CW 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
1 CENTIMETER = 0.3937 INCHES - 1 METER = 39.37 INCHES OR 3.2883 FEE 1 OR 1.096 VDS - 1 INCH = 2.54 CENTIMETERS - 1 DECIMETER = 3.937 IN OR 0.328 FOOT
1 FOOT = 3.048 DECIMETERS - 1 YARD = 0.9144 METER
MAYES
INSIDE
Array of arts
The Kronos Quartet is one of many groups performing on campus this year. The quartet will perform as part of the KU Chamber Music Series.
That's the ticket
Story, page 8
A steady stream of all-sports season ticket buyers probably will nab the last of those hot products today. About 575 remained after yesterday's sales.
Story, page 7
OUTSIDE The forecast
Today. . Mostly sunny, high around 90.
Tonight. . Chance of thunderstorms. Lows in the 60s.
Tomorrow. . Chance for thundershowers. Highs in the
80s.
Weekend. . chance of thunderstorms. Highs in the mid-90s. Lows in the 60s.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
WEDNESDAY
August 20, 1986
Vol. 97, No. 1
(USPS 650-640)
21 face court after charges in drug case
By Atle Bjorge
Staff writer
KU's former chief legislative lobbyist, one of the chancellor's top assistants, recently plained not guilty to federal charges of cocaine trafficking and could go to trial as early as the end of September.
Richard von Ende, University executive secretary, and twenty others were indicted July 22 on various cocaine-related charges. Twelve of those indicted were former KU students, and one is pre-enrolled on a KU semester. Of the 12 former students, seven were enrolled last semester.
A lawyer for von Ende could file defense motions on Sept. 8 in U.S. District Court in Kansas City, Kan. If no motions are filed at that time, the case will go to jury trial about the death of Danielle Sternik, Shernik U.S. assistant attorney.
Von Ende and his attorney, Mark Bennett, Topeka, were unavailable for comment.
The University issued a statement at the time of von Ende's indictment, but will otherwise make no comment.
"The allegations are serious, but under our criminal justice system, persons are presumed innocent until the charges against them are proven. Robin Eversale, director of Human Relations, said at the time
Von Ende was named in two separate indictments, one with Robert L. Parker, 31, and one with Michael J. Kiefer, 25. Von Ende is charged with three counts of distributing a total of 84.0 grams of
cocaine and with three counts of conspiracy to distribute cocaine.
Parker and Kiefer, also indicted by a federal grand jury. pleaded guilty on July 25
Drug Charges
The fourth man indicted on the federal level is Christopher Clark. 24. of Lawrence. He pleaded not guilty
on July 25 to charge of distributing MDMA, a hallucinogenic drug. MDMA has been a controlled substance on the federal level for about one year, while it has been illegal in Kansas only since July.
Federal indictments carry a maximum sentence of 15 years imprisonment and a $825,000 fine.
Twenty other indictments were handed down July 22. For a complete list of those indicted, they are listed in trial or hearing dates, see page 5.
The other 17 cases will be handled by state courts.
State charges carry a 3 to 5 year minimum sentence and a 10- to 20-year maximum sentence.
The indictments were the result of a yearlong combined effort by undercover police officers and local and federal law enforcement agencies.
"We realized it would be too much of a burden for one level to handle all the cases," said Sherruk.
Jim Flory, Douglas County district attorney, said the investigation involved three groups, only one of
See Cocaine, p. 5, col. 2
Executive secretary faces drug charges
Von Ende could not be reached for comment.
According to Eversole, von Ende left the University on sick leave three weeks before the July indefinite. He continues to be absent from his $33,020 position on paid sick leave. She said von Ende was on her car's insurance and that nature of her injury with him. The nature of von Ende's illness has not been disclosed.
By Beth Copeland
Staff writer
Shortly before von Ende took leave from the University, he was assigned
Twenty years ago Richard von Ende received a master's degree in political science at the University of Chicago and was accredited by the system he once studied.
Von Ende, executive secretary to the chancellor, was charged in July with three counts of distributing coercive to three counts of conspiring
Cancellor Gene A. Budg would not comment this week on von Ende's case and referred all questions to Rob Ravensley, director of Universal
to do special projects for the chancellor James Bibb and Marlin Rein, both associate directors of business and fiscal affairs, were assigned to similarly take over the Ende's lobbying duties at the Kansas Legislature.
At KU, von Ende has always been politically active, beginning with a two-year stint as vice chairman of the University Senate Executive Committee and a year as a member of the University Planning Board.
Eversole was unable to specify any special projects performed by von Ende, noting that he took his sick brother to work and was assigned to special projects.
He was hired as an assistant to the director of university relations and development in 1970. Two years later he was named executive secretary by former Chancellor Raymond Nichols.
His main responsibility as executive secretary had been to represent KU to the Kansas Legislature and at Board of Regents meetings
See Von Ende, p. 5, col. 2
TOWNSEND, NY - The University of Houston sports team held a game on Monday, May 20, 1985, in the stadium. The crowd was cheering loudly as the team took the field.
The image shows a man speaking into a microphone, holding a document in his hand. He appears to be addressing an audience or participating in a public event. The background is blurred but seems to be an outdoor setting with a large open space.
Top: Waving the wheat an important KU tradition was one of many customs taught to new students yesterday at Traditions Night. The event was part of Hawk Week, designed to help students become familiar with the University. Left: Larry Brown, head basketball coach, speaks about KU's athletic programs. See story, page 12
Fred Sadowski/KANSAN
Stickers handed out with books Tinsy Taxi' available for students late at night
By Pam Miller Staff writer
Students should discover a practical tip snugged between the books on theory and philosophy they're from the Kansas University Bookstore.
This fall, students will receive a sticker with the phone number for SecureCab the "tipsy taxi" — when they buy materials.
The program, which began in March, will provide a ride to any student who has been drinking or just needs a ride home late at night, said David Epstein, student body president. Students must show ID card to use that free cab service, which is provided by the City Cab Company.
Student activity fund money pays for the program. The Student Senate Transportation Board has allocated funds for museum fosters for SecureLab, Epstein said.
In April, the only complete month of service, the company reported transporting 736 passengers.
'It gets people who are drunk off of the streets and keeps them from driving.'
David Ambler vice chancellor for student affairs
Epstein said there was some difficulty getting the stickers to students who paid their enrollment taxes. Many students distributed until late yesterday
afternoon.
Distribution started again this morning and will continue until the stickers are gone.
The original plan had been to place stickers on all KUIDs so that students would have the number with them at all times. The new plan rejected the stickers, rejected the
University officials rejected the idea.
"We told them we wouldn't allow it, because the L.D. is for purposes of University identification," said David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs. "To put something like this on our application card, we need an identification card." Plus, as I explained to David, we're looking at a new identification card system."
However, Ambler said he liked the idea of students having the cab number readily available.
Despite the troubles of getting the
stickers to students. Epstein said he was happy with the SecureCab program.
"A as matter of fact, it has been wildly successful," he said. "It's gone above and beyond our expectations. It gets people who are drunk off of the streets and keeps them from driving.
"But SecureCab isn't just for drinking. It's here for the students."
Last spring, some students used SecureCab after working on late night projects on campus, said Randy Rappes, Citv Cabs driver.
Sandra Reed, co-owner of City Cab Company, said she also was pleased with the program.
"When you start in with something like this, you're always a little cautious." Reed said, "but the one that had nothing but good reports."
Students invite Reagan, Gorbachev to summit
By Colleen Siebes
Staff writer
mit in Lawrence.
The KU Coalition for Peace and Justice organized the campaign this summer. Organizers hope to send at least 6,000 postcards to Reagan and Gorbachev. The cards will be individually signed.
A group of students has started a postcard campaign to bring Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev and President Ronald Reagan to a summit in Lawrence.
"Dear President Reagan," the cards say, "invite you to be my guest in Lawrence at the University of Kansas for a Meeting for Peace with General Secretary Gorbachev to achieve arms control and better relations." undersided by U.S.
dividually signed.
Students can sign two cards, one written in English to Reagan, and the other bearing the scrip message in Russian to Gorbachev.
The campaign has been endorsed by U.S. Sens. Bob Dole and Nancy Kaebaum, both Kansas Republicans, Gov John Carlin, U.S.
Rep. Jim Slattery, D.Kan., Chancellor Gene A. Budig and the Lawrence City Commission, said Kirstin Myers, coaition vice president and Shawnee senior.
The cards feature one of three pictures on the front of the invitation. The pictures represent the the Kansas flag, the Kansas Capitol building and the state flower, the sunflower, to remind Reagan and Gorbachev of Kansas as a summit site.
"We want to unite everyone on campus in the campaign for talks, even those who are at odds on the issue," Myers said. "We don't want to alienate anyone."
The message is positive, personal and non-political, and it merely invites the leaders to participate.
A goal of the coalition is to educate students about the issue and make them aware that they can learn from mistakes.
Students who are concerned but feel isolated and powerless to improve relations can become
involved in the campaign, Myers said.
"We want the leaders to know that our generation is not as apathetic as they think," Myers said. "They are just uninformed.
"We speak for Lawrence and other students in the country. We don't feel embarrassed or out of our bounds to offer the invitation"
Coalition members will speak in residence halls and set up stands on campus where students can sign the cards.
Myers said the coalition hoped to make the campaign so visible that students who didn't sign made a conscious decision not to be involved.
Tables also will be set up throughout the city to unite the entire Lawrence community in the campaign. In fact, organizers hope to unite the city and the University behind the effort.
The group was known formerly as the Jayhawk Defense Initiative, but it changed the name so people would associate it with a citywide group with a similar name, the
Lawrence Coalition for Peace and Justice, said Eric Matheis, coalition president and Overland Park senior.
Organizers stress, however, that their groups are separate entities.
Although members would prefer Lawrence as the site for the summit, the main goal of the campaign is to unite the leaders for talks anywhere, Myers said.
On Sept. 17, the campus group will stage a rally to collect the cards. After the rally, two representatives will travel to Washington, D.C., to deliver the cards to U.S. officials and to the Soviet Embassy.
But the city still is a serious possibility for hosting a summit, according to coalition members. People already associate nuclear defense issues with Lawrence because of the television movie "The Day After," Matheis said.
"Why not Lawrence?" he said.
Welcome back
The annual Back-To-School issue of the University Daily Kansan is put out by the summer and fall staffs to help acquaint students with the university and the surrounding area.
The City/Area and Campus sections were produced by the summer staff, and the front and Sports sections were produced
Since most students have been away from Lawrence for several months, the summer's most important events on campus, in town, and in politics also are included.
The first regular issue of the Kansan will be distributed Monday.
2
University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Wednesday. August 20. 1986
News Briefs
Picasso painting found in railway station locker
MELBOURNE, Australia — Picasso's missing $1.2 million "Weeping Woman" was found undamaged in a railway station locker yesterday, 17 days after self-styled "cultural terrorists" stole the masterpiece and threatened to destroy it.
The thieves had demanded a ransom in the form of increased government financing to the arts. The government did not increase arts financing.
P police said officers discovered the painting, measuring 22 inches by 18 inches, after an anonymous telephone caller to a Melbourne newspaper said that it could be found in locker No. 227 at the Spencer Street Station.
The painting was wrapped in brown paper and tied with string, officials said.
Officers carried it to a police forensic laboratory where National Gallery director Patrick McCaughey confirmed that it was the masterpiece and said it appeared undamaged.
A police spokesman said a note was left in the locker with the painting but refused to disclose its contents.
Detective Sgt. Bob Quigely said the parcel was placed in the locker less than 24 hours before its discovery because the compartments are cleared daily. He said forensic scientists examined the painting and note in an attempt to lead them to the thieves.
Police reward seatbelt wearers
The ticket, however, won't mean a trip to court, but will be good for a trip to Disneyland or dozens of other prizes.
FORT COLLINS, Colo. - Motorists caught buckling up in Fort Collins face the prospect of getting a ticket from police.
To encourage greater use of seat belts, the Fort Collins Police Department plans to hand out up to 5,000 green tickets to drivers caught wearing their seat belts.
"The driver gets a card and everybody else in the car who's wearing their seat belt gets a coupon for a hot dog or an ice cream cone," said Lt. Jay Davis, who is in charge of the program.
Japanese scholar faces expulsion
NEW YORK — A Japanese scholar held for deportation because of his role in a 1968 anti-Vietnam War protest in Japan was told yesterday that he had three days to leave the United States or be expelled.
Lawyers for Choichiro Yatani, 40, a psychology instructor and doctoral student at State University at Stony Brook on Long Island, vowed to fight the deportation order and threatened to sue the government if he was not released.
Immigration Judge Howard Cohen extended the expulsion deadline from midnight Monday until midnight Friday and scheduled a hearing for Friday afternoon over the objections of Immigration and Naturalization Service attorney Daniel Meisner.
Yatani was convicted in 1970 and sentenced to probation for his participation in the 1968 anti-Vietnam War
protest co-sponsored by his student organization. But he has never been a member of a communist group, said Arthur Helton, his lawyer. When Yatiun applied to come to the United States in 1977, the INS had granted him a waiver, allowing him to enter the country despite what the government termed his "subversive" role.
Yatani has been held at the INS detention center in Manhattan since July 7 when he returned to the country from an academic conference in Amsterdam.
Customs Service officials arrested Yatani at Kennedy Airport because his name appeared on an immigration service list of persons who can be denied entry, officals said.
The State Department revoked his visa July 21 because, they said, he had been a member of a communist organization in Japan. The immigration service then decided to deport him.
"The case is very unusual because it is not very often you find someone with such strong ties to the community facing deportation." Helton said.
Helton said the State Department violated the law by not giving Yatani time to appeal the decision before being jailed.
'Squaw squad' fights worst fires
GARDEN VALLEY, Idaho — "Be tough squaws!" Benrita Burnett urged her 18-member, all-female Apache firefighting crew as they grabbed field rations and set out for the fire lines after a few hours rest at the base camp.
ine female crew, Fort Apache No. 2, is one of the Bureau of Indian Affairs' elite teams that is called in to battle the worst fires in the West.
Burnett has been with the crew five years and has no trouble recruiting new members. At least 50 women have applications on file.
"The job situation on the reservation doesn't offer much," she said. "This is an opportunity to make some money."
Janice Massey has been fighting fires for 10 years. She said she had joined right out of high school. Firefighting is her summer job. She is a teacher's aide during the school year.
Most of the women, who are between ages 19 and 40, are married and have children. When summoned to fires, they may be away from home for weeks at a time.
Saturday night, after a hot meal and a few hours sleep in the camp, the crew returned to the fire lines in the back of a 5-ton truck. They didn't expect to get back to camp again until yesterday.
Jocita Williams said she had joined the fire crew five years ago for a challenge. When she isn't fighting fires, she is working 10 hours a day thinning out ponderosa pines with a chain saw on the reservation.
Deficit to pass limit, experts say
WASHINGTON — The federal budget deficit will be $163.4 billion next fiscal year — almost $20 billion more than the Gramm-Rudman balanced budget law allows, administration and congressional economic experts said yesterday.
In a joint report issued by the administration's Office of Management and Budget and the Congressional Budget Office, experts said the deficit for the fiscal
The excess deficit means Congress would have to reduce the red ink by October or face a politically unpleasant vote on spending cuts — before it leaves to campaign for the November elections.
The report from CBO Director Rudolph Penner and OMB Chief James Miller was sent to congressional budget leaders, who will move next month toward cutting the deficit.
year beginning Oct. 1 was $19.4 billion more than the $144 billion limit set by Gramm-Rudman.
If Congress does not act, the report said, military spending would have to be reduced by 5.6 percent and most other domestic programs by 7.6 percent to comply with the balanced budget law.
Final congressional action on spending bills has been put off until Congress returns from its summer recess next month.
Among the bills to be considered is a deficit reduction bill that would cut about $7.3 billion. Some budget experts have suggested increasing that sum to meet Gramm-Rudman's targets. But the joint report said the bill's current savings were inadequate.
Congressional efforts to cut the deficit still might get a boost from the tax reform bill passed by Senate and House conferences this weekend.
Congress has a month to avert the across-the-board cuts. Under Gramm-Rudman, another report on the economy is due in October. If lawmakers are then within $10 billion of the target, no cuts will be required.
At a news conference, Archbishop James A. Hickey of Washington and the Rev. William J. Byron, chancellor and president of the pontifical Catholic University of America, defended the Vatican's position that the Rev. Charles Curran "is not suitable nor eligible to teach Catholic theology."
Blast kills 1, hurts 13 in London
LONDON — An explosion yesterday ripped through a four-story building housing an Iranian news vendor and an employment agency, killing one person and injuring 13 in a fashionable London district. Authorities were unable to immediately determine the cause of the blast.
Police initially said they thought the blast that shook downtown Kensington High Street, a busy shopping thoroughfare, was caused by a gas explosion.
The explosion occurred more than 100 yards from Kensington Palace, the London home of Prince Charles and Princess Diana who are on vacation in Scotland, and about 300 yards from the Iranian consulate.
However, they sent in an anti-terrorist squad to check for bomb evidence after hearing reports that two men were seen running from the building at the time of the explosion.
Hickey said he initiated the process to withdraw Curran's "ecclesiastical license" to teach Catholic theology but assured Curran he would follow church due process procedures.
While both church leaders defended the Vatican decision, they praised Curran "as a person, priest and theologian."
Curran, who was informed of the church decision Monday, has two weeks to decide whether or not to invoke due process procedures aimed at overturning the Vatican declaration.
The blast wrecked the ground floor and basement and severely damaged the offices of the Abbatt Employment agency unstairs.
Fourteen people were injured in the explosion, police said. Most were treated for minor injuries or shock.
His views also differ from the church's views about when life begins and the possible morality of homosexual relationships.
Hickey said the investigation of Curran's views prompted the Vatican to conclude that a number of Curran's writings conflicted with the teaching of the church.
Curran, one of the most respected Catholic scholars in the field of sexual ethics, has differed from the church on a number of issues. He supports the use of artificial birth control, and refuses to call sterilization "intrinsically evil."
Priest may fight his demotion
A man in his mid-20s, who was taken to Charing Cross Hospital, died from injuries, a hospital spokesman said. His name was being withheld until relatives could be notified.
Police said the amount of debris made it difficult to quickly determine the cause of the explosion.
WASHINGTON — U.S. church officials, ordered by the Vatican to strip a priest of his rank as official teacher of Catholic doctrine for dissenting on sex issues, said yesterday that the case might be a lengthy one.
Women limit careers. studv savs
NEW YORK - Since 1911, three-quarters of the female graduates of a high school for the intellectually talented did not consider themselves gifted and therefore chose mediocre jobs, a published report said yesterday.
The 1,250 woman surveyed, were graduates of Hunter College High School. Despite having IQs of 130 or higher, the women did not feel exceptional, a report by a University of Southern California education professor said
"If women don't recognize their potential, they cannot fulfill it," said the professor, Betty Walker. "Sometimes gifted women stop themselves before they take that extra step — because they still believe they are there only to support men and children and be the comfort-giver, their own interests take a back seat."
Graduates from the 1950s and earlier who chose careers went into traditional women's fields such as teaching, social work and library science. Walker said the women limited their career choices because their teachers or parents hadn't encouraged them to branch into other fields.
So the women chose fields they considered to be women's work, Walker said.
In contrast to the report's assertion of a limited self-image, Walker said, 80 percent of the women interviewed were aware of the women's movement. They also were aware that the professional world was opening up new career opportunities for women.
In addition, those interviewed said that they had a greater respect for other women and knew that they had the ability to create a more equitable relationship with their spouses, she said.
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Wednesday, August 20, 1986
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
3
THE HISTORY OF THE LIBRARY
Barbara Cochran/KANSAN
Pay Day
Students waited in lines to collect financial aid and to pay fees for the fall semester yesterday in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Despite his protest, Budig gets raise
By Nicole SauzeK
Staff writer
Despite his own objection, Chancellor Gene A. Budig became the first university president in Kansas to be paid more than $100,000 on July 1, after the Board of Regents approved a 5.2 percent increase in his salary.
Budig had been making $96,000 a year. In a letter, he requested that the Regents limit his raise to 2.5 percent, the same percentage raise given to faculty members. The board refused Budig's request. A smaller pay raise would have increased Budig's salary only to $98,400.
Budig later announced that the difference — $2,252 — would be donated to the Kansas University Endowment Association for scholarships.
In other campus news this summer:
■ Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, announced 17 July 15 his
decision to resign from his administrative post at the University of Kansas to return to teaching.
Cobb will take a leave of absence during the 1987 spring semester and will return in the fall to teach full time in the English department.
Cobb, who has been executive vice chancellor for six years, will leave his position at the end of the fall semester.
A search committee will be formed after Budig reviews the functions of the vice chancellor's office.
KU Police still are looking into the July 4 vandalism of the Vietnam Memorial. Someone defaced the memorial by using a black marker to write a slogan on the stone monument. The message was, "While waging a genocidal war for U.S. imperialists."
Workers from the department of facilities operations were able to remove the writing. KU police said
the case was still open but no arrests had been made.
The memorial, between West Campus Road and Memorial Drive near the Chi Omega Fountain, was dedicated May 25.
University officials reinstated the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity in mid-May and ended the group's suspension a year early.
The house was suspended for two years June 19, 1985, for violation of University regulations. Charges were based on an alleged hazing incident that occurred in April 1985.
Violation details were kept confidential by University officials because they dealt with disciplinary problems.
Under the suspension, the house was not allowed to participate in any University or Interfraternity Council's formal rush activities and was omitted from University publications.
The Acacia fraternity, 1100 Indiana St., no longer has a local chapter on campus after 82 years.
The Acacia initiates decided this summer to dissolve the chapter when membership declined. Only 11 active members would have returned this fall, not enough to fill the 45-person capacity house.
- Several other administrative changes were made on campus in the past academic year.
Peter G. Thompson, KU art professor and former associate dean of fine arts, became the new fine arts dean July 1. He replaced James Moeser, who resigned in February 1965. Moeser became dean and executive director of University Arts Service at Penn State in University Park, Pa., in July.
Also on July 1, Edward Meyen took over the position of education dean.
Mall project boosted by Dillard's interest blight study decision
By Karen Samelson Staff writer
While many KU students were vacationing elsewhere, local officials and business owners were keeping busy here.
"it's been a really productive summer," City Commissioner David Longhurst said yesterday.
The city received good news this month when Dillard's announced that the department store company was interested in taking part in the proposed downtown mall.
"That demonstrates that the market is here," said Hannes Zacharias, the city's management analyst. "We're really excited about it."
Zacharias said two other stores had expressed interest in the mall project, but the city did not release the companies' names.
The developer, Jacobs, Visconsi and Jacobs, of Cleveland, will present a revised plan to the commission in September, he said. By that time, three large department stores — the number needed to anchor the mall — should have committed to the project.
The proposed mall got another boost earlier in the summer when the commission accepted a blight study of the downtown "footprint," confirming that the 600 block of downtown Lawrence fits the legal definition of a blighted area.
Because of the study results, the city now may use its powers to purchase the land for the proposed mall.
In Douglas County administrative action, commissioners are considering hiring another staff member. Commissioners will discuss at their 9:30 a.m. meeting today a proposal to create the position of a full-time county administrator. The work now is done by a county counselor-administrator, but County Commissioner Nancy Hiebert said the county should have both a full-time administrator and a part-time counselor.
"We need someone who's there on a day-to-day administrative basis," Hiebert said. She said the commissioners would not give up any policy-making powers.
Meanwhile, food shoppers returning to town will have a new place to do business. Last week, Dillon's opened a superstore that offers potato and salad bars, a fresh seafood department, a pharmacy, post office and banking machines.
Customers also can rent videos and drop off their utility bill payments. The new store at Sixth Street and
Lawrence Avenue replaces the store at Sixth and Michigan streets, where there wasn't enough room to expand.
The summer also brought some bad news for a few local apartment dwellers. Jayhawk West Apartments filed for bankruptcy in June, listing 123 tenants as creditors, according to Clyde Chapman, director of the Consumer Affairs Association, 819 Vermont St.
To try to recover their security deposits, which range from 99 cents to about $200, tenants will have to make claims to the federal bankruptcy court in Los Angeles, where the bankruptcy action was filed, he said.
The apartment complex is operating under new management now, but Chapman said he didn't know whether the creditors would get any, part or all of their deposit money back.
The district attorney's office also kept busy this summer, Jim Flory, Douglas County district attorney, said.
On May 31, Russell Gensler, 1408 W. Third St., was fatally shot in a parking lot in Centennial Park. A few days later, police arrested two Lawrence men, Curtis White, 1306 Tennessee St., and Sherman Tolbert, 810 Lawrence Ave., and charged them with second-degree murder in connection with the shooting. The men will be up for trial this fall. Flory said.
In June, a Kansas City, Mo., man pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in the Nov. 22 death of George Hixon, KU professor of design. The man, Eugene Avis Jr., was sentenced in July to 12 years to life in prison.
On June 30, a 12-year-old Lawrence boy died of a gunshot wound that he suffered when a rifle accidentally discharged. The boy, Jay Clark, son of Barkley Clark, former KU law professor and Lawrence mayor, was playing with two friends when the rifle discharged. The shooting was declared accidental and no charges were filed, Flory said.
In July, the last guilty plea was made in the death of Leslie Frank Barnes, whose body was found March 19 in the Kansas River.
Gary Thomas, 1405 Westbrook,
pleased guilty to voluntary
manslaughter and later was sentenced
to three to 10 years in prison. In
June, Terri Barnes, the victim's
wife, and Lewis Brochman, a friend
of the victim, pleaded guilty to involuntary manslaughter.
Barnes and Brochman also were sentenced to three to 10 years.
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University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Wednesday. August 20,1986
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Summer news staff
Cindy McCurry Editor
Kady McMaster Managing editor
Shawn Aday Editorial editor
Grant Butler Campus editor
Dawn O'Malley Sports editor
Shawna Norfeet Photo editor
Tom Eblen General manager, news adviser
Summer business staff
David Nixon Business/production manager
Beverly Kastens Retail sales manager
James Scales Campus sales/back office manager
Richard Morrison Classified manager
John Oberzan Sales and marketing adviser
Fall news staff
Lauretta McMillen Editor
Kady McdMaster Managing editor
Tad Clarke Newer editor
David Silverman Editorial editor
John Hanna Campus editor
Frank Hansel Sports editor
Josh Kavle Photographer
Tom Eblen General manager, news adviser
Fall business staff
David Nixon Business manager
Gregory Kaul Retail sales manager
Peter Schaffens Campus sales manager
Sally Depew Classified manager
Lisa Weems Production manager
Duncan Calhoun National sales manager
Bennett Kelly Traffic manager
John Oberzan Sales and marketing adviser
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer-Fint Fall, Hall, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and for those days when the student activity fee is $27 a year. Lawrence, Kan. 66044 Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months of $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
Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045
State offices may hinge on experience
By Alison Young Staff writer
With the August primaries not long over, candidates for the governorship and the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives are gearing up for the Nov. 4 general election.
In the race for governor, experience will be an important issue, spokesmen for both candidates said yesterday.
Staff writer
Mike Hayden, the Republican candidate for governor, won his party's nomination by defeating seven others in the Aug. 5 primary. Lt. Gov. Tom Docking was unopposed in the Democratic primary.
Hayden, 42, has served as state House Speaker for the last four years and in the Legislature for the past 14 years. Docking, 32, has been Gov. John Carlin's lieutenant governor for the past four years.
Docking's father, Robert, served as governor from 1967 to 1975, and his grandfather filled the office from 1957 to 1961.
Hayden's primary campaign, which concentrated on the state's rural areas and smaller cities, followed a detailed plan using voter preference polls and past Republican voting figures to determine whether there were enough votes in those areas to win the primary.
The calculations proved correct. However, while Hayden won the nomination with 36 percent of the vote, he lost decisively in the state's biggest urban areas, Johnson and Sedgwick counties.
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So it's back to the drawing board for Hayden strategists who hope to have a new plan for the general election by the end of this week, said Kelley Hayden, the candidate's brother and press secretary.
In those two counties, residents favored Larry Jones, a Wichita businessman, four-to-one over Hayden.
Like the first plan, the new one will be based on the results of a large public preference survey, historic Republican voting patterns and consultation with campaign advisers.
Docking plans to target a statewide voter audience, said his campaign manager, Tom Laing.
"We do know we will have to appeal to Johnson and Sedgwick counties," said Kelley Hayden.
Laing criticized the Hayden campaign's plan for determining campaign strategy.
"The last thing we need is someone who will look to one segment of the population to the exclusion of another," he said. "We're stressing quality of experience and quality of leadership state-wide."
Hayden's campaign will also stress his experience in state government versus the "lack of experience" of opponent Lt. Gov. Tom Docking.
While the Docking name will be a factor in the election, Laing said candidate identification, not the name, will be most important.
Local candidates choose strategies
By a Kansan reporter
For local state representative candidates, agriculture, education and economic development will be prominent campaign issues.
In the race for the Kansas House of Representatives, Chris Miller, Republican candidate and a Lawrence attorney, will oppose Democrat incumbent Jessie Branson in the 44th District.
"Since then I have listened, learned and observed, and I think this year will be different."
Parker plans to concentrate on Solbach's voting record, which she thinks is not always in the best interest of his constituents.
In the 45th District, Martha Parker will again oppose incumbent John Solbach. Parker, a former elementary school teacher, ran unsuccessfully against Solbach two years ago.
Solbach said he was looking forward to the campaign as a chance to explain and defend his voting record "Voting records tend to be misconstructed, especially in elections," he said.
Like most other incumbents, Solbach's campaign will emphasize his eight years of experience in the Kansas Legislature and service on the Ways and Means, Judiciary, and Agriculture and Small Business Committees.
"The last time I ran against him I was a little naive," Parker said.
"There are a great number of voters whose first experience with the Docking name is Tom Docking," he said. "The campaign won't be won on only name identification."
In the race for the U.S. Senate, Guy MacDonald will challenge Sen. Bob Dole of Russell, the Senate majority leader. It is MacDonald's first campaign for public office.
Laing's running mate is John Montgomery, former chairman of the Kansas Board of Regents. Hayden's running mate is state Sen. Jack Walker of Overland Park, chairman of family practice at the University of Kansas Medical Center and a former Overland Park mayor.
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MacDonald, an unemployed teacher, defeated four opponents in the August primary. MacDonald spent little money on the primary campaign but defeated Darrell Ringer, a well-known farm activist from Gove County, by nearly 3,000 votes.
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From Page One
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
University Daily Kansan
5
Partygoers are indicted
United Press International
DES MOINES, Iowa — Two state legislators, one of them a prospective groom, are among five people indicted for indecent exposure and other charges stemming from a bachelor party last spring, the county prosecutor said.
A grand jury Monday indicted state Rep. Al Sturgeon, of Sioux City, for indecent exposure, and the guest of honor, state Rep. Ed Parker, of Mingo, for violating the state's gift law, said Jasper County Attorney John Billingsley.
Also indicted were Northwestern Bell bellojist Dijim Pribyl, for violating the state's gift law: Dawn Wilson, a Des Moines dancer charged with performing a sex act with Sturgeon during the party, and Chuck Maher, a bartender, for allowing indecent exposure at the Back 40 Tavern in Mingo, Billingleslae said.
Several lawmakers and reporters attended the April 17 party in Mingo, about 20 miles northeast of Des Moines. The party was held for Parker, who was married in May.
Cocaine
Continued from p. 1
which was prosecuted at the federal level.
Of the 17 people charged at the state level, six have gone through preliminary hearings. They all pleaded not guilty, and their jury trials are scheduled to begin in October and November in Douglas County District Court.
The remaining 11 are awaiting preliminary hearings later this month and in September.
Both Flory and Shernuk said the investigation was continuing, but would provide no further details. Flory said that more charges still could be filed and that it would be unethical to comment any more on an investigation that was still in progress.
"We clearly didn't resolve the problem," said Floy. "But most of the charges are for sale or delivery. I think that is significant."
von Ende
Continued from p. 1
After the July indictments in which 21 people were charged with cocaine-related crimes, University officials released the following statement:
"We're distressed that one of our staff members has been indicted. The allegations are very serious, but under our criminal justice system, persons are presumed innocent until the charges against them are proven.
"We will have no further statement concerning the legal proceedings until they're concluded."
Eversole said the University was not searching for a replacement for von Ende pending the outcome of the trial, which has not been scheduled.
"No measures have been taken to fill Mr. von Ende's position." Eversole said. "He left on sick leave, accrued it in a normal fashion, and will remain on sick leave until the University decides to do otherwise."
Twenty-one people were charged with cocaine-related crimes after a lengthy investigation involving the Lawrence Police Department, the Douglas County Sheriff's office, the Johnson County Sheriff's Office and the state and federal Drug Enforcement administrations.
They were assisted by the U.S. Attorney's Office and the Douglas County District Attorney's Office.
The Indictments
A list of those indicted, the charges, bond and hearing or trial dates appears below. The names of the students who were enrolled last semester are set off at the bottom of the list. Proceedings for those who are facing state charges will take place in Douglas County District Court. Other proceedings will take place in U.S. District Court.
Seven of those charged for cocaine-related crimes were KU students during the spring 1986 semester. Only one, Gregory D. Trariche, had pre-enrolled for the fall 1986 semester.
Dennis D. Barritt, 40, a Lawrence developer and former vice president of the Lawrence National Bank, was charged with two counts of adding and abetting the delivery of cocaine and one count of
possession of cocaine. Bond was set at $25,000. A preliminary hearing is set for Sept. 11
Barbay Bay, 24. a Phoenician resident charged with two counts of selling cocaine and one count of abetting and abetting the sale of cocaine. Bond was set at $15,000. A jury trial for Nov. 19
Donald P. Bay, 27 a Phoenix resident charged with selling cocaine. Bond was set at $10,000. A jury trial is set for Nov. 5.
Christopher Clark, 24, a Lawrence resident charged with selling cocaine. He has also a federal indictment charged him with selling MOMA, a designer drug. Bion was sent to a $100,000 jail.
Howard Eminson, 44, a Lawrence res-
charged with three counts of taking cocaine and one count of possession cocaine. Bond was set at $40,000. A preliminary hearing is set for Sept
Jack G. Houk, 34, a Lawrence resident and developer charged with selling cocaine. Bond was set at $10,000. A jury is set for Nov. 19.
Rusty L. Howard, 24, a lawrence resident charged with two counts of selling cocaine. Bond was set at $20,000. A preliminary suit for Sept. 25.
Michael Kieffer, 24, a Lauren resident charged in a federal investigation along with Richard von Hardenberg and Jeffrey Rosen, of selling cocaine. Bond is set for $10,000. A second appearance is set for Sept. 8 in Kansas City.
Robert L. Parker, 31, a Lawrence resident charged in federal district court on two counts of conspiracy and four counts of selling cocaine Bond was set at $10,000. A second appearance is due next month.
Famela Shields, 26, a Lawrence resident charged with selling cocaine. Bond was set at $10,000. A jury trial is set for Nov. 5
Curt K. Stilley, 24, a lawrence resident charged with selling cocaine. Bond was set at $10,000 A.D.
Jackie Lee Strong, 28, a Lawrence resident charged with two counts of selling cocaine. Bond was set at $300,000. A trial will be for Nov. 5.
Richard von Ende, A4, a Lawrence resident and executive secretary to the chancellor charged with three counts of conspiracy and three counts of battery. A second appearance is for Beirut 8.
William P. Wiedenman, 23, a Leawood resident and
Brian F. Cross, 20, A Roeland Park resident charged with selling cocaine. Bond was set at $100.00. A preliminary hearing has been set for Aug. 20.
Robert F. Bell, 35, a Lawrence resident charged with selling cocaine. Bond was set at $10,000. A preliminary hearing is set for Aug. 27.
Jonathan S. Flicker, 23, a Lawrence resident charged with selling cocaine. Bond was sent at $10,000. A preliminary hearing has been set for Sept. 10.
Tory E. Graham, 23, a Lawrence resident charged with three counts of selling cocaine and one count of possession of cocaine. Bund was sent for $10,000. A preliminary hearing has been set for.
Samuel F. Ruggies, 28, a Lawrence resident charged with two counts of哄诱 cocaine and one count of possession of cocaine. Bond was set at $30,000. A preliminary hearing has been set for.
Kevin Sommer, 21, a law enforcement resident with one count of conspiracy and one count of possession of cocaine. Bond was at $15,000. A preliminary hearing has been set for Aug. 27
Gregory D. Trimarchie, 22, a Lawrence residentResident with one count of hand and abetting the use of cocaine and one count of possession of cocaine for each person. A preliminary hearing has been set for Sept. 3.
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Wednesday, August 20, 1986
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KU
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
University Daily Kansan
Tickets to sell out soon
7
By Craig Herrmann Staff writer
Before the Jayhawk football team has played a single down, all-season sports tickets probably will be sold out. Athletic Department officials said yesterday.
Diana Wehmeyer, ticket manager,
said only about 575 of the 7,000
student all-sports tickets were still
available when the office closed at
5 p.m. yesterday. Wehmeyer said she
thought all the tickets would be sold
by the time the office closes today.
Wehmeier credited flyers sent by mail to students during the summer for the large number of tickets sold before students paid fees yesterday and today.
The all-sports ticket combines football and basketball season tickets and costs $55. The ticket allows students to get into all home games in both sports.
The all-sports ticket also includes a ticket to the Kansas Relays, which take place in the spring.
Wehmeyer said she was not surprised by how fast all-sports tickets were selling, but said she could not compare this year's rate of sales to that of a year ago. Wehmeyer said she had not kept the daily sales figures from last year.
Whemeyer said that about 500 all-sports tickets were sold yesterday.
The remaining tickets will go on sale at 8 a.m. at the ticket office window in the lobby of Allen Field House.
Students also can get an all-performing arts ticket allowing them to see 17 performances by the University Theatre, Concert and Chamber Music series. The all-performing arts ticket costs $55 and can be purchased during fee payment.
Academic questions keep suspended players waiting
By Frank Hansel
Sports editor
None of the remaining five football players suspended because of academic questions returned to practice yesterday, head coach Bob Valesente said.
"It's a day-by-day thing," Valesen said. "I hope I get surprised tomorrow. We're really supportive of them, but until they meet the requirements they won't be out here."
Valesente originally suspended six players because their academic status was in question. But defensive tackle Steve Nave had his academic status resolved on Monday and went through his first full day of drills yesterday.
"We're very pleased to have Steve back," Valesen said. "He was able to meet the requirements, and he is back in good academic standing."
The five players still missing from practice are linebacker Darnell Williams, defensive backs Derek and Tony Berry, quarterback Robby Santos and offensive lineman Brian Howard.
Campus/Area
All five were listed either first or second on the pre-season depth chart, and everyone except Santos had started at one time.
Valesente said he initiated the suspensions to eliminate the academic problems the Jayhawks
In 1984, 10 players were declared academically ineligible on the morning of the first game.
had suffered the last two years.
Last fall, eight players lost their eligibility after the team had left for Hawaii. All the players went through pre-season drills.
"We're focusing more on academics this year," said Mike Monos, who coaches outside linebackers. "Coach Val has been with this program for four years and he knows what direction he wants it to go in."
Player reaction to Valesente's tough standards has been favorable.
"I don't blame him for being more of a disciplinarian," cornerback Milt Garner said. "It's for the good of the team.
"In life, even if you don't play football, you're going to have to have discipline. You're always going to have to do what someone tells you."
In addition to the five players, Kansas lost two recruits because of Proposition 48, the National College Athletic Association's new entrance requirements for freshmen in Division I schools.
Bill Sutter, a defensive back from Lawrence, failed to take his American College Test; John Davis, a running back from Laurinburg, N.C., didn't qualify for an athletic scholarship.
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EMILY TAYLOR WOMEN'S RESOURCE CENTER
X
Aug. 27 Graduate Women's Potluck, is a chance for graduate students to share food and conversation before the year gets underway.
6:00:8:00 p.m., Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread.
Career Help Offered to Inspire Continued Equality and Satisfaction
Sept. 3 Open House at the ETWRC offers students an introduction to the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center and what it offers.
Free refreshments. 2:00-4:00 p.m., 218 Strong Hall.
Sept. 9 Graduate School 1.2.3. How to Get There. How do I apply? How can I strengthen my chances for getting in to the school of my choice? What is it that I want from graduate school? Answers these questions and make the application process easier by participating in this workshop. 6:30:8:30 p.m. at Byron's Autohaus, 906 Vermont.
Sept. 18 Automechs for Beginners, a three-part series of workshops
Sept. 25 on auto maintenance basics, a nominal fee will be charged for
Oct. 2 the entire series. 7:00-9:00 p.m. at Byron's Autohaus, 906
Vermont.
Oct. 7 Career Choices for Women will help student explore what is important to them in making career decisions. 7:00-9:00 p.m. Kansas Union.
Oct. 15 Exploring Financial Aid for Women, is designed to inform students to financial aid sources available to them. 7:00:9:00 p.m., Kansas Union.
Oct. 21 Male/Female Relationships in the 80's, will explore new directions in relationships between women and men. Open discussion and interaction will be encouraged. 6:30:8:30 p.m. Kansas Union.
Nov. 4 Mirror Images: Acceptance of Ourselves and Our Bodies will look at womens perceptions of themselves and their bodies, where these perceptions have come from, and how unhealthy perceptions can be changed. 7:00-9:00 p.m. Kansas union.
Nov. 11 Marketing Yourself: Resumes & Interviews, is designed to help women students improve their interviewing skills and resume writing techniques. 7:00:9 p.m., Kansas Union.
Other programs will be announced later in the semester. Watch the University Daily Kansan for details. For more information call 864-3552 or stop by 218 Strong Hall between 8 a.m. and noon or 1-5 p.m.
1987
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University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
Artists blend old and new
By Grant W. Butler
Arts editor
KU's performing arts season is a morgasgord of entertainment: rich Greek drama; spicy, avant-garde plays; tender opera and searing rock music.
Charla Jenkins, public relations director for University Theatre, said yesterday that it was important for students to experience classical as well as modern performances to get an idea of the variety in the performing arts.
"Many of the groups that were popular when I was young are now considered old and established," Jenkins said. "Students need to keep in mind that some of these younger groups are going to be the established groups of the future."
Jack Wright, artistic director of University Theatre, said this year's theater season was a combination of old and new material that would appeal to students.
"We try to balance our season," he said. "We try to pick material that will challenge our students."
The Theatre season kicks off with the annual Theatre Rally at 7 p.m. Sunday on the stage of the Crafton-Preeyer Theatre in Murphy Hall. The
rally will encourage student involvement and introduce them to audition procedures. Wright said.
Open call auditions for Theatre productions are scheduled for 7 p.m. Monday and Tuesday in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre. All KU students enrolled in six or more hours are eligible to audition.
"One of my great hopes is that you can find a way to get the word out to students to either audition or attend the events," Wright said.
"The percentage of students who attend is very low. But once they get here they'll love it."
Jackie Davis, director of the Concert and Chamber Music Series, said the series would include modern music again this year in addition to classical music.
"We like to present modern music if we can do so within the guidelines of the series – without going into pop or rock." Davis said.
"You want to present programs that will stimulate students and extend their knowledge of what is modern."
Two performance groups in the series, the King's Singers and the Kronos Quartet, feature modern music in their concerts.
Davis said the popular appeal of the groups would attract students to the concerts.
But the series does not cater exclusively to the needs of students. Davis said. The entire Lawrence community is considered in the scheduling of performances.
"We're making sure that what's mainstream in the U.S. also is presented in Lawrence," Davis said.
The KU Jazz Festival, Feb. 5-7, with feature performances by three important jazz musicians, said Ron McCurdy, director of the festival.
Ida McBeth, blues vocalist; Bill Watrous, jazz trombonist; and Bobby McFerrin, jazz vocalist, will be the featured performers in three evening concerts during the festival.
The performance by McFerrin at the festival should interest many students. McCurdy said.
"This is perhaps the biggest name we've ever had," he said.
The sounds of rock music can be heard at the Student Union Activities' Special Events series throughout the year.
The series, which has featured popular and obscure bands, has no groups definitely scheduled yet.
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Wednesday, August 20, 1986
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
9
Japanese samurai art among fall exhibitions
By Pamela Spingler
Staff writer
Oversized impressionistic prints and art that depict Japanese folklore top the list of exhibition at KU's Spencer Museum of Art.
"To most people, a print is a reproduction," Jay Gates, museum director, said yesterday. "In this case, prints refer to engravings, lincuts and woodcuts of impressionist art on a large scale."
One of the two exhibits on display,
"Blockbusters: The Big Impression",
is a 21-piece exhibit of large prints ranging in size from a 30-by-40-inch woodcut to a 72-by-48-inch lino print.
The exhibition, compiled by J. Nebraska Gifford and distributed by John Nichols Printmakers, both of New York, opened this month and will be at the museum until Sept. 28.
The other exhibit, "Chushingura: Revenge of the 47 Samurai," is a collection of prints and artifacts that portrays a story of samurai killing the man responsible for their master's death.
Gates said the story was rooted in Japanese culture and was especially popular among Japanese artists and theatre goers.
"In American life, it would be comparable to the Alamo." Gates said.
Alan Atkinson, Lawrence graduate student and a curatorial intern, put the exhibit
together. Atkinson said about 90 percent of the 40-piece collection came from the University's extensive Oriental art collection.
The remainder is on loan from other museums and private art collections.
Atkinson said he designed the exhibit to combine pieces of art that had never been shown together.
"Some had been exhibited separately to show certain artists, but none had been seen together as a group." Atkinson said.
The Chushingua exhibit will be on display at the museum until Sept. 24.
Two new exhibits will open in October.
"Japanese Quest for New Vision: the Impact of Visiting Painters, 1600-1900," which emphasizes changes in Japanese art during this period, will open Oct. 5.
"Photomontage," a collection of photographs put together into one large picture by artist David Hockney, will open Oct. 19.
"We try to make our collections available." Gates said. "The best works of art are on display most of the time, unless something about the piece itself makes that impossible.
"For example, paper is destroyed by light, so prints have to be kept in storage except during exhibitions."
1986-87 Performing Arts Calendar
All performances begin at 8 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium. Tickets may be purchased at the Murphy Hall Box Office.
Concert Series
- American Ballet Comedy, Oct. 9
- Denver Symphony Orchestra with Andre Michel Schub, Nov. 5.
- James Galway, flautist, Dec. 11.
- Franz Liszt Chamber Orchestra, Feb. 19.
- Merce Cunningham Dance Company, March 25.
party
■ New York City Opera in "Madama Butterfly," April 1.
Chamber Music Series
All performances begin at 8 p.m. in Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall unless otherwise noted. Tickets may be purchased at the Murphy Hall Box Office.
■ Mark Peskanov and Friends. 3:30 p.m. Sept. 28.
Cleveland Quartet with Emanuel Ax, Oct. 25.
- King's Singers, Nov. 19, at Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St.
- Juillard String Quartet, 3:30 p.m.
Feb. 1.
- Empire Brass Quintet, March 8.
- Kronos Quartet, April 12.
All performances are in the Crafton Preyer Theatre. Tickets may be purchased at the Murphy Hall Box Office.
- "Don Quixote of La Mancha," 8 p.m. Oct. 16.
- "The Best Little Whorehouse ... Texas," at 8 p.m. Nov. 14, 15, 21 and 22; 2:30 p.m. Nov. 16; and at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 20.
University Theatre
"Brighton Beach Memoirs," at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 26 and March 5; at 8 p.m. Feb. 27-28 and March 6-7
"The Marriage of Figaro," at 7:30 p.m. April 7 and at 8 p.m. April 10-11.
" `Antigone`, " at 7:30 p.m. April 30;
at 8 p.m. May 1-2 and at 2:30 p.m. May 3.
Inge Theatre
All performances are at 8 p.m. in the Inge Theatre in Murphy Hall. Tickets may be purchased in the Murphy Hall Box Office.
- "Father's Day," Oct. 1-5.
- "The Martyrdom of Peter Ohey," Oct. 29-31 and Nov 1-2.
"Last Summer in Chulimsk."
Dec. 3-7
"Come Back to the Five and Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean," Feb. 11-15
- "Pot-Pourri Productions," April 22-26.
Tickets may be purchased at the Murphy Hall Box Office, and all performances are in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre.
Theatre for Young People
"Crying to Laugh " presented by Le Theatre de la Marmaille, 8 p.m. Oct.17.
"In a Room Somewhere," presented by the Metro Theatre Circus at 2 p.m. Oct.18.
- "Reasons to be Cheerful." at 1 p.m. Jan 27-30 and at 2:30 p.m. Jan 31.
Student Concerts
- Octubafest '86, all day, Oct, 2-4 in Murphy Hall.
- ■ University Symphony Orchestra,
fall concert, 3:30 p.m. Oct. 5 in the
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
- Concert Chorale, 3.30 p.m. Oct.
12 in the Swarthout Recital Hall.
- Wind Ensemble. 8 p.m. Oct. 14 in the Swarthout Recital Hall.
- Chamber Choir, 8 p.m. Oct. 21 in the Crafton-Prey Theater
- Concert Choir, 8 p.m. Oct. 28 in the Swarthout Recital Hall
- Halloween Concert, presented by the University Symphony Orchestra, 8 p.m. Oct. 31 in Hoch Auditorium.
- Fall Major Works Concert, featuring the KU combined choirs and the
- Collegium Musicum, 2 p.m. Nov.
16 at the Spencer Museum of Art.
University Symphony Orchestra, 3:30
m. s.e. 23 in Hech Auditorium
- KU Wind Ensemble, 8 p.m. Dec. 2 in the Crafton-Prever Theatre.
- Vespers, 3:30 and 7:30 p.m. Dec 7 in Hoch Auditorium.
- Symphonic Band, 3:30 p.m.
March 1 in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre
- University Symphony Orchestra
3:30 p.m. March 8 in the Crafton
Preyer Theatre
- Concert Band, 8 p.m. March 9 in the Crafton-Prever Theatre.
- University Band, 8 p.m. March 10 in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre
- Concert Choir, 8.p.m. March 11,
the Swarthout Recital Hall.
- Collegium Musicum, 2 p.m. April 5 in the Spencer Museum of Art.
- Concert Chorale, 8 p.m. March 31 in the Swarthout Recital Hall.
- University Band and Concert Band, 8 p.m. April 13 in the Crafton-Prever Theatre
- Symphonic Band. 3:30 p.m. April 12 in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre.
On Campus
- Chamber Choir, 3:30 p.m. April 19 in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre.
- Jazz-orama, featuring the KU Jazz Ensembles and Jazz Choir, 8 p.m. April 23 in the Swarthout Recital Hall
- Spring Major Works Concert, featuring the KU combined choirs and the University Symphony Orchestra. 3:30 p.m. April 26 in Hoch Auditorium.
"We Can Make You Laugh," a comedy/game show, will be presented by Student Union Activities at 7 tonight in Woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas Union. Admission is free.
- Dow Jones and the Industrials, presented in a free concert by SUA, will perform at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Burge Union parking lot, weather permitting.
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The University Theatre will sponsor the annual Theatre Rally for people interested in trying out for Theatre productions at 7 p.m. Sunday in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall. The rally will be followed by a workshop on auditioning techniques.
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The University of Kansas Baseball Team will hold an organizational meeting for people interested in trying out at 4 p.m. Monday on the second floor of Allen Field House.
■ KU Democrats will have their first meeting of the fall semester at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union. Featured guests at the meeting will be Judy Runnels, candidate for Secretary of State, and Bob Miller and Lynne Bartz, candidates for the Kansas Legislature.
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Concert Series
Lawrence, KS
American Ballet Comedy October 9, 1986; 8 p.m. Hoch Auditorium
Denver Symphony Orchestra with Andre Michel Schub November 5, 1986; 8 p.m. Hoch Auditorium
Merce Cunningham Dance Company March 25, 1987; 8 p.m. Audition Hoch Auditorium
(913) 842-1811
James Galway, Flutist
December 11, 1986; 8 p.m.
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Frant Liste
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February 19, 1987; 8 p.m.
Hoch Auditorium
New York City Opera
in Madama Butterfly
April 1, 1987; 8 p.m.
Hoch Auditorium
DESTINATION
A WORLD OF ENTERTAINMENT
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS 1986-87 CONCERT & CHAMBER MUSIC SERIES
TTINERARY
University Arts Festival Event
Gathrie Theatre' Candida
February 8, 1987; 3:30 p.m.
Cratton Theatre 3:30
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT: MURPHY HALL
BOX OFFICE! 913 864 3982
Chamber Music Series
Mark Peskanov and Friends
September 28, 1986;
3:30 p.m.
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Cleveland Quartet with Emanuel Ax October 25, 1986. 8.p.m. Crafton-Preston Theater
King's Singer
November 19, 1986; 8 p.m.
Plymouth Congregational
Church
Juilliard String Quartet
February 1, 1987; 3:30 p.m.
Crafter-Prafter Theater
Empire Brass Quintet
March 8, 1987; 8 p.m.
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Kronos Quartet
April 12, 1987; 8 p.m.
Crafton-P剧院 Theatre
10
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
Fraternity may join activities despite probation
By Nancy Barre
Staff writer
The probation of a KU fraternity will not curb the group's activities this year, the president of the fraternity said yesterday.
The Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity, 2021 Stewart Ave., was placed on probation this summer by the University for the 1986-87 school year.
The probation resulted from the charges of a former pledge who accused the fraternity of hazing. A hearing was held May 12 after the pledge's petition was filed with the University and the Interfraternity Council on April 16.
John Creighton, fraternity president, said he didn't attend the hearing. He emphasized, however, that AKL had not been stripped of any privileges.
"The AKL fraternity can still participate in any greek activity," Creighton said.
Under probation, the fraternity participated in formal rush and will be able to participate in University activities. But the chapter's actions will be monitored by the University, local AKL alumni and the fraternity's national headquarters.
Caryl Smith, dean of student life, said. "The University of Kansas does not discuss disciplinary actions against groups or individuals."
Smith would neither confirm nor
deny that AKL had been placed on probation. She said she was authorized, under University codes regarding hazing violations, to make recommendations in most cases involving hazing.
Erik Hansen, IFC president and Lake Forest, III, senior, said that he did not attend the hearings and that the IFC was not involved in the case
"If a petition is filed with the IFC, we take care of it, but if it's filed with both the University and the IFC, the University automatically takes over," he said.
According to Hansen and several AKL members, AKL must send a monthly report on its pledge education program to KU and national AKL officials.
Creighton would not comment on the University's actions, but other members of the fraternity said the accusations were unfair. They said they thought the University was using them as an example because of the recent hazing legislation.
"It was just a personality conflict with the pledge, but the case came up and they had to do something," said Mike Mireslaw, Kansas City junior and a AKL member.
University and fraternity officials refused to identify the pledge or the specific charges.
Fraternity members said they would comply with the provisions of the probation.
"It's not that by a deal." Miroslaw said. "We just have to send in a monthly report on our pledge education program."
Hansen said he thought AKL was being treated fairly.
"I feel that it is a good move," Hansen said. "I wasn't involved in it."
but the University needs to be able to control hazing.
"The new hazing laws have increased awareness, and I think they will make the victims of hazing more aware of their rights."
Both the state legislature and the University enacted new hazing codes last spring.
Under the new state law, hazing is considered to be a class B misdemeanor. A misdemeanor is punishable by not more than six months in jail or a $1,000 fine or both
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Wednesday, August 20, 1986
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
11
Campus construction booms
By Sally Streff Staff writer
Construction projects planned for the next several years and several completed during the summer on the KU campus represent what one University official called an unprecedented boom in construction.
"This is the most amount of construction that has ever started in one year on campus," said Allen Wiechert, director of facilities planning.
Plans include the construction of a $13.9 million science library, a $12 million human development center and a $7.23 million renovation of Snow Hall.
Wiechert said construction projects scheduled to start this academic year fitted into the University's long-term plan to locate academic buildings close to the center of campus and move research and support services to West Campus.
"The idea is to move things that aren't really part of day-to-day class activities over to West Campus," he said.
The boom in construction will increase the workload on the facilities operations department, which oversees the construction projects, and also will hamper travel on campus, Wiechert said.
Parking between Malott and Haworth halls will be partially blocked and walkways leading to the computer center may be re-rooted or closed, he said. Construction of the science library will block the service entrances behind Wescoc Hall.
Construction will begin first on the human development center.
Wiechert said work would start after bids were taken this fall and would be completed in two years. The four-story, 270,000-square-feet brick building will be connected to the east side of Haworth by a ground-level walkway
The center will combine the departments of human development and family life; special education; speech-language-hearing; science and disorders; radio-TV-film; the KU Bureau of Child Research; and the KU Gerontology Center in one building.
Those departments have been scattered in different buildings on and off campus, said Jim Sherman, chairman of human development and family life.
"This will allow us to bring together all our programs," he said. "It will promote interaction of faculty and graduate students, both with each other and across departments."
The construction of the building, which has not been named, was financed by a $9 million federal grant and $3 million in private donations.
To make room for the new building, the facilities operations buildings near Haworth will be down. Motor pool, maintenance, construction and grounds crews will move to a building on West Campus in October or November.
Renovation of Snow Hall will start in the spring, Wiechert said. The $7.23 million project, financed solely by state money, will take four years to complete because the Kansas Legislature appropriated the money in two parts last session.
The newer sections of Snow will be renovated in the first two years and
then opened while work is done on the older sections. Wiechert said.
After renovation, Snow will house the University's computer science and mathematics departments.
Construction on the $13.9 million, 92,000-square-foot science library will start after bids are received next spring, he said. The library, to be built on the slope behind Hoch Auditorium, is expected to open by fall of 1989.
Renovations also are planned on an old fraternity house, at 1120 W. 11th St., that the Endowment Association acquired in the 1970s. The yearlong project will cost $300,000 and will convert the building into a home for the Audio Reader Network.
In addition to future work, two scholarship halls were renovated extensively during the summer. Ceilings, counters, lighting and appliances all were replaced in bathrooms and kitchens in Miller and Watkins halls, said Ken Stoner, the director of student housing. Watkins also received a new roof and hot water system.
Student rooms in both halls were redecorated with new wallpaper and furniture. The original hardwood floors were restored, radiators were covered and new lights and outlets were installed.
The renovation, which cost about $489,000, was funded by a trust fund set up for the two halls and coincides with Watkins' 60th anniversary.
In addition to the renovation of Watkins and Miller, telephones were installed in students' rooms in all eight scholarship halls. Stoner said. Before, each hall had only three to four phones.
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Jim Scaramucci, Overland Park senior, rode the Convincer, a machine used to simulate a car crash at 5 mph. in front of Wescoe Hall yesterday. KU Police used the machine to demonstrate to passersby the value of wearing seat belts.
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I attended First Christian Church soon after arriving in Lawrence as a graduate student. I found a great place to make new friends. I was immediately as comfortable as in my home church. The open-hearted welcome that I received and the obvious love people had for God and one another were the reasons I chose First Christian as my church home in Lawrence. I've had the opportunity to sing in the Chancel Choir and to serve in other ways. I've experienced love and support and made very special friends. I'll long be thankful for this church experience. I invite you to come and share in what I've found at First Christian.
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12
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
'Meet a Professor' tonight
By Tony Balandran
Staff writer
New students will have the chance tonight to get acquainted with the people who will teach them.
In an effort to welcome new students and to help familiarize them with some of the KU faculty, the University of Kansas' student orientation program is sponsoring "Meet a Professor" night as a part of Hawk week festivities.
Students may visit with one of more than 100 faculty members at 6:30 p.m. in their resident hall, fraternity, sorority or other on-campus housing unit, said Lovely Ulmer, orientation coordinator.
During these meetings, new students will be able to ask the faculty member any questions or discuss informally any concerns or problems they might have. The program was started last year.
Students in off-campus housing can meet with faculty members in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union at 6:30 p.m.
The purpose of the four-day Hawk Week is to allow the new student to become familiar with the University, said Ulmer.
"New student retention is different than current student retention," she said. "If new students
don't feel as though they belong,
then generally it is that much harder for them to later feel they do belong."
Hawk Week is not designed to distract new students from participating in Country Club Week, a succession of separate activities sponsored by on-campus living groups.
"Instead of having each fraternity and each sorority and each residence hall doing their own different things at different times, Hawk Week is sort of putting all the events under one umbrella." Ulmer explained.
Hawk Week began Monday evening when about 900 students attended the orientation program in Murphy Hall.
Last night more than 3,000 new and returning students gathered to learn or demonstrate the University's spirit during Traditions Night at Memorial Stadium.
From wheat waving and the Crimson and Blue to the Campanile and the Jayhawk mascot, students were given a history lesson in traditions, athletics and academic achievements of the University.
"Like any tradition," Ulmer said, "it takes a generation going to realize that how the
school year begins is as important as how the school year ends.
"I think they had a good time and that was one of the points tonight."
Tomorrow, Hawk Week will conclude with "The Beach and the Boulevard," a gathering on Wescoe Beach of exhibits and demonstrations ranging from karate to dancers.
The festivities, which begin at 6 p.m., allow new students to learn the locations of campus buildings and enjoy themselves at the same time. Ulmer said.
"Last year we had to cancel 'The Beach and the Boulevard' because of rain." Ulmer said. "This year we expect a lot of people to come out."
Tomorrow's events will be topped with a concert at 8:30 p.m. by Dow Jones and the Industrials in the Burge Union parking lot. The concert is sponsored by Student Union Activities.
Students will be able to take guided tours of several buildings on campus, such as Watson Library, Robinson Gymnastium or the Spencer Museum of Art.
In addition to the nightly sessions this week, the student orientation program has scheduled daytime academic workshops.
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1986-87 School Calendar
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1986-87 School Calendar
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Bypass gets $4 million allocation
Lawrence City Commissioners last night unanimously allocated up to $4 million for the proposed southern bypass, if the project receives the needed financing.
by Karen Samelson Staff writer
The commissioners stressed the need to divert traffic from 23rd Street to the proposed bypass, especially since KU students return and 23rd Street becomes congested.
The proposed two-lane highway, expected to cost $15.7 million, would extend from Kansas Highway 10 east of Lawrence to Clinton Lake and connect with the Kansas Turnpike between Lawrence and Topeka.
The decision was spurred, in part, by the U.S. House of Representatives' approval of $10 million for the project. The commissioners hope that by allocating the money they can
"It's important to send a signal to the Senate to say 'We're behind this.' " Commissioner Howard Hill said.
show the U.S. Senate that the city supports the bypass.
Praeger said the long-term planning included the economic development of the community, because of the access it would provide to the Noria industrial park, east of Lawrence.
Commissioners said they hoped the U.S. Senate would consider the legislation in September.
The Douglas County Commission approved $4 million last year for the proposed bypass.
Mayor Sandra Praeger said she was pleased that the proposal passed. She said she was cautiously optimistic that the Senate also would approve the appropriation, pointing out that Sens Bob Dole and Nancy Kassebaum and Transportation Secretary Elizabeth Dole, all of Kansas, supported the project.
The county commissioners approved the annexation of the Noria site on Monday, Praeger said.
blems, Praeger said. The immediate concern is 23rd Street, she said.
The bypass is supposed to alleviate immediate and long-term traf pro-
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“This is a bold decision,” said Commissioner Ernest Angino. “I think we ought to take the bull by the horns.”
Angino suggested that the city look into a potential route around the east side of town as well.
Although Commissioner David Longhurst supported the motion, he also expressed concern that the southern bypass could divert business from downtown.
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V
Wednesday. August 20,1986
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
13
Senate seems content with appointed officer
By Bill Raynolds
Staff writer
Kris Kurtenbach was not elected student body vice president, but her May appointment by the Student Senate Executive Committee has caused little controversy. In fact, the move has been called necessary.
"David (Epstein, student body president) wasn't here for the summer, and we needed someone to organize summer orientation and to attend meetings of the Student Advisory Committee to the Board of Regents," said Gordon Woods, a member of StudEx.
"We picked Kris because she lived here all summer. There's no way the office could function with no one here."
Kurtenbach replaces Ann, Brown, who resigned when she decided to accept a position as a copy editor with the Argus Leader, a Sioux Falls, S.D. newspaper, instead of going to law school at the University.
Epstein said Brown recommended Kurtenbach as a replacement at a StudEx meeting in May, and StudEx unanimously approved Kurtenbach in an emergency session May 18.
StudEx is the executive committee of the Student Senate and is made up of Senate committee chairmen or their representatives, Senate executive officers and Student Senate representatives to the University Senate Executive Committee.
Kurtenbach was KU director of the Associated Students of Kansas, a state-wide, nonpartisan student lobbying organization. She also won an off-campus Senate seat last
fall and was Epstein's and Brown's campaign coordinator.
Woods, graduate senator, said that the Student Senate rules and regulations and the University Senate Code gave StuEx the power to act in behalf of the Student Senate when classes are not in session and that StuEx had emergency powers to act on matters requiring action within one week.
Although no formal Senate rule requires that the entire Senate confirm Kurtenbach, Epstein said the full Senate might have a vote.
Kurtenbach said she wanted to be vice president so that she could have a better chance to work with the University administration toward achieving both the goals of Epstein's and Brown's administration.
Those goals included setting up a cab service for students who had consumed too much alcohol at local taverns and establishing a course guide for students.
"Their platform issues were worthwhile, and I wanted to be in a position to achieve their goals and my own," she said. "You don't have as much leverage as a senator, but now I have a better chance to work with the administration to help reach those goals."
Kurttenbach and Epstein currently are working on Course Source, an expanded syllabus that will give freshmen and sophomores detailed descriptions of general courses in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the amount of work in those courses and the professors' expectations of the students.
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The University is building a $3.5 million communications system that could give students access to library and research materials in their residence hall rooms.
Eventually, fibre-optics will be used to connect the wiring between buildings and allow the transmission of video and high speed data communication to access points all over campus.
System to link halls, library
By Colleen Siebes
Staff writer
Since May, the University has been rewiring campus buildings to prepare for the system.
In the first phase, scheduled to be completed in June 1987, copper wires will be used to set up a University telephone system that can transmit sound and low-speed computer information.
Dewey Allaire, associate director of facilities operations, said officials had no definite schedule for completing the project.
The system, when completed, would allow students who live on campus to tap into University data banks from their residences. This is not possible now, Allaire said.
The new system will transmit data
Dean search continues
chancellor for academic affairs earlier this year.
The search for a new journalism dean is continuing and is expected to get more intense this fall.
Linton also said some nominations were been made, and applications were sent to the nominees.
For example, students could save research time by looking up library resources from their residence hall rooms, and medical students could watch live operations on video.
University officials this summer placed advertisements in professional journals to fill the position vacated by Del Brinkman, said Bruce Linton, chairman of the search committee and professor of journalism. Brinkman became vice
Linton said he didn't expect much response now to the advertisements because most people who were likely to respond to the ads would be busy preparing for the fall semester.
By a Kansan reporter
Some faculty members feared the new system might replace professors.
through three wire centers or "mother computers" which will allow students, staff and faculty access to data banks in other buildings.
"The new system will provide flexibility for using a great deal of new technology that the old system couldn't." Alaire said.
Lee Young, professor of journalism, will be the acting dean until a replacement for Brinkman is found.
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14
University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
Renovation project scrambles Kansas. Burge unions' services
By Sally Streff
Staff writer
Students searching for the Oread Bookstore this fall will have to find its new location — on the fourth floor of the Kansas Union — one floor above its old home.
And those looking for student of offices will discover that some have been moved to the Burge Union.
These changes are in preparation for the first phase of the Union's renovation, a $6.5 million project expected to start in January or February and to take more than two years to complete.
Plans call for the first phase of renovation to be divided into three stages, said James Long, Union director. First, all food service will be moved to the third floor. All the bookstores then will be consolidated on the second floor. Finally, all student offices will be moved to the fourth floor.
Allen Wiechert, director of facilities planning, said that the second phase of renovation would cost about $3.5 million, but that he was sure where funds would come from or when construction would start.
Plans for the food service sections on the third floor include a restaurant with table service. Long said. At least one food service area in the Union will stay open late at night after the renovation, he said.
The main dining area will have several lines, allowing students to buy food or drinks without standing in a long line.
"In order to get a Coke now, you have to go through the whole line." Long said
Wiechert said offices and departments in the Union would be shuffled during construction so all the Union's services would remain available.
"We will vacate one part, redo it, move things back, vacate another part, do it," Wiechert said, conceding that the renovation may be confusing to students.
"Things aren't always going to be in the same place when they come," he said.
For instance, when construction starts on the third floor in January, the existing cafeteria will be moved to the second floor where the Prairie Room now is.
tions and the Student Senate, which were next to the cafeteria, moved to temporary space in the Burge Union during the summer Student organizations now are on the third floor of the Burge Union, and the Student Senate office is on the first floor.
The offices of student organiza-
The offices will move again Oct. 1 into new offices being constructed on the first floor of the Burge Union, said David Epstein, student body president.
As he looked around the unfinished offices in the Burge Union, Epstein said. "It will be quite an undertaking to condense to this size."
But Long said he was sure the inconvenience and confusion would be worth it. The Kansas Union's old floor plan already confuses most people, he said.
"You really have to know the building to get through it," he said.
Renovation of the Union will improve its organization and will offer more advantages to students, especially in food service, Long said.
In addition, the renovation will improve the Union's air conditioning and other mechanical functions. Long said.
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- Games away will feature give away items and added entertainment such as the "Famous Chicken" on Oct. 11.
- KU's seven home game schedule includes games with North Carolina, Nebraska and 1985 National Champion Oklahoma.
- Purchase your student season football ticket for $28 at Allen Fieldhouse after Sept. 1.
94
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Sept. 13 North Carolina
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Sept. 27 Indiana State (Band Day)
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Oct. 11 Iowa State (Homecoming)
Oct. 4 Southern Illinois
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In fact, there are few places like Kief's anywhere. You don't need to shop Kansas City for music or sound, Kief's does it better just ten minutes from your door. Whether you're looking for the latest hit albums and tapes at the lowest discount prices in town or whether you prefer to select from one of our thousands of classical selections; we've got you covered at Kief's. Our vast inventory affords our customers an enormous selection they simply will not find anywhere else. What's more, if we're out of an item you need we'll be glad to hold it for you when it returns to stock or special order it for you at no extra charge.
Our commitment to the future is dramatized by our tremendous selection of compact discs. Again, you don't need to shop around once you've been to Kief's. Kief's also carries a complete line of blank audio and video tapes and a great assortment of the best record and tape care products-all discount priced every day.
Next door, you'll find Kief's Gramophone Shop with the best in audio from around the world. You'll find Kief's Gramophone Shop has more high quality lines, more competitive prices, and more service than anyone for miles around. The Gramophone Shop has plenty to tickle the fancy of the most discriminating audio buff, yet the Gramophone Shop also can outfit the dorm dweller with a quality system at a student price.
Yes, Kief's and the Gramophone Shop are where Lawrence and KU shops for sound. We've been here 27 years and we'll be here whenever you need us at 25th & Iowa in the Holiday Plaza. So...if you're new to town; welcome to Lawrence. If you're old friends; welcome back and you're welcome anytime to Kief's—No.1 for anything in music and sound.
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9
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan
15
Lobbies change grant system
United Press International
WASHINGTON — Universities are paying lobbyists up to $50,000 a month to avoid the standard competitive review process by helping secure millions of research and development dollars from Congress, public records show.
S spurred by the lobbying, House and Senate members have interceded in the traditional grant award system — a competitive review by panels of university or government scientists — to aid their alma matters in obtaining hefty awards.
In 1985, for example, Sen. Allonse D'Amato, R-N.Y., attempted to procure nearly a third of a $90 million defense research program budget for Syracuse University, where he earned both his undergraduate and law degrees.
In a more recent case of academic politicizing, several senators, including Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., and Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole banded together to win passage June 26 of a bill ordering the Pentagon to pass $55 million in scientific research money to nine select universities.
Of that figure, $36.6 million will be used for a new library at Northwestern University and academic buildings at Syracuse and the Rochester Institute of Technology, despite a law that requires Defense Department programs to fulfill military purposes.
Critics say such lobbying tactics and congressional intervention are undermining the traditional competitive process for assuring that the best-qualified researchers win
grants, although the vast majority of the $65 billion the government awards annually is distributed competitively.
"Professionals in the field are in the best position to judge (scientific quality) - certainly better than members of Congress," said Robert Rosenzweig, president of the Association of American Universities, a group of the nation's largest research universities.
Under pressure to compete on the political front, 12 of 57 members of Rosenzweig's association have bypassed the review process since 1983 and five are clients of Cassidy and Associates, a firm that lobbies Congress for universities' interests.
Asked about his push for Syracuse, a D'Amato spokesman said, "For someone to stand up and say the elected representatives of the people should not have a say in where the tax dollars are spent, that's wrong."
On the Senate floor recently, Sen. John Danforth, R-Mo., complained that universities had become "organizations that apply to lobbyists, pay lobbyists, lobby the Congress, just like anyone else."
Reports to the House clerk's office show 11 of 16 universities that appear likely to escape competitive review and receive up to $110 million in two new congressional appropriations bills, have hired Washington lobbying firms. Six of the schools retained Cassidy and Associates.
The firm's employees include ex-staffers for influential members of Congress, including House Speaker Thomas "Tip" O'Neill, D-Mass., and past presidents of Indiana University and the University of Alabama. Both
universities are among seven schools allotted non-competitive grants under the fiscal 1987 Energy Appropriations bill.
D'Amato tried in 1985 to secure nearly $30 million for Syracuse from a $90 million, fiscal 1966 budget for a new Pentagon research program that had been designed to assure competitive review of all awards.
A congressional source said concerns about D'Amato's attempt and the June 26 bill contributed to a decision by the House and Senate Armed Services committees to parde the defense program to $50 million in 1987.
The June bill requires the Pentagon, which already had chosen certain schools for 1986 research grants and may have delivered the money, to give eight of the nine selected universities $35 million of its 1986 research budget.
However, the bill's language also requires universities to use grant money for research.
Since 1971, the Mansfield Amendment — passed in the wake of Vietnam War abuses — also has required the defense secretary to assure that Pentagon awards bear "a potential relationship to a military function or operation."
A Northeastern University spokesman said $13.5 million in Pentagon money awarded for engineering research would be used for a university library.
A Rochester Institute spokesman said $11.1 million would go mainly for academic services, which he asserted fulfilled the defense mission because some students would work someday for defense contractors.
Surgery department gets chairman
By Karen Samelson
An internationally known surgeon will become the new chairman of the department of surgery at the University of Kansas Medical Center, Executive Vice Chancellor D. Kay Clawson announced in July.
The surgeon, Laurence Y. Cheung, 42, will replace Frank W. Masters as chairman in December. Masters will step down from his administrative position but will continue to teach.
Although Cheung will not begin his official duties until Dec. 1, he spends a few days at the Med Center every other week to work with Masters and to get to know the department.
"I'm so excited about it," he said Monday. "I'm more excited about it now than when I accepted the job."
Cheung is professor of surgery at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and chief of surgery at the St. Louis Veterans Administration Center.
He received his medical degree in 1968 from the National Defense Medical Center in Taiwan. He completed an internship at Holy Cross Hospital in Salt Lake City and a residency at the University of Utah Medical Center before going on to Washington University in 1977.
Cheung, who specializes in gastrointestinal surgery, said he felt good about KU's resources, surgery department and staff.
faculty.
As chairman, Cheung plans to oversee the education of graduate and post-graduate students and to stimulate more research among the
Cheng will also continue to work with patients and will encourage faculty to be more active in the hospital.
"It is very critical that I do see patients and operate," he said, stressing the need to be a role model for students.
Cheung said his salary had not been established, but it would be comparable to his salary at Washington University.
His wife, Lola, is even more excited about the move, he said, in part because of the quality of the Shawnee Mission School District in Kansas City, Kan. The Cheungs have two children, ages 8 and 12.
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Campus
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
University Daily Kansan
Director manages state of the unions
Allan Hagman/KANSAN
By Kristi Schroeder
Staff writer
He's in charge of a $10 million operation, and much of that money comes from KU students' pockets, but he is not well-known outside of the buildings he runs.
James Long is director of the Kansas and Burge unions. As director, he is in charge of the management of the unions and the variety of services they provide.
Long came to the University of Kansas three and a half years ago. He replaced Frank Burge, who had been director for 30 years. Long came to KU after working 11 years at the Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. Before that he worked at the Emporia State University Union.
Within the Kansas and Burge unions, Long is responsible for supervising the seven major department heads. The Unions have 250 to 300 employees — depending on the time of year — working under these heads of departments.
"My responsibility is to set the goals for the entire operation, to muster our resources whether they are human or financial, and to achieve those goals, be short- or long-term." Long said.
Amar Hagmani/KARAN James Long, director of the Kansas and Burge unions, oversees operations at both unions, including the recent renovations.
Long works with the departments on personnel operations, budget planning and goals for the services and buildings that he supervises.
He coordinates the efforts of the seven departments, each of which are assigned different duties. The departments screen candidates for jobs within the different areas and do the hiring themselves.
A typical day for Long usually begins with doing as much of the administrative business as possible, such as taking care of correspondence and completing necessary reports in the morning.
"I'm biased," Ambler said. "Because ultimately I selected him."
Ambler described Long as competent and capable.
KANSAS UNI
In the afternoon, Long tries to go out into the main building and visit the other areas under his control outside of the Kansas Union. These include the cafeteria in Wesco Hall and the Burge Union. But Long said that he didn't get out to visit them as often as he would like.
During the latter part of the day, Long said, he tried to meet with his department heads, although he didn't do this every afternoon. Long also meets with David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs and his immediate boss.
Ambler said he was attracted by Long's career, his professional competencies and his personal characteristics.
"He made me feel he was the right person for the job." Ambler said.
Long's ability not to get rattled under pressure is a prerequisite for his job, Ambler said. The Union director needs to be someone who doesn't get upset or lose perspective in the face of a crisis.
"With a $10 million operation, you need someone who can roll with the punches," Ambler said.
KANSAS UNION
"The renovations to date are on target." Long said.
Rolling with the punches has been a little bit harder later for Long, who is putting the renovations for the Kansas Union into action.
Plans for the renovation began two and a half years ago. When Ambler hired Long, he did it believing Long would be a driving force behind the renovation.
The renovations have included a lot of extra duties for Long. The preconstruction moves have been underway for the past two months. This has included moving the Oread Bookstore to the fourth level of the Kansas Union.
The moves have been planned to be made in the most timely and efficient manner, Long said.
"And he proved my point," Ambler said.
"One of our biggest challenges is to keep the operation open while the renovation is taking place.
"We know that as a result of the actual renovation processes beginning, that it will be a frustrating period not only for patrons of the building, but some of those that have offices in the building, as well as our own employees," Long said.
An in-depth look was taken at the major activities that occur in the Union to see what effect the renovation might have on students, Long said.
"We believe at this point there are very few activities that we will not be able to handle at all over the traditional ones we've handled in the past." Long said.
Some moving of activities from the Union will occur, but with cooperation, flexibility and understanding on
the part of the planners of the activities and the participants, minimal problems should arise, Long said
Because the Union is being renovated, not added onto, no additional space is going to be made available. Long said. This creates the problem of moving offices and services around, rather than to new areas.
Actual construction in the Union will not begin until January or February, he said. One of the biggest parts of the renovation is the change in the Kansas Union Bookstore
Steve Word, manager of the bookstores, said the renovation had brought many new major projects to
See Long, p. 5, col. 4
KU gets grant to study environmental toxins
By Sheri Donaldson Special to the Kansan
Now that Congress has approved $2 million in defense-research funds for KU, researchers on West Campus and at the University of Kansas Medical Center intend to proceed with their plans to study environmental toxins, or poisonous substances.
The funds received final approval June 26 in a 56-42 vote in the U.S. Senate. The research will be funded by the Department of Defense.
According to Elias Michaels, professor of biochemistry and leader of the toxin research, the funding will cover an approximate two-year period and involve 21 investigators. About $1 million of the funds will finance research at the Lawrence campus, and $1 million is marked for Med Center research.
"There will be many different projects. For example, toxic nerve gases, such as those used in World War I, will be studied," he said. "We want to know why something like a nerve gas causes brain damage and what is the best treatment for a soldier or a population of civilians."
"Since there is a moderate degree of danger involved, this type of research will be conducted at the Med Center. It has been designated an authorized facility with security procedures to handle this type of material."
Michaelis said the research conducted at the Lawrence campus would involve the study of certain low-level toxins.
"New toxins found in fish, bacteria, fungi and other substances have been discovered. We want to find out how some of these toxins affect people," Michaelis said.
These experiments will be conducted on West Campus at the biological research labs in the Biological Research Center.
All of the research will be unclassified and the results made available to the public when the studies are completed, Michaels said.
The $2 million will cover all aspects of the research. Michaelis said the funds would pay for the purchase of new instrumentation, supplies, glassware and the salaries of research associates. The associates are individuals at the doctorate level and beyond who will function as researchers under the direction of key faculty members.
Michaelis explained that some
neurotoxin research was already giving on at KU, but that the federal funding would enhance and amplify the program. He said KU researchers had communicated directly with research units in the Army Medical Command, a division of the Army concerned with the treatment and protection of individuals injured during battle.
"They are aware of our research plans," he said. "The Army Medical Command wants to send a scientific committee out here to review the program and discuss specifics.
"So, this research is not free-flowing. It's not like Congress can give us the money and we can do just anything."
The approval to allocate the funds came after a lengthy battle. The legislative fight began June 6 when the Senate voted 58-40 to kill defense-research funds for 11 universities. Sen John Danforth, R-Mo., led the opposition. He claimed that the funding was based more on the political clout of the universities' senators than on the merit of the research proposals.
Danforth argued heatedly against the proposed funding during the final vote June 26. During his speech, he said "What we are saying is that it doesn't matter whether they have the capability to do research or not. What matters is pork-barrel politics. What matters is having the right friends on the right committees of Congress of the United States."
A House-Senate conference committee restored the funding June 18 in a compromise version of the legislation. With a push from Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., $55.6 million for defense research was restored to the bill; $2 million of it is intended for KU.
Dole said the research monies were for equipment and facilities related to research.
"Without state-of-the-art facilities, universities cannot effectively compete for research funds," he said. "Until they possess such facilities, institutions continue to be at a serious disadvantage in the competition for research funding and will be denied the opportunity of developing their full potential."
Those opposing the funding felt that direct appropriation by Congress undermined the conventional merit-visit route. Danforth said in
See Toxin, p. 5, col. 5
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2
University Daily Kansan
Campus
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
Quickest and fittest survive battle to park
By Lynn Maree Ross Special to the Kansas
Hunting season begins today.
Basketball season begins today.
The license is yellow and white
costs $3 a year; the prey is a parking
space at the University of Kansas.
On the main campus, nearly 5,000 hunters have only 2,951 spaces to choose from. However, this may change in the near future.
Donna Hultine, assistant director for parking services, said that last February they hired Barton-Aschman Associates, Evanston, Ill., to study the campus parking situation.
Jean Keneipp, senior vice president of the company, said the company would study the University's present and future parking needs.
she said.
"The result will be a program that will keep pace with the University."
The information for the study came from two sources: campus statistics and student and faculty surveys.
The University supplied Keneipe with information about the number of students, faculty and staff on campus each day; the number of people using each building; and the number of cars on campus during peak hours.
"The problem we see with the yellow zones is they're not where people want to park." Hultine said.
For example, the most congested yellow-zone parking is by Green Hall. Meanwhile, the yellow zone west of Memorial Stadium is rarely full, she said.
law school.
Kevin Campbell, Lawrence third-year-law student, said that two-thirds of the law students had to park at least a half mile away from the
The best bet is to get to school earl. Campbell said that he usually found a place to park because he was
'The problem we see with the yellow zones is they're not where people want to park.'
- Donna Hultine assistant director, parking services
at school first thing in the morning. "If you're there after 8:30 you might as well forget it," he said.
at school first thing in the morning.
However, some students don't get to school early. When they do get to campus, they sit in their cars, hunched over the steering wheel. They peer right and left, like vultures, waiting for someone to leave the parking lot.
Sometimes the students sit in their cars with the engines turned off. But as any hunter knows, being prepared is the best guarantee of bagging the prey. Some students, aware of this, sit in their cars with the engines turned on.
A few seconds can be the difference between getting a parking place and being late to class.
as class time approaches, some students tempt fate and park in a red zone.
Parking services issued about 7,000 tickets last year to people with parking permits who had parked in the
wrong zone.
The worst time to find a parking place is at 10 a.m. on Wednesday. According to the University, that's when the most students are on campus, Keneipp said.
Knowing how many students are on campus during peak hours is essential to the study, he said. So the company hired a plane and took an aerial photograph of the University at about 10 a.m. on a Wednesday a few weeks before spring finals.
In addition, the company sent surveys to faculty members. A student survey appeared in the April 25 edition of the Daily Kansan.
To encourage students to respond, the company offered three cash prizes. Hultine said the prizes were awarded in May to Kent Smith, Victor sophomore, $100; Evan Ice,
Newton senior, $50; and Dennis Kuyper, Kansas City, Kan., senior,
$25.
Even though the company offered prizes, Kneipp said, less than 50 percent of the students responded. About 50 percent of the faculty responded.
The company is still compiling the information. But sometime in late November or early December it will present its findings to the University and recommend changes, Keneipp said.
Those recommendations could include ways to finance major changes in parking such as parking garages.
Until then, it's open season on parking spaces.
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Wednesday, August 20, 1986
Campus
University Daily Kansan
3
TOWER 1
The flags above Fraser Hall appear to jut out of the foliage on the east side of thing visitors see when they arrive in Lawrence, campus. The flags, which can be seen from miles away, are usually the first
COLEMAN'S 1983 REPLACEMENT OF THE INNER CIRCLE FOR THE NEW FAN CLUSTER
Fraser flags wave at the early birds
Wilfredo Lee/KANSAN
Charles Leroy King, left, and Bill Kelch raise the KU flag. King and Kelch raise the flags every weekday around 7 a.m.
By Rachelle Worral
Staff writer
As the sun rises each morning, so do the flags above Eraser Hall.
Those who raise and lower the flags get the fringe benefit of seeing the campus and Lawrence from one of the highest points in the city.
It's a long climb to the roof of Fraser. Three flights of stairs from the seventh floor lead to the small towers from which the flags are raised.
The ritual begins before most students are on campus. Facilities and operations workers raise them each day at 7 a.m. and lower them at
10 p.m. Flags have been flying high above Fraser since 1967.
At 4: 54 a. m., campus is peaceful as Charles Leroy King and Bill Kelch take the elevator up to the seventh floor where a door in the stairway leads to the attic.
"I go up there and look down at the football field, King said." We can see pretty much everything from up there.
King, who has raised the flags weekday mornings for the past seven years, said that other workers at Fraser also raised the flags. The night crew takes the flags down in the evening.
"When it's pretty up here is when all the students are here."
The flags are not raised if winds exceeded by 25 miles per hour or if it is raining. King said. People often call asking where the flags are when they aren't raised.
"It's been a challenge on account of a lot of people always missing the flags downtown," he said. "Somebody calls in and wants to know where the flags are. You can see them 10 miles out.
"one time, Bill put the KU flag in upside down."
After the flags are lowered at night, they are kept draped over a rod in a large wooden bin in the attic. Kelch removes the U.S. flag first, and he and King start up the metal spiral staircase which leads to another room with another spiral staircase.
The towers from which the flags are raised are much bigger than they look from the ground. Each tower has eight large vented and screened windows. Most of the windows are bolted shut, but the favored view is from a north window in the tower where the KU flag is raised. The view encompasses the football stadium
They recieved a phone call because of that.
and the downtown.
The thick flag poles are anchored to the grated floors and extend through a small opening in the ceiling. The poles extend about 20 feet above the roof and the flags are 8 by 12 feet.
As Kelch tries to raise the flag, it snags and has to be lowered, sweeping the floor as it descends.
Kelch said, "I was always taught that the flag was not supposed to hit
the ground. I was always taught that in Boy Scouts."
They sometimes must climb up the ladder propped against the opening when the flag becomes snagged.
"You have to be careful or the wind will yank you right out of there." Kelch said.
King said visitors could go up into the tower if they got permission from the facilities and operations department.
TE
Amy Rhoads/KANSAN
Prof spins science facts into tastv tales
Thor Holmes, graduate student and teaching assistant in biology, studies life.
By Evan Walter
Staff writer
On his birth certificate he is called, "Thorvald Holmes," but he tells his students to call him Thor.
Holmes tries to give his students an appreciation for biology by delivering course material with humorous plays and anecdotes.
He believes biology relates to everyone on Earth, and people need better knowledge of his field, which he calls "the study of life."
There are four sides to Holmes' personality: the scientist of mammology, working on his dissertation; the biology educator, teaching Biology 104, introductory biology; the performer; and the concerned environmentalist trying to educate and warn his students about how the present generation's doings will affect the future.
Holmes combs his long, reddish hair behind his head in a ponytail, making no attempt to hide his receding hairline. A beard of the same color extends below his collar. He wears Benjamin Franklin-type glasses and an amiable smile. He speaks boldly and clearly.
"It it just is spooky how little most people know of how the world works," he said. "Some of us scientists should be addressing that problem.
"Science is real jargonicism. We need people willing to speak in Bud and Ethel's sophistication of English, to tell them what we're doing."
Holmes has been teaching at the University of Kansas since 1980. In a few months he expects to finish his dissertation. He is uncertain about what he will do after that.
He works at the Museum of Natural History in Dyche Hall, which should make him feel at home. Fossils, seashells, bones and shrubbery stock the shelves of Holmes' house, and a pair of large whale bones appear to stand guard on both sides of his front door.
Holmes said that when he was young, he wanted to become a scientist, but now he would rather be a teacher.
"I would be content to be a T.A. (teaching assistant) for the rest of my life," he said. If the University offered him a full-time position educating children at the museum, he said, he would give up research
Holmes said that he liked teaching because he is good at it and that he preferred teaching to conducting research.
"In my whole life, only 20 people will read my dissertation," Holmss said. "I want a bigger audience.
"Scientists need some interface to communicate their work to the people who are paying for it."
The natural sciences are too important to be handled by the usual didactic practices, which Holmes said were often characterized by teachers who speak in monotone and teach without concern for showing the relevance of scientific material to the
outside world.
"In the study of life, the teacher should be alive." he said.
Holmes said that he didn't like orthodox teaching methods.
"I just fix it so my class is not an onerous experience," he said. "Getting the students to show up is half the battle. The trick is to make the information interesting so they'll suck it up. You've got to sneak around. It's kind of like Walt Disney."
"A lot of people view introductory biology as a cut course. I'm a teacher, not a cutter."
Holmes tells his students not to be intimidated by his status and that the only difference between himself and them is that he is in graduate school.
When teaching, he translates biological information into parables of rhetoric that students can easily relate to. In Holmes' class, animals, plants, cells, and chemicals all come to life and often speak.
For example, a bony fish sensing the presence of a starfish — a predator — says, "Uh-oh, I better get out of here."
The pine trees produce "turpins" — liquids that function as both
insect repellent - also "bandworms"
Holmes tries to make the objects of his teaching both interesting and logically sound.
Dorothy Scott, biological sciences secretary, said that Holmes treated all of his students as friends.
"The students love him," she said,
"he has a way of dealing with you.
He does not carry his degree on his shoulders. He's an even Steven man. If he has a problem, you'll never know it, because he always greets you by asking how you are — how 'you' are.
"He has the most smashing, vibrant personality. He hasn't changed in the three years I've known him."
Scott said students had told her that Holmes treated them as if they were as important a part of the class as he was.
Holmes' students generally perform well on the tests administered to all the introductory biology classes, he said. Out of 37 students in one semester, 19 received A's.
In addition to classroom activities, Holmes welcomes telephone calls at home on nights before tests — the "biology hotline," as he calls it. He also takes his students on a field trip to the Topeka Zoo and a trip to the banks of the Kansas River.
"I've tricked a lot of people into thinking I'm responsible for their effort," he said. "As far as I know, ever since I've been teaching, my students have been performing better on the average."
Behind the humorous facade and facts of interest, Holmes tries to give his students serious messages and warnings about the world.
"Everybody should have a picture of the planet Earth, taken from the moon, in their kitchen," he said.
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4
University Daily Kansan
Campus
Wednesday, August 20 1986
Prof to lend heritage to S. African history class
By Dana Spool Staff writer
Staff writer
South Africa. Those two words tend to command attention.
Those two words are what Surendra Bhana is all about.
Bhana will be the Langston Hughes Professorship in history this fall. He will be teaching two courses in South African history.
Bhana is a professor and head of the history department at the University of Durban-Westville, in Durban, South Africa. He talked about the differences between the two universities.
"The big difference is that we appear to be a lot more rigid in our approach. Authority doesn't allow for a free discussion, development of individual thinking." he said.
However, Bhana does not think he is like the average professor in South Africa.
"I have a very informal approach to elicit free discussion," he said. Bhana searches for creativity in his students and praises them for being different.
Different is perhaps the best way to completely describe Bhana's life. He was born in India and moved to South Africa after his eighth birthday.
"It was not my decision. My grandfather went there in the early 1900s. I went to South Africa in 1948 for the first time as a little boy," he said. "I just happened to find myself in that part of the country.
"My wife was born in South Africa and is of Indian descent. Families went there without thinking too much about it."
His family spent the first part of this year in New Haven, Conn., with Bhana. However, his family returned to South Africa in July; he remained in the United States.
The tension in South Africa bothers him constantly.
The news coming out of South Africa does not help ease his mind.
"The suppression is there. Yes, it bothers me a great deal," he said.
"In these troubled times one can anticipate the rate of crime. It does bother me that my family is there."
"News is controlled to such an extent that things would appear to be normal," he said. "There is a great deal of silence in the black township. There are scares about bombs going off. This is what really comes to mind."
"The number of people who have
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"I had no problem," Bhana said about traveling to the United States from South Africa. "If active in politics, then someone may have troubles. Those kind of controls are there."
"It has been going on for a long, long time. Three to four decades. Unequal society. White minority at the expense of the blacks. Unequal for the whole society."
died has mounted. It has actually devastated the blacks."
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Bhana's life is easier then many people in South Africa because he is not heavily involved in politics.
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The only comfort Bhana knows is that his wife and three children live in a secluded area and are surrounded by family and friends.
The secluded area includes families of Indian descent. There are few, if any, blacks and no whites. Bhana knows segregation first hand, especially in the home life.
"Simply with the blacks: Don't have TV in their homes and not even electricity," Bhana said. "The average white in South Africa watches TV."
Television as Americans know it is unheard of in Bhana's township.
"TV is state-owned. Not much of choices. It is extremely dreary and boring." Bhana said.
Whites in South Africa stay home and watch "important things" such as "Dallas" every night, Bhana said, although Dallas is certainly not the most important thing going on in his hometown today.
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"People live in different areas. Very little contact with anyone different," he said. "Maybe a little at the work place. The ignorance of each other is great."
ed bv everyone.
Bhana's family is better off than a lot of the Indians in South Africa. Blacks are the majority in South Africa, and whites are the minority, but Indian descendants are oppress-
Bhana's three children are enrolled in a private school in Durban. The school only allows a very small percentage of blacks and even fewer Indians.
"It took them a little time getting used to the way the courses were taught. My son kept saying everyong asking 'Are you who?' They kept mistaking him for Spanish," he said.
The school couldn't prepare the children for life in the United States, but that didn't keep them from enjoying themselves, he said.
The school year in Durban is arranged on a calendar year. It begins in mid-February and breaks for three to four weeks in July. The students return to school and break for the year in November. The school system is not divided into semesters, and students graduate after reaching 10 matriculation, which is equivalent to the senior year in high school.
Bhana teaches at a segregated university that includes blacks and Indian descendants. Yet, the academic world is one of constant turmoil for Bhana.
His university has been closed since winter break. Because the university is controlled by the state, Bhana is still paid, but that does not help the toll it takes on him.
"Every university in is in trouble," he said. "The question is whether they will reopen. It is very hard to be in a university where it can be boycotted or shut down."
"The work place is affected. Society is affected," he said.
Lawrence seems to be a second home to Bhana. He received his master's and Ph.D. at the University of Kansas. He majored in U.S. history with an emphasis on recent America. He was a teaching assistant from 1967 to 1969.
The credentials Bhana submitted when he was being considered for the
professorship are endless. He has written books and articles; he has taught at various schools; he is working on a project on Indentured Indians; and he just finished a research program in New Haven, Conn.
The benefits KU will receive from the man who wrote this list are also good, said Bill Tuttle, professor of history.
The food in the United States did not upset the children, he said. But it is different from the food in South Africa.
South Africa is presently in the news almost every day and just the chance to learn something about South Africa from someone who lives there is important and valuable, Tutte said.
"We are very lucky that he is in the country," he said.
Tuttle has benefited from his friendship with Bhana as well as his educational relationship.
"He is very spiritual," Tuttle said.
"It means that in terms of a deep
the lifestyle." Bhana said of his children while they were in New Haven. "The 16-year-old really thrived. She is an honor student."
friendship, he tries to make it very close."
Their friendship has lasted over the miles for 15 years. It's a friendship that started when Bhana was a teaching assistant under the direction of Tuttle. The correspondence between them fills a two-inch thick file on Tuttle's desk. And that is only part of it, he said.
"I call him a couple of times a year," Tuttle said. "We have done this since he left."
The other relationships in his life are also deep. He met his wife at KU, where she was studying psychology. She is the only woman psychologist who has been in "Who's Who in South Africa."
His son is fascinated with becoming a pilot and is certain that only the United States trains pilots.
"They are very much in love with
"Great deal of emphasis on eating out here and fast food. We have an occasional trip to the fast-food place," he said.
Fast food is not attractive to Bhana because he is a vegetarian
"I eat a lot of eggs, fish and things like that," he said. His oldest daughter is also a vegetarian. Bhana's decision to become a vegetarian was one of mind over body.
"I couldn't put flesh in my mouth. I kept thinking that this was living flesh at one time," he said.
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Wednesday. August 20,1986
Campus
University Daily Kansan
5
GTAs teach with 'empathy'
By DeAnn Thomas
Staff writer
Although they may get no respect from their students, graduate teaching assistants are competent and can bring a fresh outlook to their courses, the chairman of the French and Italian department said recently.
Most first-year courses and half of the second-year courses in the French and Italian department are taught by GTAs.
"It's a psychological problem, not a matter of teaching, for freshmen who come to KU and have mostly GTAs," said Norris Lacy, the chairman.
"Students may feel they re not getting the best KU has to offer."
Although most GTAs have little or no teaching experience, they are often fresh and enthusiastic, Lacy said. Most establish a good rapport with the students and are effective teachers.
All departments of the University use GTAs. Math, English and foreign language departments frequently use GTAs to teach the introductory courses.
Janet Riley, assistant to the vice chancellor of academic affairs, said GTAs were qualified to teach any beginning level courses.
Several department chairmen said that complaints about the quality of GTA instruction occurred no more
often than complaints about the quality of regular faculty instruction.
Margaret Baker, department secretary for Germanic Languages, said it was much better to use GTAs for the introductory courses.
"They are closer to the students' position," she said. "It hasn't been that long since they were in school and they know what it is to learn a language. It makes them a little more empathetic."
Charles Himmelberg, chairman of the department of mathematics, said GTAs make it more feasible to get elementary courses taught within the budget.
"It would triple the budget if we tried to teach students with all faculty." Himmelberg said.
GTA's average between $6,000 and $7,000 a year, officially working 20- to 22-hour weeks, he said.
There is an 80 percent chance that GTAs will teach the introductory math courses, Himmelbog said. a few professors teach 101 courses. The math department hires between 45 and 50 GTAs each year.
The job also supports the GTAs while they put themselves through graduate school. Himmelberg said.
Barbara Paris, administrative assistant to the director of freshman-sophomore English, said that the English department was hiring at least ten more GTAs for the 1986-87 school year because of the increase
Haskell Springer, director of freshman-sophomore English, said GTAs usually taught ENGL 050, 101, 102 and 203 courses.
in enrollment this year.
Several departments require foreign GTA applicants to take the Test of Spoken English. The test consists of a recording that asks questions which test the fluency and vocabulary of the applicant.
Himmelberg said one sample question asked the person to describe how to ride a bike. The answer requires the ability to think through the process and intelligently answer in English. The answers are recorded and reviewed by a committee.
The applicants are required to make a score of 240 from a possible 300, which Himmelberg said was among the highest standards in the country.
Himmelberg said that only Colorado State University required the same high score of its applicants. Other universities required a score of 220.
The Department of Academic Affairs requires all new GTAs to attend a meeting one week before school starts to orientate them with teaching instructions and how to manage a class.
The GTAs then meet with their department heads and are given further instruction on how to teach their particular course.
him and Long. Plans call for the bookstore to completely cover the second level of the Union.
Long Continued from p. 1
The Oread and the textbook departments will be next to each other, Word said. The used-textbook department of the bookstore is presently in the top 10 in North America in sales.
But the renovations include the entire building. Designs of the building are reviewed periodically by the state architecture department, Long said.
Even with all of the hectic work going on around him, Long remains cool. And he always remains open to his employees.
"Even on a bad day, he's always open to see people." Word said. "He has his quiet times when he is preoccupied."
the June 6 Senate debate that researchers had become lobbyists and that proposals needed to be judged by their merits and not just pure politics.
Continued from p. 1
Supporters of the funds argued that merit reviews by other scientists of the funding proposals often are biased in favor of those made by elite East or West coast schools. Direct congressional appropriations may be the only way some schools have a fair opportunity to secure funds.
He said that the lack of a peer review system within the Defense Department for the allocation of funds meant that the best projects would not be funded and basic research would suffer.
Francis Horowitz, vice chancellor of research, graduate studies and public service agreed that
prestigious schools sometimes had a better chance of securing government research funds.
"It is true that the schools on the East coast have built reputations, and proposals from those schools may be more acceptable. That's part of human judgment and fallibility." she said. "But I am basically very supportive of the peer review system. The problem is that it is not used in the Department of Defense."
Michaelis said KU was not taking an easy route by not having the merit of its proposals reviewed by scientific colleagues.
Toxin
"The University of Kansas was not out to bypass the peer review system where scientists look over the quality of our work," he said. "We submitted a research proposal and discussed it with representatives."
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University Daily Kansan
Campus
Wednesday, August 20. 1986
Various services available Watkins hospital in healthy condition
By Kristi Schroeder
Staff writer
Students often knock the quality of services offered at Watkins Hospital, but despite these insults the hospital at the University of Kansas offers many services not found in other Big Eight schools.
James Strobi, director of student health services, said the services offered by the various universities differed because of tradition more than anything else. For example, the pharmacy in Watkins is run through Watkins rather than the School of Pharmacy.
"KU is probably about the largest in number of staff and divisions," Strobl said. "Colorado is close to KU in size, and Mizzou is the smallest."
The University of Missouri has smaller health service buildings on campus because the medical center for the school is right across the street, Strobli said. The other schools, such as KU, do not have med centers that are accessible to the students on the main campuses.
KU has 10 full-time physicians and one psychiatrist. Kansas State University and the University of Nebraska have seven and the University of Oklahoma has eight physicians.
Strobl said one of the most significant differences other than services offered is the amount paid by the students for services at the health centers.
At K-State the lab charges for all tests done by that department, he said, and KU does not charge for most lab services.
The hospital can perform 85 percent of the lab services in the hospital and the students are not charged for these tests. The other 15 percent are tests of a specialized nature and must be sent out. The hospital charges the
student the same amount as the hospital must pay for the tests, plus $3 for shipping and handling, Strobli said.
In-patients are charged for their lab tests and any tests that must be read by a pathologist are charged to the students.
The health fee paid by KU students covers a large portion of the bills normally charged by other hospitals.
Iowa State University receives half of its income from tax revenues. Nebraska doesn't charge for as many services as some of the other universities, Strobl said.
A special service offered by Watkins, free of charge, is direct billing to students' insurance agencies. Watkins has two full-time people who work in the insurance billing office. But Strobl said this service might be in jeopardy.
"That service costs us a lot of money," Strobli said.
When the hospital has to start cutting corners, the insurance billing may be one of the first to go, but other types of cuts may also be ahead for Watkins.
K-State closes its hospital in the summer, and Strobl said that Watkins would face the same kind of closing in the future to help cut expenses. The in-patient services offered by Watkins also are very expensive to maintain and may face elimination in the future.
"In-patient care takes a lot of hands," Strobl said. "Salaries take a big bite out of the hospital."
Iowa State was forced to close its in-patient services four years ago. Nebraska just renovated its in-patient services and Missouri has no in-patient services, Strobl said.
Watkins accepts students after the regular clinic hours of 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. If a student signs in at 4:31 p.m.
he will not be able to see a doctor, but a nurse practitioner is available to examine him. The emergency room is open 24 hours a day.
Watkins has a full-time dietary consultant, Ann Kohl - a service offered by other universities, such as K-State and Iowa State.
Kohl is available to answer and aid students with any type of problems regarding food.
"I counsel on any and all eating concerns," Kohl said.
Kohl helps design nutritional habits to improve athletic performance, modifies diets for weight gain or reduction and improves the qualities of some diets.
Any person who comes to Kohl for weight reduction must first be screened by a physician or the nurse practitioner. This is done for the student's own protection, she said.
"I don't think the word is out all over campus," Kohl said. "But once a person comes in for counseling a lot of times I get calls a few days later
Kohl is busiest in the fall and spring and most of that business comes from referrals.
A year ago Watkins began a sports medicine program which was so well-received that it has expanded its hours. The program offers students the chance to learn more about injuries that can result from participation in sports and ways to prevent these injuries.
from her friends wanting to come in to see me."
"The program was open 8 to 9 every morning." Strobli said. "Second semester we were open from 8 to 10 and we are continuing to grow."
Robert Ohlen, executive director of Lawrence Memorial Hospital, said the services offered by his hospital and Watkins were pretty similar. Lawrence Memorial does not keep any statistics on the number of college students from the county who use its services.
The best way for students to find out the services offered at Watkins is to call the hospital. The lobby of the hospital also carries pamphlets and has bulletin boards with health education information on them.
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Pharmacist Cathy Thrasher prepares prescriptions at the Watkins Hospital pharmacy. Thrasher has been an employee at Watkins for two years.
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Wednesday, August 20, 1986
Campus
University Daily Kansan
7
Trouble leads many to religious zeal
By Rachelle Worrall Staff writer
Students look in dismay at the friend they used to party with. The friend no longer has a beer in his hands, but a Bible.
People are turning to religion to fill a vacancy in their lives. But for some it becomes an intense and short-lived addiction that may end as abruptly as it began.
Eric Goff, Ballwin, Mo., junior, was in trouble a lot when he was younger and turned to religion for an escape when he was a high school freshman. After a friend convinced Goff to go on a three-day retreat, he became a "born-again Christian" for about a year.
Goff said he and others turned to religion out of desperation.
"I think it's that they've hit rock bottom. It's a different way out." Goff said.
The church Goff attended was supportive, but he said, "I think it was more of a scapegoat. It's an addiction" to takes as much of your time."
It takes as much of you.
Like others, Goff said that while he was religious, he always carried a Bible with him. The devotion to religion ended almost as quickly as it began. He decided he was not doing any better than he had been before he became religious.
"I'm more agnostic now than anything else," he said.
Dave Lovell, youth minister of Ithaca, the college youth group at the First Presbyterian Church, 2415 W. 23 St., said that he became more religious about nine years ago.
People become more religious to satisfy a need, he said. More than 350 college students attend his church.
"I was in high school and was a heavy drinker. I was using alcohol as a crutch. I became religious and that crutch has never failed." Lovell said.
People going from one extreme to another, he said, was a regular occurrence.
"They're redoing just what they were doing before. They haven't found what they're looking for
because they have not started looking yet," he said. "That's not what being a Christian is, I see it all the time."
Anne Clevenger, chaplain at the Canterbury House, an Episcopal church, 1116 Louisiana St., said many people went from the extreme of being wild to being very religious.
"It's almost like a pendulum." she said.
Many people who lose interest in religion may do so because they've become disillusioned after realizing the initial zeal they felt when they became born-again does not happen all the time. Cleverenger said.
"It's this enormous hole that we all have. But the only thing that can fill it is God," she said. "But a lot of the things that we turn to, all of those are very sincere efforts to fill this very real need. I would not say that anybody's pursuit is trivial or very shallow."
Jim Musser, director of Campus Christians, 1016 Kentucky St., said he became religious in search of fulfillment and came to have a personal relationship with God.
"I didn't turn to religion," he said.
"I turned to a relationship with Christ. It was turning to a personal God for my needs.
"As a child growing up, there were a lot of inadequacies in my own life. There was a lack or void there. So through peers, I began to realize there was a little bit more to life."
A recent increase in church attendance by the middle class has occurred because people have acquired all the material wealth they can, yet still they find themselves unfilled, he said.
"Materialism is rampant right now. I think that materialism is the God of the age, of this generation," he said. "This is a very difficult time for campus ministries because students aren't really committed as they were 19 years ago."
There are more people going through the motions of being religious. Musser said, but more people aren't becoming Christians. More people may be attending church but this is not an indication of spiritual religion.
Some people may be zealous for a year or two, but may not be firmly rooted in their religious beliefs, he said. The zeal can't last forever, and eventually it may burn out.
The Hair Station
Maranatha Campus Ministry, 927 Ohio St., is known for its extreme Biblical interpretation.
"I've met some people who've gone from one extreme to another in a sense," Musser said. "There are some people like that. We tend to pick up on stereotypes. I don't think it's a black and white issue."
Sometimes the churches that follow a strict interpretation of the Bible, such as Maranatha, are called cults, Betthauser said. But that is only because they are often small, close-knit groups. Maranatha has about 30 members.
Beth Betthauser, congregation member and former KU student, said, "We're probably considered more raidical than say a conservative church. With God, it's all or
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Betthesauer, 24, became a Christian as a KU junior, and felt some of her sorority sisters were bothered by the fact she was religious. Her parents just thought it was a phase she was going through.
"I guess I did carry my Bible around," she said. "I guess because I was reading it."
She said she didn't understand why her sorority sisters seemed to duck when they saw her coming except that they were afraid because their own sins might be exposed.
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8
University Daily Kansan
Campus
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
Catholic center's prayers heard: Expansion to be dedicated soon
By DeAnn Thomas
Staff writer
Legal struggles and space problems aside, the half-block addition to the St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center, 1631 Crescent Road, was scheduled to open for student and faculty use on August 15.
The center's expansion was plagued by petitions from its neighbors complaining of possible parking and traffic congestion since the plans for the addition were first announced in the summer of 1884. The problems were solved by redesigning parking facilities at the center and making a few other changes.
As a result of an out-of-court settlement with neighbors, the size of the sanctuary was cut down, and the planned chapel was eliminated so there wouldn't be an overpowering building in the area. Despite these concessions, members of the center are glad to finally have a place that will accommodate them.
Krische said that of the 5,000 Catholic students in Lawrence, 3,000 had voluntarily registered with the
"The building gives us an identity," said the Rev. Vince Krische, director of the center "People will know who and where we are."
center.
The original three-story home that the center was located in could not sufficiently contain Sunday masses or weekly student meetings.
The center began holding services in Smith Hall in 1978 to handle the growing congregation. When the congregation outgrew Smith Hall in 1984, services were moved to Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
Because they didn't have an appropriate meeting center of their own, Krische said, some members might not have felt like attending church in the University facilities.
"Some students had attended classes in Woodruff just a day or two before," Krische said. "They felt kind of strange coming into the auditorium for the service."
The expansion includes a sanctuary, two seminar rooms and three meeting rooms. The original center will be remodeled to contain a small library and the kitchen, Krische said.
So far, all the comments about the expansion have been positive, Krische said. Careful and serious planning went into making sure the church fit in with the neighborhood and with the University.
Dan Markowitz, development director for the center, said the stone
structure was similar to buildings on campus.
"It is not just a church, it's a center for students." Markowitz said.
Laurie Blackburn, Overland Park senior and member of the center's council, said the center was designed with students in mind.
"A lot of students have already asked to use the pipe organ for recitals." Blackburn said.
"It's really an alive church. The church is really trying to go places. The priests go to great pains to get student involvement. Every committee has students on it."
Rooms are now available for students to study in. The Moral Development and Conscience Formation can meet easily now at the center. The Formation is composed groups of students from the different University schools that discuss how to apply their religion to their work
Workers worked throughout the summer to complete the St. Lawrence Catholic campus center, which is opening this month.
Blackburn said the sanctuary was designed with acoustics in mind.
"The floors aren't carpeted because that eats sound." she said.
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Krische said the members of the center had a lot of musical talent. When they met at Smith or Woodruff, no piano was available, so violins, guitars, flutes and some brass accompanied hymns and meditation
Darcy Chano/KANSAN
music.
Krische said that the center was a recognized University organization, although it was not funded by the University. Many aspects of the building attempt to communicate the church's relationship with students, faculty and alumni.
is named, is the patron saint of students, Krische said.
St. Lawrence, for whom the center
Krische said the historical and natural features of the church were a part of the building that students might find interesting.
"Native Kansas limestone was used for the walls of the church and to connect the building to the original
center, Krisene sai.
An educational history of Catholicism in Kansas will be incorporated into the building. A cloister connecting the original center to the expansion is representative of St. Benedict, who founded monastic schools, which were usually taught in cloister-structured buildings.
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11.6
Wednesday. August 20,1986
Campus
University Daily Kansan
9
Lawrence ready for AIDS occurrence
By Dana Spoor Staff writer
Staff writer
The disease has not hit Lawrence, but the chance and the fear are still there.
While research is being conducted and seminars have been held on AIDS, Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, Lawrence has made few preparations for any occurrence of the disease.
AIDS is a disease that attacks a person's immune system, making them more susceptible to diseases. People with AIDS normally die of complications because of the breakdown of the n immune system. The only proven ways of contracting AIDS are through contaminated blood and intimate sexual contact. Unborn children can contract the disease from diseased mothers.
A laboratory headed by Charlie Wood, professor of microbiology conducts research on AIDS.
body produces to fight a disease.
Developing antibodies against a disease will make people immune to it.
"We're more concerned with trying to identify useful products for testing antibodies for AIDS virus." Wood said. "We are trying to identify a link of the virus that people will develop antibodies to."
Strobi, director of student health,
said. "We won't do anything en masse."
Antibodies are organisms that the
The researchers test genetically engineered material. The material has been designed for research to reduce the risk of contracting AIDS.
People who want information on the disease can contact Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas in the Burge Union.
"We are still testing." Wood said.
"If a person wants to talk about it we have peer counseling. It is a person to talk to over the phone, not especially trained, but if they have feelings they want to off of their chest anonymously it helps," said Ruth Lichtward, spokeswoman for GLSOK.
We're more concerned with trying to identify useful products for testing antibodies for AIDS virus. We are trying to develop a link of the virus that people will develop antibodies to.'
Charile Wood Professor of microbiology
"We are more interested in research. We are looking at new viruses of AIDS patients."
These new viruses include one that affects the brain and nerve cells and is different from other viruses associated with AIDS, Wood said.
The lab is not the only step Lawrence is to combat AIDS.
"We have some films," James
"We do a lot of it individually. A lot of us haven't really been affected by it. Although AIDS is not a gay disease, when you say AIDS people
Wood said that one of the myths associated with AIDS is how it can be caught.
think gay."
"It it not through casual contact. It is mainly through intimate contact," he said. "It is actually spreading into heterosexual, but it still seems to be contracted in the homosexual."
Other myths are associated with the disease. Lightwird said.
"We get a lot of screwy ideas. Like casual contact. We run into that kind of attitude." she said. "It is a justification for prejudices. Once we talk to them tell them the truth, they say 'That's not so bad then.'"
People are often referred to an AIDS hotline, she said.
"We have contacts in the medical community if they want to talk to someone who has factual information," she said.
Another way Lawrence is watching out for AIDS is testing samples of blood donors.
"For the past year we have started testing," said Margaret Gray, lab technician for the American Red Cross in Lawrence.
They take blood from the donor, and it is tested for the virus. The test takes about four hours.
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14
University Daily Kansan
Campus
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
Campus active through thick of night
By Kirk Kahler
Special to the Kansan
Although many students are too busy partying or sleeping to realize it, there is a significant amount of activity on the KU campus throughout the night.
Workers in several offices on campus perform their duties throughout the night.
You would think most people would dislike these jobs because the abnormal working hours could updle life's normal activities. But the workers meet their late-night chores positively for a variety of reasons.
Mark Sellers, 1012 Emery Road, works for the department of facilities operations and is one of three people in charge of cleaning Wescoe Hall. Although his shift is from 5 p.m. to 2 a.m., he said, he prefers this shift to others he might work.
He said that he liked the shift because students were out of the building, giving late-night workers more opportunity to complete the large amount of work to be done every night.
"This gives you a better chance to get raises and promotions." he said.
Sellers also said the night shift allowed more time to have a little fun with the supervisors and co-workers. This is one of the ways to deal with the sleepless, late hours.
Ernie Steinbach, 2713 Maverick Lane, works the same shift as Sellers and said he liked the night work so much that he took a demotion to obtain the shift. Steinbach said the cameradeir and unique experiences made the job worthwhile.
the only bad aspect of the job is rude and disrespectful students who let him know that they look down on him and his job. Steinbach said.
Both Sellers and Steinbach said that the job sometimes got in the way because they had jobs during the day also.
But janitors aren't the only late-night workers on campus.
The University Information Center is a 24-hour operation that needs someone in the office all night. Kristen Henderson, who often works the night shift, said that because she was
a student, the job sometimes became difficult to manage.
Henderson said there were numerous things to occupy time while trying to fight the boredom. When the phones aren't ringing, possibilities include updating information folders and current events bulletin boards, entering calls into the nightly report and reading and watching T V.
But the best diversion, Henderson said, is often the bed in the room so the worker can get what little sleep is possible. She said it was very difficult to answer the phone and the caller's question adequately when awakened from a sound sleep.
Some of the offbeat calls are one of the few highlights of the job. Henderson said. Some people call just to talk to someone. One caller has become known and expected to call because of the frequency of his calls.
Lazy journalists using the service to research stories; callers who get mad because their question can't be answered; and abusive drunks are the only calls that really irritate the workers. Henderson said.
"The only good thing is that you can always hang on," she said.
Several KU policemen are also out all night patrolling the campus. Officer Paul Stanton, 3425 W. 9th Court, said the night shift could be extremely boring, especially during the summer when there are fewer students
Most of Stanton's time is spent driving around the campus, walking parking lots and performing minimal traffic enforcement. He said he basically looked for any suspicious activity and made himself available to answer the few calls the department received.
Stanton battles sleep and boredom by turning up the radio in his car, eating sunflower seeds or doing foot patrol. He said this became a difficult battle at times because it affected his state of awareness, which could put a strain on his reaction time.
Paperwork does not take up much of his time because paperwork results from arrets, which are few during his shift, he said.
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The variety of situations he encounters makes the late-night hours worthwhile. But he said of all the personalities he had dealt with in his years of police work, drunk college students are the worst with regards to respect and conduct.
He said that he thought it was easier to fit into the student schedule, because, if scheduled right, he can be finished with work, school and studies by noon. He then has the rest of the day to sleep.
Workers at the University Computing Center are also among the campus all-nighters. Bill Parrson, 1417 E. 15th St., said he enjoyed working all night at the center.
Parrison's duties during the night include saving information taken from the computer, checking out material to students, mounting tapes
There is usually plenty to keep busy, Parrison said, but when things slow down, boredom sets in. He fights this by reading computer manuals, playing with the computer and developing his own programs.
on the computer and whatever else may require his attention.
Parterson said that his shift was attractive because it was quieter than during the day. There is no one to distract him from his work, he said, and he doesn't have to deal with supervision.
At any given time, passersby may witness the lone burning of late-night lampo in practically every building on campus. This, combined with the regular nightly activity, makes for a rather busy KU campus 24 hours a day.
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Where to call
Readers who have ideas for stories or photographs can call the Kansan newsroom at 814.4810.
For ideas about campus and area coverage, ask for John Hanna, campus editor. For magazine ideas ask for Monique O'Donnell or Michelle Johnson, magazine editors.
For arts and entertainment ideas or on campus items, ask for Grant Butler_arts editor.
For sports, call Frank Hansel, sports editor. For photo ideas, ask for jackie Kelly, photo editor
For questions or complaints ask for Lauretta McMillen, editor, or Kady McMaster, managing editor
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Wednesday, August 20, 1986
Campus
University Daily Kansan
11
Assembly sets College's direction
By Brenda Florv
Staff writer
College Assembly is unnoticed by many, but the decisions it makes affect anyone working toward a degree in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
College Assembly is the governing body of the college. It makes the final decisions for the college curriculum and faculty matters, such as sabbaticals and promotions.
James Carothers, associate dean of the college, said the purpose of the college was to give students a broad education, not to educate students in a particular field.
"Students may not have a coherent conception of why they are required to take certain classes," he said. "But over the long run a student will understand the value of a liberal education."
Students do have a voice in these decisions. Twenty percent of the assembly is reserved for students. However, Carothers said, not many students had shown an interest in participating.
"I think it's because many of the things we do are routine," he said.
He said that faculty participation varied depending on the issues. It's greatest when curricular changes are being considered
- There will be changes in the school in fall 1987.
The number of courses that used to fulfill the humanities, social and natural science requirements have been cut by 90 percent.
Robert Lineberry, dean of the college, said the reduced number would fit the needs of the general education student instead of leaving students
with a slight background in many subjects.
Other changes will require students to enroll in English 101 immediately upon entering the college or be placed on probation. They will be required to remain enrolled in the English courses until they have completed successfully English 102. The same requirement will apply to Math 101 and Math 102.
Another change will eliminate logic as an option for the math requirement. Those students who wish to use logic to fulfill a requirement can use it for the communications requirement.
In addition, students will be required to enroll in four semesters of one language instead of having the option of enrolling in two semesters of two languages.
College Assembly consists of all faculty and staff — anyone with the title of instructor — and graduate and undergraduate students. The faculty members are automatically in the assembly, but the student representatives are elected during student senate elections and can't exceed 25 percent of the faculty voting membership.
Pam Houston, assistant to the dean of the school and secretary of the assembly, said that last year the assembly consisted of 563 faculty members, 90 undergraduates and 30 graduates.
"Last year we didn't have enough people to fill all of the slots," she said.
The assembly gives final approval of issues. The standing committees
review and study topics and then present their opinions to the whole assembly.
The assembly has five committees; Committee on Sabbatical Leaves; Committee on Faculty Appointments, Promotion and Tenure; Committee on the Budget; Committee on Graduate Studies; and Committee on Undergraduate Studies and Advising.
Margaret Jones, Wichita senior,
said the best way to get active on
the assembly was to be on a committee.
She is on the Committee on
Undergraduate Studies and
Advising.
Students cannot be elected to the Committee on Sabbatical Leaves or the Committee on Faculty Appointments, Promotion and Tenure. But they can serve on the others and are elected by their peers on the assembly.
"Anyone who wants to can get involved," said Shawna Tunnell, Hutchinson junior, a member of the Committee on the Budget. "It's a great opportunity to get involved in the college. They do consider what you say, but I'm not sure if it changes the final decision."
She said that the job was interesting because she met many faculty members and deans.
"It's interesting knowing what's going on in the college," she said.
Lineberry said that he would welcome more student participation.
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(Membership Only $10.00)
THE STORY OF A REBEL AND HIS BIKE
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PEE-WEE BIG ARVOK
- 4 FREE tape rentals ($10.00 value)
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- Daily rental $1.99
Tues. rental $ .96
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ound
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TWO NINTH EDITIONS OF THE NEW YORK EDITION
TENTH EDITION BY ROBERT L. GILLINGTON
FIFTEENTh EDITION BY MARY MORRIS
TWENTH EDITION BY JOHN H. BRYAN
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841-7222
12
University Daily Kansan
Campus
Wednesdav. August 20. 1986
Waves of students talk and gawk on cement shore of Wescoe Beach
By Kristi Schroeder
Staff writer
You can't build sandcastles there and you won't be able to get your feet wet, but a beach does exist on campus, and it is THE place to go.
Wescoe Beach, the open concrete area in front of Wescoe Hall, has become the place to hang out, lie out, study, talk and watch people go by. But the attraction it holds varies from person to person.
Alan Salts, Lenexa senior, said that he liked the Beach for two reasons.
It's a place to hang out between
classmates. And a place to
watch all the activity.
The Beach is blanketed with people almost any time of the day. About the only time it is deserted is on cold days in winter and on rainy days.
Rick Snyder, professor of psychology, said basic need to be around people and to talk to people seem to be the biggest attraction of the Beach.
He said the central location of the Beach most likely aided its popularity. The friendly and open atmosphere is also an attraction.
"It's like a bar without the bar," he said.
But the bar without a bar hasn't always been around for KU students to take advantage of
Mildred Clofdelter has worked for the University for 47 years. She spent 42 years working with the Adams
Alumni Center and has seen a lot of KU students over the years. She graduated from the School of Business in 1941. At that time, plans for a building such as Wescoe Hall were a long way off.
As a matter of fact, in 1941, former Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, for whom the building was named, was just graduating from college. The $7.68 million building was dedicated in April 1974 and was designated the humanities building.
Clodferlater said the place to hang out when she went to KU was a fountain located in the Kansas Union. The fountain was a drugstore-type place; drinks were served and a jukebox played.
"Wescose seems to be pretty popular too," she said. Clodfelter has specific reasons for thinking the Beach had had so much popularity.
"It's centrally located," she said.
"And it has space to sit, and it can expand."
Clodfeller said the addition of the cafeteria behind Wescoe also drew people more towards that part of campus. But the attraction wasn't strong enough to pull Clodfeller there after the alumni offices moved into its current offices. After the move, she said, she didn't get down to that part of campus very often.
Allen Wiechert, director of facilities planning, said the popularity of Wescoe was not anticipated
Original plans for Wescoe had the building 20 stories high. After the bid came in, the amount was over what was available through state and federal funds. Wiechert said.
when it was built.
The state hired a new architect who redesigned the building, but the new project still called for more money than was available. The Board of Regents and Chancellor Archie R. Dykes requested that the balance come from student fees, Wiechart said.
The final design for the building came as a collaborated effort to keep cost down, to allow pedestrian access at a central location of campus and to keep the view open to the south.
So the building was designed to allow an open walk-through for students and not to canyonize Jayhawk Boulevard with tall buildings, he said. But with all of these plans, officials still weren't expecting the popularity of the Beach.
"Some popularity was anticipated," Wiechert said. "We thought the south side would be used more."
But the large amount of students who flock to the Beach each day was completely unexpected. Most students come through the Beach at some time on the way to class, and it's a good location for meeting friends. Wiechert said.
"It's the heart of campus," he said.
12
Shauna Norfleet/KANSAN
Wayne Gray, Kansas City, Kan., junior, and David Allen, Shawnee senior, spend time relaxing on Wescoe Beach.
$ave Your Money Shop the Kansan, Daily.
CLINTON PARKWAY
A. K. BROWN
ASSEMBLY OF GOD 3200 Clinton Parkway
Pastor Ronald Mickley
COLLEGIAN FELLOWSHIP 9 a.m.
Meeting at All Seasons Motel
Skyline Room 23rd & Iowa
MORNING WORKSHIP 8.15 & 10.45 a.m.
SUNDAY EVENING 7:00 p.m.
WEDNESDAY NIGHT
BIBLE STUDY 7:30 p.m.
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Welcome Back K.U. Students
Come take a peek at our fall collection
• Dresses
• Sportswear
• Coats
Jay SHOPPE DOWNTOWN
Hours
M-Sat. 9:30-5:30
Thurs. 4 til 8:30
Sun. 12:30-5:00
FREE PARKING
PROJECT 800
Welcome Back K.U. Students
Come take a peek at our fall collection
• Dresses
• Sportswear
• Coats
Hours
M-Sat. 9:30-5:30
Thurs. 4 til 8:30
Sun. 12:30-5:00
Jayhawker Towers
Apartments
Great view of campus, or of the Jayhawker Towers POOL!
Closets:
11 feet wide, dresser built in
Two Sinks:
No waiting for your roommate!
BATH
BED RM
140 square feet
Big Picture Window
Thermostat:
All Utilities Paid!
Location:
On campus, on bus route.
LIVING/DINING RM
240 square feet
Paid Cable TV Hookup
Carpet:
Wall to wall, several colors.
Plan for the future
choose your space in a lease option
INDIVIDUAL CONTRACT
Jayhawker Towers
1603 W. 15th
843-4993
Jay 1
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Great view of campus,
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dresser built in
Walls:
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Two Sinks:
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BATH
BED RM
140 square feet
Big Picture
Window
Location:
On campus,
on bus route.
Thermostat:
All Utilities
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240 square feet
Paid Cable
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Private Entrance:
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Carpet:
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INDIVIDUAL CONTRACT
Jayhawker Towers
1603 W. 15th
843-4993
Great view of campus,
or of the Jayhawker
Towers POOL!
Closets:
11 feet wide,
dresser built in
Walls:
Solid, rich brick
Two Sinks:
No waiting for your
roommate!
BATH
BED RM
140 square feet
BED RM
140 square feet
Big Picture
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Location:
On campus,
on bus route
Thermostat:
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240 square feet
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Carpet:
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Jayhawker Towers
1603 W. 15th
843-4993
Campus
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
University Daily Kansan
13
Agency eases anxieties of pregnancy
By Rachelle Worrall Staff write
Staff writer
Being a pregnant student didn't seem to leave many choices for Lisa, who became pregnant as a 19-year-old sophomore at KU.
The three choices available to any pregnant woman are to carry the baby full-term and keep it; it put it up for adoption; or have an abortion.
Birthright of Lawrence Inc, $921^{1)$} Massachusetts St., gives support especially for those who want to keep their babies or give them up for adoption.
Lisa (not her real name) said that she didn't go to any support agencies because she didn't feel she had a choice other than abortion at the time and was also too ashamed to talk to anyone about it.
"I should have gone some place to get help, but it was easier just to call the doctor and make an appointment to have it done.
"All I wanted to get rid of it. It wasn't until after I'd had the abortion that I thought about what I'd done." she said. "It's been almost two years, but I think about it almost every day. I think I'll do some thing."
"For about 6 months after the abortion, I was very depressed and suicidal off and on. I finally went to my friends for help when things got really bad."
Joy Fry, a volunteer at Birthright, said the agency ran free pregnancy tests and gave brochures about the different choices available to pregnant women.
About 50 percent of the women Birthright helps are single, she said. Birthright provides no information on where to get abortions, but tries to
get the woman to realize it is a form of surgery, and she needs to carefully choose a doctor.
Details that should be discussed are the type of procedure to be used; the type of anesthetic to be used; and whether a follow-up to guarantee that all of the fetus was removed will be done.
Birthright provides maternity and infant clothing for women in need of financial help. They also have a mutual assistance home program for women who no longer have a place to live because of their pregnancy. They are placed with Lawrence families during their pregnancies.
Birthright offers no counseling on contraceptives; it prescribes chastity.
A secretary at Dr. Dale Clinton's office, 15 E. Seventh St., which provides contraceptives and is the only abortion service in Lawrence, said the office did perform a number of abortions, but she couldn't give actual numbers.
The office provided no counseling before or after abortions were performed, she said.
The Douglas County Health Department gives information on the choices available to women. Nancy Jorn, nurse at the health department, said that women who decided to have abortions might want to check into the before-and-after counseling provided by abortion agencies.
Agencies that provide before-and-after counseling in addition to abortion services are Comprehensive Health Associates in Overland Park,
Where to call for help
Birthright of Lawrence - 843-4821
Douglas County Health Department — 843 0721
Watkins Hospital — 843-4455
Catholic Social Services of Lawrence — 841-0307
the University of Kansas Medical Center and Wichita Women's Center.
Watkins Hospital's Health Education program provides information to pregnant women. Watkins usually refers pregnant women to counseling and provides contraceptive counseling, said Janine Demo, health educator.
"There are a lot more who do end up pregnant than people realize," she said.
The Catholic Social Services, 320 Maine St., provides the only infant adoption service in Lawrence, said Becky Snyder, director. They also provide pregnancy counseling.
Last year there were 21 pregnancy clients and 1 adoption, she said.
"A lot just don't think about adoption as a viable option," she said. "Abortion is so easy and available. A lot of people just don't know about adoption."
"I think intellectually they want to,
but the emotional part is hard."
Call today...
Sell tomorrow
KANSAN 864-4358
CATHAY RESTAURANT
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a 10% discount on Sunday evenings with KUID
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Lunch 1 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
Dinner 4:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. (Sun. until 9 p.m.)
842-4976
ATTENTION: Students, Staff and Faculty
FUNTIME MOVIE RENTALS
The FUJI Absolute
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With alloy rims, an alloy frame, and alloy hubs, the FUJI Absolute is a very classey ride. No matter how far you ride, the FUJI Absolute is a great deal. Test ride one today!
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--special sauce, temping toppings... all blended together for a 'Pizza-Perfect' pizza that tastes just right.
Friday, Saturday, Sunday
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Not valid with any other offer
EXPIRES
9.28.86
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Open
M-F 11 a.m. -2 p.m.
Tu-Sa 5 p.m. -10 p.m.
Sun-Mon 5 p.m. -9 p.m.
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Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Guide to Good Dining
REQUIRED EATING FOR MIDNITE MUNCHIES 101. DOMINO'S PIZZA
Orientation Week only.
Starving students, take note! This orientation week, crack down on a case of the midnite munchies with Domino's Pizza.
Nothing soothes the studious soul better than a piping hot pizza, baked golden brown and loaded with lots of luscious, 100% real cheese and savory sauce. Now, from 9 p.m. until closing, get a 12" pizza with one topping of your choice for only $4.99!
Every pizza is made fresh and hot to order with the finest ingredients available. Real dairy cheese, our
The hungries are History this orientation week with Domino's Pizza! Call for a piping hot pizza delivered to your door (or Dorm!) in 30 minutes or less.
Lawrence
841-7900
1445 W. 23rd Street
841-8002
832 Iowa Street
OPEN FOR LUNCH!
11 am - 1 am Sun - Thurs
11 am - 2 am Fri & Sat
$499
Special
DOMINO'S PIZZA
Name
Address 16005 DPE-030
Get a 12 custom-made pzxra with one topping and one can of Coke, for ONLY $4.99!"
Limited delivery area.
One offer per order
Good at listed location(s)
Offer valid from 9:00 am - closing
Expires. At the conclusion of Fall
Sæmester orientation week
One call does it all!
DOMINO'S PIZZA DELIVERS FREE.
Enjoy
Coke
Limited delivery area.
Our drivers carry less than $10.00.
Travel Domoine Pizza, Inc.
University Daily Kansan
Campus
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
Low salaries send some facultv elsewhere
By Evan Walter
Staff writer
Professors at the University of Kansas may teach with a firm commitment to excellence, but many think this is not reflected in their paychecks.
Faculty salaries at KU are low in comparison with those at peer institutions. This concerns members of the KU administration.
"This is a serious issue because our faculty have been underfunded for some years," said Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor.
The Board of Regents has identified a group of universities as peer institutions with KU: the universities of Iowa in Iowa City; North Carolina in Chapel Hill; Oklahoma in Norman; Colorado in Boulder; and Oregon in Eugene. All of these
schools, the Formula Funding peer group, are similar in size and curriculum and are in states with similar per capita incomes.
A listing was compiled of salary and compensation averages at KU and its peer group institutions from July 1, 1985, to June 30, 1986.
On the salary-comparison averages, KU ranked third out of the six institutions in the Formula Funding peer group. The chart listed the salaries of assistant, associate and full professors from each of the peer schools.
In addition, the organizers of the data, who are from the office of institutional research and planning at KU and other schools, compared the average salary for each classification of professor at KU with similar classifications at the peer schools.
The average salary for full professors at KU was $1,917 less than the weighted total average for all five schools plus KU. When excluding KU, the average salary was $2,372 less.
The average salary for associate professors at KU was $2,465 less than the weighted total average and $3,085 less when excluding KU.
The average salary for assistant professors at KU was $871 less than the weighted total average and $997 less when excluding KU.
"There may be some faculty who are pleased," said Melvin Dubnick, associate professor of public administration. "but I haven't run into them.
"We're not as well-paid as we should be. It is possible to do better at other institutions."
The Kansas Legislature has implemented raises of 2.5 percent for the University, but the faculty still are not pleased, Dubnick said. The only thing that can be done is to go before the Legislature.
"I think it is safe to say that most members of the faculty believe it is too low," said Robert Lineberry, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. "They are significantly lower than our peer institutions."
Chancellor Gene A. Budig and the Regents have been working with the Legislature on improving pay for faculty and staff at the University, Lineberry said.
Education and
The Regents goal is 8 percent increases for fiscal 1988, but the final decision belongs to the Legislature.
Budig instructed the deans of the schools and the college to implement a 3-percent salary increase.
Cobb said, "It is my personal opinion that salaries won't improve significantly until the economic conditions of the state improve. The economy of the state has been in doldrums for some time."
One major impetus for the salary increase this year has been that the Legislature and the general public are aware of the relationship between higher education and the economy, Cobb said. Other states that have had economic recovery have invested into higher education before the recovery.
Lineberry said, "The difficulty with faculty salaries predates recent economic problems of Kansas."
The salary problem also has led to a problem with teachers leaving for other institutions.
"There is not a year that goes by that we do not lose to other institutions," Lineberry said.
Although there hasn't been an unusually high number of people leaving the University, Cobb said, KU has lost some important people.
"I don't think the number of people who leave has increased dramatically," he said. "We've had some very significant losses in the past year or two."
Filling vacant spots, which are usually taken by assistant professors, hasn't been a major problem for the University, Lineberry said. KU's wages for assistant professors are competitively based on market considerations.
The salary problem has mainly hit the associate and full professors, he said.
Orientation a success
At spring and summer orientation this year, 4,367 new students enrolled for the fall semester, which is 591 more than last year's orientation.
In addition, 2,722 parents came to the program, which is 1,009 more than last year.
The figures were released in July by Lovely Ulmer, KU director of orientation.
P
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Kansan Classifieds
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
864-4358
Lawrence First Church of The Nazarene
1942 Massachusetts Phone: 843-3940
Dr. G. Ray Reglin, Ph.d Senior Pastor
Sunday School 9:45 a.m.
Sunday Morning 10:50 a.m.
Worship Services
Sunday Evening 6 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study 7 p.m.
Make this your church home away from home
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ANSAS
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PLYMOUTH CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
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Dr. Homer D. Henderson Kevin Poidevin-Brown George B. Owen
Church School 10 a.m.
Worship Celebration 10 a.m.
10 a.m.
Adult Seminars, Sunday 9 a.m.
925 Vermont (Downtown Lawrence) 843-3220
Plymouth Church is accessible to persons with handicapped conditions.
WHAT KIND OF PIZZA EATER ARE YOU?
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Offer expires Sept. 21, 1986
Cash value 1.00C
Limited delivery area
$3/$2 $3 off a large or
$2 off a medium
Godfather's Pizza™
Dine-in, Carryout
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Limit one pizza per coupon. Please present
coupon before ordering. Not valid on
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Offer expires Sept. 21, 1986
Cash value $1.20K Limited delivery area
$2/$1 $2 off a large or
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Wednesday, August 20, 1986
Campus
University Daily Kansan
15
Courtship must flourish into marriage, expert says
By the Associated Press
CARSON, Calif. — After years of familiarity between spouses, the embers of love may start burning low, but in order to keep the flame lit, long-term couples must continue courtship behaviors for life says a clinical psychologist.
The reason a relationship is so alive at the beginning is that the two people involved are working very hard to keep it vibrant, says Susan Regas, a lecturer in marriage and family counseling at California State University, Dominguez Hills, in Carson.
"They tell each other how attractive they are and what they like about each other," she explains. "When people are just getting to know each other, they do a lot of things to get it going. They do romantic things such as sending love letters, sending a rose. People, as soon as they get married, stop doing this."
The early fire won't be kept alive without hard work, she said, because it is hard work at the beginning but a little easier because the relationship is new.
"You did a lot of thinking about how to keep the other person happy. That has to be done even in the 15th year of marriage, or else it will die," says Regas, who offers some suggestions on keeping a marriage fresh.
*Learn to love yourself first, something you must do before you can love anyone else. People who don't feel good about themselves don't give to the relationships; they pull things from other people.*
■ Really identify what you want in the marriage. A lot of people don't think about what they want in a relationship. They just feel unhappy, so they nag. Recognize what you want and communicate that to your partner in a way that doesn't blame him or her. Don't say for instance. "You're a crummy partner, you're never home. Say. 'I feel sad when I left alone
every night at home."
Always keep the relationship alive sexually and romantically. Keep up or start doing the candlelight dinners, romantic walks and handholding. Set aside time to be devoted to affection and sex.
Have friendships outside the marriage. There's no way one person can meet all your needs. Each spouse needs his or her own friends and the pair also need joint couple friends. These need to be good couples, not troubled couples. The basis of the friendship should be strength, not trying to rescue the couple. However, outside friendships can't be more important than time spent alone as a couple.
- Beware of becoming over involved with each other. A couple can get enmeshed, too involved. So when one spouse is in a bad mood, the other takes it as a personal offense because every need is being met by the spouse. Unless there are other people in your life, you can't stop that involvement.
- Be able to enjoy being alone, and have outside activities or interests. As long as you're having fun together regularly as a couple, the activities you do without your spouse, such as sports, reading, photography or other hobbies, will add excitement and interest to your marriage.
Trust each other. Without trust, you cannot know whether the other person will stay around to work out problems. Commitment to stay together is the underlying basis of a good marriage.
Commitment means you will not only be there for the highs of passion but also for the lows when your spouse loses his or her job or you finds out your child is on drugs.
"If you're doing all these things, you're in for a good marriage." Regas says. "Your partner also has to do them. Your partner has to have the same values.
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University Daily Kansan
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Wednesday, August 20, 1986
City/Area
University Daily Kansan
Telemarketing becoming national sales trend
Companies sell wares over phone
Donna Hovey, program manager at Entertel, gives Cliff Hamill encouraging support while he gives a correct response to customer's question.
By Evan Walter Staff writer
Many people used to think the best way to handle solicitors was to slam the door in their faces without giving them time to stick their foot inside.
But now all they often have to do is hang up a phone.
■ See related story p. 5.
After-dinner telephone solicitors have made themselves familiar in many U.S. households, Surendra Singh, assistant professor of business, said telemarketing had become a national trend.
"In the last five or six years, there has been a surge in direct marketing, and telemarketing is a part of direct marketing." he said.
The total amount the American telemarketing industry received from sales increased from $7.6 billion in 1977 to $13.6 billion in 1983, according to a study by the Direct Marketing Association in New York City.
Many telemarketing firms sell commercial goods and services, ranging from magazine subscriptions to insurance plans to bank credit cards. Other firms collect donations for non-profit organizations.
Singh said he thought that telemarketing generally would work better for fund-raising than for commercial products.
"When you call someone at home, you are interfering with their privacy," Singh said. "They usually get turned off. But if you tell them you're working for United Fund, that's another story."
Not all telemarketing firms solicit homes, however. Many connect businesses with other businesses. Some telemarketing is conducted by interested consumers calling the firms, often through a toll-free number.
Interested consumers calling businesses is called inbound marketing. Outbound marketing is when the telemarketing firms call potential customers, said Dennis Rosen, associate professor of business.
Rosen said that sales revenue from telemarketing, both inbound and outbound, had been growing at an approximate rate of 25 percent a year for the past couple of years, with the majority of revenues coming from business-to-business telemarketing.
Not everyone fancies or has the needed talents for telemarketing. Rosen said a person's voice and character had a lot to do with the success a person would encounter in a telemarketing job.
"I think it's people who are good communicators and who like to talk," said Jack DeVault, owner of Telemasters in Kansas City, Mo. "There's an element of challenge. Not everybody is cut out for it. Not everybody's going to like it."
"A lot of the sales reps are either people in schools, actors or actresses who need money," said Nilda Castillo, assistant manager of the information central department at the Direct Marketing Association.
Singh said he saw two reasons for the success of telemarketing. Running a telemarketing operation is inexpensive relative to most other businesses, and it provides direct contact between the sellers and the consumers.
Many employees work part-time for these firms, and the work hours for consumer calling firms often run from 5 to 9 p.m.
Telemarketers also have an advantage over those who try to sell by mail, since mail can be easily discarded. Singh said.
Michelle Nelson, manager at Dial America Marketing Inc. of Kansas City, Mo., said the majority of the company's employees were college students and retired people working part-time.
"It takes much more effort to say 'no' over the phone than to throw mail away," he said. "When you receive a phone call, you have to act."
Major firms have been investing in telemarketing to service the more marginal accounts, such as asking for renewals for magazine subscriptions. Rosen said.
According to a survey by McGraw-Hill, a book publishing company, Rosen said, a good salesman makes about eight presentations a day. In many circumstances, the calling can be done in an hour by telemarketing.
Castillo said the success of telemarketing depended on the goal of the marketing and the product.
"In one situation, it might work best for fund-raising," she said. "In another situation, it might work best for businesses. You have to consider a lot of variables."
Singh and team marketing hiren have helpful for many small businesses. He likes to telephone general more effective than 'cold calling' — calling unknown customers who haven't expressed an interest in the product.
"I see a bright future for direct marketing over the phone," Singh said. "To do hard selling, telemarketing is not a good media. To give information, it's good."
"The hard sell aspect will decline. That will not be successful in the long run."
Outbound telemarketing firms rarely obtain the list of names to call by randomly selecting names from telephone books, Rosen said. Instead, they buy lists from list brokers and list managers, that are based on information such as what people have bought in the past.
Smile
"The more specific the list is, the more expensive it is." Rosen said. "If you've purchased anything in which you've placed your name down, your name is on a list. If you've entered any contests or bought a credit card, your name is on a list."
Most lists cost between $35 and $60 per one thousand people. As an example, he said there were lists with the names of physicists, elevator employees and leather goods retailers.
Although the lists are produced for all types of telemarketing firms, most of them differ in size and services.
Unlike many other firms, most employees at Telemasters don't work at the company's office.
"My callers work from home," said DeVault. "It's becoming more
See marketing, p. 5, col. 1
I am very proud to be a part of this community. I believe in giving back and making a positive impact on the world.
Wilfredo Lee/KANSAN
Gwen Kungenberg, program manager at Entertiel, gives an enthusiastic job-done to an employee who just made a sale.
Great pay good hours lure many
By Brenda Flora
Staff writer
Come on guys make those sales!
Smile!
Hey, way to go!
Sell. Sell. Sell!
These commands stand out among the rumbling of voices and the rows of telephones at the only telemarketing firm in Lawrence.
Entertle, 619 Massachusetts St.,
employs about 170 people. Most are
students from the University of Kansas,
Schwartz said. The company is
two years old, but has only been
Lawrence a little more than a year
"We try to maintain an environment that keeps the energy level high," said Robin Schwartz, president of Entertal. "It's the kind of job that people have to be motivated."
Entertel sells a client's service or through telemarketing - using the telephone to conduct business. They do surveys for clients as well.
The company's clients include the Chase Manhattan Bank, Players Club (a travel club), Mutual Benefit Life Insurance, and Zoo Books, a children's books series.
Entertel's parent company, Entertainment Publications Inc. in Birmingham, Mich., also sells its own product, Entertainment Mastercard, through Entertel.
Telephone sales representatives (TSRs) work in a room that has four rows of 20 people each. Each person faces the front and is about three feet away from the next person.
In front of each person is a telephone, a tape recorder to verify sales, a list of names and numbers to call and a program sheet. The program sheet has the exact words the TSR should use when talking with a customer.
The goal for the employees is to make a sale, get a lead or complete a survey
Merrick has worked at Enteric since June and is an operations assistant.
"I think our purpose is twofold," said Diane Merrick, Shawnee graduate student and an employee. "We try to present our client in a positive way."
"It's a fast-paced job," she said.
"When you first start your ears get sore, but you get used to it."
Steve Ferro, St. Louis senior, said that he liked working at Entertainer because he met a variety of people.
"It's not an easy job to do," he said. "You get verbally abused about once a month."
Esther Sparks, 28, has been working for Entertel for 15 months and said she handled customers who were angry by being polite and thanking them for their time.
"Sometimes they even apologize to you when you are super nice to them," she said. "They feel bad because they have been rude to you."
Although like the world of telemarketing, others don't.
See Entertel, p. 5, col. 1
FREDERICK J. SCHNEIDER
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr.
File/KANSAN
Winter a winner in politics game
By Brenda Flory
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr. is a player on many teams, but the game he plays most is politics.
Staff writer
Winter, 33, was raised in Ottawa. The blue-eyed, gray-haired Republican senator won his 2nd District seat representing the Lawrence area in 1984. Winter was appointed state senator in 1982 after then-State Sen. Jane Eldredge resigned. Winter serves on the Ways and Means Committee, the Judiciary Committee and the Economic Development Commission.
"It's a challenge trying to ac-complish something for people." Winter said. "In a broad context I would like to see a better world.
"Government seems to get involved in everything, yet it is always asked to help."
"He's knowledgable and easy to work with. When I call him to talk about an issue, he comes down and tells me how he feels.
"He's a good team player," said Senate President Robert Talkington, R-Iola.
Winter said he hasn't always followed popular opinion or, at times, his party's opinion.
"We don't always agree, but I don't expect to either."
"It's easier to get along with the crowd than to support an unpopular belief." he said.
Because Winter's father was a senator and carries the same name, Winter has often been compared with his father. Many followers of Kansas politics might have the impression he is following his father's footsteps.
"I grew up with politics, but I feel I'm my own person." Winter said.
Winter Sr. was chairman of the Ways and Means Committee. He retired from the senate two years before Winter Jr. became a senator.
"He had to establish himself," Von Ende said. "I think Winter surprised them. He is independent and I think he has gained respect in the Senate."
Richard Von Ende, executive secretary for the chancellor and friend of the Winter family for years, said he thought some in the Senate expected the younger Winter to be an extension of his father.
But they are similar in a number of ways because they have often worked as a father-son team.
"What do ya wanna know about the little bitty boogar?" Winter Sr. said.
"We're competitive in a lot of ways. He beats me in running, and
"I don't influence him in the Legislature. He makes the decisions himself."
They have played rugby and basketball together, and both were centers on the KU football team.
"You would think basketball was the most important game in the world when you see them play together," Von Ende said.
"They are good friends and have a great respect for each other. Wint Sr. raised them to individuals and to stand on their own. I think they have great respect for him as a father because of that."
Winter Jr. may call himself a liberal moderate, and his father may call him a boogar, but others call him energetic, humorous, and
competitive.
"You feel comfortable with him the first time you meet him," said Penny McCurdy, Winter's secretary.
McCurdy has worked three years for Winter, who is a lawyer and partner of the Stevens, Brand, Lungstrum, Golden and Winter firm in the First National Bank Tower, 900 Massachusetts St.
"He has a lot of things going at once," she said. "He is constantly on the phone."
When Winter is extremely busy, McCurtry said, at times even she has to make an appointment to talk to him.
McCurdy said she often caught Winter with his stocking feet on the desk polishing his shoes while he was on the phone.
Winter has three daughters, Katie,
6, Molly, 4, and Elizabeth, 11 months,
who often accompany him to the
office on the weekends.
John Lungstrum, partner and friend, knew Winter when he was an undergraduate at KU.
Winter graduated from KU with a bachelor's degree in political science in 1975. He graduated from KU law school in 1978 with honors.
"He wore a sandwich board to stir attention on campus," he said. "He saw the importance of drawing students into the election. I felt this
He recalled Winter supporting the Robert Bennett campaign during the 1974 election campaign for governor against Vern Miller.
"He has coloring pencils that he keeps in the office for them," McCurdy said. "He gives them paper and they sit on the floor coloring while he's on the phone."
epitomized his eagerness and personal self-confidence."
Winter has been a partner with the firm since 1978. Lungstrum said that the firm hired him because he had exposure to the political arena, he seemed interested in serving society and the partners liked him.
"He takes his work seriously, but he doesn't take himself seriously," he said.
"He recognizes the work he does as a senator is important, but he keeps things in perspective by not getting in awe over the title."
Lungstrum said the partners understood the time demands that Winter had and made allowances.
"If we didn't have an interest in politics, things might be different," he said. "We often hash out problems of the world in office conversations."
But during basketball season, especially last year, the mornings were filled with talk about KU basketball.
"We thought about proposing resolutions praising Larry Brown," Limnstrum said, chuckling.
At the North Carolina State-Kansas NCAA regional basketball game in Kansas City, Mo., in March. Winter and his father ran around waving banners to get on television.
Winter's enthusiasm for his alma mater and his campaign for improving education in the state makes him an active supporter of KU.
"They just wanted to see if they could do it." Lunstrum said.
"He does precisely what any state senator from Lawrence would do and that is to beat the drum for KU."
See Winter, p. 5, col. 4
2
University Daily Kansan
City/Area
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
Everything but the kitchen sink
Shop owner uses his imagination to fill pipe store with curiosities
By Jacque Janssen Special to the Kansan
It could be the wooden Indian that stands at the door when the shop is open. Or it could be the small cardboard signs that hint at what is inside, such as a 'NOTICE': After 35 years in business in the same place, if 'George' does not have it, he will make it. Antiques made while you wait;" or "COME IN See A ZENITH Living Color TELEVISION with GOLDFISH in Picture Tube."
There is something about George's Pipe Shop. 727 Massachusetts St., that forces people to stop and take a look.
Curious shoppers find pipes of all sizes, colors, shapes and prices, from simple corncobs to the most elaborate $300 antiques. There really is a television with goldfish in it, and George also has one that contains a plastic skeleton to "scare you with."
George Wilson, 74, said that he had owned the shop since 1949. He graduated from the University of Kansas in 1941 with a bachelor's degree in sociology, "a pud course," he said
But the most interesting thing that can be found in George's Pipe Shop is George himself.
"You don't have to be very smart to do that," he said.
After graduating, Wilson went to law school for a while.
"But then a little law is worse than none at all," he said with a laugh.
Wilson began the pipe shop in 1949 after getting the space from his father-in-law, who had a photography shop there. He said that he began the pipe shop because he had a collection of more than 125 pipes.
"I'm not operating the way I'd like to, you see," Wilson tells his customers. "You see, I've got three things going against me."
One of the things that is hurting his business is that he has been forced to limit his hours in the shop to care for his wife, who broke her hip three years ago.
Wilson tells his customers that the shop used to be a "ma and pa operation," but since his wife broke her hip, he's had to do all of the cooking and cleaning. The shop is open from
1:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday.
"I just don't get the traffic anymore," he said.
During fishing season a red sign on the window warns, "Fishing Season Is Here — Closed on Monday."
Wilson also tells his customers that the anti-smoking campaign is also going against him.
"People can't smoke in airplanes on public buildings anymore," he said.
MACAULAY'S
BREWERY
"And the third thing is half my regular customers have died off."
Even if many of Wilson's regular customers have died, he still has many loyal ones.
— George Wison Pipeshop owner
'I'm kind of out of character today, or I guess you'd say I'm not in character. I've got the reputation of the oldest hippie and the most relaxed businessman in Lawrence.'
George Wilson proudly displays the most expensive pipe he sells. The $300 hand-carved pipe is one of his favorites. Wilson is the owner of George's Pipe Shop, 727 Massachusetts St.
One customer is David Dary, KU professor of journalism. Dary said he had known Wilson for about 17 years. He stops by the shop every five or six weeks to pick up a pipe or just to talk
Dary said that the shop's shortened hours didn't really affect Wilson's business because the customers adjusted and scheduled their visits accordingly.
"He's learned how to live a fascinating life." Dary said. "He does pretty much what he wants to." Another loyal customer teased Wilson about not wearing any crazy clothes.
"How come you're dressed so respectfully today George?" he said.
"Where's your crazy hat or crazy tie?"
Wilson automatically pulled out his collection of summer hats, which included a big green, foam hat shaped like a frog and a huge blue-and-white umbrella hat.
Jacque Janssen/special to the KANSAN
day, or I guess you'd say I'm not in character," Wilson said. "I've got the reputation of the oldest hippie and the most relaxed businessman in Lawrence."
"I'm kind of out of character to-
He then pulled out a yellow newspaper from 1969 that had a picture of a man with long hair walking by a barbershop.
The man in the picture was Wilson, and he didn't really have long hair. He was wearing a wig that his wife had given him for Christmas. He said he had a lot of fun with it.
The same customer tried to get George to talk about his business. The man talked about an article published in a magazine about Wilson's pipe-repairing ability.
Wilson may not talk much about his pipe-repairing abilities or his success as a businessman. What he did like to talk about was all of the other hobbies he had.
Wilson avoided the subject as well as he could. The conversation ended when Wilson said that modesty was one of his greatest virtues.
"I've had a lot of fun," he said.
"I've got enough equipment to start a machine shop and build a house."
Wilson doesn't hesitate to flaunt his crafts. The goldfish in the television seem to attract the most customers.
After all the customers had left, Wilson said he had his own philosophy about life: A person can't be happy just running a business, a person has to have different interests and must work with his hands.
"You can get burned out and not be as effective as you would be other-
*
One thing Wilson does with his hands is gardening. He talked about his favorite crops and inventions. He grows papaw trees in his backyard. Papaw, he said, used to grow wild in Kansas and their fruit tastes like bananas.
Wilson is prepared with old, color snapshots of one of his pawpaw trees and a wheelbarrow filled with pawpaws, which look like oval, medium-sized stones.
Wilson also showed a snapshot series of his "sick-a-mare" tree. He said that "sick-a-mare" trees are made by taking a regular sycamore tree and attaching marigolds to it.
In the final snapshot of the series, Wilson showed his special watering system, which he claimed had also helped him to develop a burpless cucumber.
"Regular cucumbers make you
He said he had built a lily pond to water all of his plants.
"That city water isn't too good for plants, you know — too much chlorine," he said.
"All I try to do is grow old gracefully. I've had a lot of fun," he said.
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Wednesday, August 20, 1986
City/Area
University Daily Kansan
3
Local man is study in faith, hard work
By Rachelle Worrall
Staff writer
He has been a familiar sight around Lawrence for years, but many who look at the solitary figure limping down the street never really see him.
Those who know him, usually know him just as "Wendell," or "the short, orange-haired man with the limp, who works at the back door of some of the bars."
What they don't see is the emotions churning within Wendell Arnold. He does not want to be different, he yearsns to be liked and accepted.
A car honks as it pulls up to the corner. Arnold, standing in front of Bullwinkle's Pub, 1344 Tennessee St., looks toward the car and is greeted by a smiling blonde. He beams and, as he waves to the girl, fine lines deepen around his sparkling eyes.
Arnold broke his leg playing football at age 13. Surgery on the leg didn't return it to normal.
"I found myself not being able to walk. It's easy to take everything for granted," he said.
He was not only physically different than other children because of his leg, he said, but he was more advanced intellectually than other children.
"As a child, you just notice. You just know you already know what is being taught. You become bored," he said. "You can find yourself sometimes knowing more than a teacher. It does make a communication gap."
After graduating from Ottawa High School, Arnold didn't attend college. But he still enjoys studying. He loves math, science and philosophy.
Arnold has lived in Lawrence for about 20 years. He has lived in the storage room of the East Lawrence Community Grocery, 1200 New York St. He was forced to move from the Eldridge House on July 1 because the building is being renovated. He
doesn't drive or have a phone. He said he doesn't need to.
He won't reveal his age. He said he doesn't like to feel a distance between the college students with whom he spends so much of his time.
His home and family were in Ottawa, but now only two deserted houses are there for him to visit. Arnold has two brothers and two sisters, but when asked about them, he grows quiet.
He got the houses after his parents died several years ago. He hopes to restore them.
Doug Compton, who has employed Arnold for five years, said that he told Arnold he should sell the houses because they weren't worth restoring. But Arnold disagrees.
"I didn't want their homes to go down the drain," Arnold said. "I want to fix them up just partly out of respect to my parents."
Compton owns The Mad Hatter, 700 New Hampshire and Bullwinkle's and was the former owner of Cogburns, 737 New Hampshire St. Arnold prepared the bars for opening, and sometimes works at their back doors.
"He has a key to everything I own," Compton said. "He's an excellent worker. If he wasn't good help, he wouldn't be around. He's got a job with me as long as he wants it.
Although he is popular with students, Arnold said, he has to work at developing himself socially.
"I think he pretty much gets along with everyone. They (the students) all think he's the greatest thing that's ever happened."
"I never developed socially very well, but I've always liked people. I don't want to be so much different as I am so much a part." Arnold said.
"The best thing (about being in Lawrence) was that I got a chance to develop socially. I feel a lot more at ease than I used to. I feel a lot more relaxed.
"Some people think I'm too friendly. I told one person, 'I can't buy that.' I wouldn't go into Kansas City and try to get to know everybody in the bad section of town."
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Compton said he didn't know much about Arnold's schooling, but that Arnold was well-read and enlightened in many subjects.
Glenn Price, assistant professor of theater and media arts, said he had known Arnold for about 10 years.
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"I detected very early a very fine mind," Price said. "I came to enjoy his company, his personality, and his broad knowledge of things. I've enjoyed talking to him about philosophical issues.
"He would be a beautiful student
He would be a professor's dream."
A philosophical question Arnold says he is concerned with is "What is beauty?"
"I have studied the question of beauty quite a bit. It's something that has intrigued philosophers throughout the ages. In the near future, I will study philosophy and science a lot." he said
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Arnold pulled out a paper napkin that was tucked into his wallet. On it was written philosophical questions he wanted to try to eventually answer.
"Once an idea is gone, it may not come back." Arnold said.
Compton said that although Arnold was popular among students, he was bothered by his physical appearance.
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"He resents it because he thinks he's a very ugly person. He thinks that tall people have the best lives in the world," Compton said.
"He's well-like by everybody that knows him," Olds said. "He's the type of person that you can't help but like."
Traci Olds, Overland Park senior, said she had heard that one time in a bar, tears welled in Arnold's eyes before he said he wanted to be like the beautiful people.
Arnold sometimes spends his free time baking pies. He has been approached by several students about going into the baking business. But, he said, he doesn't want to work 60-hour weeks.
Arnold said that he became curious about baking when he was 5-years-old. His grandmother told him then that if he was old enough to be curious about it, he was old enough to learn.
Compton said he had considered starting a bakery with Arnold. If he had the extra space, he said, he would let Arnold use it free of charge.
Price said, "He's a good pie-maker. Next to my wife, he bakes the best pies in town."
But Arnold said he wouldn't want to spend the time needed for professional baking.
H
"I could become a chef," Arnold said. "But if I were to make a career in cooking, I'd have to figure on 10 hours a day."
"I'm a perfectionist. I can't help but be critical of myself when I'm baking. I always ask myself, 'Is it good enough?' "
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4
University Daily Kansan
City/Area
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
Women's shelter provides sanctuary and counseling
By Rachelle Worrall Staff writer
Help is available to the hundreds of Lawrence women who are physically and emotionally abused each year.
Women's Transitional Care Services, WTCS, which has a secret location, provides a 24-hour crisis telephone line for women in need of help. It also provides shelter for women who need to get out of an abusive situation, said Barb Smith, an employee at WTCS.
Last year, the center received about 900 crisis and referral calls, she said.
From July 1985 to June 1986, 86 of the 124 women sheltered by WTCS were battered. The 38 other women were those who needed temporary shelter because of reasons other than abuse, such as a house fire, said Kathy Greenlee, an employee at WTCS
WTCS also housed 139 children, 110 of whom were children of battered women. The children are assigned "advocates" within 48 hours of their arrival at the shelter. The advocates are volunteers who offer support and try to develop friendships with the children.
Women at the shelter have peer counseling, said Smith, and many are referred to professional counseling. Peer counselors are women who are not professionals.
but have also been battered, based on the assumption that those women who have been battered can best understand battered women.
According to statistics from July 1985 to June 1986, 15.1 percent of the abused women at WTCS were 21 years old and younger; 55.8 percent were 21 to 30; 18.6 percent were 31 to 40; 7 percent were 41 to 50; and 3.5 percent were 51 to 60
Of the women who were sheltered last year, about 70 percent were abused by husbands, about 5 percent by ex-husbands and about 25 percent by a boyfriend or live-in boyfriend, Smith said.
Smith said that sometimes a woman would be sheltered by WTCS four or five times before she became independent of the person who was abusing her, Smith said. There is no limit to the amount of time a woman can stay.
"We don't require bruises or broken bones if a woman says she needs shelter." Smith said.
"At least she knows that she's got a place to be." Smith said.
Smith said that there was not a typical personality that ended up in an abusive situation, although many seemed to come from traditional homes. Despite the different backgrounds, by the time women end up at the shelter, they have more in common.
"By the time we see them, they have no self-esteem left." she said.
Last year, alcohol was involved in 42 percent of the abuses and drugs were involved in 22 percent. But Smith said she didn't think merely drinking alcohol caused a person to be violent. The personality types that become dependent on alcohol also tend to be more violent.
The seven-bedroom shelter can house seven families at one time, although no one in need of shelter would be turned away because of lack of room. Smith said.
The shelter location is secret to protect the women. Smith said they would sometimes meet the women in a neutral location or go with the police to their home.
WTCS is funded by about 15 organizations, one of which is KU's Student Senate. A major funder of the shelter is the United Way. The budget next year is $83,000.
There are five full-time employees at WTCS and 50 to 70 volunteers, depending on the time of year. Many of the volunteers are KU students.
WTCS has formed a task force against violence in student relationships that will present a training program to resident assistants at residential halls. The program will include the issues of date rape and any battery that occurs in relationships.
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City/Area
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
University Daily Kansan
5
Marketing
Continued from p.1
popular.
DeVault said that about a dozen people worked for his year-old company, which provides business-to-business connections.
Dial America Marketing, however, conducts outbound consumer marketing, Nelson said. Dial America has been in business since 1957 and is one of the earliest telemarketing firms.
Dial America has about 2,000 employees nationwide and employs 25 to 30 in the Kansas City, Mo., office, Nelson said.
Entertel
Continued from p.1
Lauri Moore, 18, worked five mon ths for the company last year.
"The pay and hours were great," she said. "I got tired of hearing 'sale, sale, sale.' I couldn't handle the pressure, but for someone who wants to make some money it's a good job."
Dudley Hutcherson, program manager, said anybody that needed the money and was willing to work for it could be successful.
"The people that do the best are those who are outgoing
Phone sales offend some
By DeAnn Thomas
Businesses may be reaching more people and making more sales with telemarketing, but telephone owners aren't always appreciative.
"It's an invasion of privacy," said Rita Lucas, 3099 Tomahawk drive.
Lucas said telemarketing, which offers services, products, and information or tries to get donations by giving to charity donors their burgers by a activity offered
"They're taking advantage of facilities that we need and use for more important reasons," Lucas said.
For example, Lucas said, elderly or partially invalid citizens could hurt themselves rushing to the phone only to be confronted with a sales pitch.
Yet more businesses are turning to the direct marketing approach of phone selling because it is more successful than direct mailing.
Robin Schwartz, president of Entertal, 619 Massachusetts St., does not think his company's approach is offensive to telephone owners.
Schwartz said Entertel trained the callers to be polite and accept refusals. Entertel also demands that its employees stick to the prepared
Schwartz said that Enterted bought calling lists that were based on demographics and psychigraphies.
speeches for the product.
Demographics provide information about age and financial status that enables businesses to target their product. Psychographics provide information about spending and traveling habits, enabling businesses to further narrow target markets.
Henry Remple, a psychologist at 901 Kentucky St., said that telemarketing could be effective if the caller quickly stated the purpose of the call.
With the ability to narrow lists down to select people who may have an interest in the service offered, all callers need to do is capture the person's attention. Remple said.
Remple's wife, Mariana, said she recently received a call from Washington, D.C.
"I thought, 'Oh, this must be important,' but they were just offering a magazine subscription," she said.
She said she was annoyed by the phone-selling approach and preferred direct mail services
"At least I have the choice of tossing out what I don't want without having to listen to or even read the material," she said.
said state Sen. David Miller, R- Eudora.
About every KU budget has to go through the Legislature
Winter
James Bibb, associate University director of business affairs, said Winter Jr. helped with about 10 bills that dealt with KU in the last session.
Continued from p. 1
"But I don't think KU is his only concern." Bibb said. "He takes a broader viewpoint. He has a positive attitude toward higher education in general."
Winter said he had a strong commitment to higher education. He supported better financial support for teachers and graduate students.
"It's a combination of things that are needed to improve education," he said.
State Senate Minority Leader Michael Johnston, D-Parsons, said, "He's a creative guy with a good sense of humor."
David Epstein, student body president, said he had worked with Winter on getting better outdoor lighting on campus.
"He always seems willing to help people," Epstein said.
But politics, even though it takes up most of his time, is not the only
From 1971 to the KU Football played center for the KU football team. He also frequently plays basketball and occasionally plays rugby.
game Winter has played.
"I wasn't good enough to make a career out of football," he said.
He said he had a fascination for learning about the unknown. In 1976 he took up flying and earned a private pilot's license.
"I always wondered how they flew them," he said looking into the sky out of his office window. "So I learned."
"At a weak moment I agreed to fly with Wint to a convention in Colorado Springs," Lungstrum said.
When they were arriving at the Colorado Springs airport, Winter radioed the traffic-control tower asking which runway they wanted him to take, the right or left one.
"The tower replied that there was only one runway." Lungstrum said. "We were about ready to land at a construction project."
Adam Winter, 21, KU law student,
jokingly said his life was endangered when he flew to San Diego with his older brother.
"We came in too steep and bounced on the runway," he said. "We blew out a tire. We had to take off again and barely missed these huge power lines. Then we had to land with a flat tire."
Winter Jr. said he didn't know what his next challenge would be.
"Parachuting would be a great high," he said, again gazing out the office window.
Winter also said he didn't know what his next challenge would be in politics.
He said he has had offers to move up the ladder, but he had a family to think about.
"My daughters are the sixth generation to live in Douglas County," he said. Winter's great-grandfather settled around the Lecompton area about 1854.
Winter had offers in the past to run for lieutenant governor and attorney general.
"I think he feels he does a better job where he is at," said Mary, his wife. "I don't think he wants to be away from the family either."
Several state senators and representatives from both political parties said they felt Winter was capable and qualified to go further
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6
University Daily Kansan
City/Area
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
Laughter is main course at Apple Valley Farm
OSKALOOSA — Sixty acres of family entertainment are all that remains of a large farm homestead dating from the 1800s.
A barn that is now a theater sits on part of the former homestead. Inside the theater are about 160 people fanning themselves and chatting about coming events.
They may be talking about one of many events that Ric Averill has been doing for 15 years.
Apple Valley Farm in Longview Park, on the east side of Lake Perry, draws people each week to watch performances in the barn theater. Also on the 60 acres are a general store, a restaurant and saloon and camping grounds.
"We don't take ourselves too seriously," Averill, the theater's owner and producer, said. "That is what makes the show enjoyable and different every time."
Averill and his wife, Jeanne, write
and produce all of the plays performed at Apple Valley Farm. The Ric Averill Players perform only two different plays a year, one on Friday nights and the other on Saturday nights.
Spectators are not often seated by the theater owner, who just happens to be dressed in a devil's costume.
The setting is relaxed. Wooden folding chairs are placed throughout the barn floor. Pieces of paper with numbers on them are taped to tables to help folks find their seats.
The curtain rises. The audience quiet. The show begins.
Over the actors' voices are mumbled words and the sounds of scooting chairs. The barn is packed full of eager spectators, donned in casual blue jeans and shorts.
The audeience settles back to enjoy the next couple of hours. During the show, Averill asks for the person who has traveled the farthest to speak up. A free beer is passed the person's way.
Beer and cola are the only things cold in the barn. No air conditioners cool the place, but complaints about the heat are not heard. The audience is more concerned with who is about to knock over its drinks.
A drunkard is walking clumsily through the audience, spilling drinks and sitting on women's laps.
Averill calls him up to the stage. The cast is missing one actor, and this man will be perfect.
"But, Ric," protests Kelly, the script girl, played by Kelly Christiansen, Lawrence senior.
No buts about it. Burt, a drunk,
played by John Newbold, Lawrence
resident, has just joined the Ric
Averill Players in "The Rise and Fall
of Jennifer Goodman."
And this is almost how the players are selected.
Many of the performers are friends of Averill's who have said they would like to be in the show. Some have auditioned. Averill said that he has asked KU students to join his cast
after he has seen them perform.
Auditioning is as casual as the play.
Now that the cast is complete, the play must continue. "From the beginning," Averill says. The curtain falls and the show begins — again.
The lighting is not perfect. During the first couple of minutes of the show Averill reaches down and changes the position of the light. He turns to the audience and says, "Thank you for coming to our dress rehearsal. We don't get the lines right either."
Ad libbing is what the show is all about. The script is there to provide a beginning base, Averill said, but the actors are free to add their own lines when the situation fits.
A light flashes from one corner of the audience.
"Pictures!" Averill shouts.
And right in the middle of their lines, everyone stops, runs to the corner of the stage and poses. The audience is in hysterics.
The performers on-stage antics are
what keeps the show lively, Averill said. The audience is part of the show throughout.
The barn theater is an informal setting that allows the audience to shout words of encouragement and occasional "boos" to the devilish acts of the players. Averill and his wife woke about their life at home when the lines in the play allow.
When Averill and his cast are trying to be serious and an audience member begins to laugh. Averill waits. The cast glances at the laughing spectator and taps its feet. The spectator just seems to laugh more, but Averill still waits. Unless, of course, one of the cast begins to laugh.
"If you want to laugh, you can buy a ticket and sit out there." Averill says to Jennifer Goodman, played by Susanna Pitzer, Lawrence resident, when she can't keep a straight face.
"I look at things in an interesting light." Averill said.
Averill has never had a hard time coming up with ideas for plays, and most of the ideas come from movies.
On Saturday nights the Ric Averill Players present "The Wild Duck Boy."
"It's about somebody raised by animals." Averill said In this case the animals are wild ducks. "The duck boy is a cross between Indiana Jones and the Elephant Man," he said. Averill plays the wild duck boy in the show.
Intermission is part of the entertainment, too. Waitresses during the show become actresses. They march onto the stage singing about peanuts and beer. Then they march off the stage to sing, while sitting on men's laps, about how the men should buy their wives peanuts and beer.
The play keeps the audience laughing for more than two hours. Then comes the vaudeville show.
"The numbers that follow the show are musicals and dances," Averill said. It is a takeoff from the old Vaudeville Oleo. "You know what
STUDIO 102
Jennifer Goodman (Susanna Pitzer), the heroine of the play, sings to her pianist boyfriend, Bob Redford (Jay Emmer)
Joyce D.
Lucinda (Jeeanne Averill), tempts a member of the audience with her evil ways. Audience participation plays a large part in the plays at the barn theater.
oleo is don't you? It's a substitute for butter.
Story by Dana Spoor Photos by Wilfredo Lee
Averill has been performing at Apple Valley Farm for 15 years. He bought the theater business in 1973. Tickets are $6 a person, and reservations are suggested. The shows play every year from June until the last weekend in September.
"A lot of people come back to see the old show with the new cast," he said. Each year one new show is added. The show that played on Friday nights the year before is moved to Saturday night and a new show is produced Friday. But, the cast will be different and the ad-libbing will never be the same.
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8
University Daily Kansan
City/Area
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
Problem of racism still lurks around University
By Kristi Schroeder Staff writer
Some people find great humor in ethnic jokes, but for others, these jokes are extremely painful and offensive. This brand of humor, along with many other incidents, are examples of the kinds of racism that can be found on campus.
Caryl Smith, dean of student life and associate vice chancellor for student affairs, said her office worked with the offices of minority affairs and affirmative action to help prevent racism and deal with any problems that might arise on campus.
Smith said her office was in charge of the environment on campus, which included working with the other offices to keep the campus free of racism.
"But it's sad to report that every year there is some difficulty that appears to deal with racism," Smith said.
Some of the more common of those problems deal with someone who is insensitive about ethnic jokes, using certain examples in a class or calling a minority an offensive name, she said.
in May, attended both KU and Haskell Indian Junior College. She said racism was present to some extent on campus and could keep American Indians away from the University.
Venida Chenault, who graduated from KU
"They've seen some discrimination in town and with their experience at Haskell," Chenault said. "And they expect they will have it at KU."
Chenault said that she hadn't had much problem with racism because she wouldn't put up with discrimination and racism issues.
"I won't just stand there and take it," she said.
Chenault has dealt a lot with American Indians who have had problems with racism. Generally when a student approaches Chenault with a problem, she directs them to the office of affirmative action. But she always talks to the person first.
and history.
Chenault, like Smith, said a large part of the problems American Indians faced were the inconsiderate examples used by professors in classes. The most damaging and common problem of discrimination and racism stemmed from misinformation and ignorance about American Indian customs
Problems also arise from KU advisers who are not supportive of American Indians, Chenault said. Some tell the American Indians to drop out of school because they won't make it anyway.
But Chenault said conditions had improved since the days when Haskell students were only allowed in town on certain days.
Smith and people from the affirmative action and minority affairs offices form part of the Human Relations Committee, a University-sponsored organization.
One recent problem that the committee focused on was the terminology used for a certain type of portable radio. The term used was "ghetto blaster." Smith said this was offensive to many blacks because of the negative connotations to inner-city living.
"It's a direct slap in the face and a stereotype of blacks." she said.
Smith said a retailer in Lawrence used the term ghetto blasters in an advertisement. Her committee wrote him a letter informing him that he was offensive to some people.
The man stopped using the term and apologized, saying it was inadvertent. Smith
said this was a typical response. The people are sorry, but it happens continually anyway.
Many people don't intentionally use the words negatively. Smith said, but people need to be more aware of things like this.
The committee sponsored hearings last year on apartheid and divestment in South Africa. Smith said that the hearings were extremely educational and that she wished 24,000 people, about the size of the KU faculty and student body, could have attended them.
"We try to make a positive contribution," she said. "We're committed to continuing education."
Smith has been at KU since 1972. She said racism issues had not changed as much as she had thought they would.
The recent issues in South Africa have made people more aware of racism, she said. Increased awareness was part of the reason for the series of committees dealing with racism over the past several years.
"Ten years ago things were more active and overt," she said.
London Bonds, adviser to the Black Panhellenic Council, said racism wasn't a problem in the greek system. The separation
of white and black fraternities and sororites on campus is due more to the difference in the histories of the organizations than to any type of racism. She said the organizations had never reported any problems with racism.
White fraternities and sororites are larger and financed differently from the black organizations, Bonds said. They also have different rushes and other formal activities.
Bonds, who is also assistant director of the Organizations and Activities Center, said the black greek organizations were not limited to blacks. The Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority has one white member.
On a national level, a lot of whites join the black organizations. Bonds said.
"People tend to join where their interests lie" she said.
So if a specific organization offers something a person enjoys, the person can usually join regardless of race. Bonds said.
JoAnne Hawkins, St. Louis senior and member of the Sigma Kappa sorority, said she had noticed more interest by blacks in the predominately white greek system in the past couple of years.
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Wednesday, August 20, 1986
City/Area
University Daily Kansan
7
Market offers breath of fresh air
By Sheri Donaldson Special to the Keeper
Special to the Kansan
Succulent sweet corn, brilliant tomatoes, fat zucchini and golden honey are some of the juicy items found at the Farmer's Market at the 1000 block of Vermont Street.
Vendors sell fresh, locally grown produce and home-baked items at the market from 5 to 8 p.m. Thursday and from 6:30 a.m. to 12 p.m. Saturdays. This year the market opened May 10 and will close on Nov. 8.
Dick and Elaine Brauer, Linwood,
sell goods at the market this summer
and grow pumpkins, potatoes,
cucumbers, sweet corn and other
fruits and vegetables. The Brauers
grow the produce on more than 100
acres at their farm.
"I do gardening in my spare time and my son takes care of everything full time," Dick Brauer, realtor, said. "It's a lot of fun to sell at the market." It's like a county fair."
The market started in 1975 when the Douglas County Extension began sponsoring fruit and vegetable competitions downtown. The Douglas County Extension provides agricultural, gardening and homemaking information to the public.
"The Downtown Lawrence Association found out about it and decided to start a type of open-air market where farmers and truckgardeners could sell fresh produce
and homemade baked goods every week," Jim Bateman, president of the DLA, said.
The aroma of freshly cut, sweet basil and other herbs drew many customers to the booth of Marian Horvat, Tonganoxie. Overflowing tables of spearmint and catnip for 25 cents a bunch, $1.50 loaves of applesauce-oatmeal bread, vegetables and lavender and pink zinnia flowers surrounded the busy vendor.
"I certainly can't pass that up for a quarter," one customer said as she handed over 25 cents for a boxful of fresh cucumbers.
Horvat, a 1970s graduate of the School of Journalism, said that she had been selling items at the market for several years.
"I have a good-sized herb and vegetable garden," she said. "Coming here is a good way to get rid of our extra produce." Horvat is a free-lance editor and gives piano lessons in addition to her gardening activities.
To sell items at the market, certain rules must be followed, according to Kala Patterson, manager of the market.
"Produce must be locally grown. And we only allow growers and producers, not retailers," she said. "Basically, vendors can sell produce, honey, plants and homemade baked goods."
About 50 people wandered through the wide aisles of the parking lot, even filled by about 30 vendors. The customers examined tasty items such as big blackberries priced at $2 a pint, sweet Greek baccala honey-nut pastry desserts at four for $1 and 50-cent giant cinnamon rolls.
Lucy Seaver, McLouth, said it was her first shopping visit to the market.
"We wanted to buy some cucumbers. We appreciate the freshness of the produce here," Seaver said.
Several of the produce vendors said they did not use harmful chemical fertilizers or pesticides on their crops.
"I do use a natural bacterial solution on some vegetables that pretty much takes care of the squash bugs and caterpillars," said Bole Lominska of Hoyland Farms in Jefferson County. "But I absolutely do not use chemical fertilizers or pesticides."
Lominska sells honey, beets,
squash and other vegetables raised
on two acres of his farm at the
market.
"use a lot of leaves, grass clippings and manure for fertilizer," he said. "For a natural pesticide, I have ducks who love to eat grasshoppers. And the spiders and ladybugs are great at keeping the rest of the bugs in control."
MARGARET KING
Raymond and Louise Beach, Rt. 1, pack some fruit for a customer. The Beaches have been selling their produce at the Farmer's Market in the 1000 block of Vermont Street for about five years.
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Wednesday, August 20, 1986
City/Area
University Daily Kansan
9
Accidents, drownings force closing of local rock quarry
By Rachelle Worral
Staff writer
Daredevils searching for excitement will be unable to satisfy themselves by leaping from the 40-foot cliffs at the rock quarry at 95th Street and Cedar Creek Road off Highway 10, about 20 miles east of Lawrence.
Since June 28, said Lt. B Miller of the Johnson County sheriff's department, the department has been arresting anybody trespassing on the private property. About 50 people have been arrested and charged with criminal trespassing since that time.
"Alcohol and drugs were the biggest problems," Miller said.
Deputy Greg Hill of the department said, "We're keeping a close eye on it because of all the drownings."
About four persons have been killed while at the quarry in the past five years. Miller said he wasn't sure of the exact number. The most recent death occurred in June.
The dirt and gravel road up to the quarry is now blocked by a barbed-wire fence and aluminum gate bearing a "No Trespassing" sign. Two free-standing signs behind the fence give further warnings to keep out.
The road up the hill to the quarry is too uneven and rough for cars. On a wire barrier about 50 yards past the
gate another "No Trespassing" sign hangs.
People open the gate and go past the four signs warning people to stay away. Hill said. They then tell him, "We didn't see any signs." Most of the trespassers are in their late teens to early 20s.
The littered trail up to the quarry leads to a spring water fed, aqua-colored swimming hole with a diameter of about 250 feet. The cliffs surrounding the water are about 40 feet high.
Snorkelers and scuba divers found about four cars at the bottom of the quarry last summer. Miller said that many cars had been recovered over the years from the quarry and most of them had been stolen, stripped and pushed over the cliffs.
"They (thieves) were just preying off people that go inside the quarry," he said.
Charlie DeCoursey, Kansas City junior, said that he swam at the quarry a lot when he was in high school, but that he had not been since last summer. Decoursey said that a friend had his car broken into while they were at the quarry.
The attraction to the quarry was the cliff diving. he said.
"It thought it was fun. I don't think it was very dangerous," DeCoursey said.
There are underwater caves, but DeCoursey said he had never tried to swim in them. Stories about swimmers drowning in the caves were a deterrent.
Although he lives near the quarry, Rogers said, he had only been a few times and had never jumped from the cliffs. The one time he he did take his children, they went to pick up aluminum cans.
Johnny Rogers, who lives near the quarry, said that in the past, sometimes more than 200 people would go to the quarry in one day.
The owner of the quarry, Robert J. Anderson of Kansas City, Mo., said the quarry had been around for about 15 years. The rock was used for the construction of Highway 10 from Lawrence to Kansas City.
Attempts at keeping people off the property have been made for years, Anderson said. But signs and fences have not deterred trespassers.
Persons jumping from the cliffs needed to be strong swimmers. Miller said, because they had to swim about 150 feet after jumping before they could touch bottom.
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Brian Shulda, of Shawnee, said he
The rock quarry near Kansas Highway 10 has been closed because of drownings and accidents.
Wilfredo Lee/KANSAN
used to jump from the cliffs and was disappointed when he drove to the quarry in mid-July to find no one was there and police had become serious in patrolling the area.
"It's pretty dangerous I guess if you don't jump in the right place," Shulda said.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Deadlines, Deadlines, Deadlines . . .
Advertising and News/Editorial deadlines will begin on August 22 (and run daily thereafter) for our first issue of the school year, August 25.
If your firm or student organization is planning on submitting information to the KANSAN, please come by:
119 Flint Hall, Advertising 864-4358
111 Flint Hall, News/Editorial 864-4810
More detailed information on specific deadlines will be available in these offices.
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University Daily Kansan
City/Area
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
Tavern changes with law
By Kristi Schroeder Staff writer
When freshmen used to ask "Where's the place to meet people?" a familiar answer was "Cogburns." But that would only work now for freshman who turned 20 by July 1.
The change in the drinking law did affect the crowd at Cogburns, 737 New Hampshire St., but so did the new owners who took over in October. Mona Tipton and Brett Mosiman bought the bar then and, with their ownership, have brought a different style of entertainment.
"We introduced more live music." Tipton said. "We had bands almost every weekend and Wednesday nights."
Tipton said Cogburns would continue to bring in live bands during this school year. The bar will kickoff the year with live bands during Country Club Week.
Cogburns featured the Elvis Brothers, and The Answer this summer. The bar will be open from 6 p.m. to midnight Monday thru Saturday this fall.
Tipton said the type of band that was playing dictated the type of crowd at the bar.
"Different bands bring in different people," she said. "Who's there depends on what's there."
Tipton's preference for bands that play original music is reflected in some of the bands that will be playing this year and that played last year.
Sharon Hughes, Oakley junior,
said that she enjoyed going to
Cowburns on band nights.
"The crowd is always better on a band night." she said.
Hughes said she also went to Cogburns for 25 cent draws on Thursday nights. She said that the bar had gotten better because of the full house on Thursday nights.
"Maybe it's the dancing atmosphere, and it's dark," she said. "I do like to go there because I like to dance and you don't have to be 21."
Mike Christman, Eureka senior,
said he rarely went to Coghurns
anymore, but it wasn't because of
the change in ownership.
"When I was a freshman, that was the only place I went," he said.
But Christman said he went to Cogburns now only when a friend's band was playing or he wanted to hear a particular band.
Tipton said the bar would definitely continue to have more live music. With the opening of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., for live music, the interest in live music will increase, she said.
Their love of music has pulled them out of the starving-college-student-ranks. And all it took was a couple of 100-watt speakers, a 300-watt amplifier, a mixer, a turntable and a rock 'n' roll music library.
By Evan Walter
Staff writer
The investment is small for a few KU students who have thrown together old equipment and new businesses --- catering music at parties, receptions and bars.
Money is music to student DJs' ears
The job, some student disk jockeys say, can pay up to about $200 a night.
"I had some equipment before'I came to KU," said Jeff Fugit, 26, who lives in Lakewood and disc jockey. "You get to meet people, and the hours weren't too bad."
Fugitt started his venture when a resident assistant at his residence hall asked whether he could provide the music for a party in Lewis Hall.
Fewer than five people can operate a disc jockey service, which usually advertises with word-of-mouth, flyers or classified advertisements.
Mickey Larson, Olathe senior, has worked as a disc jockey for four years and calls his one-man venture "Music Mix."
"A friend of mine had been doing it," he said. "I asked him if I could help. When I had enough equipment of my own, I started my own business."
in spring. Larson said, "You get to meet people. It's pretty good money. I had most of the records and equipment, so it didn't take much of an investment.
Larson services private parties, wedding receptions and works two nights a week at The Mad Hatter, 700 New Hampshire St., during the fall and spring semesters.
“It’s very easy. It’s probably the easiest job that pays well.”
And loving music helps out, said Roger Keys, Gilville, III., senior.
'The best thing about it is going to different parties and making money from it.'
Keys and one of three owners of "Audiofiles," a disc jockey service, said, "All three of us like music a lot. The best thing about it is going to different parties and making money from it."
Keys said he had been working as a disc jockey for about four years. The Audiofiles work two to three events a month during the school year, he said.
Larson said he usually earned between $75 and $125 for a night of spinning records.
The money made varies according to the event, the disc jockeys said.
Keys said the Audiofiles would make from $125 to $200 per event.
Fugitt said he had been a disc jockey for about a year and a half, but he wasn't optimistic about the future of the business.
Fugitt, whose operation has four members and no name, said most of the places he had performed at had planned budgets. One party at Lewis payed the group $250. On the average, he said, he worked five to six events a month.
"It's fun, but as far as the money-making aspect, right now I don't think there's going to be a lot of demand because of the drinking age," he said. "The dorms invest their money into different activities instead of parties."
"The most time is spent getting all the new music and recording it," Keys said.
The disc jockeys invest not only their money but their time as well.
Keys said he preferred playing music on cassette tapes rather than records, because record needles could jump, especially when people bumped into the table the stereo was on.
Larson, however, said he preferred to use records rather than tapes.
"They're easier to use than tapes," he said. "Because when you cupe up a song, you can see exactly where it is. With a tape, you have to search for it."
But Fugitt said he didn't think the business consumed a lot of time.
"At the longest, it took an hour to set up before and after the parties," he said. "And they'd usually last about three hours."
The size and weight of the equipment required for a disc jockey might sometimes causes problems with storage and transportation.
Fugitt stored his equipment in his room at his residence hall and would transport the equipment by truck. In the winter, loading and unloading the truck could be a problem, he said.
The equipment for the Audioifiles is stored at one of the member's apartment, Keys said. When moving, the equipment fits in two cars.
At parties,Keys said, equipment is sometimes damaged by split drinks.
Larson said the only major disadvantage was that he would usually work on Friday and Saturday nights, when he could be doing other things.
But the worst problem a dice jockey faces is calls on short notice, Keys said.
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LAWRENCE'S COMPLETE SPECIALTY STORE FOR THE KID IN EVERYONE
Y
- Hacky Sacks * Frisbees
* Stuffed Animals
* Squirt Guns
FUN AND GAMES
937 MASSACHUSETTS
- Strategy Games • D & D
• Costumes • Masks
• Special Orders Welcome
10 Month Lease Available
10 Month Lease Available
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS.
One of Lawrence's newer and most energy efficient complexes
LEASE A TWO-BEDROOM UNIT NOW! For Fall Semester
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY EXTRAS:
- Individually controlled high efficiency
- Frostfree refrigerator and dishwasher in unit unit
- heating and air conditioning
- Swimming pool with sun deck and cabana.
- Laundry facilities.
- Free covered parking on one and two bedroom units.
- Regular and Large 2 bedroom
- units from $360 to $395 per month.
- Quiet southwest location
Don Conrad Campus Pastor
- KU bus route.
Placed Dr
55 W 2022
Heatherwood
Dr
4800 TV
AV, WB,
convector, switch
2040 Heatherwood Dr. No. 203 Phone 913-843-4754
LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY
(ALC-AELC-LCA)
C
WELCOME to WORSHIP at 10:30 a.m. "Theme: Welcome, skeptic" (Lunch follows worship Aug.24)
- Whirlpool - Sauna
- Shower - Locker Rooms
On August 31 begins Bible Study (on Revelation) at 9:15 a.m. and Supper Group at 5:30 p.m.
1204 Oread
843-4948
Excitement!
Jazz & Tap
Fall Classes Begin Soon
Ballet
Aerobic Exercise
Aerobic Jazz
Social Dancing
Call for more information
gallery DANCE
At Trailridge Athletic Club
DANCE GALLERY
2500 W. 6th St.
841-0215
WELCOME BACK STUDENTS!
A. F. K.
LIBERTY HALLVIDEO YOUR DOWNTOWN VIDEO ALTERNATIVE PRESENTS
6 Great Reasons To Check Us Out First!
4. OPEN LATE!
To serve you better we are open from noon to 10 PM
Monday through Saturday and from 2 PM to 10 PM
on Sunday.
1. LOW PRICES!
Mon-Thurs.. tapes $1.50, players $3.00.
Fri-Sun.. tapes $3.00, players $5.00.
Plus many $1.00 tapes all the time.
2. WIDE VARIETY!
We carry those hard to find tapes not found anywhere else in town — classics, international, cult, music, sci-fi, horror and lots of popular, too.
5. GIFT CERTIFICATES!
Friends birthday coming up? Video rentals are the perfect gift and the certificates are good for players.
too!
6. MOVIE POSTERS!
A great way to spice up your room! If we don't have it in stock, we can get it for you.
3. EASY TO RENT!
All we require is a $1.00 membership fee, two pieces of 1.0. and you are out the door with tapes galore.
646 MASS.
749-1912
Does Rob love Sally?
Will Jim meet the girl of his dreams?
Do you like bubble baths and kite flying?
To the girl in the gold lamay shorts . . do you want to go out?
Read Kansan Classifieds
University Daily Kansan 119 Stauffer-Flint
L
est.1969
McCall's Shoes
FASHION SELECTION AND SINCERE SERVICE WE WANT TO BE YOUR SHOE STORE!
Put Yourself in our Shoes
See Our Complete Fall '86 Collection of Mens & Womens Shoes by
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Wednesday, August 20, 1986
City/Area
University Daily Kansan
11
Forgetfulness often trips false alarms
By Evan Walter
Staff writer
A shop owner sticks his key into the front door on an early Monday morning, preparing for a busy day. He steps inside, turns on the light and sits down to review the sales receipts from the day before with a cup of coffee.
But then a deafening, monotone shriek sends him springing from the chair 30 seconds later, spilling coffee into his lap. He forgot to shut off the burglar alarm.
Although alarms can save a store from robberies, they can sometimes go off because of circumstances other than a break-in.
The people who work in a store frequently are the cause of false alarms, said Dave Rueschhoff, the owner of Rueschhoff Security Services Inc., 2441 W. Sixth St."
With every alarm system he installs, Rueschhoff said, he instructs the store owner and all other employees about the proper use of the system and how to prevent false alarms.
"We give an hour-long lecture on how to use them." Rueschhoff said. "But so many of the retail stores have high employee-turnover rates, and they don't give new people proper instructions."
The number of false alarms has been high in recent months, according to Bob Avery, an officer of the Lawrence Police Department. He said he did not know the reason for the increase but knew the most frequent cause of false alarms in businesses.
"Most of them are caused by employee personnel," he said. "Most alarms have a delay system. They'll walk in and not get it shut off in time."
Delay systems are built into the alarms that work by monitoring the motion within a building interior. The owner of an alarm with a delay system has time to shut it off before it rings.
False alarms also occur on the KU campus, Sgt. John Brothers, KU police department, said that of the 15 campus buildings with security systems, the alarms rang 213 times in 1985. The KU police statistics didn't indicate how many were false calls, but Brothers said he thought most of them were.
"Environmental conditions can set them off," Brothers said. "For example, a good lightning storm can set them off all over the place."
Rueschhoff said he had two
guidelines alarm owners should follow to reduce the likelihood of false alarms. All people who work in the building with the security system should know how to use it. If problems with the system arise, people in the building should contact the company that installed the system.
False alarms caused by personnel can result in financial penalties, Avery said.
"After the fourth alarm, we charge them $10 if they have a permit," he said. "If they don't have one, it's a flat $10 (the first time)."
Permits are not required to have an alarm system, but allow the police to know who has alarms and who to contact when an alarm goes off. Avery said. They are not required for audible alarm systems.
The KUPD, which handles the alarm calls on campus, doesn't require permits for buildings with systems and doesn't fine for false alarms, Brothers said.
Mechanical problems with the system can also trigger a false alarm. The most common mechanical problem occurs with telephone lines, which connect most of the systems with the police if they are direct systems, or with private security companies if they are indirect systems. Avery said
Animals can get caught by the system. This summer there were two incidents in Lawrence of deer walking through glass storefront windows and setting off alarms.
Animals also were responsible for numerous false alarms in private homes with burglar-detector systems, Avery said.
"The most common cause are animals in the house," Avery said.
"When the people are gone, a cat is loose."
Security alarms come in various types. Some have audible bells and others don't. Some are monitored by the police department while others are monitored by private companies, Avery said.
"Every alarm system is custom-designed," Rueschoff said. "It's like a heating- and air-conditioning system. You design it to fit the building."
Security systems can be designed either as perimeter systems — on the exterior of a building — or as interior motion detectors. Rueschhoff said that most systems were a mixture of both.
Rueschhoff said he recommended that his customers buy systems with an audible bell.
M
--offers you:
Flower Girl
Shauna Norfleet/KANSAN
Katherine Allen, 6, daughter of Rand and Gail Allen, 1625 University Dr., sits at the corner of University drive and Strong avenue this summer selling flowers and other miscellaneous items.
Aztec Inn
WELCOME BACK KU STUDENTS AND FACULTY
We feature delicious 12 oz. Steaks, Trout Almondine, Prime Rib, Lobster, Shrimp, Chicken, as well as Burgers.
Also, try our great Mexican menu featuring South of the Border selections made from scratch.
Come in any day for the Best Margaritas in Town for only $1.50 a glass, and Well Drinks are $1.50 everyday. Live Music every Friday and Saturday night. Public and Private Dining.
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Luncheon Menu
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---
valon
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- One or two bedroom apartments.
- Close to K.U. and Hillcrest Shopping Center.
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Leasing Office location: 111 W. 8th, #101.
- On K.U. Bus route.
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Lawrence, KS 66044
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Leading Edge Model D:
Captures community with power and compatibility
LAWRENCE, KS—Faculty, students and the business community have been flocking to a new IBM-compatible computer—the Leading Edge Model "D". This remarkable PC is perhaps the "hottest" selling PC in town.
PC in town.
Sold locally by Computer
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Inside, the Leading Edge is well thought out. The main board can accommodate a full 640K. It has full size expansion slots and is socketed for the 8087 chip. It even has a 130 watt power supply to support this machine growth. To prove its reliability, the Model "D" comes with a full 15 month warranty.
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double floppy disk drives, graphics capability built in, and monochrome or RGB monitor output on the board.
---
Leading Edge
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Total MS-DOS System
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30mb System-$1995
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LEADING EDGE, IBM, and HERCULES are trademarks
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COMPUTER OUTLET LEADING EDGE, IBM, and HERCULES are trademarks.
12
University Daily Kansan
City/Area
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
PARKER
Tammy Stude/Special to the KANSAN
In preparation for a body building competition, Wilson performs arm curls.
Student develops mind, muscle
by Lynn Maree Ross Special to the Kansan
Some KU students may groan at the thought of returning to school and the promise of tests.
But Kirk Wilson, Paola four year student in pharmacy, has spent the last three years preparing for a test that he won't get college credit for.
Wilson's test didn't take place in a classroom, but on a stage. He is a competitive body builder.
In March, Wilson stepped on stage at Central Junior High. 1400 Massachusetts St., as a contestant in the Mr. Lawrence body-building competition.
People turn to body building for a variety of reasons, Wilson said recently.
He began lifting weights because he was too thin. He said he was 6 feet 2 inches tall and weighed 140 pounds, like the skinny guy on the beach who sand kicked in his face.
Now Wilson weighs 220 pounds, but he still isn't satisfied.
"I would like to get a little bigger,
he said. "Gain about 20 more pounds."
And although body building has positive effects, he said, it has negative effects on his life as a student.
of lean muscle."
While Wilson tries to gain that extra 20 pounds, he must also concentrate on pharmacy school.
In addition to bigger muscles, he has better self-disepline and confidence, Wilson said. But he also has an empty stomach much of the time and sleeps less.
An efficient and productive workout requires Wilson to concentrate for long periods of time. Wilson said this trained him to concentrate better when studying.
Training also builds his self-confidence. Now he is more outgoing, "I can talk to people better," he said.
However, Wilson said, his size can be intimidating. When he first came to KU, the other pharmacy students didn't talk to him, despite his smiles and attempts to be friendly.
But Marty Post, Kansas City, Kan. fourth year pharmacy student, said
Wilson didn't intimidate him. He just thought Wilson was in the wrong school.
And Post isn't the first person to think Wilson was out of place. Wilson said an instructor at Johnson County Community College pointed down the hall and said, "Isn't the gym down that way?"
Now that Wilson's been at KU a few years, that rarely happens. The students know Wilson better and are friendlier, Wilson said.
Gene Martin, dean of pharmacy and one of Wilson's professors, agreed. Although Wilson's size is overwhelming, Martin said, other students don't seem intimidated.
"He's outgoing," Martin said. "He seems like a nice guy."
The benefits of body building gained Wilson some new friends in the pharmacy school. But he also made sacrifices. To prepare for competition, Wilson gave up big meals, sleep and study time.
Wilson said he usually ate 5,000 calories worth of food a day. But for three weeks before the competition.
he cut back to only 800 calories a day. He ate only chicken breasts, fish and eggs.
"It gets old." he said.
But the lack of food also robbed Wilson of a good night's sleep. Going to bed hungry wasn't easy, he said.
The diet helped trim excess fat from Wilson's body. As Wilson's body fat decreased, his muscle definition increased. Well-defined muscles are one thing body-building judges look for, he said.
The lack of food and sleep made studying difficult, and daily workouts in the gym cut down on study time. Wilson he spent two to three hours a day lifting weights.
After three years of training and three weeks of dieting, Wilson was ready to flex it out for the Mr. Lawrence title.
Rick Sells, owner of Junkyard's Jym, 353 Gateway Drive, and sponsor of the competition, stepped on stage at Central Junior High School. He asked the audience to make lots of noise when the body builders came out on stage.
T
Tammy Stude/Special to the KANSAN
Kirk Wilson, Paola fourth year pharmacy student, works on his shoulder development at Junkyard's Jym. 535 Gateway Drive.
M. S. GANDHRA
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The fall football season is here again and many of you Wichitans will be making the journey north to the University of Kansas for the
games.
While you're in Lawrence, you should try the cuisine of the Royal Peking Restaurant at 711 W. 23rd.
for $8 a person the chef will prepare "The President's Meal" to Peking to Richard Nixon on his break-through journey to China. Individual dishes on the card run from 40 cents each egg, a pork rib and Peking meat. Most are in the $3 to $4 range.
By M.F. West Wichita Beacon staff
Chinese Food: Taster's Delight
Here's what the critics say about the Royal Peking Restaurant From the pages of the Wichita Beacon:
and for four.
The latter we began with the won
Duck. Most are in the maze. On recent family occasions we've enjoyed both the dinners for three and for four.
\*prices not current
We hardly had finished soup and roll when the main dishes arrived: the fried rice, beef (juilleme) in a large pan, and chicken. We size pieces of chicken prepared with mushrooms and vegetables including bamboo shoots, the Royal crab, and medium in size with a rich orange sauce and a sweet and sour pork.
ton soup, which was brought to table only moments after we'd ordered and our tea had been poured. We had egg rolls with the soup as a side dish. The Royal Peking provides two for the dollar with both a hot mustard sauce and a slight sweet clear broth. This is much more crisply done. The pork bits in the filling are well done but retain delicate flavor while the crisp and finally chopped vegetables in the roll only hint of being cooked.
Places to go
Places to go
While tastes are difficult to describe to others, it may be enough to say that each of these dishes is a savory taste experience in itself.
PAID ADVERTISEMENT
On the latest visit to the restaurant (which is almost hidden in the kitchen) we ordered the Mauntipoutus) we ordered the dinner for three, beginning with hot and sour soup—very hot—and egg rolls and preceding with fried rice. Then we moved on to beef, chicken with green pepper (pepper which was precisely touched by heat of cooking but without being either cooked or boiled), and our salad. These were much like dishes in the other dinner but with some subtle differences. The net result of both evenings was a meal filled with a variety of tasting experiences and considerable gustatory satisfaction.
The Royal Peking decor is modest with wall hangings and lamps to suggest Oriental or charac-
teristic nothing overpower the pleasure of dining.
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1
Wednesday, August 20,1986
City/Area
University Daily Kansan
13
Students relive medieval age at annual Renaissance benefit
By Lynn Maree Ross
Special to the Kansan
The Renaissance Festival, sponsored by the Kansas City Art Institute for seven consecutive weeks starting Sept. 6, in Bonner Springs.
Tickets are $7.95 for the general public at the gate and $7 in advance. $3.25 and $2.75 for students and senior citizens. $6.75 for students and senior citizens. And available for groups of 25 or more at $6.50 can be purchased by calling (816) 681-8005
The festival, which is an annual benefit for the Kansas City Art Institute, is held in Bonner Springs.
The Renaissance Festival is a few weeks away, but several KU students have been working for months creating the crafts and characters of 400 years ago.
"To be a performer, a street character or a crier you have to audition," said Alyson Burnett. Lawrence junior. Burnett is a member of the Society for Creative Anachronism, a group dedicated to the study and enactment of medieval and Renaissance life.
After the first audition, the selected people can attend workshops to learn to speak medieval English and get help with their characters.
After practicing, each person auditions again. Burnett said that sometimes the second auditions were held in public at Nichols Fountain on the Country Club Plaza in Kansas City, Mo.
Auditioning in public gives people a chance to practice in front of a crowd, she said. It also gives the judges an idea of how well each person stays in character under pressure.
This attention to detail might seem overdone, but it's the duty of those participating to make the visit to medieval days as realistic as possible, Mary Strobl said.
Strobl, her sister Dorothy Strobl and Barbara Jones, Peculiar, Mo., sophomores, perform as the Dotty Minstrels. The trio sings Renaissance songs.
But staying in character isn't difficult because performers look out for each other, she said. For example, they remind people to take off watches or other jewelry that doesn't look medieval.
Richelle Basgall, Dodge City senior, also will return to the festival this year as a street musician.
Bassagall came to the festival in years past as a visitor. Last year, Bassagall said, she decided to become part of the festival.
She and Jennene Rohr, Topeka sophomore, wandered the paths of the festival grounds playing Irish tunes last year. Bassgail played the violin and Rohr played a lap harp.
Participating in the Renaissance Festival has an added benefit for Basgall and Burnett. The festival allows them to delve into the real-life trappings of their university studies.
John Andrews, a Lawrence resident and KU graduate, also has more than a passing interest in the Renaissance Festival. Andrews will perform vocal solos at the festival for the sixth consecutive year.
Basgall was a music major but switched to humanities, which involves studying the Renaissance period. Burnett studies medieval literature.
"Music is my greatest love," Andrews said. "The festival truly means a great deal to me."
Andrews sang a variety of songs, but "Danny Boy" and "Green Sleeves" are favorites of the festival visitors.
"I slip into it, it seems, almost without effort," he said.
Besides the chance to sing, Andrews said, the formality of the time
period is much like the way he lives.
For that reason, getting into the character of Andrew A. Cappella is easy.
The chance to get away from unpleasant reminders of the 20th century is something Andrews is quick to take advantage of.
Although Basgall, Rohr and many other people had to audition to participate, not all performers audition.
--catholic. "People come in and bring their friends. It's good for the business," he said.
"It's like a getaway," he said. "But my God what a pleasant getaway."
Burnett said that because the Society for Creative Anachronism was invited to participate each year, the members don't have to audition.
It must be frustrating to be an inspired singer, instrumentalist, poet or comedian and have no place to perform.
Doug Hassig, the owner of Up and Under, 403 N. Second St., said Mike nights were for anybody who wanted an audience for their talents. Performers have 20 minutes on stage every second Wednesday.
So, several nightclubs in Lawrence schedule "mike nights" to attract untamed and hardworking artists and give them an open microphone and an audience to perform in front of.
By DeAnn Thomas
'Mike nights' provide local spotlights
Matthew Moore, a local soloist and poetry reader, said, "There is very little baiting of the performances by the audience. It's a good opportunity for local artists who are just putting their acts together to get response."
Tim Ebeling, drummer for the Tornado Alley band, said mike nights tested the nerves and poise of the artist.
"Some are good, some not so good, but people like seeing new performances."
"It gets people used to performing," he said. Ebeling and his band usually attend Tuesday open-mike nights at the Rock Chalk Bar, 618 W. 12th St.
Audiences are usually very receptive to the performers, Hassig said.
Staff writer
The combination of new talent and local professionals who stop by to play between shows provides an enjoyable, learning atmosphere.
Rick McNeely, owner of the Jazzhaus, $92.1%$ of Massachusetts St., said that he got a good response when he held the Lonnie Ray's Blues Jam, the Jazzhaus' version of mike night.
The Lonnie Ray's All Star Band, which plays traditional blues and rock 'n' roll, provides the jam session.
People have brought harmonicas, guitars and saxophones to the session. Their names are called off the sign-up list, and they join the band on stage and make music.
CITY CAB $3 Gets you anywhere in Lawrence
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Southern Hills Center - 1801 W 23rd
9:00 to 5:00 Mon - 9:30 to 20:00 Saturdays
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841-7117
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- seating for up to 700
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• Climate control year round
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Airline Tickets
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- Haircuts Facials
Coupon
Sale dates—Aug.21- Sept.13,1986
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14
University Daily Kansan
PROTECTED BY
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
University Audio/video
PHILIPS AUTO AUDIO
PHILLIPS EN-250
Q
This Phillips automotive design includes a solid line switch, power supply for high power operation from a 12 VDC power source. The amplifier and power supply circuits are a kind of modified aluminum enclosure with
circuits are included in a single, rugged,
low profile anodized aluminum enclosure with
high reflectivity.
the 'power supply' separately 'magnetically'
or for low external radio frequency interference. This amplifier uses
discrete 'power' for maximum sound quality. The output stage is fully
complementary and its DC coupled to the speaker load for outstanding low frequency
performance.
This amplifier is best used with high performance source units and speaker systems. It has low noise, continuous power, both channels driven from 20-20KHz, with no more than 1W continuous power.
CONCORD
10:43
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If you can't afford it, spare yourself the heartache of listening to it.
List: $349.95
Uncompromising performance, the Concord begins and ends with it. One listen to it and you will be exhilarated. You know you already deserve the finest. Specs include FNR an exclusive noise reduction system, and AM stereo to give you the same experience yourself at University Audio by finding out just how affordable the finest can be.
University Audio/video
2319 Louisiana Lawrence
841-3775
University
udio/video
THE VOLKSWOOFER/SATELLITE IB
The most elegant solution to the conflicting demands for wide dispersion deep bass low diffraction and supercardiac resonance is the subwoofer satellite system. This is precisely what M A K has done by designing amplifier and cabainer systems that enable low power output and flat power output are achieved. In the subwoofer, a low pass active carrier network features a 24db active horn which provides the necessary
quencies for a truly custom match to any speaker system or room . . . the built-in 400mW amplifier offers only a bass frequency range. The satellite IB is a perfect match to the Valkovista. It features two 4 woofers and two dome tweeters crossed over using a highly tunable mic.
a treble contouring afferring presence depth, distance brightness impact and overall tonal balance impact of the vibration is virtually non existent. But above all else what makes them sound exciting and vital is their ability to produce the impulse dynamics of each tone in a satisfactory of alive performance.
MILLER & KREISEL
hafler
HAFLER 110
This preamplifier has earned worldwide recognition for pearce setting audio performance. It operates all discrete devices in the signal path. All capacitors are low distortion, low dielectric loss design. Unused inputs are internally grounded for lower cross-
NOW $379
List: $440.00
LightStar
HAFLER DH-500
This power amplifier is conservatively rated at 255 watts per channel, which is adequate for the loudest sound we have heard from a high power amplifier. For extraordinary power requirements, this amplifier is bridged to mana. Now you would have in excess of 800 watts of power available.
List: $850.00
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University Audio/video
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Over the years, auto. sound technology has been nudging home hi-fi quality. Now, with this bass amplifier, you can experience the sound of live music in the contesses of your car. Most fine auto sound systems have but one deficiently no real deep bass. But by using a high-quality amplifier, the limitations can be eliminated. Innovative technology & design make this amplifier compatible with any car stereo on the market today and extend their bass down to 30Hz. This unit includes a bass drive level and a parametric equalizer to customize subwoofer response to match your room's ambient protection circuit protects the amplifier from damage due to improper protection settings overload or speaker short circuits.
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Mission speakers are designed for perfectionists, true. And associated with state-of-the-art. Justifiably so. But they are also affordable. Priced within the reach of all, they combine sophisticated speaker design with precise workmanship to offer extraordinary value. Listen for yourself . . . you'll discover why Mission is the speaker under $1000. Priced from $220 per pair to $800 per pair.
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udio/video
YOU OWE IT TO YOURSELF TO AUDITION THE BEST
707
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udio/video
2319 Louisiana Lawrence
841-3775
University
udio/video
THE NEC N-961: A
VIDEOPHILE'S DREAM
CD-ROM
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CD-ROM
Usually, when a unit is loaded with features, performance is only ho-hum. The NEC N-961 is, however, a notable exception to that generality. All of the buzz words are here: Dalby noise reduction, HQ circuitry, Hi-Fi Stereo, with built-in MTS-SAP, 21-ffeature on-screen display programming, 140-channel totally random-access tuner. And they all work. Stuningly, Audition the NEC N-961 at university Audio soon. Discover for yourself the wonderful world of Hi-Fi video.
SONY
List: $1149.00
NOW $899
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SONY WM-F100
- Stereo cassette playback
- Stereo cassette playback
* Built in AM/ FM stereo tuner
* two rechargeable Ni-Cad batteries
- Ultra-compact design
- Auto source
- Auto reverse
- Dolby B noise reduction
NEC
Battery
12V 5Ah
Max. Capacity 60Ah
Power Output 48W
12V 5Ah
Max. Capacity 60Ah
Power Output 48W
- MDR stereo headphones
- Optional AC/ DC power supplies
List: $199.95
SONY WM-F75
NOW $159^95
- Sports Walkman with AM FM stereo tuner
* Splash resistant case and headphone
* Auto reverse
* Dobby: B-zone reduction
* Courcier internal flywheel
* Automatic tape selector
* Distant local sensitivity selector
List: $179.95
NOW $149^95
University
udio/video
KENWOOD
9 13
KENWOOD
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Quartz PLL Synthesizer FM/AM
Cassette-Receiver
- Theft Prevention New DIN Chassis with carrying handle * 18FM/6AM presets with scan & auto-memory * ANRC II with WIDE NARROW position * Tunner Monitor * Local/DX / Auto-reverse * Blazimuth tape head * Dalby B/C NR * Metal * Tape Advance * Keyoff eject * Speaker preamp lader * Laminator * FNBs * Selenium blue/amber illumination * 12W total ample .4W ch. at 1% * l preout
List: $549.95
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University
udio/video
LUXMAN
Luxman's new LV-103 brid design integrated amplifier. What-design?
Brid design. That's right, brid design. With FET's in the front end, extended-life tubes in the driver stage, and MOSFET-sensitized for high power output, the result is a new dimension in sonic warmth and clarity. This rare hybrid (brid) circuitry is the consummate application of voltage-driven amplification technology, transcending all previous designs in terms of simplicity and total linearity. Doo beta circuitry and STAR circuit topology further minimize distortion. All this means that Luxman has combined the best features of the tube amplifier with modern MOSFET-design. The result? Smooth. Transition-free power. State-of-the-art? You bet.
List: $700.00
NOW $599
POWER TRANSMISSION VALUE 1000
University Audio/video
2319 Louisiana Lawrence
841-3775
CARVER
[ ]
THE RECEIVER 130
The original Carver receiver receives 130 watts per channel with a frequency bandwidth of 1H to 30 kHz & 1db. It also features three types of protection: 1) short circuit 2) DC offer 3) Low high frequency 4) overloaded 5) power - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful - powerful
List: $875.00
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THE CARVER COMPACT DISC PLAYER
This Carver CD player employs triple laser beam pickup is sophisticated oversampling and digital filtering. If all that is fitted, it may have been just an imaging device and evolving many state of the art players, discovered why they didn't sound as good as they could have. His solution to this discovery was very simply called the Lensless Laser Diode, which he used. You are there, than just in the presence of a very good recording
List: $650.00
NOW $579
University
udio/video
ALLISON: SIX
This model's features include:
1) uniform acoustic output in the audio stream
2) high output capability, enabling the system to produce the full dynamic range of analog or digital signals.
digital recordings. of the lowest possible
O
very broad dispersion at all frequencies, 5) maximum reliability through sophisticated engineering and rigid quality control and 6) convenience and flexibility in placement.
List: $200.00 ea. NOW $149 ea.
H
ALLISON: NINE
One critic has called the Allison Nine the best looking loudspeaker ever produced in the world. It is built into a way system with an 10' long excursion acoustic suspension woofer and convex diaphragm mid range and high frequency drivers. These speakers provide magnetic fluid for better efficiency and improved heat dissipation. The system can be bi-amped and the power slope can be adjusted to allow for sound in either oak or walnut veneer.
List: $500.00 ea.
NOW $429 ea.
1
Sports
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
University Daily Kansan
Continuity is key to football success
By Frank Hansel
It all looks the same
Sports editor
The desk still sits in the back corner of the office next to the television and VCR. The only things that have changed are the knick-knacks on the shelves
The unknowing visitor might think this was still Mike Gottried's office — and that's just the way Bob Valente wants it.
Valeente, who took over as Kansas' head football coach when Gottfried left for the University of Pittsburgh last December, wants to follow the same game plan as before.
"I wouldn't be a very good football coach if there weren't some things that I wanted to stay with because I believe in them," Valsente said last week. "Continuity is the most important thing in a program for success. If you are having success — are moving forward in the program — then you need to stay as close to that plan as you possibly can."
After 21 years as an assistant coach, Bob Valesente has his first head coaching job. Valesente will make his head coaching debut Sept. 13 when the Jayhawks host the North Carolina Tar Heels.
Although this is Valesente's first head coaching position after 21 years as a assistant, linebacker coach Mike Monos said Valesente got plenty of experience last year during the Gottfried regime.
"When we had all that trouble in Hawaii (with players' academic problems) last year, Val ran the whole show while Coach Gottfried was out talking to the press," Monos said. "It was Coach Gottfried's team, but
A. R. MILLER
Coach Val did a lot of it, working with the players, and practical schedules
Valesen said he was ready when he took over the top spot.
"When I first got the opportunity to take this position, I had my feet firmly planted on the ground," he said. "I've been in coaching for many years and I quickly recognized the challenges that lie ahead and the course we have to take to continue what has already been started."
"It hurt, but then again it was building us up for it." Vaughn said. "A couple of games we'd be at the hotel and nobody knew where Coach Gottfried was. Coach Val was stepping in for Coach Gottfried.
"So when we got the announcement that Coach Gottfried took the job at Pitt, well, nobody was really disappointed because Coach Val had been coaching us for the last four or five games. We lost a good one, but we gained a better one."
While Valesente wants to follow the same plan on the field, he is following another one off the field.
Because Valesente, who was Gottfried's top aide, had done so much to run the team, wide receiver Willie Vaughn said little had changed since the team realized that Gottfried was moving on.
and he understands them, but he's able to make sure he's a disciplinarian," said Dave Dunkelberger, "defensive coordinator. "He's not going to give in and not going to make it easy. He realizes the only way to get the job done for them and us is with discipline."
He has a feeling for the players
Coach recruits, fills 'Air Force'
The recruiting poster could have said "Uncle Val wants you."
Sports editor
That was the task for first-year head coach Bob Valesente. He had to find recruits for his receiving corp, the KU Air Force.
the Rockies Graduations hit the Air Force hard. The Jayhawks lost four receivers, including All-Big Eight performer Richard Estell, who had 70 receptions last fall.
By Frank Hansel
Kansas also lost wide receivers Johnny Holloway, Sandy MeeG and Skip Peete, along with tight end Sylvester Byrd.
The loss of the receivers left sophomore Willie Vaughn as the senior member of the team, when it comes to playing time.
"I still pick up things from him. If I can do something to help him, then I certainly try, and that goes for the other receivers." Vaugn said. "We're just young and we look at our leader as the quarterback."
Vaughn said that although he might be considered a leader, he was still learning things from older teammates, such as senior wide receiver Sal Lewis.
That inexperience has Valesente concerned.
"That's one of our big concerns whether or not we can overcome that in the early going, but we do have more speed at that position this year," Valesente said.
Rodney Harris transferred to Kansas after the Drake football program folded. Harris played in all 11 games for the Bulldogs as a freshman last season, catching five passes for 56 yards, and returning 18 punts for 144 yards.
Valesente recruited two prospects at wide receiver.
"I had a couple other schools that I considered going to." Harris said.
See Receivers, p. 15, col. 1
Valesente's goal is bright defense
Kansas head football coach Bob Valesente's recipe for a successful defense is simple — he wants every Jayhawk on the field to be totally involved in every play.
"We're trying to establish a swarming-three-downs-and-off defense with a total team concept." Valesente said last week.
By Frank Hansel Sports editor
Linebacker Willie Pless, the star of last year's defense, graduated, leaving the Jayhawks with some work to do.
Those three are Rick Bredesen, Rick Clayton and John Randolph. Bredesen finished second on the team in tackles, behind Pless, with 121. Randolph earned a starting position in the middle of the season with Pless and Bredesen when the Jayhawks switched from a 5-2 defense to a 4-3. Clayton got little playing time as a reserve.
Last season, the Jayhawks finished seventh in total defense in the Big Eight, allowing an average of 335.2 yards a game. Kansas lasted in pass defense giving up an average of 208.9 yards per game.
Valesente said the Kansas staff spent a lot of time in spring practices improving the defense.
The Jayhawks boast plenty of depth with Stacy Henson and Warren Shields also battling for playing time. Academic eligibility status is uncertain for Darnell Williams, who started in some games last year and made 85 tackles.
But there are some bright spots in the defense.
"We're probably a little bit stronger at linebacker than we were before," linebacker coach Mike Monos said. "Before we only had Willie, now there's no one standout, but the three of them together should do a great job."
The major question the team has to answer, can it stop the pass?
Valezente said the answer would have to come from all 11 players.
"I feel like everyone else in teaching feels — that pass defense
involves not only the pass rush, but the linebacker coverage and secondary coverage," Valesente said. "All 11 people, when a pass is made, are totally involved in stopping that pass."
Kansas has three returning starters to provide the pass rush.
Defensive ends Phil Forte, who made 63 tackles last year, 11 of them for losses and three quarterback sacks, and Scott Carlson, who played sparingly last fall, will provide the outside rush.
The middle of the Jayhawk defensive front is in up in the air right now. Nose tackle Eldridge Avery, who finished with 64 tackles last fall, currently holds down one tackle position. But there is a question mark at the other tackle spot because Steve Nave was moved to offensive tackle Monday when Bob Peiper was injured in practice.
Steve Nave had 63 tackles last season as a starter. Guy Gamble and Mitch Gaffen will battle for playing time if Nave stays on the other side of the line.
Free safety Wayne Ziegler and cornerback Milt Garner are the two returning defensive secondary starters.
Ziegler missed seven games last season with knee injuries. He originally injured his knee against Vanderbilt and then reinjured it against Kansas State.
Garner led the Jawhays with five interceptions last season and had 30 tackles, 23 unassisted, at his cornerback spot. Mike Fisher, a junior college transfer from Mt. San Antonio, Calif., is listed to start opposite Garner. Fisher was a team captain and first team all-conference selection last fall.
"I can see excellent improvement in the spring, but we still have to go out against Big Eight competition or in the opener against North Carolina," Valesente said.
Jamey Steinbauer, who had 18 tackles and two interceptions, is the leading candidate to start at strong safety.
RECREATION SERVICES Fall 1986 Activities Calendar
AUGUST
Thursday 28
SEPTEMBER
Monday 25
Classes Begin
Sunrise Fitness begins 6:15 a.m.
Enter to Duse Labor Day
Extravaganza 5 p.m.
Robinson 208
Mud Volleyball 65.00
Volleyball 65.00
Monday
Labor Day Holiday, Labor Day
Weekend
Wanggao
Sand Volleyball 10.00 a.m.
Coreball 10.30 a.m.
Croquet
Tuesday 2
Softball Managers' Meeting
6:30 p.m.
North Gym
Wednesday 3
Sports Clubs
Campbell Instant Scheduling
8:30 a.m. 4 p.m.
208 Robinson
Softball Clinic 6:30 p.m.
North Gym
Aqua Aerobics
Demonstration 6:30 p.m.
Softball Instant Scheduling
8.30 a.m. 4 p.m.
208 Robinson
Softball Officials Meeting
8.30 p.m.
156 Robinson
Aerobics Demonstration
5.30-6.30 p.m.
North Gym
Thursday 4
Monday 8
Softball Begins
Aerobics Class Begins 6 Weeks
For $10.00
M & W 5:30 6:30 p.m. North Golf
or T & M 7:30 6:30 p.m.
Tuesday 9
Wednesday 10
Aqua Aerobics Session 1, 6 weeks for $10.00
T & E 7H, 5:45-6:30 p.m. or
8:30-9:00 p.m.
*Hot Spot*
Waterpool Managers Meeting
6:00 p.m.
202 Robinson
Weight Training
7:30, 8:30
Thursday 11
Tennis Singles Entries Due
5.00 p.m.
Robinson $1.00
Entries Due: Waterpolo, 5.00 p.m.
208 Robinson $10.00
Jayhawk Triathlon Entries
Due 5:00 p.m.
280 Robinson $10.00
Sunday 14
Tennis Singles, 1:00 p.m.
Robinson Courts
Intraumal Swim Meet Entries Due
5:00 p.m.
208 Robinson $1,00/50.00
Waterpolo Begins
Jayhawk Triathlon 8:00 a.m.
Packet Pickup 6:45 a.m.
Friday 19
Monday 22
Tuesday 16
Intramural Swim Meet: 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday 17
Old Pool
Football Managers Meeting.
6.30 p.m.
North Gym
Sunday 21
Tuesday 23
Football Instant Scheduling
8.30 a.m. 4 p.m.
208 Robinson
Wednesday 24
Football Instant Scheduling
8:30 a.m. 4 p.m.
208 Robinson
Sunny Lake
Tennis D/M 1:00 p.m.
Robinson Courts
Sunday 28
OCTOBER
Table Tennis/Badminton Singles
Entries Due, 5.00 p.m.
208 Robinson, $1.00
Monday 29 Softball Playoffs Begin
Fable Tennis/Badminton Singles Tournament 5.30 p.m.
207 Robinson Court I, Main Gym
Monday 29
Thursday 2
Softball Hill Championship. TBA
Table Tennis/Badminton Doubles Entries Due 5.00 p.m.
280 Robinson Gym, $1.00
Ki-Aikido
Kung Fu
KU Karate
KU Martial Art
Ruayu
Football Begins
Friday 3
Thursday 9
Table Tennis/Badminton Doubles Tournament 5.30 p.m.
207 Robinson Court I, Main Gym
Sunday 5
Monday 6
Friday 10
Volleyball Instant Scheduling
8:30 a.m. 4 p.m.
208 Robinson
Volleyball Officials Meeting
6:30 p.m.
156 Robinson
Saturday 11
Tuesday 14
Soccer (men's & women's)
Taekwondo
Table Tennis
Vanguard Karate
Volleyball
Volleyball Managers Meeting
6:30 p.m.
North Gym
Indoor Soccer Managers
Meeting 7:00 p.m.
202 Robinson
KU vs. Iowa State
Monday 13
Wednesday 15
Volleyball Instant Scheduling
8.30 a.m. 4 p.m.
208 Robinson
Volleyball Officials Clinic
6.30 a.m.
North Gym
Thursday 16
Handball, Wallyball Entry Dues
5.00 p.m.
208 Robinson
Volleyball $1.00/$5.00
Indoor Soccer Officials Meeting
6.30 p.m.
208 Robinson
Aerobics Session I Ends
Aqua Aerobics Session I Ends
Sunday 19
Handball/Wallyball
Tournament. 1.30 p.m.
Monday 20
Volleyball And Indoor Soccer
Basketball
Aerobics Session II Begins
6 Weeks for $10.00
m & W 5:30.6:30 p.m. Or
T & TH 5:30.6:30 p.m.
North Gym
Tuesday 21
Thursday 23
iqua Aerobics Session II Begins
6 Weeks For $10.00
T 6, TH 5-45 6:30 p.m.
T 7, TH 5-45 11:15 p.m.
Old Pool
Sunday 26
Racquetball Singles Entries Due
5 p.m.
208 Robinson, $1.00
Racquetball Singles Tournament, 1:30 p.m.
Thursday 30
Football Play-Offs Begin
Racquetball D/M. Squash Entries
Due 5:00 p.m.
208 Robinson $1.00
Friday 31
Halloween
NOVEMBER
Racquetball D/M. Squash Tournament, 1:30 p.m.
Sunday 2
Football Hill Championship TBA
Sunday 9
Monday 10
Volleyball and Indoor Soccer Discoffle Basin
Wednesday 19
WEDNESDAY
Turkey Tort Entries Due 5:00 p.m.
208 Robinson. 66.00
Indoor. Soccer Hill
Friday 21
Championships TBA
Thursday 20
Volleyball Hill
Championships TBA
Friday 21
Pre Holiday Basketball Entries Due
208 Robinson
Limit 116 Teams. $5.00
Saturday 22
Turkey Tork 9.00 a.m.
Shenk Complex
Late Registration
8:00 R 45 a.m. $8.00
Wednesday 26
DECEMBER
Monday 1
Pre-Holiday Basketball Tournament
Thursday 4
5:00 p.m
208 Robinson 55.00
Aerobics Session I Ends
Aqua Aerobics Session I Ends
Polar Bear Run, 12:00 Noon
Shenk Complex
Late Entries.
11:00-11:45 a.m. $8.00
Monday 8
Tuesday 9
Finals Begin
Fridav 19
Friday 19
Finals Day
Surprise Fitness Conclu-
cedes Wednesday 24
Christmas Eve
Saturday 28
Holiday
Sunday 29
Holiday
Wednesday 31
New Years Eve
Friday 2
Holiday
Saturday 3
Holiday
Sunday 4
Holiday
Thursday 25
Christmas
Friday 27
Holiday
JANUARY 1987
Thursday 1
New Years Day
Thursday 15
Classes Begin
Sunrise Fitness Begins
Wednesday 21
Aerobics
5:30 6:30 p.m.
North Gym
1-On 1 Free Throw Entries Due
5:00 p.m.
208 Robinson, $1.00
Aqua Aerobics Demonstration
6:30 p.m.
Old Pool
Recreation Services
864-3546
Call for Info.
Recorded Message 864-3456
Service Center
864-3491
Proper K.U. I.D. needed for entrance into Robinson and for participation in most programs
Facilities
Fitness Center/Weight Room...103 Robinson
Gymnastics...216 Robinson
Gymnasiums (Basketball, Volleyball, Badminton)...209-215 Robinson
Racquetball/Handball Courts...123 Robinson
Natatorium...107 & 115 Robinson
Lifetime Sports Area(Table Tennis,Golf,Pickle Ball,Archery)...207 Robinson
Multipurpose Room...130 Robinson
Combative Room...102 Robinson
Saunas
Service Center...129 Robinson
4
2
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
Now On Sale
CUSTOMER APPRECIATION SALE
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Audio
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Stereo Review
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Wednesday, August 20, 1986
3
Sports
University Daily Kansan
KU's ground game might be improved with new emphasis
By Frank Hansel Sports editor
Game after game last fall, the Kansas passing game was a constant topic of conversation while the running game went relatively unnoticed, with good reason.
"Coach Val (head coach Bob Valesente) emphasized it a lot more in the spring)" running back Mike
The Jayhawk passing game ranked first in the Big Eight Conference, averaging 254.7 yards. But on the ground, they ranked sixth, averaging only 122.3 yards.
'We realize, and the coaches realize, part of what went wrong in the second half last year was that our running game wasn't a success and all we did was pass.'
—Mike Rogers KU running back
Rogers said. "We worked on it in practice a lot more than we had in the past.
"We realize, and the coaches realize, part of what went wrong in the second half last year was that our running game wasn't a success and all we did was pass. Teams would just drop back five defensive backs, and it's too easy to defend just a passing team."
Rogers, who rushed for 268 yards and two touchdowns last fall, now weighs 205 pounds after putting on 20 pounds during the off season.
"Knowing that it is all muscle, and the fact that I'm stronger, I'm more confident that I can break tackles easier." Rogers said.
Running back coach Paul "Rocky"
Alt said Rogers' extra weight would be an asset only if he could do the same things he did when he weighed 195.
Listed first on the pre-season depth chart at playback is Mark Henderson. Last fall, Henderson gained 90 yards on only 16 carries
Three junior college transfers will be challenging Rogers and Henderson for playing time.
Tim Ledford, a transfer from Mount San Antonio Junior College, ran for 460 yards and three touchdowns last fall on the way to being named the team's most valuable player and an all-league selection. Ledford also led the team with 31 receptions.
"Tim Lefford got hurt in the middle of the spring, but he has had the whole summer to heal, and he and Arnold Snell give us a lot of depth at running back," said Alt.
Snell, a sophomore transfer student from Independence Junior College, rushed for 978 yards and seven touchdowns. He was named honorable mention National Junior College Athletic Association All-America as a kick off and punt returner last fall.
The third transfer student is Scott Schriner from Butler Community College. Last season, he rushed for 1.408 yards, scored 18 touchdowns and was named first team NJCAA All-America.
Along with strengthening the backfield, Valesente said he was looking for more production from the offensive line.
Valesente has been forced to juggle his offensive line after Bob Pieper broke his foot Monday. Pete Popovich, a backup center last season, has been moved to right tackle. Steve Nave has been moved from defensive tackle to right guard.
Von Lacey has been put in at left guard to replace Paul Swenson. Paul Oswald is back at center and Jim Davus is listed at starting left guard.
CALL THE BOARD SO
"They're the most experienced group we have coming back." Valesente said.
Offensive right tackle Bob Pieper is expected to miss four weeks of practice since he broke his foot Monday. Pieper was participating in a blocking drill when offensive tackle Pete Popovich stepped on his foot. The injury has head coach Bob Valesente reshuffling his offensive line.
Fred Sadowski/KANSAN
More seats to be built for games
By a Kansan sports writer
The University of Kansas Athletic Corporation received approval from the Board of Regents in late June to add about 610 seats to the field house, which already has 15,129 seats.
Allen Field House will be getting more seats in the next two months, but just who will be sitting in them has yet to be decided. Athletic Director Monte Johnson said Monday.
About 330 seats will be added in a row behind the existing top row of seats in the upper level of the field house. The rest will be added in the lower level above the entrances to the main floor in the four corners of the building. Six rows of 10 seats will be added to three corners, and four rows of 10 seats will be added to the fourth corner to leave room to move equipment.
Johnson said that while some of the new seats would be located next to existing student seating sections, they had not been designated as student or general public seating as of yet.
"As far as the exact use of the seats, it has not been determined yet," Johnson said. "We have to get them in first."
He said the seats should be put in over the next 60 days. The additions should cost between $40,000 and $50,000 and will be paid for by revenue from season ticket sales for the new seats.
Last season, nearly every Jayhawk home game was sold out as KU went 35-4 and earned a trip to the Final Four in the NCAA Championship Tournament.
The Jayhawks lose three starters from last year's team, but athletic department officials have still been deluged with ticket requests.
In July, Floyd Temple, assistant athletic director, said requests had been pouring into the athletic department and that the seats would be easily filled.
68 Jay Allen, OG, 6-3, 235
90 Eldridge Avery, DT, 6-3, 255
66 John Baker, TE, 6-4, 215
45 Carlos Barrow, LB, 6-2, 228
1 Derek Berry, SS, 6-3, 205
3 Tony Berry, CB, 6-1, 175
94 Collis Brazil, DT, 6-6, 240
25 Rick Bredesen, LB, 6-1, 230
47 John Brehm, PWR, 6-1, 185
7 Mark Brown, SS, 6-1, 215
13 Vince Bryant, QB, 6-1, 205
11 Chip Buddé, C, 6-1, 255
34 Ronnie Caldwell, WR, 6-0, 185
52 Scott Carlson, DE, 6-6, 230
39 Rick Clayton, LB, 6-3, 230
67 Bryan Cohane, OG, 6-4, 245
79 Dave Cohn, FB, 5-10, 205
80 Dru Davidson, LB, 6-2, 225
70 Jim Davis, OT, 6-6, 260
26 Johnny Diggs, TB, 6-0, 195
The 1986 Kansas Jayhawks
57 Mike Dinnel, LB, 6-2, 225
14 Kelly Donohue, OB, 6-0, 175
Rod Duncan, DE, 6-4, 205
6 C.J. Eanes, CB, 5-9, 170
Rob Finney, WR, 5-10, 170
31 Mike Fisher, CB, 5-9, 180
91 Phil Forte, DE, 6-3, 240
58 Rob Foster, C, 6-0, 240
Bernard Frye, WR, 5-11, 160
75 Mitch Gamble, DT, 6-4, 250
61 Guy Gamble, DT, 6-3, 245
16 Milt Garner, CB, 5-11, 190
95 Darryl Golden, DT, 6-5, 270
66 David Gordon, LB, 6-3, 220
10 Johnny Granderson, CB, 6-2, 185
10 Johnny Granderson, CB, 6-2, 185
59 Dave Grattan, C, 6-2, 250
Mark Hammons, WR, 5-9, 160
Chris Hampson, TE, 6-2, 210
9 Kevin Harder, FS, 6-2, 190
80 Rodney Harris, WR, 5-10, 185
35 Tony Harvey, WR, 6-0, 190
Kevin Heiman, FB, 6-1, 210
43 Mark Henderson, FB, 6-0, 205
39 Stacy Henson, LB, 6-1, 235
20 Brad Hinkle, FS, 6-1, 180
44 Ray Hoover, LB, 6-2, 215
8 Byron Hornung, CB, 5-11, 172
65 Bryan Howard, OG, 6-5, 265
61 Bill Hundelt, OT, 6-5, 255
64 Steve Isham, OG, 6-4, 250
83 Tracy Jordan, TE, 6-4, 215
87 Eric Keeler, LB, 6-1, 215
Kurt Kerns, DT, 6-2, 230
69 Mark Koncz, GD, 6-5, 250
72 Von Lacey, OT, 6-5, 270
73 Tim Ledford, FB, 6-0, 225
Mark Lesher, TB, 5-10, 170
Mike Lesher, CB, 5-10, 170
4 Sal Lewis, WR, 6-1, 185
2 Undra Lofton, CB, 5-10, 165
50 Mike Long, LB, 6-0, 200
32 Marvin Mattox, SS, 6-4, 205
15 Mike McElhiney, FS, 6-2, 185
Curtis Moore, LB, 6-1, 210
92 Steve Nave, DT, 6-2, 250
73 Teddy Newman, DE, 6-4, 240
38 Rob Newsom, RB, 6-0, 185
40 Guy O'Gara, LB, 6-0, 200
15 Mike Orth, QB, 6-5, 205
54 Paul Oswald, C, 6-4, 270
84 Mark Parks, TE, 6-5, 225
77 Brian Pawlak, OT, 6-4, 240
71 Bob Pieper, OT, 6-5, 280
93 Mike Pirrie, LB, 6-3, 215
66 Pete Popovich, C, 6-5, 245
11 Tom Quick, WR, 6-2, 190
49 John Randolph, LB, 6-0, 235
Jeff Rank, QB, 6-3, 175
88 Murphy Ray, WR, 6-2, 175
48 Rich Reith, P, 5-11, 180
Gregg Robisch, KS, 5-10, 160
24 Mike Rogers, TB, 6-1, 205
81 Peda Samuel, WR, 5-7, 160
8 Robby Santos, QB, 6-4, 210
96 Scott Schriner, RB, 5-10, 195
41 Warren Shields, LB, 6-1, 215
12 Mac Smith, KS, 6-1, 185
5 Quintin Smith, WR, 5-10, 170
22 Arnold Snell, TB, 6-0, 210
99 Paul Sper, DE, 6-5, 215
23 Jamey Steinhauser, SS, 6-0, 195
98 Jon Stewart, DE, 6-5, 213
27 Craig Stoppel, OG, 6-5, 225
78 Ken Trossen, OT, 6-8, 215
17 Chase Van Dyne, K, 6-2, 200
19 Willie Vaughn, WR, 6-0, 185
62 Dave Walton, DE, 6-8, 225
89 Brad Wedel, TE, 6-5, 210
9 Mike Werner, OT, 6-5, 265
97 David White, DE, 6-3, 260
55 Darnell Williams, LB, 6-2, 228
85 Lyndall Yarnell, DT, 6-2, 209
81 Wayne Ziegler, FS, 6-2, 190
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4
University Daily Kansan
Sports
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
Season's first 5 games keep players. fans at home
By Frank Hansel Sports editor
The Kansas football team will have plenty of opportunities this season to enjoy some home cooking.
Because of a kind scheduler, the Jayhawks play their first five games in Memorial Stadium. Kansas will not venture into enemy territory until Oct. 18, when it plays Kansas State.
Game 1
North
Carolina
Sept. 13
Home
UNC
fidence among our young players."
"There is an advantage when you play at home," first-year head coach Bob Valense said last week. "It will give us a chance to establish ourselves and play in front of our home crowd and to build some con-
The Jayhawks and Valesente won't take their first test until Sept. 13, the latest Kansas has ever opened a football season, when they play the North Carolina Tar Heels.
Fans would flock to see the basketball teams from these two schools meet in Allen Field House, but neither school has been as successful on the football field in recent years.
The Tar Heels won 45 games from 1979 to 1983, but in the last two seasons they won only 10. Last season, they finished fourth in the Atlantic Coast Conference with a 3-4 record, and the Tar Heels were 5-6 overall.
This will be the third meeting between the Jayhawks and Tar Heels. So far, each team has a victory. In 1984, North Carolina defeated Kansas 23-17 in Chapel N.C. The Tar Heels jumped out to a 20-0 half-time lead, and a second-half Jayhawk rally fell short.
Despite the loss in 1984, free safety Wayne Ziegler enjoyed the game.
"I'm looking forward to playing them again." Ziegler said. "They have a class ball club, and whenever I think about playing North Carolina, it brings back good memories."
Some of those memories are of the 18 tackles he made and four passes he broke up against the Tar Heels.
UNC head coach Dick Crum has an experienced team with 15 returning starters, eight on offense and seven on defense. Offensive tackle Harris Barton, 6-foot-4 and 275 pounds, anchors an offensive line that will try to provide holes for running backs William Hume and Brad Lopp.
Hume, who was bothered by injuries last season, was the Tar Heels' top gainer with 515 yards. Lopp was second with 407 yards.
Tackle Reuben Davis, 6-3 and 280 pounds, leads the Tor Heel defense. He was an all-ACC selection last season as a sophomore.
BULL
Game 2
Utah
State
Sept. 20
Home
The Utah State Aggies will invade Lawrence on Sept. 20 in the first meeting of the two schools.
Last season, the Aggies were 3-8 overall and 3-4 in the Pacific Coast Athletic Association, putting them in fourth place. First year Aggie head coach Chuck Shelton, who coached at Drake when the school dropped its football program last year, will have seven defensive and four offensive starters back as the foundation of his program.
Linebacker Al Smith. 138 tackles, and down lineman Mark Mraz. 18 quarterback sacks, lead the defense. On offense, sophomore quarterback
Brett Stevens started four games last season. He completed 75 of 151 passes for 909 yards and six touchdowns. Glen Crawford rushed for 495 yards on 105 carries.
Indiana State will return to Memorial Stadium Sept. 27 for the second consecutive season. Last year, Kansas beat the Sycamores 37-10 in the first meeting between the
Game 3
Indiana
State
Sept. 27
Home
schools.
S
After being ranked first in Division I-AA in 1984, Indiana State teil to 4-6 last season and head coach Dennis Raetz will have to find a replacement for four-year starting quarterback
Jeff Miller. Miller set 15 school and two conference records while amassing 2.261 yards in offense, nearly 70 percent of the Sycamores output.
raetz still has his three leading rushers, Jimmy Edwards, Tracy Steward and Charles Walls
Game 4
Southern
Illinois
Oct. 4
Home
SALUKIS
The Jayhawks and the Southern Illinois Salukis will meet for the first time on Oct. 4. The Salukis were 47 last season and finished third in the Gateway Conference with a 2-3 mark.
Head coach Ray Dorr has 36 returning lettermen and 17 starters back from last year's team.
Poll says KU, KSU may compete for Big Eight cellar
By Frank Hansel
Sports editor
According to the annual Big Eight Conference summer football poll, there might be only two significant conference football games — the Nov. 22 game between Nebraska and Oklahoma in Lincoln, Neb., to determine first place, and the Oct. 18 meeting between Kansas and Kansas State to determine last.
The defending national champion Oklahoma Sooners have been picked for the second consecutive year and the seventh time in the last decade to make the Jan. 1 trip to the Orange Bowl.
The Jayhawks have been picked to battle it out with the Wildcats for the seventh and eighth spots in the conference.
"The polls are really for the fans and media," Kansas linebacker coach Mike Monos said recently. "You never really know what is going to happen. You just have to take it one game at a time."
Game 5 Iowa State IowaState Oct.11 Home
Iowa State
The Jayhawks will attempt to prove the pollers hurt Worc. Oct. 11 in the Homecoming game against Iowa State. Last season, Iowa State defeated the Jayhawks 22-21 in Ames, Iowa.
The Cyclones will try for their first winning season under four-year head coach Jim Criner. Iowa State could reach its goal with the help of 17 returning starters and 37 lettermen.
Alex Espinosa returns at quarterback. After only 19 games, Espinosa is third on the all-time Iowa State passing list and second in career completions. The Cyclones gained just 1,061 yards rushing with only eight rushing touchdowns, but Andrew Jackson, who led the team with 415 yards rushing, has returned to the team.
For the defense, Iowa State's two top tacklers, linebackers Dennis Gibson and Jeff Braswell, will return. The two teamed up for 178 tackles last season.
Game 6 Kansas State Oct.18 Away
Away
STATE
Kansas will leave Memorial Stadium for the first time Oct. 18 to play K-State in Manhattan. The Jayhawks defeated the Wildcats 38-7 last year in front of 40,000 fans – the largest crowd of the year in Lawrence.
after the Wildcats lost to Wichita State and Northern Iowa on the way to a 1-10 season. Kansas State, which defeated Missouri, tied with the Tigers for the Big Eight cellar with 1-6 marks.
Like the Jayhawks, K-State is entering a new coaching era. Stan Parrish, who has never suffered a losing season at Wabash and Marshall Universities, takes over for Jim Dickey. Dickey resigned last season
The Wildcats return 13 starters — eight on offense and five on defense. Randy Williams and John Welch will battle for the quarterback job and two of the top three rushers, Todd Moody and Ray Wilson, are back.
Defensive ends Kevin Humphrey and Jeff Hurd are the cornerstones of the Wildcat defense. Last year, the two combined for 143 tackles.
Game 7 Oklahoma State Oct.25 Away
CORRER
Away
The Jayhawks stay on the road with an Oct. 25 game in Stillwater, Okla., against the Oklahoma State Cowboys. Last season, the Cowboys scored a touchdown with one minute, five seconds remaining to defeat Kansas 17-10.
Head coach Pat Jones will have to rebuild the OSU defense after the loss of All-America defensive end Leslie O'Neal and lineman John Washington.
The heart of the Cowboy offense,
running back Thurman Thomas, the
Big Eight's leading rusher with 1,650
vards and 15 touchdowns, is back as
well as quarterback Ronnie Williams.
Q
Game 8
Oklahoma
Nov. 1
Home
The Jayhawks return home Nov. 1 to play the national champion Oklahoma Sooners, who routed Kansas 48-6 last year in Norman, Okla
The Sooners may be just as tough this season. Despite the loss of All-America nose guard Tony Casillas, the OU defense, which gave up a national low 193.5 yards per game, will be led by All-American linebacker Brian Bosworth.
Offensively, head coach Barry Switzer and the Sooners will rely on the quick feet of quarterback Jamelle Holleway.
Last season, Holley took over after Troy Aikman broke his leg against Miami and led the Sooners to the Big Eight title and the national championship with a 25-10 win over previously unbeaten Penn State in the Orange Bowl. Holley was the Sooners leading rusher with 861 yards, the most ever for a freshman OU quarterback.
The Jayhawks will play the Colorado Buffaloes Nov 8 in Boulder, Colo Last year, the Buffaloes beat the Jayhawks 14-3 in Memorial Stadium.
The victory was just part of head coach Bill McCartney's magic. He
CU
Game 9
Colorado
Nov.8
Away
took a team that finished 1-10 and transformed them into a 7-5 team, including a 20-17 loss to Washington in the Freedom Bowl.
Serving as mMcCartney's magic wand was the wishbone offense. Colorado has seven offensive starters returning including quarterback Mark Hatecher and running back Anthony Weatherbspoon and Sam Smith.
The defense is led by linebacker Barry Remington, who had 162 tackles, and punter Barry Helton, who was second in the nation with a 46-yard average.
Game 10
Nebraska
Nov.15
Home
I
The Jayhawks return home Nov. 15, where the Nebraska Cornhuskers, who buried Kansas 56-6 last year in Lincoln, Neb., will await the team's arrival.
Nebraska had its worst season since 1981 when it finished a mere 9-3, including a 27-23 loss to Michigan in the Flesta Bowl. The offense will be led by two-time All-Big Eight runningback Doug DuBose, who rushed for 1,161 yards last fall.
All-Big Eight linebacker Marc Munford, the team's leading tackler, is expected to recover from November knee surgery to lead head coach Tom Osborne's defense.
Game 11
Missouri
Nov. 22
Away
Tigers
The Jayhawks will finish the regular season in Columbia, Mo., against the Missouri Tigers on Nov. 22. The Tigers are trying to rebound from a 1-10 season, including a 34-20 loss to the Jayhawks.
Second-year head coach Woody Widenhoor will look to a strong offensive line, including Ted Rommey an All-Missouri Valley Conference selection who transferred from Drake, to lead the offense. Wide receiver Herbert "Junebug" Johnson, who set a Missouri record with 49 receptions, also appears to be an offensive threat.
Defensive end Dick Chapura, who recorded seven sacks and 98 tackles, is the Tiger leader on defense.
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WESTERN
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
Sports
University Daily Kansan
5
KU focuses on fun to sell tickets
By Heather Fritz
Associate sports editor
When some schools promote the sale of football tickets, they promote the game. Kansas promotes fun.
Ken Weiser, KU's director of marketing and promotions, is the one responsible for this year's promotional football pamphlets and posters. The slogan across the front is "There's nothing like being there!" A picture of the school band, the happy crowd and the Jayhawk mascots adorns the pamphlets and posters.
Look at another school's promotions and one might see pictures of a quarterback in action or a pile of linebackers.
"Lots of places they'll sell the
game." Weiser said. "They'll show people making great passes, great hits. I don't believe those are the things we need to sell. The football fans will already be interested. The band, the crowd, getting there early — all those things are great. There's a lot of fun around the game."
Weiser is in charge of promotions for all Kansas sports and for the sale of all-sport season tickets and football season tickets, as well as single-game tickets.
"We work with different themes we want to promote," he said. "We're a family oriented group The university is very aware of doing things in good taste, so the promotions we have need to have the same appeal."
Weiser works with Leiweke and Associates, a Kansas City, Mo. consultant, to arrange special promotions, and he said he had several surprises in the works for the coming football season.
"There's a lot of neat things coming up," he said. "We've committed ourselves to doing something special every week. And we're going to try to expand the Late Night with Larry Brown, too. It will certainly be worth staying up for."
Besides those promotions, there again will be prize giveaways and drawings at this year's games. And the San Diego Chicken will make an appearance at the Homecoming game Oct. 11.
basketball team and the size of Memorial Stadium, the university usually sells out of all-sports tickets and doesn't sell out of football season tickets.
"It was easy to sell all-sports tickets," said Weiser. "All we had to do was say that they were available."
Because of the success of the
The promotions center on football and basketball games, but, Weiser said, that helps the non-revenue sports too.
"We've really concentrated on football," he said. "Of course, with basketball you don't need any help. Football is a major source of revenue. When I help football, I also help my women's golf team. If the promotions go well, every sport will benefit."
Short-distance recruits face long-distance race
By Ric Anderson
Sports writer
This might not be a banner year for the 1986 Jayhawk women's cross-country squad. In fact, Cliff Rovello, head women's cross country coach, said the squad might repeat its last place performance of last year.
But that doesn't mean his runners are slow.
5,000-meter runners."
Rovello said his runners, most of whom were recruited to run for the track team, simply had not specialized in the longer distances of cross country because of track's emphasis on short and middle distance runners.
"We have eight runners," Rovelto said. "Four of them are half-milers. They're great half-milers, but not
Rovello said a squad of this caliber might rank higher if it wasn't in the Big Eight Conference.
"For instance, K State has 23 people with eight scholarships," Rovelto said. "We have two scholarships."
Roveto said six of the eight teams probably would be ranked in the top 20 because the other schools placed much more emphasis on long distance running.
Another shortcoming is the squad's lack of experience. Of the eight starters, two are juniors, two are sophomores and four are freshmen. Kim Sheridan, team captain last season, graduated, and freshman
See Runners, p. 9, col. 4
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
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Wednesday, August 20, 1986
Sports
University Daily Kansan
7
Football
Fall Sports Schedules
Sept. 13 — vs. UNC, 11:30 a.m.
Sept. 27 — vs. Utah State, 1:30 p.m.
Sept. 27 — vs. Indiana State, 1:30 p.m.
Oct. 4 — vs. Southern Illinois, 1:30 p.m.
Oct. 11 — vs. Iowa State, 1:30 p.m.
Oct. 18 — at Kansas State, 11:30 a.m.
Oct. 25 — at Oklahoma State, 6:30 p.m.
Nov. 1 — vs. Oklahoma, 1:30 p.m.
Nov. 8 — at Colorado, 2 p.m.
Nov. 15 — vs. Nebraska, 1:30 p.m.
Nov. 22 — at Missouri, 11:30 a.m.
KU
Baseball
Sept. 11 — Johnson Co. C.C., 1 p.m.
Sept. 14 — Butler County C.C., 1 p.m.
Sept. 14 — N.E. Oklahoma A.M. noon
Sept. 25 — Allen County C.C., 1 p.m.
Sept. 28 — Kansas City C.C., noon
Oct. 5 — Highland C.C., 1 p.m.
Oct. 9 — Ft. Scott C.C., 1 p.m.
Oct. 12 — Garden City C.C., 1 p.m.
Oct. 18 — Labette C.C., 1 p.m.
Oct. 19 — Crowder C.C., 1 p.m.
Games will be at Quigley Field
Softball:
Sept. 14 — JUCO Round Robin, Lawrence
Sept. 20-21 — at Lincoln, NE
Sept. 27-28 — Jayhawk Invitational
Oct. 10-11 — at OSU Tournament
KU
Tennis
Men:
Men:
Oct. 3-5 — at Oklahoma State Fall Open
Oct. 17-18 — at Ball State Invitational
Oct. 24-25 — at Rolex Regional Indoor Championships, Wichita
Oct. 30-Nov. 1 — at Volvo Tennis Championships, Los Angeles
Nov. 15 — at Minnesota
Dec. 4-7 — at ITCA National Clay Court Championships, Florida
Golf
Women:
Sept. 25-28 — at Midwest Intercollegiate Tournament
Oct. 3-5 — at Oklahoma State Fall Open
Oct. 9-12 — at All-America Championships, Ocean Creek, S.C.
Oct. 31-Nov. 2 — at Kentucky Invitational
Nov. 13-15 — at ITCA Rolex Regional Championships, Utah
Dec. 4-7 — at ITCA National Clay Court Championships, Florida
KU
KU
Men:
Sept. 15-16 — Jayhawk Invitational, Alvamar Country Club
Sept. 22-23 — at All-College Classic, Oklahoma City, Okla.
Sept. 28-30 — at Illinois Intercollegiate, Oak Brook, Ill.
Oct. 13-14 — at Memphis State Invitational
Oct. 20 — at Wichita State Invitational
Nov. 10-11 — at Hal Sutton Invitational, Shreveport, La.
Men:
Women:
Women:
Sept. 12-13 — at Iowa State Invitational
Sept. 19-21 — at All-College Kickoff, Edmond,
Okla.
Sept. 26-28 — at Lady Seminole Invitational,
Florida
Oct. 3-5 — at Beacon Woods Invitational, Tampa,
Fla.
Oct. 20-21 — Kansas Jayhawk Invitational,
Alvamar
KU
Cross country
Men:
Sept. 5 — Intrasquad at Rim Rock Farm
Sept. 12 — Kansas Invitalional
Sept. 20 — Jayhawk Invitalion
Sept. 27 — at Kansas State Invitalion
Oct. 4 — at Oklahoma State Jamboree
Oct. 17 — Rim Rock Farm Invitalion
Oct. 25 — Open
Nov. 1 — Big 8 Championships, Manhattan
Nov. 15 — NCAA Regional, Peoria, Ill.
Nov. 24 — NCAA Championships, Tucson, Ariz.
Women:
KU
Women:
Sept. 13 — Jayhawk Triangular
Sept. 20 — Jayhawk Invitational
Sept. 27 — at Kansas State Invitational
Oct. 4 — at Oklahoma State Jamboree
Oct. 18 — at Southwest Missouri University
Oct. 25 — Open
Nov. 3 — Big 8 Championships, Manhattan
Nov. 15 — NCAA Regional, Peoria, Ill.
Nov. 24 — NCAA Championships, Tucson, Ariz.
Volleyball
Sept. 6 — vs. Wichita State, 2 p.m.
Sept. 12-13 — at Kansas State Tournament
Sept. 16 — vs. Nebraska, 7:30 p.m.
Sept. 19-20 — at Bradley Tournament
Sept. 24 — at Missouri, 7:30 p.m.
Sept. 26-27 — at Tulsa Tournament
Oct. 1 — vs. Kansas State, 8 p.m.
Oct. 3-4 — at S.W. Missouri St. Tournament
Oct. 10 — vs. Iowa State, 8 p.m.
Oct. 11 — at Wichita State, noon
Oct. 14 — at Nebraska, 7:30 p.m.
Oct. 20 — at Kansas State, 7:30 p.m.
Oct. 23 — colorado, 8 p.m.
Oct. 24 — vs. Oklahoma, 8 p.m.
Oct. 28 — vs. Missouri, 8 p.m.
Oct. 31/Nov. 1 — at Florida Tournament
Nov. 6 — vs. Western Illinois, 8 p.m.
Nov. 8 — at Iowa State, 7:30 p.m.
Nov. 11 — vs. Central Missouri State, 8 p.m.
Nov. 14 — at Oklahoma, 7:30 p.m.
Nov. 21-23 — Conference Tournament
Dec. 5-6 — NCAA First Round
Dec. 12-13 — NCAA Regional
Dec. 19-21 — NCAA Final Four
Schedules are tentative and subject to change
---
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KU STUDENTS THE KANSAS CITY STAR/Times
NEWSPAPER has a Special Student Discount Rate
HALF PRICE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! FALL SEMESTER - 86 Aug. 21 to Dec. 19, 1986
$20.80 morning evening Sunday
This price includes consideration for non-delivery when classes are suspended for holidays, breaks and other periods when service is not requested. The offer becomes effective Aug. 21 and expires Dec. 19, 1986 DELIVERY TO BEGIN WITHIN 3 WORKING DAYS OF PAYMENT which can be made in person at the local office at
932 Mass. St., Lawrence, KS, 843-1611.
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8
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
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The Fresh Look
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Wednesday, August 20, 1986
Sports
University Daily Kansan
9
Tennis teams take fall break
Fewer tournaments allow time to build stronger games
By Anne Luscombe
Sports writer
They will play fewer tournaments than usual, but the Kansas tennis teams intend to use the fall season to work on their games.
"The men won't play in September." Scott Perelman, head tennis coach, said recently. "I don't feel the need to rush right into it. This way we can take the time to choose the squad and be more selective. And the other (women's) teams are going to be surprised by the girls coming back."
Porelman said senior Mike Wolf, who has held the No. 1 position the last three years, could expect a challenge from newcomers Chris Walker, Craig Wildey and Sven Groeneveld
"This is the first time he'll be challenged for the spot," Perelman said.
Wolf said he did not play much tennis this summer, but felt that was to his advantage.
"I am anxious to play now," he said. "I need spirit to get things going and I think I have that now."
Wolf's doubles partner and former co-captain, Michael Center, graduated last spring, opening the No. 2 singles spot. Perelman said Wolf probably would be paired with
Groeneveld or returning teammate Larry Pascal.
"Center was really good," said Wolf. "His shoes will be hard to fill. Whoever I end with, I hope we can match up and do as well."
He said his two goals for the coming year were to play as well as he could and to become an All/America player. The All-America tournament will be in October.
Walker and Wildey also will become doubles partners, Perelman said.
Choosing this year's team is going to be tough, but Perelman said he was pleased with the players he had to choose from.
"We've got 16 or 17 guys shooting for 10 spots," he said. "It's going to be interesting and tough making decisions."
Among the players returning are senior Kevin Brady, junior Darin Herman and sophomore Jim Secrest.
"We've got the best team in the Big Eight and the region," he said. "We've got the talent and depth we're looking for."
With leadership and returning players, he said, KU's men's team should be in good shape.
The women's team has more savvy and is a better team than in the past, Perelman said.
"The key is going to be really working hard during the fall," he said. "We still need to improve on game play and team work."
Competition for the top positions could become a battle between the triad of Tracy Treps, Barbara Inman and Jeanette Jonsson.
"It really will depend on who's been working hard this summer." Perelman said.
The women's team will get two new members this fall with the arrival of freshmen Stephanie Riley and Laurie Gaither.
"I know Stephanie is very capable," Perelman said. "She just needs to work on being more consistent."
The women's team lost last year's co-captains Christine Parr and Pam Porter, who graduated in May.
Pere尔man said he hoped the women would improve their games, get stronger and work on team unity.
"We are one of the top two teams in the league," Perelman said. "Now we need to make strides toward beating Oklahoma State."
Tryouts for the women's team is scheduled for 8:30 a.m. Saturday at the courts behind Allen Field House. Tryouts for the men's team is to be at 8:30 a.m. Sunday, also behind the field house. Practice begins Monday.
Satterfield, one of the squad's leaders, has run only three conference races. A broken foot put her out of action for most of last season.
Shaula Hatcher left the University, Of the top three runners last year, only sophomore Melissa Satterfield remains.
She rolls her eyes when called a team leader, although Satterfield has been running hard this summer;
"I want to improve my time," she said. "I hope the team can improve this year."
Although Monday was the first day of organized practice and the first time she had seen her new teammates, Satterfield said she liked what she saw.
averaging seven miles a day
Continued from p. 5
stays healthy we could do pretty well."
Possible frontrunners for 1986 are Satterfield, who was the Arkansas state champion in the 600, 1600 and 3200-meter runs in 1985. Trish Mangan, junior, who was the Illinois state champion in the 800-meter run in 1983 and Angie Helmer, junior, who has placed in every Big Eight meet in which she has competed.
"They were all good in high school," she said. "If everybody
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10
University Daily Kansan
Sports
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
Volleyball team gets fine-tuning practice
Bv Heather Fritz
Associate sports editor
When volleyball coach Frankie Albitz took over the coaching duties last season, the team had to start by re-learning the basics. After that same team's first practice this season, which was Friday in Robinson Gymnastium. Albitz said the players just needed some fine-tuning and adjustments.
It appears they've come a long way in one year.
This year's Jayhawk roster is the same as last year's, with one addition: freshman outside hitter Jodi Oelschlager of Lawrence. The team may be without two of its better players, however.
Hitter Judy Desch had a hernia operation in July and will be unable to play until Sept. 2, four days before KU's first game. Another hitter, Eileen Schwartz, injured a knee in May and injured it five minutes into Fridays practice. Trainer Brenda Sneed said Schwartz would have arthroscopic surgery Aug. 27 and would be out for at least four to six weeks. Albitz said Oelschlager might replace Schwartz.
Despite the injuries, the team still has some outstanding players in hitter Catalina Suarez, blocker Julie Ester and Monica Spencer, the team'setter.
With the exception of Oelschlager, the players are familiar with each other's style of play.
"There's only one freshman." Suarez said "We're more like a team already. Everybody knows more about each other and we're adjusted."
That familiarity makes the team's practices more consistent. The team is able to pick up right where it left off last season and players say it's as if they never left.
"We're already starting at a higher level than last year." Albitz said. "My job will be to fine-tune them and make a couple of adjustments for some teams."
Most of the players participated in summer volleyball, as well as playing in United States Volleyball Association games last spring. The USVBA team, which consisted of the same players as the KU team and was coached by Albiz, won the regional championship and went to nationals, where the team tied for 19th place.
The Jayhawks are scheduled to play 15 individual games and five tournaments, including two games with top-20 Nebraska and a tournament appearance at Florida. Albiz said the schedule was slightly tougher than last season's, but still not of top-20 caliber.
Albiz called Suarez, who was named most valuable player at the USVBA regionals, the team's stabilizer. Suarez played on Colombia's national team before coming to the United States last year and is KU's most experienced player.
"She helped us more last year than hopefully she'll have to do this year." Albitz said. "She could do anything you asked her to."
Friday's practices were relaxed and the players looked as if they were having fun. Last year, the team started the season with practices three times a day. This year, the team practiced twice a day. Albiz said she was trying to put fun back in to the game.
"Last year we had three-a-days and we burned out," she said. "It's too hard on them physically. I'm really trying to stress fun in practice this year. Last year, it seemed like it was a class."
REDEEMER LUTHERAN CHURCH
Sunday Worship: 8:30 & 10:45 AM Sunday School and Bible Class: 9:45 AM
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Karl Schoenrade, Pastor, 843-7587
Church Office: 843-8181 27th and Lawrence Ave.
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Kansas reserve setter Michelle Klone watches blocker Julie Ester spike the ball during volleyball practice at Robinson Gymnasium Monday.
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Refreshments will be served
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Wednesday. August 20,1986
University Daily Kansan
Sports
11
The image shows two individuals in a sports setting, likely during a football game. The player on the left is crouched in a defensive stance, wearing a white shirt and dark pants, with his knee bent slightly upward. The player on the right is standing with one foot raised, holding a football in his hand, wearing a black jersey and shorts, and also in a defensive stance. Both players appear to be focused on the ball. The background is blurred, indicating an indoor sports arena with tiled flooring.
Careful scrutiny
Head coach Bob Valesente instructs quarterback Mike Orth during practice at Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
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1119 Massachusetts 841-6599
Special players vie for squad positions
By Heather Fritz
Associate sports editor
Because of the loss of last year's punter and placeckicker, the Kansas Jayhawks will have to re-establish its special teams squad this season. Bovalesente, head football coach, said recently.
Rob Dickerson, last year's punter,
graduated, leaving the spot open for
sophomore John Brehm or newcomer Rich Reith. Reith averaged 41.2 yards a punt at West Los
Angeles Junior College last season
and was named all-conference and
honorable mention All-American.
Brehm, a wide receiver for last year's junior varsity team, was listed
behind Reith on the pre-season depth chart.
"After talking with the coach," Brehm said, "it's going to come down to which of us kicks the ball consistently. We'll be pretty even, I think."
"It makes you work harder
The battle for placekicker will be fought between sophomore Chase Van Dyne and freshman Mac Smith. Last season Van Dyne, who made one of two field goal attempts, kicked behind Jeff Johnson before Johnson left the team. Van Dyne also made a 57-yard field goal in a junior varsity game against Pratt Community College. He is listed ahead of Smith on the depth chart, and he said that would help him.
See Kickers, p. 12, col.3
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12
University Daily Kansan
Sports
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
FRESNO
Fred Sadowski/KANSAN
A Quick stretch
Reserve quarterback Tom Quick stretches before practice at Anschutz's Pavilion. The Jayhawks began fall practice Monday.
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zio said. "Rob is one of the very best long snappers in the country. I think that's a hidden factor. He's one of the strengths of the team."
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Kickers
Pannunziro said Foster's time for a snap was .65 seconds and professional teams look for a time of 7 seconds.
Continued from p. 11
"He snaps the ball great, there's no doubt," said Brehm.
Foster earned a letter and a scholarship on the basis of his ability as a long snapper.
Special teams coach Joe Pannunzio said he was not worried about any lack of experience on the players' part.
because you've got people behind you
pushes hard." Van Dyne said.
"From what I hear, he has been kicking
well."
"Punting and placekicking are specialized positions. More freshmen can come in and contribute right away than in other positions. Experience doesn't affect them that much."
"They'll do all right," he said. "Chase has kicked before and Smith has a real strong leg. In just three days of practice I've seen that Reith has a very strong leg. Between them we'll be in good hands.
Valesente said, "It remains to be seen what they are going to do, but it looks like they have a lot of ability"
Pannunzio said Jan Stenerud, former placekicker for the Minnesota Vikings of the National Football League, was expected to be at
practice sometime this week to work with the kickers on technique. Steneret, who has made the most field goals in NFL history, is a friend of Van Dyne's parents and Valesente, Pannunzio said.
In addition to the kickers, an important part of the special teams is the long snapper, Pannunzio said. Junior Rob Foster handles long snaps for Kansas.
"The thing we have that no one looks at is a long snapper." Pamun-
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830 MASS. • 843-6155 • M-5 9-6 Thurs. 9-9 Sunday 12:30-5:30
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
Sports
University Daily Kansan
13
Athletes active in summer
Five from Kansas compete in Olympic Sports Festival
By Dawn O'Malley Summer sports editor
While many students might have spent their summer months earning money, several Kansas athletes took time away from their jobs to participate in the U.S. Olympic Sports Festival from July 29 to Aug. 3 in Houston.
Two incoming Kansas basketball players, Mark Randall and Kevin Pritchard, played for the North team. Kansas track athletes Scott Huffman, a pole vaulter, and Sharriff Hazim and Raymond Mitchell, both long jumpers, represented the North track team.
These five were among more than 3,000 athletes who competed in 34 events including track and field, swimming, boxing, figure skating and ice hockey.
Until this year, the event was better known as the National Sports Festival. It has served as a training ground for Olympic hopefuls.
"It was an experience. I enjoyed it so much." Randall said recently. "It was an honor for me to be selected in the top 48 sophomores and freshmen. The honor of that was exciting."
He said competing against older
players sharpened his skills and showed him many areas needed improvement.
"Strength, for one." Randall said. "Everybody is stronger. I need to work on my shooting."
But even though he might have some weaknesses, Randall said he also felt he did well against the competition. He said he could only improve by competing against more experienced players.
Randall and Pritchard were coached by Digger Phelps, Notre Dame men's head basketball coach. The North team failed to win any of its four games and its several scrimmages.
"We set a goal to try and get better each game," Randall said. "At the crucial times we didn't do the things that we needed to do. It was disappointing. Everybody likes to win."
The Kansas track athletes participating were more fortunate. In the pole vault, Huffman placed fourth. Hazim took fifth place in the long jump, but Mitchell failed to place.
"I just have to have faith in myself," Hazim said. "I don't get a big glory out of beating someone. But
it is nice to win and show talent. You have a certain feeling when you can jump against other talented athletes."
Hazim said he was just learning the finer points of long jumping, and being chosen to compete on the North team was an honor for him because he said it showed he had the potential to become a stronger jumper.
"You have to make sure you are strong," Hazim said. "I need to work on sprint and on technique."
Rick Attig, assistant men's track coach, said the athletes went into the meet without much conditioning. They had worked toward getting ready for the fall collegiate season by lifting weights, but in doing so, the athletes lost spring in their jumps.
To be chosen to participate in the festival was an honor for the athletes, Attig said. Although Huffman, Hazim and Mitchell didn't win their events, there were a lot of other athletes who weren't successful.
"It is something they have each year." Attig said of the festival. "A lot of meets might be better but the idea is to get athletes with the possibility of getting to the Olympics to go to those meet."
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Iowa State planning football improvement
United Press International
AMES, Iowa — It's taken three seasons, but Iowa State University football Coach Jim Criner says he has finally put together his kind of team.
"It takes three recruiting classes for a coach to get his personality into a program, and this is my third class." Criner told a media day gathering Monday. "I think we will definitely have an excellent season, and (a winning season) would be our number one goal."
For the third consecutive year, Criner appears to have put together a solid defense. But if the Cyclones are to improve on their 5-6 record in 1985
- and perhaps ward off cries for Criner's resignation - he said it will take a better offense.
Last fall ISU's offense scored 155 points while opponents tallied 318.
"From a defensive standpoint this is going to be another good year." Criner said. "But offensively, we need to be consistent and to keep our defense out of the tough field positions. We haven't done that in the past."
Criner said his staff and players aren't concerning themselves with a recent NCAA investigation into football recruiting violations. School officials are conducting their own investigation into the 34 allegations ranging from illegal loans to gifts, but Criner said he was thinking football and only football.
"We're going to put our business to football." he said. "We're going to tell (ISU administrators) that (the investigation) is their job and we're concentrating on the football field."
On the field, ISU returns 17 starters
— seven on defense, nine on offense and kicker-punter Rick Frank. After struggling offensively the past seasons, Criner said a veteran offensive line and experienced quarterback in Alex Espinoza and talented receiving and backfield crews would combine to take pressure off the defense.
"The area offensively that has been a real problem has been getting a consistent running game," Criner said. "That's another area that we feel our football team has made great progress in."
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WHITENIGHT'S
the men's shop • 839 massachusetts • lawrence, kansas 66044 • 843-5755
14
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
Sports
Southwest Conference play is not a joking matter
The Associated Press
DALLAS — The Southwest Conference is the but of probation jokes off the football field. On it, the league could produce some of 1986's most potent teams.
Southern Methodist University and Texas Christian University are on NCAA probation and the penalties include no bowls and no SWC championship. They've already dubbed their Sept. 27 meeting in the Cotton Bowl — to celebrate the Texas Sequencentennial — the "Probation Bowl."
Other SWC schools are too nervous to laugh
Texas, Texas Tech, Houston and Texas A&M are either conducting in-
checked by the NCAA for possible rules violations.
Only Arkansas, Baylor and Rice are free of suspicion, although Baylor was recently placed on basketball probation by the National Collegiate Athletic Association.
The Aggies, meanwhile — fifth in the final Top 20 poll after a Cotton Bowl victory over Auburn — are favored to repeat as conference champions.
Jackie Sherrill's Aggies are well armed, returning 20 of the 22 players who started in the last four games, including quarterback Kevin Murray.
The Aggies are 16-3-1 in games started by Murray, who passed for a
record 292 yards in the Cotton Bowl. The defense is anchored by All America linebacker Johnny Holland, who had 150 tackles in 1965.
Baylor, the only SWC team to beat A&M in 1985, will be loaded again.
Baylor has 41 lettermen returning, including 16 regulars from a Liberty Bowl队 that dumped LSU 21-7. Carlson, the liberty Bowl MVP, has an excellent receiver in reliable split end Matt Clark.
Baylor's defense will be led by AllAmerica defensive back Thomas Everett and backlineback Ray Berry.
Arkansas, which defeated Arizona State in the Holiday Bowl, is certainly a Top 10 contender.
The Razorbacks, who were 10-2,
must replace seven starters from a
defense which did not allow a rushing touchdown in its last nine games. All-SWC noseguard Tony Cherico serves as a strong building block.
Arkansas needs to improve its field goal kicking.
The Texas Longhorns are being low-rated by some, but they return 15 starters and placekicker Jeff Ward, who has accounted for 30 percent of Horn victories the last three years.
Junior quarterback Bret Stafford can hand off to talented running backs like Charles Hunter, Edwin Simmons, Eric Metcalf and Darron Norris. Tight end William Harris is among the nation's best.
Texas Tech, Houston, SMU and TCU will rank in the spoiler category
Tech has a new coach, David McWilliams, and a rugged pass defence which was second in the country in 1985. The Red Raiders have scrapped the wishbone in favor of a multiple offensive attack
Houston could be a surprise with elusive quarterback Gerald Landry, who has 13 Cougain passing and total offensive records. He set the SWC's single-game total offense standard of 434 yards last year against Arkansas.
SMU, which had no scholarships to give in 1985, is thin and rebuilding. Junior Bobby Watters should bring
more passing to a run-oriented defense led by Jeff Atkins.
TCU is rebounding from the shock of NCAA probation. Four senior starters will redshift, and the Horned
Frog defense could be weak. Coach Jim Wacker is heartened by the return of quarterback Scott Ankrom, who missed most of the 1985 season
with a broken ankle
New Rice Coach Jerry Berndt inhers 17 starters, including three talented quarterbacks. The defense is headed by free safety Steve Kidd, who led the nation in punting with a 45.9 average.
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Welcome Hawks
Welcome Hawks
Welcome Hawks
For your convenience, we're open until 7:00 p.m. on Thursdays.
Douglas County Bank has made a special effort to accommodate your hectic schedule. Every Thursday, until 7:00 p.m., you can apply for loans, deposit or withdraw cash, have access to safe deposit boxes and obtain other bank transactions.
As usual, you'll always receive comprehensive banking services plus round the clock automatic teller accessibility all three Douglas County
Whether you're a student, faculty member, new to town or new to our country, stop by and we'll help you open a new account ... or come in and visit about student loans to finish your education.
For your convenience, bank at Douglas County Bank. the bank that meets your needs
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The Rainbow Classic In Honolulu, Hawaii December 26,1986-January 3,1987 $1357.00 per person
Join the Kansas Jayhawks as they journey to beautiful Hawaii for the Rainbow Classic. See the Jayhawks in action for three games against quality opponents. This official tour is endorsed by the University of Kansas Athletic Department. While in Honolulu, you'll stay at either the Sheraton Waikiki or the Hyatt Regency Waikiki.
Package Includes:
- Round trip air fare from Kansas City
- Accomodations for 7 nights at Sheraton or Hyatt Waiikii
- Lei Greeting upon arrival
- Taxes for all included features
- Tickets to all three Kansas University games, Dec.27, 28, 30
- Transfers to and from all three games
- Welcome breakfast get together and sightseeing briefing
- Maupintour Escort
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For questions and more information, call Maupintour toll free at 1-800-332-0084 in Kansas. In Lawrence (913)749-0711
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Wednesday, August 20,1986
Sports
University Daily Kansan
15
Receivers
Continued from p. 1
"But when I came down here I liked what I saw, and the things that I could be involved with. We have talent that can probably either equal theirs or even be better than they were last year."
Quintin Smith, a highly recruited receiver from Yates High School in Houston, chose Kansas over Texas and Texas &M. Last fall, he caught 59 passes for 984 yards and 12 touchdowns for the Texas 5A state championship team.
While Harris and Smith figure to battle for playing time, there are several returning Jayhawks who want to see some combat action for the Air Force.
Ronnie Caldwell was a part-time starter last fall and caught 12 passes for 104 yards. Murphy Ray played sparingly and caught two passes for 11 yards, and Tony Harvey was moved from tailback to wide receiver during spring practice.
Mark Parks, Brad Wedel and John
Baker, who was converted from quarterback, will battle for Byrd's vacated tight end spot.
"Mark Parks finished as a starter and both of them (Parks and Wedel) have excellent experience because that year that Sylvester Byrd shredded they both played, and last year they played," Valesente said. "So they're actually going into their third year of playing."
Valesente said he also would look at freshman recruits Tracy Jordan and Craig Stopel at tight end.
In addition to a youthful receiving corp, Valesente will have a relatively untested quarterback. The present leader to replace Mike Norseth, who graduated last year, is Mike Orth.
Orth redshirted last year, but in 1984 he challenged Norseth for the starting job and played in nine of the 11 Jayhawk games. He has completed 42 of 80 passes for 607 yards and two touchdowns in two seasons.
"Mike Orth finished spring extremely well," Valesente said. "The last two weeks he was outstanding. He's been here a couple years and certainly knows our system. I have every confidence that he'll go and show the leadership and poise that I saw in the spring."
Vaughn said that there was a difference in the two quarterbacks and that Orth's inexperience wouldn't slow down the Jayhawks' passing attack.
"He was involved in the game. He did everything but play, so he's ready." Vaughn said. "Mike Orth and Norseth are two totally different quarterbacks. They're both consistent and that's the key factor. Orth throws a much harder ball which gets to the receivers quicker and gives you a better chance to do something with it."
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, August 20, 1986
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Supplement To The K.U. Daily Kansan, Lawrence Journal World, Lawrence "FYI"
2nd Big Week!
Welcome To Dillon's Newest, And Brightest Food Store In Lawrence 6th & Lawrence
Prices Effective Aug. 20-26, 1986
grand opening
—Bonus Special—
Food Club
Register To Win $1,000 Shopping Sp
The University of Kansas Hawk Week
1 Winner Register At All Lawrence Store Now Thru Sept. Drawing Held Sept.
OUTDOOR DANCE/CONCERT
Dow Jones and the Industrials
THURSDAY NIGHT, AUGUST 21 8:30 p.m. THE BURGE UNION
ALL NATURAL Dairy
FREE
All Jayhawks should flock together for the Burge Union's open-air concert and open house. You can have your cake and eat it too: The Union will be giving away a five-foot Jayhawk cake and the KU Bookstore in the Burge Union will offer discounts on Jayhawk clothing.
The Burge Union is located between the Daisy Hill residence halls, Jayhawker Towers, and the Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
OFF ONE FREE
ROCKY TOP
COLA
FREE TIME FREE
CKY TOP
CKY TOP
COLA
NORTH CAROLINA
JEC MOW PRICE $13.00 NO REFUNDS GAME 12
KANSAS vs. NORTH CAROLINA
SAT. SEPT. 15, 1985 10 P.M.
16 oz.
GAME TIME SUBJECT TO CHANGE
SAT SEPT 13
9:00 AM - 1:00 PM
MEMORIAL STADIUM
SEC. NOW BEAT
NORTH CANDIDATE
Set of 2 to be given away every day thru Sept.9th.Register now thru Sept.9th Winner Drawn Daily Register In All 3 Lawrence Stores
Dillors
FOOD STORES
Limit Rights Reserved
More Registrations & Grand Opening Specials Inside...
Supplement To The K.U. Daily Kansan, Lawrence Journal World, Lawrence "FYI"
2nd Big Week!
Welcome To Dillon's Newest. And Brightest Food Store In Lawrence 6th & Lawrence
Prices Effective Aug. 20-26, 1986
Prices &
Most
Registrations
Effective in
All 3 Dillon
Stores in
Lawrence.
Rotation Diet Headquarters In Lawrence
Bonus Special
Food Club
U.S.D.A. Grade 'A' Large
Register To Win Free $1,000 Shopping Spree JELLO Puddin Pops
1 Winner Register At All 3 Lawrence Stores Now Thru Sept. 9th. Drawing Held Sept. 10th
Eggs
49¢
Dozen
ALL NATURAL Dillon's Classic ICE CREAM
Bonus Special
Dillon's Classic
All Natural
Ice Cream
% Gallon, Vanilla, Chocolate, Strawberries
N'Cream, Chocolate Chip, After Dinner Mint,
Chocolate/Vanilla Swirl, French Vanilla
Buy One, Get One Free!
Buy One At Regular Price
And Get One Of Equal
Value Free
—Bonus Special—
Rocky Top Pop
Cola, Diet Cola, Lemon-Lime,
Orange, Root Beer, Grape, Cherry
Cola, Diet Lemon-Lime or Strawberry
39¢ 2 Liter Plastic Jug
ROCKY TOP
DIET
COLA
CAFFEINE FREE
ROCKY TOP
ROCKY TOP
COLA
Free! Register To Win... Kansas Jayhawk Football Season Tickets
Bonus Special
Van Camp's
Pork & Beans
15¢
16 oz.
Van Camps PORK AND BEANS
Van Camp's PORK
Set of 2 to be given away every day thru Sept. 9th. Register now thru Sept. 9th. Winner Drawn Daily Register In All 3 Lawrence Stores
Van Camps PORK AND
+ +
Dillons
FOOD STORES
Limit Rights Reserved
More Registrations & Grand Opening Specials Inside...
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Bonus Special—Snacktime
Pepitos Chips
11 oz. Jalapeno, Jalapeno & Cheese, Traditional or Nacho
Buy One Get One Free!
Buy One At Regular Price And Get One Of Equal Value Free!
Beverages
Free! Register To Win A Free Transformer
Register At All 3 Lawrence Stores Now Thru 9th. Drawing To Be Held S.
Bob Welgel
Store Mgr.
Greg Wilkes
Asst. Store Mgr.
Grand Opening
2nd Big Prices Effective August 20th-26th
Free! Register To Win A Free 1/4 Sheet Birthday Cake
For All Immediate Family Members
Register Now Thru Aug. 28th In All 3 Lawrence Stores. Drawings Daily.
Chicago's Famous Elis Cheese Cake.
Free! Register To Win A BMX Bike
Register At All 3 Lawrence Stores Now Thru Sept. 9th. Drawing To Be Held Sept. 10th.
Bonus Special—Danish Rolls
10¢ Each
Bonus Special—Country Oven Angel Food Cake
99¢
Bonus Special—Old Milwaukee Beer
Regular or Light, 12/12 oz. Cans
$2.59
From Our... Produce Dept.
“Pick of The Crop!”
Bonus Special—California Iceberg Head Lettuce
49¢ Each
Bonus Special—Marzetti's Salad Dressing
Blue Cheese, Ranch,
Honey French, Vegetable Dip,
Ceasar or Spinach Salad
Buy One Get One Free!
Buy One At Regular Price And Get One Of Equal Value Free
Salad Bar...
Take home a fresh salad tonight!
Make it right in the store at our new self-service salad bar. We have over 40 ingredients to choose from, including 6 different salad dressings.
Bonus Special—Red Ripe Tomatoes
LB. 39¢
Green Onions
Fancy 4/$1
Garden Fresh Top Red Radishes 39¢ Bunch
Green Leaf, Romaine, Boston or Red Leaf Lettuce 39¢ Bunch
Free! Register To Win A Coca-Cola 3 Wheel 5 HP ATV.
Register At All 3 Lawrence Stores Now Thru Sept. 9th. Drawing To Be Held Sept. 10th.
Free! Register To Win
A Trip For 2 To Puerto Vallarta Mexico
Includes 8 Days & 7 Nights, Round Trip Air Transportation & Land Transfers. Register At All 3 Lawrence Stores Now Thru Sept. 9th. Drawing To Be Held Sept. 10th.
Free! Register To Win One Of 2 Sony 19" Color T.V.'s
Register At All 3 Lawrence Stores Now Thru September 9th. Drawing To Be Held Sept. 10th.
Register To Win A... $50 Gift Certificate (1 Winner)
Register At All 3 Lawrence Stores Now Thru Sept. 9th. Drawing To Be Held Sept. 10th.
Week!
1986 - Limit Rights Reserved.
Samples &
Demonstrations Throughout The Store
7 days a week
Gerry Collie
Market Mgr.
Our People Make it Happen!
Bonus Special—Armour Star Bacon
16 oz. Package
Buy One Get One Free!
Buy One At Regular Price And Get One Of Equal Value Free!
Bonus Special—U.S.D.A. Choice Grain Fed Boneless Bottom Round Roast
98¢ LB.
Bonus Special—U.S.D.A. Choice Grain Fed Boneless Beef Brisket
(Whole In Bag)
USDA CHOICE Grain Fed Beef
79¢ LB.
(Trimmed $1.28 LB.)
From Our Deli...
Bonus Special—ButterBall Smoked or Oven Roasted Turkey Breast
$2.99 LB.
Bonus Special—“Ready To Eat” Hot Dogs, Hot Links or Polish Sausage
10¢ Each
Bonus Special—Uncooked Headless Gulf Shrimp
71-80 ct.
$2.99 LB.
Bonus Special—Sea Bass Fillets
From Cold Pacific Waters
$2.39 LB.
Jerri Baldwin
Seafood Mgr.
Build your own sandwich or taco at Dillon's new Sandwich & Taco Bar.
Joy Koerner
Dell Mgr.
Joy Koerner
Deli Mgr.
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"Great For Dressing Up Your Room!"
-Bonus Special—
From Our... Plant Department!
10"Tropical Plants $999
H
...Where It's Springtime all year round.
Sun Flower Sue Will Help You With Your Houseplant Questions.
Chris Dary Floral Mgr.
Our People Make it Happen!
grand opening
Register To Win One Of 3 Magnavox VCR's Register At All 3 Lawrence Stores Now Thru Sept. 9th. Drawing To To Held September 10th.
Clorox 5c Off Label
Pillons
FOOD STORES
Samples & Demonstrations Throughout The Store! 7 Days A Week
49¢ Gallon
Bonus Special-
50 OFF
Regular
CLOROX
120
NOTE BOOK
3 CONTENTS
120 CONTENTS
120 CONTENTS
Note Book
25.28
120 CONTENTS
120 CONTENTS
120 CONTENTS
-Bonus Special-
Stuart Hall
3 Subject Theme Book
Wide or Narrow Rule. 120 ct. Book
Buy One 120 ct.
Themebook At Regular
Retail
& Receive A 200 Ct.
Pkg. of Filler Paper
Free!
Free! Deliveries
From our Flower Shop and Pharmacy Deliveries made everyday...Twice a day Monday thru Saturday & once on Sunday within Lawrence city limits.
Register To Win A
Register At All Lawrence Stores Now
Thru September 9th. Drawing To Be
Held Sept. 10th.
310.000 PRESCRIPTION
PHARMACY
Popcorn
To Every Video Customer!
Dr. B. E.
...a complete full-line professional Pharmacy
Terry Post Pharmacy Mgr.
LIMIT ONE COUPON PER PRESCRIPTION PLEASE
$3.00
Free! Register To Win A Romantic Night In Kansas City
Includes Hotel Accommodations At The Westin Crown Center Hotel, Dinner For Two, And Much Much More. Details And Registration At All 3 Dillon Locations In Lawrence. Drawing To Be Held September 10th.
THIS COUPON GOOD FOR $3.00 ON YOUR NEXT OR TRANSFERRED PREScription FROM
ANY OTHER PHARMACY. IF YOUR PRESCRIPTION IS UNDER $3.00, IT WILL BE FILLED
FREE. NO REFOUND FOR DIFFERENCE IF YOUR PRESCRIPTION IS LESS THAN $3.00
PRESCRIPTION COUPON
Coupon Good Only At Our New Store Store At 8th & 9th Avenue and Our Store At 10th & Massachusetts Lawn, Coupon Good Thirst. 30th. State Law Prohibits the Inclusion of 19 Will Gift Coupons.
DILLONS PHARMACY
---
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One Years Free Prescription For One Winner And Their Immediate Family
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NSAS
Hitting the books
Head football coach Bob Valesente insists that his players are students first and athletes second. And some of them are learning the hard way.
Story, page 11
The seemingly never-ending saga of campus lighting promises to last until at least winter as further delays bog down the project.
In the dark
Story, page 15
Big tan on campus
The first day of classes should provide a prime chance for summer's sun worshipers to show off on Wescoe Beach under calm, sunny skies.
Details, page 3
HOT
Vol. 97, No.2 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday
August 25,1986
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
97
Scott Joy, Lawrence senior, front, and Steve Frank, Prairie Village senior, navigate their way down the Kansas River.
River race makes splash for charity
Staff writer
By PAMELA SPINGLER
With a thud, and then a splash,
the three students in the canoe hit
the water of the Kansas River as
the vessel turned belly-up in the
afternoon sun.
The three managed to drag the overturned boat to safety on the nearby bank. After a quick beer, they tried again — this time successfully.
Meanwhile, Saturday afternoon's Kutty's Ark Raft Race had begun without them.
A pirate whaler, an inflatable raft, canoes, inner tubes and a giant Styrofoam box were some of the crafts floating on the river for the third-annual charity event
sponsored by Theta Chi fraternity and Gamma Phi Beta sorority.
The race started at Riverfront Park and ended at Burcham Park, two miles downstream. And the only rule was that the crafts couldn't have a motor.
Monday Morning
"You could swim it if you wanted to," said Scott Petry, Lawrence senior and race chairman.
The race had three categories -- for individual competitors, pairs and teams of three or more. There were nine entries.
Individuals paid $5 to be in the race, pairs paid $10 and teams
paid $20. T-shirts also were sold, and proceeds went to the Douglas County Council on Aging.
Petry made no estimate on how much money was raised.
The one-man race included three inner tubes, an inflatable plastic raft and a large, Styrofoam box.
The Styrofoam box won
Don Welling, a 55-year-old Baldwin City resident, captained the cube in the finish line in 34 minutes and 45 seconds, amid cheers from a crowd of about 50 racers and spectators that had gathered on shore.
"I didn't hurry," Welling said.
"The current carried me along. All I did was raddle across the river.
things . . in fact. I saw a blue heron as I was floating down."
he said he chose the giant box because it was handy, and it was cheap.
"It's a packing box of some kind, and I got it out of a trash dumpster years ago," he said.
"It is very peaceful. You see
senior, was one of four Delta Upsilon fraternity members in the race. They manned rafts and inner tubes and wore 33-cent sunglasses.
"We talked about entering it, and it sounded like fun," Sinclair said. "We wanted to support a great philanthropy."
In the two-man race, two canoes
See RAFTS, p. 5, col. 5
McCollum no place for freshmen,some say
Staff writer
By NICOLE SAUZEK
The only sound on the 10th floor of McCollum Hall Friday morning was a woman singing softly. The hall was clean, the lobby neat.
Meanwhile, five floors down, chaos seemed to reign
There, the elevator door opened and a bicycle sped into the lobby. Over inoleum and carpet, the rider and bicycle weaved through bodies and turned toward the south wing.
As the hall door opened, a wave of deafening noise gushed into the lobby. As many as four separate stereos blared different songs as the biker stopped to yell down the littered hall for a friend to wake up.
In McCollum, 389 upperclassmen and graduate students occupy the eighth, ninth and 10th floors. Eight hundred freshman live on the floors below.
The situation has the upperclassmen and graduate students so upset that many of them
want to leave the hall They are concerned because McCollum was supposed to be a hall primarily for them.
But freshmen residents say they think the other students are overreacting.
"By putting so many freshmen into the hall, the atmosphere is never going to be the same," said Lawren Havlik, Hutchinson graduate student. "Now, it's as if a tradition's been broken."
According to contract terms, McCollum is a hall reserved for upperclassmen and graduates only. Freshmen are to be placed in the hall only if other residence halls are filled.
At the request of many of his fellow residents, Chris Moore, Junction City graduate student, met Thursday with Ken Stoner, director of student housing, about moving graduate students to another hall.
"I think that they have a legitimate concern." Stoner said. "The problem started when less graduate students applied to live in McCollium. It's not that we're giving preference to freshmen.
Lack of year-round housing at the residence halls has caused many of the graduate students to find other places to live. During the summer break, graduates must move out of the residence halls, find other housing and then return to the residence halls in the fall.
We just have to adjust the numbers to who apply." Two years ago, 50 freshmen were assigned to live in McCollum. Last year, 400 were admitted. This year, 800 of a total 1,189 residents are freshmen.
"The only answer is to change the policy." Stoner said. "The grad students' complaints will be relayed to the department of student housing soon for discussion."
He said he did not know how soon any changes might take place.
Moore said he also might start a petition drive if action wasn't taken soon.
"Noise is a paranoia that we have," Moore said.
See MCCOLLUM, p. 5, col. 1
County judge to decide fate of KU lawsuit
Rv SHANF HILLS
Staff writer
A Douglas County Judge could decide within 60 days whether a patrol sergeant for Campus Parking Services may sue the University of Kansas for age discrimination.
Edwin Fenstemaker, 59, a 35-year veteran of Parking Services, filed a suit in June that said he was demoted two levels — from lieutenant to parking officer — because of his age.
Fenstemaker is seeking more than $100,000 in compensatory and punitive damages and back pay that still is accumulating.
The suit also says that Donald Kearns, director of Parking Services, exerted substantial psychological force to coerce Fenstemaker into accepting the demotion in 1984.
A University discrimination hearing panel met to review the case and hear testimony in May. The panel concluded that Kearns had discriminated against Fenstemaker because of his age.
Based on a 1984 memorandum written by Kearns, the panel concluded that Kearns forced Fenstemaker to accept a demotion. Kearns issued an unsatisfactory evaluation in the memo and gave Fenstemaker 36 hours to resign or accept a demotion.
"It is the view of the panel that the gravity of the situation required more time for a decision, and that Mr. Fenstemaker was coerced into requesting a voluntary demotion," said Deanell Tacha, then vice chancellor for academic affairs, in a memo summarizing the panel's conclusions.
The panel also suggested that the demotion of Fenstemaker be less severe. Fenstemaker was promoted from parking officer to sergeant and now is a full-time sergeant with Parking Services.
Fenstemaker could not be reached for comment.
James Rumsey, Fenstemaker's lawyer, said Friday that he would not comment on pending litigation.
Kearns, who was named as a defendant in the suit along with the University, referred all questions to Mary Prewitt, special assistant attorney to University general counsel.
The suit should reach the oral argument stage within 60 days. Prewitt said Friday, at which time a judge issued a motion to dismiss the case or send it to trial.
Prewitt filed a motion July 14 saying that Fenstemaker's suit should be dismissed for several reasons.
See DEMOTION. p. 5, col. 1
Staff writer
By NICOLE SAUZEK
Athletes' drug tests increased by policy
Chancellor to speak at 9:30
Student athletes will face more drug tests — both announced and random — and stricter penalties for drug use because of policy changes the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation made earlier this month.
In addition, all athletes under the jurisdiction of the KUAC will be tested, Gary Hunter, assistant athletic director, said last week. In the past, only a small percentage had been tested.
The program also may include cheerleaders, the pompon squad and mascots. Monte Johnson, athletic director, and an administrative staff committee are considering the addition of the spirit squads to those tested under the $2\frac{1}{2}$-year-old program.
"Our main goals are to educate, deter, rehabilitate and then counsel," Hunter said. "We're not trying to be tricky or deceitful. We want to educate the athletes about the use and abuse of drugs."
The stricter drug policy will cost the sports medicine department $23,350 for fiscal year 1987, an increase of 36.5 percent from the previous fiscal year. Last year's program cost $17,106.
Each athlete will be tested a minimum of twice during the academic year. Both times the test results should be submitted, and might be notified of one or both tests.
athletes who do not pass the drug test. Athletes who test positive for drug use could lose their scholarships and the right to participate.
Athletes' urine is tested primarily for use of cocaine, amphetamines, anabolic steroids and THC (tetrahydrocannabinol), found in marijuana, said Lynn Bott, director of sports medicine.
Penalties also will be tougher for
After 40 days, the athlete is tested again. From then on, testing continues randomly every month until the end of the athlete's academic year.
"On the third offense, the athlete is subject to suspension, loss of financial aid, or both," Bott said. "Perma-
Previously, an athlete was tested during the preseason physical and once randomly during the year.
The first time an athlete tests positive, the KUAC Drug Policy Committee, which is Bott, Hunter and the player's head coach, is informed of the test results. The athlete then is informed and advised to get professional counseling.
See TESTING, p. 5, col. 3
Convocation to kick off semester
By NANCY BARRF
Chancellor Gene A. Budig will give the 121st annual Opening Convocation address at 9:30 a.m. today in Hoch Auditorium.
All classes will be canceled from 9:30 to 10:20 a.m., and the entire University community is invited to attend the ceremonies. Student Body President David Epstein will give the welcoming address.
The University announced Thursday that Budig would present both the Higuchi/Endowment Research Achievement Awards and the Chancellor's Club Teaching Professorships at the convocation.
The Higuchi/Endowment Research Achievement Awards were established in May 1981 by Takeru Higuchi, Board of Regents distinguished professor of pharmaceutical chemistry and chemistry. Four awards of $10,000 each are given annually to benefit outstanding KU researchers.
Richard T. DeGeorge, University distinguished professor of philosophy, who will receive the Balfour Jeffrey Award for his research in the humanities and social sciences.
This year's recipients are:
Jan Roskam, Deane E. Ackers distinguished professor of aerospace engineering, will receive the Irvin Youngberg Award for research achievement in the applied sciences.
Lester A. Mitscher, University distinguished professor and chairman of medicinal chemistry, will receive the Dolph Simons Sr. Award for his research in the biomedical sciences.
William J. Bell, professor of entomology and of physiology and cell biology, will receive the Olin Petefish Award for his research in the basic sciences.
The Chancellor's Club Teaching Professorships were established in 1981. Recipients are given $5,000 annually while they teach at the University.
This year's recipients of the Chancellors Club awards are:
N Ray Hiner, professor of history and of educational policy and administration.
Symbols redesigned 20 years ago
Norman L. Martin, professor of diagnostic radiology at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Lawrence A. Sherr, professor of business administration.
By NANCY BARRE
Staif writer
Today's Opening Convocation marks the 20th anniversary of the redesigning of three symbolic KU relics — the ceremonial mace, collar and official seal.
Two KU professors refurbished the mace, collar and seal and presented them to the University in 1966 in honor of its centennial celebration.
Carlyle H. Smith, professor emeritus of design, redesigned the mace and collar. Elden Teft, professor of art, redesigned the University seal, which is on the collar and is embossed on all official University documents.
The mace, a large wooden staff carried by the marshal of the University at official functions such as convocation and commencement, was designed by Smith. The collar resembles a large chain, and the seal is in the center of a metal medallion
attached to the collar.
"When I was redesigning it (the seal), I tried to work from what was there, but no one knew where the original design came from," Tefft said.
SIGILLUM UNIVERSITATIS KANSIENSIS
VISTONEM HANC MACNAAM QUARRE NON COMBIRATUR PUBUS
OREGONIA
ESTABLISHED 1865
"Although we still don't know where the first seal came from, we
did run into some interesting things when we researched it."
He said that on the original seal, the biblical image of Moses at the burning bush made Moses appear bald. However, upon further research through KU's department of religious studies, he found that Moses originally had been wearing a turban that had been worn away in time.
On the newer seal, Teft replaced the turban. He said he wanted to modify the seal, employing historical elements, rather than completely change it.
"I just wanted to find out the truth about Moses' baldness, and make the lettering more legible," Tefft said.
1
Smith also preserved historical elements in his design. He used wood from the staircase of old Fraser Hall to make the mace's eight-pound wooden shaft.
1
2
Monday, August 25, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
News Briefs
40 die as volcano in West Africa releases toxic gas, officials say
YAOUNDE, Cameron — Toxic natural gas released from a volcano killed at least 40 people in northwestern Cameron during the weekend, the government said yesterday.
The government declared an emergency zone in the area near Nios Lake and ordered an evacuation from the area. It said it feared the death toll could rise significantly.
A government statement said 40 people were killed by inhaling toxic natural gas coming from an active volcano in the area. It said the deaths occurred Friday and Saturday.
Radio Cameroon said injured people were evacuated to a hospital in Bemenda, about 250 miles south of the disaster site. It did not give a figure on injured people or people who had been evacuated from the remote area.
The radio said the United States and Britain had pledged to provide instruments and material to monitor the releases of toxic gas, as well as medicine and food for victims.
French radio in Paris said France and Israel also had pledged aid.
Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres is to travel to Cameroon today, and an announcement is expected on a resumption of diplomatic relations between Israel and Cameroon. Yaounde, in the central part of the West African nation, is far from the disaster zone.
Radio Cameron said the toxic gas disaster apparently had not changed Peres' plans to travel to the country.
In Washington, State Department spokeswoman Anita Stockman said: "The U.S. government is prepared to assist the government of Cameroon. They have indicated there may be a need. We don't have any report of American casualties. It's not an area frequented by tourists."
Okla. post office gunman burier
WATONG, Okla. — Patrick Henry Sherrill, who killed 14 U.S. Postal Service co-workers and wounded six others before committing suicide, was buried yesterday in a family plot in his hometown.
Sherrill, 44, was cremated, and his ashes were placed at the gravesite of his parents in a brief, private service attended by 25 friends and relatives no clergy.
Sherrill, who had worked at the post office in Edmond, Okla., about 80 miles away, for about 1½ years, entered the building about 7 a.m. Wednesday and began shooting.
Gov. George Nigh declared yesterday an official day of mourning in Oklahoma. The declaration came as Edmond residents gathered at a college football stadium for memorial services.
Eight victims of the shooting were buried Saturday. Four others were buried Friday.
Services for Patricia Gabbard, 47, were yesterday in Crescent, Okla. Betty Jarred, 34, will be buried today in Guthrie, Okla.
Police have speculated that Sherrill was angry over a reprimand he received Tuesday. On Wednesday, he entered the post office carrying a pistol in his hand and two more pistols and ammunition in his mail bag.
The police reference was to reports that supervisors had threatened Sherrill with dismissal if his work did not improve. Postal Service officials have denied that supervisors threatened to fire Sherrill.
Sherrill was one of the five top marksmen in the Oklahoma National Guard and was authorized to check out weapons and ammunition, officials said Friday. The guns used in the killings were from the National Guard.
Merger stalls Frontier Airlines
DENVER — Frontier Airlines, the subject of a stalled $146 million merger with United Air Lines, was shut down yesterday by its parent company, People Express, leaving thousands of passengers stranded as the owners prepared for bankruptcy.
Frontier, which served 55 cities in the United States and Canada, halted operations at 6 a.m. because People Express, which bought the airline in November for $100 million, said it could no longer afford Frontier's
People Express said it planned to file for bankruptcy protection for Frontier today.
Despondent Frontier employees held out hope that the airline might be saved by the pending $146 million offer by United.
"People Express has given United until today to reach an accord with us," said Hank Krakowski, a United co-pilot and Air Line Pilots Association spokesman in Chicago. "Once bankruptcy is filed, the deal off. Everything will be tied up in court."
A People Express statement said, "In the absence of assurance that the sale to United will take place, People Express is unwilling to commit any more of its funds to Frontier," adding that the bankruptcy filing would take place assuming no agreement between United and its pilots' union was reached.
Marcos denies plans for coup
HONOLULU — Ousted Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos said he would not sneak home for an attempted coup while President Corazon Aquino was on her first trip abroad since taking power six months ago.
"Just between us," Marcos told reporters during a rally Saturday at his beachfront home in Honolulu, "it is immaterial whether I go or not.
"The most important thing is to get the country out of Communist hands," he said after hundreds of his supporters encouraged him to return to govern his homeland.
"I'm not in control of her movements," Marcos said when asked about Aquino's trip to Indonesia and Singapore, as well as a stop in the United States next month. "It is not for me to dictate exactly how she will move."
In the Philippines, military and police units were put on red alert. Armed Forces Chief Gen. Fidel Ramos said the maximum state of readiness was a precautionary measure against a possible coup by Marcos supporters during Aquino's absence.
Aquino herself was confident as she boarded her presidential jet, saying, "I do not have any second thoughts about this trip."
Falwell denounces campaign
LYNCHBURG, Va. — The Rev. Jerry Fallow well that despite Pat Robertson's effort to emphasize his experience in law and business, he could not escape identification as a minister if he ran for president.
Fallwell, a Baptist minister who founded the Moral Majority, said he was concerned that a Robertson presidential campaign could be harmful to the evangelical cause at large.
Robertson recently said he would answer the issue of his religious affiliation by emphasizing that he had a law degree, attended the London School of Economics and ran the multimillion-dollar Christian Broadcasting Network.
Robertson has complained that during the contest for precinct delegates in the Michigan Republican primary, supporters for Vice President George Bush circulated a flyer headlined, "Help Keep Religion Out of Politics."
He said supporters of the religious right also had been guilty of excesses, pointing to the Michigan primary campaign of Rep. Mark Siljander.
The congressman, a strong supporter of the religious right, was defeated by a Republican challenger. Siljander attributed his defeat to backlash from a tape distributed to ministers in which he asked for their help to break the back of Satan.
Official questions tax-plan fight
HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. — The congressional tax plan is unfair to the states, but fighting its passage could leave the states facing even worse legislation, Gov. Richard Lamm of Colorado said yesterday.
"Despite the fact that it's bad tax policy, it has a head of steam behind it," Lamm told the executive committee of the National Governors' Association, which is having its annual conference in South Carolina.
According to the association, 45 states have some kind of sales tax, and the portion of the tax plan removing the sales tax deduction is seen as pressuring states to shift their revenue base to deductible taxes, such as those on income and property.
From Kansan wires.
EdLevin
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, August 25, 1986
3
News Briefs
Man to stand trial on cocaine charge
A Lawrence man charged with selling cocaine was ordered Wednesday to stand trial by Douglas County District Judge Ralph King.
Brian Cross, 22, 1012 Emery Road, was one of 21 people, including 12 former KU students, indicted in July on state and federal cocaine-related charges. Cross was charged with one count of selling one gram of cocaine.
The arrests were the result of a joint effort by various law-enforcement agencies, undercover police officers and informants.
Including Cross, seven of the people indicted on state charges have gone through preliminary hearings and face jury trials next month and in October.
Cross' trial was set to begin at 9 a.m. Oct. 20 in Douglas County District Court.
Cheering trvouts set
Junior varsity cheerleading and pompon tryouts will be at 6:30 p.m. Thursday in Anschutz Sports Pavilion. Clinics will be from 6:30 to 9 p.m. tonight through Wednesday in the sports pavilion.
Judges will choose six men and six women to make up the JV cheerleading squad, and are considering choosing two additional cheerleaders as alternates, said James Speed, a judge.
Two women also will be chosen to fill spots on the pompon squad.
Cheerleaders will be judged on tumbling and gymnastics, partner stunts, jumps, high kicks and cheering the "I'm a Jayhawk" fight song. Pompom girls will be judged on high kicks, cheering "I'm a Jayhawk" and a dance routine.
Arts ticket available
Patrons of the fine arts can get the same kind of deal sports fans can.
The all-performing arts ticket, like the all-sports ticket, allows students to attend a variety of events for one price. With the arts ticket, students may attend all 17 performances of the University Theatre, the University Concert Series and the Chamber Music Series. The $55 cost of the all-performing arts ticket is $38 less than what students would have to pay for individual tickets.
Students can reserve seats to any performance during the year, said Charla Jenkins, theatre public relations director.
If students failed to reserve all-performing arts tickets during fee payment, the tickets will be available at the Murphy Hall box office.
There is no limit on the number of tickets available, Jenkins said.
Corrections
Because of an editor's error, the boxed quote on page 1 of the Back-to-School issue was incorrectly attributed. It should have been attributed to David Epstein, student body president.
Because of a reporter's error, KU police officer Tom Stanton was improperly identified in a story in the Campus/Area section of the Back-to-School issue of the Kansas.
Weather
Today will be mostly sunny with a high around 90 and winds 10 to 15 mph. Tonight will be fair with a low around 70 Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with a 30 percent chance of after noon thunderstorms and a high around 90.
From staff and wire reports
Student activity fee to remain the same
By SALLY STREFF
The $28 student activity fee students pay at the beginning of each semester will not change for at least two years, the Student Senate Executive Committee decided yesterday.
Staff writer
The decision means that until at least the fall of 1988 student groups that receive money from the fee will get the same amount of regular Student Senate financing that they did this year.
SUUNEX voted to postpone for one year the revenue code hearings that determine financing for the groups.
Revenue code groups are large organizations, such as Legal Services for Students and KJHJ-FM, that serve many students. They request an annual level of financing every two years. The Senate allocates funds for these groups by splitting up the activity fee.
The vote was in response to the Senate's decision in the spring to change its elections from November to April. Because of that decision, elections will take place twice this academic
year, once in November and once in April.
Tim Henderson, finance committee chairman and the sponsor of the proposal, said he thought it was important to hold revenue code hearings after elections so that politics did not play a large role.
StudEx met for two hours yesterday before voting 5-3 to postpone the hearings. Members declared the situation an emergency and acted for the full Senate, which StudEx has the power to do under Senate rules.
"We have to move revenue code hearings as far away from elections as humanly possible," he said.
Previously, Student Senate elections occurred in November, and revenue code hearings started in January. After the date of elections was changed, senators also changed the time of revenue code hearings, moving them to this fall.
However, Henderson, Pratt senior, said that because elections were taking place twice this
year, hearings at any time would be influenced by politics.
"Representatives get much more attuned to what gets them elected as elections get closer." Henderson said before yesterday's meeting. "Someone says: 'Maybe if we give more money to them they'll support us.'"
Henerson sent letters to the 19 revenue code groups, saying he wanted to postpone the hearings until fall 1987. The set at those hearings would go into effect on July 1, 1988.
Only four groups wrote back, and only one of those four, Consumer Affairs, said hearings shouldn't be postponed.
David Hardy, law and graduate student representative to the University Senate Executive Committee, protested abandoning what he called the Senate's primary responsibility.
"Students expect us to watch their money," he said. "That's what we do as Senate, that's our most important function. I don't care if we do it in the spring or the fall, I think it's really bad not to do it."
Michael Anderson, co-chairman of the Senate Student Rights Committee, said the action might give a nine-month windfall to student groups, during which they wouldn't have to justify their spending to Senate.
But David Epstein, student body president, said, "We are going through immense changes. These are special circumstances."
Henderson asked, "What would bother students more? Postponing revenue code for one year or jacking up the student activity fee another $3 or $4 for people's political whies?"
Hardy questioned whether political wrangling about revenue code hearings occurred to the extent Henderson contended.
But Henderson said that by last April two coalitions already had formed for this November's elections.
A
"That was last April," Henderson said. "Can you imagine what it will be like in October?"
Ed Sellers, Belton, Mo., and Grant Cochran, Grandview, Mo., practiced before their turn in the Sixth Annual Kansas Fiddling and Picking Championships yesterday at South Park.
Pickers leave 'em grinning
Staff writer
Rv IANE ZACHMAN
Folk music lingered in the air yesterday afternoon in South Park. Children ate cotton candy, and dogs romped around in the midday sun.
The music provided a relaxed atmosphere for those picnicking, biking, walking or just out for an easy day before the beginning of school.
The Sixth Annual Kansas State Fiddling and Picking Championships had come to Lawrence.
But many performers were there
more for the enjoyment of playing rather than the competition.
For Theresa Gabauer, Overland Park, this was the first time she had entered the miscellaneous string instruments contest.
"We just come for fun," said Mary Franzke, Topeka, a contestant. "We've found a lot of people we haven't seen for a while and it's just fun to get together."
"I don't think we placed in the top three, but it was nice to spend the day listening to others and having fun," she said.
There was even a politician. Dennis Moore, the Democratic candidate for state attorney general, encouraged a crowd of about 75 people to sing "This Land Is Your Land" as he performed with his group, Denny and the Doo-Da's.
The audience was entertained by folk music performers between competing musicians, including the bands Full Circle and Last Kansas Exit, both of Lawrence, and The Sons of Ravon of Wichita. Dan Newton,
CAROLYN D. HAWKINS AND ROBERT MAYER AT PARK
The Hodges family of Osakaoska try to edge their singing voices toward perfection before competing in the Sixth Annual Kansas Fiddling and Picking Championship yesterday in South Park. Beth Hodges, Osakaosaa freshman, her sister, Davi Kramer, and her brother, Brett Hodges, sang and played. Kramer's 3-year-old son, Zeb, gave the group a little moral support
Lincoln, Neb., also performed a "squeezebox" exhibition on accordian and concertina.
Steve Mason. Lawrence senior.
said, "I've played in all the festivals since they began in Lawrence. Today I'm in the folk singing and fiddle contest. It makes for a nice day in the park."
Member sues frat after fall
By a Kansan reporter
A member of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity is seeking more than $20,000 in damages from his fraternity for injuries he received when he fell out of a second-story window at the group's house.
Timothy McGivern, Topeka junior, suffered head injuries and a broken shoulder in February 1985 after he fell out of his bedroom window at the house, 1540 Louisiana St., while getting into bed.
The suit was filed Aug. 13 in Douglas County District Court, naming the local chapter of the fraternity as the defendant. No court date has been set.
The suit states that McGivern suffered permanent disfigurement from the injuries.
keep the house free from "defects, hazards, and dangers." McGivern is seeking damages in excess of $10,000 for his injuries.
McGivern also is seeking additional damages in excess of $10,000 because he claims the fraternity was negligent by not providing screens, storm windows or other protective devices, such as bars, on the windows.
Representatives of the fraternity could not be reached for comment.
The suit charges that the fraternity was negligent because it failed to
Although McGivern refused to comment on the status of the suit, he said he would speak to his chapter tonight at a meeting about the suit
McGivern's attorney, Harold S. Youngentob, Topeka, said he would not comment on the status of a suit that had not been settled.
McGivern, who was a sophomore at the time of the accident, lived in the chapter house last year.
Woodruff's care for students remembered
By JOHN BENNER Staff writer
Staff writer
The name of Laurence C. Woodruff is familiar to any KU student who has visited Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. It was named in his honor.
His contemporaries remember him as a man who cared deeply for students and who for years made beginning biology classes more interesting than most of his students had anticipated.
Mr. Woodruff died Monday at the age of 84 and left behind many friends and acquaintances who agree that today's students would have been glad to know him.
"His great love of students and the University set a standard of excellence in our student services program that made a substantial
contribution to the great reputation this University enjoys today." Chancellor Gene A. Budig said in a prepared statement.
Mr. Woodruff began his association with the University of Kansas as a freshman in 1920, and received a bachelor's degree in 1924, earning his master's in 1930. He received a doctorate in entomology from Cornell University in 1934.
After receiving his doctorate at Cornell, Mr. Woodruff served as an instructor there until 1934. He returned to KU that year as an assistant professor of biology and became an associate professor in 1939.
"With enrollment down during World War II, entomology professors were not needed," said
Raymond Nichols, chancellor emeritus. "Because our registrar had been called up for military service, we asked Laurence to act as registrar. He turned out to have a flair for administration — something I glad we were fortunate to spot."
Mr. Woodruff served as registrar through the war, then became the dean of men in 1947. He was appointed the first dean of students in 1953 and held that position until 1967 when he reached the mandatory retirement age of 65 for administrators.
Mr. Woodruff's family suggests memorial contributions to the KU Endowment Association to create a Woodruff Scholarship Fund in Biological Sciences.
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Monday, August 25. 1986 / University Daily Kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Von Ende should resign
Richard von Ende's troubles have only just begun.
Von Ende, the University's executive secretary and representative to the Kansas Legislature since 1972, was charged July 22 with three counts of distributing cocaine and three counts of conspiring to sell cocaine. All are federal crimes.
In the United States, a person remains innocent of a crime until proven guilty. So, in the eyes of the law, von Ende is innocent, and rightfully so.
But the implications and inferences that accompany the charges against von Ende will make it hard for him to ever perform his duties as successfully as he has in the past.
As the University's main lobbyist in Topeka, von Ende has represented the school in some very important circles. The cocaine charges have tainted his reputation and could have
repercussions on KU's image.
In his years in Topeka, von Ende built a strong network of legislators and lobbyists. Many in that network will undoubtedly be wary of negotiating with a suspected drug dealer.
The University has made no move to remove von Ende from his $53,020 position as his case winds its way through the courts. He officially has been on sick leave since three weeks before the charges were filed.
Without a doubt, von Ende's persistent efforts to attain more money from the Legislature and the Board of Regents for the University have contributed greatly to the strong position KU now holds among the state schools in Kansas.
And for that, the University should be thankful.
But von Ende now can help the University most by resigning.
Legacy of service
Separate portraits of Laurence C. Woodruff remain on campus.
One is compiled from a list of the positions he filled, the societies he served and the honors he received. It is a portrait of involvement.
Another is more personal, drawn from the collective memories of hundreds of young people who took beginning biology courses at the University. It is a portrait rounded with a wry smile and punctuated by a man's droll humor.
Laurence C. Woodruff died Aug. 18 in Eudora. He was 84.
Mr. Woodruff joined the University in 1934 and worked
here until he retired in 1972. He was a teacher, the dean of men and the dean of students. He also was registrar during World War II, serving while the man who normally filled that position was in the armed forces.
When he was forced to retire as an administrator in 1967, he continued teaching for another five years. True to his legacy of service, he willed his body to the University of Kansas Medical Center for research purposes.
We can only repeat what is usually and rightfully said on these occasions: a good and special man has died, and such a loss diminishes us all.
A cordial gesture
In an era when the "take what you can get" mentality is pervasive, Chancellor Gene A. Budig this summer decided that enough was enough.
Despite his objection, the Regents forced the raise on Budig.
In late June, the Kansas Board of Regents approved a 5.2-percent increase in Budig's $96,000 annual salary. But the chancellor requested that the raise be limited to 2.5 percent, the same raise faculty members received for fiscal year 1987.
A pat on the back for Budig — a slap on the wrist for the Regents.
Budig's raise, which took effect July 1, makes him the first university president in Kansas to be paid more than $100,000 a year.
Undaunted by the Regents' insistence, Budig did some budget cutting of his own. He lopped 2.7 percent, or $2,252, off the increase, which brought him in line with the faculty raise. He donated the excess to the Kansas University Endowment Association's scholarship fund.
Interestingly, that record-breaking salary came at a time when KU faculty
Why did the Regents forcefeed an administrator who wasn't hungry when the faculty are consistently paid salaries that are lower than those at our 'peer institutions?'
members, like other state employees, were told that perennially tight budgets had little room for larger pay raises. And, for the third consecutive year, students endured tuition hikes this fall.
Regent Frank Becker, El Dorado, said, "We have to take care of our top administrators or we will lose them to other universities." It seems that Budig thought he already was well taken care of.
Granted, the Regents aren't entirely responsible for the low salary raises. The Legislature has been tight-fisted as well. But why give the money to Budig?
Regents officials tried to justify the raise by saying Budig had done a good job running the University. Didn't the faculty deserve the same? Haven't they also done a a good job?
Budig at least made a symbolic gesture to show some solidarity with the faculty. Good for him.
News staff
Opinions
News staff
Lauretta McMillen ... Editor
Kady McMaster ... Managing editor
Tad Clarke ... News editor
David Silverman ... Editorial editor
John Hanna ... Campus editor
Frank Hansel ... Sports editor
Jacki Kelly ... Photo editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
David Nixon ... Business manager
Gregory Kaul ... Retail sales manager
Denise Stephens ... Campus sales manager
Stuart Dewey ... Classified manager
Lisa Weems ... Production manager
Duncan Calhoun ... National sales manager
Beverly Kastens ... Traffic manager
John Oberzan ... Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be typeed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words and should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
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The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stuuffer-Fiall Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and on Wednesday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Lawren's website www.lawren.edu. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $27 a year county and $18 for six months and $35 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student activity fee.
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Responsibility part of learning
Long before most students have unpacked their first box or paid their first utility deposit, a somewhat masochistic group gathers in the Kansan newsroom to help set the wheels of this paper in motion.
Terrified reporters receive their first story assignments from fledgling editors, and we all make a grand play at putting out a nightmare called the Back to School issue.
The first day of class then brings the first regular issue of the Kansan, and all too quickly the routine begins again.
This column, too, is part of that routine. Editors take this chance to exercise some greenhorn journalism philosophy and to guarantee that their pictures appear in the paper at least once a semester.
But there is a more noble pur pose behind this piece as well.
Thousands of freshmen, transfer students and other unfamiliar faces arrive on our campus every fall. So an introduction to the publication that will get ink all over your hands for the next 15 weeks somehow seems appropriate.
The University Daily Kansan is, by design, a laboratory newspaper for the School of Journalism.
It is a paper run entirely by students. More than once this semester, that fact will become painfully, and regrettably, evident.
Students in advertising, reporting, editing and photography classes put their homework on display every day, setting themselves up for some of the
And all of this is meant to be taken as an explanation, not as an excuse or apology.
DONNA COLEMAN
Lauretta McMillen
Editor
toughest critiques they will ever receive. And, all too often, we fall on our collective face.
Names are misspeelled, incorrect titles are given and misquotes and other errors make it into print, despite our best efforts. Usually, we are quickly, and loudly, made aware of our shortcomings.
We take ourselves quite seriously and strive to maintain a professional demeanor as we learn the ins and outs of daily journalism.
And that's the way we like it.
hide behind that fact.
We are, and should be, held accountable for every word we print on these pages. There is no defense in being "just a college newspaper," and we try not to
Students who work for the Kansan also have a lot of fun. We learn a great deal, and most Fridays bring a feeling of pride and accomplishment that is well-deserved and well-celebrated.
But when we fail — when the name is wrong, the quote is out of context or the facts just aren't quite right — let us know.
For it is only when our errors are brought to our attention and corrected that we learn. And that's why all of us are here.
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Reagan still sticks to his guns
One of the things I like about President Reagan is that he sticks to his beliefs. He doesn't back down or switch positions on an issue because of pressures or emotional appeals.
Consider the fight that went on in Congress over efforts to weaken the federal gun control law.
The White House supported the changes because Reagan is a big booster of the National Rifle Association, which believes that there should be no gun law at all.
But there was an unusual twist to that battle. It was provided by Sarah Brady, the wife of James Brady, who still holds the title of press secretary to the president.
Brady doesn't actually run the press office in the White House anymore. He's still partially disabled as a result of taking a bullet that was intended for his boss.
As everyone remembers, Brady was shot in the brain by a loomy who had bought a cheap gun in a Texas pawnshop as easily as if he had bought a cheap guitar.
Ever since her husband nearly died, Brady has had serious doubts about the availability of handguns in this country. She developed strong views.
Mike Royko
Chicago Tribune
BROTHERS
She decided that she couldn't keep quiet any longer.
So she got in touch with Handgun Control Inc. and became one of its most vocal lobbyists.
During the hearings on the changes in the gun laws, she testified against them and has since made numerous appearances across the country.
Some people thought that Sarah Brady's involvement might persuade Reagan to rethink his position.
After all, Brady, who has long been one of his most trusted and loyal
workers, will never be the same man as a result of getting between the president and the deranged gunman.
And since the president also knows Sarah Brady pretty well, he could see what a wife and family were put through when a Saturday Night Special wound up in the hands of somebody who was insane.
But that's what I mean about Reagan sticking to his guns, so to speak.
We called the White House press office and got one of Brady's aides on the phone and asked how the president felt about Sarah Brady's efforts.
He said: "We don't have any comments on Mrs. Brady's opinions." And he said that the White House was still foursquare in favor of the changes in the gun laws.
I'm sure that wasn't easy for Reagan. Every time he sees Brady struggling to regain his health, he's got to be reminded of what one pawnb shop gun can do.
But I can see Reagan's side of it. He's now well into his second term
But I can see relegation. He's now well into his second term
in office. And in all that time, how many of his press secretaries have been shot? Only one.
Expanding the statistic - how many of his hundreds of other staff members have been shot? Still only Brady.
So, I'm sure that if you do what the president surely has done — if you take the big picture and keep everything in perspective — you decide that it's silly to get excited about a change in the gun laws when only one White House press secretary has been shot in the head while you were president.
For that matter, Reagan did not lose even one press secretary while he was governor of California. Or while he was an actor.
So, what are the odds, really, of another press secretary being shot in the head? As any bookie would tell you, pretty slim, pretty slim.
Looking at it that way, I can understand Reagan's position.
Mailbox
Communication myth
The myth of a state of the art communication system for the University of Kansas has been given new life by a recent article in the University Daily Kansan.
The story in the Aug. 20 issue did not provide any new or useful information. It also neglected to mention very important points concerning a data and telephone network for the KU campus.
The term "system" was used in the story but there was no description of the "system." It appeared that there may be at least two systems involved; one for data and another for telephony. However, the story was not clear in this distinction.
And although it was stated that there was no schedule for completion, the project was said to cost $3.5 million. Not only did the story fail to explain what the term "project" refers to, but it also failed to question how the University could spend $3.5 million on a project that did not have a schedule for completion.
My experience is that any project
without a schedule is usually not organized, not defined and usually never gets completed. I hope this is not the case with the mythical KU system.
Computer jargon was used rather loosely in the story, and I believe it tended to be misleading. Besides the problems with the technical language and terms, the story did us all a disservice by suggesting that the new system could replace professors.
I don't believe that any professor should worry about being replaced. Professors teach and explain things using their intuition, experience and knowledge. Not even the most naive person could believe that a telecommunications system could duplicate or replace one of our valuable professors.
I would appreciate hearing more details about plans to modernize and improve our campus telecommunications. However, it would be more useful to have better quality information and more factual data than has already been presented.
Gordon F. Sargent
Lenexa graduate student
Bring Zippy to KU
Let me be the first among many, I assure you, to humbly besease you, to beg, to implore, to cajole you to consider adding "Zippy the Pinhead" as a daily feature of the University Daily Kansas.
Zippy is wet, he's wild, he's a '49 Studebaker on a rampage in a bowling alley in Honolulu. He's having an uptight emotional experience at a picnic of octogenarian nuns.
Zippy would have been elected
president of the Association of University Residence Halls in 1978, but he was disqualified because his enrollment could not be verified.
Zippy The Pinhead
The Kansen needs Zippy; KU needs Zippy. Banana daiquiris, AstroTurf, "Leave It To Beaver" and miniature golf just aren't enough anymore.
It's time to put a real pinhead in the Kansan.
Dennis "Boog" Highberger Lawrence graduate student
IS BARBIE'S HEART STILL BEATING?? YUD!!
BUT SHE'S NOT HAPPY VET...SHE NEEDS A...A...
UN-OH!! NOW KEN IS HAVING A MENTAL CRISIS BECAUSE HIS 'R.V.' PAYMENTS ARE OVER-DUE!!
University Daily Kansan / Monday, August 25, 1986
5
McCollum
Continued from p. 1
"Below us are a lot of freshmen who are away from home for the first time. I don't think they know what studying really is yet. We're scared that there is going to be too much noise to study."
Chuck Schwegler, Lawrence freshman, said — as he adjusted the volume on his stereo — that he wasn't worried about the graduate students' complaints.
"They can complain all they want," Schwegler said. "This is Country Club Week — we're going to be loud before classes start. I'm here for school."
but until then, I'm going to have some fun."
However, Moore said the graduate students wanted their own hall.
"We don't need anything special," he said. "I think JRP (Joseph R. Pearson) Hall would be an ideal spot. It's closer to the library."
Moore said the students in JRP, an all-male residence hall that could house 400, could move into McColum. JRP would be reserved for upperclassmen and graduate students and would be open year around.
Meanwhile, the graduate students and upperclassmen say they felt outnumbered.
"Freshmen do freshmen things," said Jo Ellen Kerksiek, Kansas City, Mo., graduate student. "I don't hate freshmen. I just don't expect them to understand. Last night, I about got run over in the elevator by a guy on a skateboard.
"I've lived with freshmen. I don't want to live with them anymore."
Demotion
Continued from p. 1
Rumsey filed a counter motion Aug 15 challenging Prewitt's request.
Prewitt said Fenstemaker had not followed proper procedure in filing suit. Fenstemaker should first have gone through the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission before assuming he had cause for action to file under a U.S. civil rights code, she said.
Courts do not have jurisdiction over a civil rights employment case until the commission has reviewed it, she said.
In Prewitt's motion to dismiss the suit, she cited several federal and
state cases in an attempt to prove that the University is not viciously liable for the actions of its employees, such as alleged actions by Kearns.
Fenstemaker had 300 days to file a complaint with the commission and failed to meet that deadline, Prewitt said.
Although Prewitt cites court rulings that say states and their agencies are not persons, and therefore cannot be sued as such, Rumsey cites a case that says states can be considered persons.
Testing
Continued from p. 1
nent suspension is also possible. The final approval for permanent suspension is left to Monte Johnson."
All records are erased at the end of each academic year and the athlete is given a clean start — unlike the old policy, which accumulated all test scores from year to year.
Hunter said the department had received no complaints from athletes about the drug policy.
"The athletes are very understanding." Hunter said.
Each athlete must sign a consent to be tested for the use of drugs that are prohibited by the department. If an
athlete refuses to sign the consent, the athlete doesn't become a member of the team.
"If you say 'no' (to the tests), you're just admitting to taking drugs," said Wayne Ziegler, Nickerson senior and defensive safety. "If you're playing a sport for either a college or professionally, you're representing someone.
"It's a privilege to play for a college. You abuse that privilege if you use drugs."
Some athletes also feel that the drug tests give them a chance to prove they don't use drugs.
Rafts
Continued from p. 1
battled for first — and last — place. The Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity took first with a time of 11 minutes and six seconds.
The Whaler, a pirate's vessel created by nailing two canoes together, sported a seven-foot mast with a bedsheet stenciled with the fraternity's letters as a sail. On the top of the mast, a stuffed Tweety Bird with an eye patch was perched in a red bucket.
A red, inflatable La Choy dragon sat on the bow of the boat as a lookout and beer holder.
The TKE members dressed the part. Along with red TKE shirts and shorts, each person wore a black eye patch and a Long John
Silver's pirate hat.
The TKE's even christened the boat in proper fashion — with a bottle of beer.
"We're very proud of it," said Whaler captain Mike Morak, Emporia junior. "We had a lot of enthusiasm and a great team."
Horak said the people who worked on the boat the most got to be the crew members.
Kent Gilbert, Kansas City, Kan. senior, and part of the TRE's shore support group, said events such as this help the house's moral.
"It get's everyone excited about the new year," he said.
Petry said the race was a success. He said that he had expected more participation from fraternities and sororities but that the race came before some houses had had their first meetings.
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For the opportunity to have something to be and not just something to do.
Due to certain errors that occurred in the Checkers Pizza advertisements last spring, the University Daily Kansan would like to extend its sincere apologies to the management, employees, and customers of Checkers Pizza.
We hope that our past mishandling of their advertisements have not caused undue hardships to those involved.
Sincerely,
The University Daily Kansan.
Student Senate and all Student Organizational Offices are now located in the Burge Union
Paid for by Student Senate
6
Monday, August 25, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
Counselor named new county administrator
By KAREN SAMELSON
Staff writer
When Chris McKenzie goes to work today, he will sit at the same desk in the same office at the Douglas County Courthouse, but he'll need a new nameplate that says county administrator.
McKenzie was the county counselor/administrator until Saturday, when his appointment to the new position that the county commissioners created Wednesday became official.
The commissioners decided to create a full-time administrative position because the county, with a budget of about $18 million, keeps growing, Commissioner Warren Rhodes said.
Park 25 tenants plagued by thefts
Several tenants of Park 25 Apartments, 2401 W. 25th St., were plagued by a series of thefts that apparently began Thursday evening and ended Saturday morning.
The following items, valued at $3,543, were stolen over the period:
A microwave oven and other items, valued together at $435, taken between midnight and 8:30 a.m. Saturday.
*Stereo and electronic equipment, valued together at $2,219,
stolen between 4 and 7 p.m. Friday*
from a locked car in the complex's parking lot.
A JVC AM-FM stereo cassette player valued at $239, stolen between midnight and 9 a.m. Friday, also from a car in the parking lot.
■ Car stereo equipment and cassette tapes valued at $360, stolen between midnight and 8 a.m. Saturday from a car in the parking lot
A Fox radar detector valued at $150, stolen between 11 p.m. Thursday and 7 a.m. Friday from an unlocked car in the parking lot.
The new job means that he will be in a direct supervisory position, McKenzie said. He will supervise and evaluate departments whose heads are appointed by the commission, such as public works and emergency preparedness.
"I'm very excited about it," McKenzie said Friday. He said the new job description clarified the extent of his authority.
He also will oversee the preparation of the operating budget, capital improvements program and a long-range strategy plan for the county.
"It's a combination of the old and the new," McKenzie said.
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McKenzie, who has been county counselor/administrator for about 18 months, earned a law degree from the University of Kansas in 1981 and a master's degree in urban planning from KU in 1976.
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The commissioners were able to appoint McKenzie to the position so quickly because they already knew his capabilities and had anticipated the need for a new administrator, Rhodes said.
"That legal background makes him a better administrator," Rhodes said.
"Why go through 91 applications for it?" Rhodes said.
Commissioners had chosen McKenzie over 90 other applicants when they gave the original position to him, Rhodes said, so they were confident of his abilities.
A contingency fund will cover the extra amount until the 1987 budget goes into effect, Rhodes said.
McKenzie now will earn $33,000 He earned $40,000 in his previous position.
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The University of Kansas 121st Opening
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Monday, August 25, 1986, Hoch Auditorium, 9:30 a.m.
Chancellor Gene A. Budig, Speaker
Classes will not meet from 9:30-10:30 a.m.
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6:30-8:30 pm (Advanced) Robinson Gym
Instructor: Sensel David King, Shodan (1st Deg. Black) Green Beret, US Army
Special Classes
Special Classes Hawaiian Kempo-Fridays & Sundays (in Kansas City) Okinawan Weapons (Kobudo)-Monthly clinics with
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, August 25, 1986
7
Hill catches party spirit
By KIRK KAHLER
Staff write
About 300 people, sitting in small groups, were scattered on the hills behind Templin Hall, some talking, others just looking around.
About 15 people danced on a nearby basketball court, while 20 others waited in line for drinks - soft drinks only. This was Hug-a-Hawk, a party Saturday night for students who live in residence halls.
Most of the students attending Huga-Hawk said they enjoyed themselves, but the lack of alcohol seemed to dampen some partygoers' spirits and may have affected attendance.
"There isn't as big of a line at the Porta Johns," said Sgt. John Brothers of the KU Police Department, who has worked security at both dry and wet Hug-a-Hawks.
Hug-a-Hawk, an annual party on Daisy Hill, is sponsored by the Association of University Residence Halls and is an opportunity for hall residents and others to get acquainted before classes begin.
In the past, the party's main attraction had been free beer, now a casualty of Kansas' legal drinking age of 20. AURH stopped serving
beer at the party last year.
"In the past, all you had to do was contact a band and the beer distributor," said Drew Blossom, AURH president.
This year, Hug-a-Hawk was more like a carnival, with games and prizes. Noelle Jibril, AURH's national communication coordinator, said the carnival activities served as a substitute for beer.
Both Jibril and Blossom said the lack of beer might have affected the turnout, which they said was comparable to last year's. Blossom estimated that about 1,700 students attended the party.
Both also said that people seemed to be having a good time without the alcohol. Blossom said those who wanted to drink probably went back to their rooms or cars to do so.
Laird MacGregor, Templin Hall president, said the absence of beer was a positive thing.
Instead of getting drunk as in the past, students now focus on meeting people, he said. MacGregor also said organizers wanted to get the message across that the absence of beer does not mean the end of a good time.
Those who attended the party had
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Troy Miller, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, said that he did not have a good time and that the absence of beer was one of the main reasons.
However, Jeany Donohue, Prairie Village sophomore, said she had a good time without the alcohol. But she said beer might have produced a larger turnout.
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Will Cohen, Topeka junior, came to the party to become re-acquainted with old friends. He said that more people attended the party and were rowdier when beer was served, but that everyone seemed to have a good time at both.
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PUBLIC RELATIONS
SCOTT M CUTUP / ALLEN H CENTER
THE WARDROBE OF STUDENTS
IN THE REGULAR CLASSROOM
Physical Chemistry
Principles and Applications in Biological Sciences
Hay
THE BIOMETRICS IN
OF SPORT TECHNIQUES
GET OFF YOUR ASSETS!
Any student with good business sense knows to expect a return on a solid investment.
But, the bottom line with textbooks is that they have a very short lifespan and lose all monetary value after a very short time.
you've got textbooks that you're just sitting on, now's the time to sell them back.
you'll find our "Buy Back" representative in the Trail room next door to the bookstore, today from 8:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Don't be backward about your textbooks, sell them back to us on a regular basis to lower the cost of your investment.
To Your Good Health THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH EDUCATION
WATKINS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL PRESENTS:
at
Ongoing health education programs are offered by the Student Health Service and are open to all students of the University of Kansas. For more information about services available, call the Department of Health Education (843-4455 Ext. 46, 47)
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Health Professionals of the Student Health Service provide seminars, workshops, and programs upon request of any student group. These informal gatherings include such topics as contraception, sexually transmitted diseases, women's health, nutrition, or similar health care issues. Students requesting house calls should contact the Department of Health Education at least two weeks in advance of the requested program.
PROGRAM DEVELOPMENT
PROGRAM DEVELOPMENT Need help planning or organizing a particular program or series of programs for your student group? Call the health educators at Student Health for assistance! (843-4455 Ext. 46, 47)
5
8
Monday, August 25. 1986 / University Daily Kansan
Students encounter no hostility abroad
By ATLE BJORGE
Staff writer
Despite concerns of terrorism when they left in the spring, no KU students in study abroad programs met with hostility in Europe this summer.
"I'm glad I didn't jump off my trip for that reason," said Diane Field, a Lawrence senior who went to Britain. "The only bad point was that we ate too much. They forced five-course meals on us."
Mary Elizabeth Gwin, director of the Office of Study Abroad, said there was much alarm after the U.S. bombing of Libya in April. She said the summer study programs lost about 40
people because of the tense situation.
Only 160 KU students participated in the programs this summer, compared to 225 last summer. The University of Kansas reacted prudently compared with some institutions that had tremendous drops in the number of students, Gwin said.
students.
The office immediately called overseas about cancellation alterations to the programs, Gwin said. To her surprise, everybody answered that the concerns were unfounded, she said.
Before leaving Kansas, students were told to stay away from large crowds, U.S. embassies and to not wear clothes that identified them as
"We told students that if you are in London and something happens in Rome, call your mother anyway," Gwin said.
U. S. college students, she said.
mother anyway. Give me a
Discovering the outside world is valuable because you tend to take so much for granted in your own country, she said.
"Americans will always be naive," Gwin said. "Given the vastness of our country, we tend to be very inward in our thinking."
Jacquelyn Ainlay, Lawrence junior, said that she thought people in England and Scotland were very pro-United States and that Paris was the only place where people were having problems.
William Blue, professor of Spanish and Portuguese, said that for many of the students he travelled with it was their first trip to Europe and that they were given plenty of opportunities to compare cultures, lifestyles and food.
The program opened with a 16-day tour of Spain, then the students went to Barcelona for a month of classes, during which they lived with Spanish families, Blue said.
Gwin said that to avoid students backing out, the study abroad office was going to campaign this semester by visiting classrooms and distributing promotional material.
On Campus
The University of Kansas Baseball Team will have an organizational meeting at 4 p.m. today on the second floor of Allen Field House for people interested in trying out.
The Society for Fantasy and Science Fiction will have an organizational meeting at 8 p.m. tonight in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union.
KU Democrats will have its first meeting of the fall semester at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union.
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Beginning Sept. 3, 1986
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In addition to our delicious donuts and our fast, affordable lunches we proudly present these new items.
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Paid For By Student Senate
University Daily Kansan / Monday, August 25, 1986
9
Regents officer says schools lack funds
By PAM MILLER
Staff writer
TOPEKA — Kansas Board of Regents schools are seriously underfinanced, and changes are needed to maintain the high quality of higher education, the Regents chairman said Friday.
Frank Becker, the chairman, spoke to the state Legislature's interim Special Committee on Financing of Regents Institutions. He said that compared with peer schools throughout the country, the Regents schools were inadequately financed
Peer schools are chosen by the Regents for their similarities to the state schools.
According to comparison studies of peer schools, state faculty members' salaries are 6.5 percent less than faculty members' salaries at peer universities, Becker said. He recommended an 8 percent salary increase for faculty members.
"If you don't give raises to employees, you are going to lose
them," he said. "We understand there's limited funding. We hope there's some reallocation."
receiver recommended to the committee that the enrollment method of financing be changed. The present methods cuts funds from any university that has a drop in enrollment. (216)
"Should the institution lose the funding if it tries to raise the quality of education for the students it does have?" Becker asked the committee.
He proposed that schools with declining enrollment not lose money because of their enrollment. The schools with increased enrollment would receive all the new financing they needed to reach the level of their peers.
Mark Tallman, director of legislative affairs and development for Associated Students of Kansas, spoke to the committee about the possible ways funds could be increased. He proposed solutions such as increased state support or student fees or internal reallocation of resources.
After the meeting, Tallman said tuition costs could be raised to increase financing. Students now pay 25 percent of the costs of their educations. That could be raised to 33 per cent, he said.
Becker also suggested that the best way to govern higher education in Kansas would be to put all the Regents schools, community colleges and Washburn University in Topeka under one board.
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union ENOVATION
SIXTY · YEARS · AND · GETTING · BETTER
The Oread Book Shop, previously located on level three of the Kansas Union, has been moved to level four as a result of the renovation at the Union.
The Oread will remain in this temporary location for two years until it is moved to a new, permanent location on level two of the Kansas Union.
For more information about the Union renovation, please inquire at the Information Counters at either the Kansas or Burge Unions.
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1 12" 2-topping pizza + 2 pops §4.99 + tx.
2 2 12" 2-topping pizzas + 4 pops $8.99+ tx.
3 16"² 2-topping pizza + 4 pops $8.99 + tx.
4 2 16" 2-topping pizzas + 6 pops $14.00 tax incl.
5 16" 2-topping pizza (Dine-In Only) $5.99 + tx.
6 12" two-topping pizza + 2 all-you-can eat salad bars (Dine-In Only) $5.99 + tx.
7 12" DELUXE PIZZA (sausage, pepperoni, onion, mushrooms, & green peppers) $5.99 + tx.
8 16'' DELUXE pizza §8.99 + tx.
9 12" PRICE BUSTER (sausage, pepperoni, onion, mushrooms, green peppers, canadian bacon, black olives, ground beef, & extra cheese.) $6.99 + tx.
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10
Monday, August 25, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
SenEx delavs action on athletes
By ATLE BJORGE
Staff writer
The University Senate Executive Committee still has no formal position on whether athletes should be allowed to enroll before other students.
After a 45-minute discussion Friday, SenEx members postponed taking a position on early enrollment of student athletes until Sept. 5.
A system of preferential enrollment was instituted last fall as part of a systematic and comprehensive review of the academic side of the athletic program.
Under this system, athletes affected enroll on the first evening of each enrollment period
Although there are about 400 student athletes, early enrollment only involves about half of them, said Anthony Redwood, director of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation. The remainder go through normal pre-enrollment because they are seniors or juniors.
These policies are under the jurisdiction of the vice chancellor for
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academic affairs. SenEx can recommend changes in policy to the vice chancellor.
The Student Senate in the spring approved a non-binding resolution that called for the end of the early enrollment system.
A L I E N S
There Are Some Places
In the University
You Don't Go Alone
Daily '5:00 2:20 9:15 Sat. Sun. '2:15
"It says that you are a second-class student if you are not out on the field." said Gordon Woods, a student senator. "I not unisympathetic to the problems athletes have, but they are not unique."
"This is the remedy," he said.
Redwood said an alternative to the present system was to return to having no early enrollment, a system he labeled chaotic.
Redwood defended early enrollment, saying that athletics were University-sponsored activities and that the performance of athletes reflected back on the University.
Bob Stancliff, women's softball coach, said athletes had left his team because they couldn't do well in the classroom and schedule practice time around it. He said the new enrollment procedures allowed players to improve their grade point averages.
Woods, however, said the key to a quality education was access to classes, and the rotating system
Most schools in the Big Eight Conference have some form of special enrollment for athletes, Redwood said.
Richard Lee, director of supportive educational services, said athletes had from 40 to 55 hours of practice time every week, in addition to class time
Redwood also said athletes had less flexibility than other students because of their practice schedules.
*Bargain Show
Students who are working or in band have the same scheduling problems as the athletes, he said. A student might be working 30 to 35 hours a week, and have to take a specific class to get into the School of Business, Woods said.
VANGUARD
KARATE TEAM
makes that fair.
Is there life after country club week? Vanguard Karate Team is betting on it! Vanguard will be conducting a 4 week conditioning program open to all students that will put energy back in a neglected body. The program will emphasize the attributes needed to be successful in sport karate, both point and full contact. We will work on endurance, flexibility, control and basic techniques.
Tom Stidham, assistant director of bands, said he didn't have any problem with preferential enrollment of athletes. But there are other groups that are probably just as deserving, he said.
The program runs Aug. 25-Sept.19 Meets in room, 102 Robinson Times: Mon. 8-10 p.m., Wed. 8-10 p.m., Fri. 6:30-8:30 p.m.
Washburn was walking across McDonald Road in front of the National Guard Armory when he was struck by a northbound car driven by Craig M. Fincham, 18, 108 W. 22nd Terrace.
Student hit by car critical
No charges were filed against
By a Kansan reporter
Larry W. Washburn, 20. Wellington sophomore, was listed in critical but stable condition at the University of Kansas Medical Center yesterday after being hit by a car about 11:30 p.m. Saturday night.
The cost is $20. The class is limited to 22 people For more info. call David Rank 749-1738.
Fincham was given a field sobriety test and a breath-alcohol test, but the results had not been released, said an officer with the Lawrence Police Department.
Fincham and two passengers in his car were not injured.
Washburn, who was going to the Anchor Bash, a party sponsored by Delta Gamma sorority that took place at the Holiday Inn Holidome, 200 McDonald Drive, suffered a head injury and a broken leg in the accident.
Fincham.
Announcing
the arrival of
HOUSE OF USHER'S FALL 1986
Lawrence
Book
A SCHUMM/LONGHURST PRODUCTION
Welcome to Lawrence
FREE at KU Bookstores, Rusty's & Krogers
KANSAS UNIVERSITY RUGBY FOOTBALL CLUB FALL 1986 PRACTICE SCHEDULE
Begins Monday, Aug. 25
Practices will run Monday- Thursday from 4:30-6:00 p.m. at the fields at 23rd & Iowa Any questions contact Coach Mills at 841-7450
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See Major Kennard Room 203, Military Science Building ARMY RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS
CONGRATULATIONS
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, August 25, 1986
11
Sports Monday
Valesente puts focus on academics
INSAS
PLAYBOOK
CALCULUS
UDK 2015
By HEATHER FRIT7
Associate sports editor
When the Kansas football team lost eight players last year and 10 players in 1984 to academic inelegibility, Beb Valesete was only an assistant coach, and he couldn't do much about .
"He's big time on school," defensive sive and Phil Forte said last week.
But now Valesente is KU's head coach, and peers, players and professors all say that this season, the emphasis is on the "student" side of student-athlete.
On August 15th, Valesente suspended six players with questionable academic status before fall practice began. He said they were welcome to return to the team as soon as their academic eligibility was assured, but as of yesterday only one player had returned.
The rules in Valesente's new academic gameplan are rigid. If a player skips a class and the coach finds out, that player will not practice with the team or play in that week's game.
And last spring, Valesen asked eight players who were having problems in school to sit out of spring practice.
Tutors also will oversee new players and those struggling academically at a mandatory study hall, two hours a night, four nights a week.
"Academics certainly are the most important item in a student athlete's life." Valesen said. "The student-athlete is someone that should pay a tremendous amount of attention to his success in the classroom and then take advantage of his abilities atheltically or otherwise."
One change Valesente made was to hire Paul Buskirk as administrative assistant in charge of academics to fill a position that, in the past, has been more administrative than academic.
Buskirk worked for $2_{1/2}$ years as the liaison between the office of academic affairs and the Athletic
eligibility. He reports directly to Valesente, who he says has "incredible commitment" to academics.
"I never dreamed I would work with a football coach who stressed academics so much," Buskirk said.
I'm a firm believer that players need to major in a degree, not just major in ineligibility.
— Bob Valesente KU head football coach
JEWEL HOLMER
Department. In his new position, he is the academic coordinator for football, but he works closely with Richard Lee, assistant athletic director in charge of academic support programs, to monitor enrollments and check degree requirements and
"I don't have to fight him for anything."
Valesente also is getting some help from the National Collegiate Athletic Association
Under the NCAA's new entrance guidelines, Proposition 48, incoming
freshmen must have taken a certain core curriculum of 11 classes in high school and have attained a grade point average of 2.0 on a scale of 4.0 in those classes to be eligible to compete in collegiate athletics. The student must also have received a score of at least 15 on the American College Test or a minimum combined score of 700 on the Scholastic Aptitude Test.
The core curriculum consists of three years of English classes, two years of math, two years of social science, two years of natural or physical science and two years of additional academic courses.
Before Proposition 48, an athlete's only requirement to be eligible for college athletics was a high school GPA of 2.0, no matter what the high school scale.
"If you take a student who's not prepared for college and force him into a college environment, it may be asking quite a bit," he said. "Now we're demanding quite a bit. The NCAA is demanding that a student have college prep classes."
Bill Sutter, a Lawrence defensive back, didn't take the ACT test, and John Davis, a running back from Laurinburg, N.C., fulfilled his requirements in five years rather than four.
Valesente carries his academic philosophy into the recruiting process, where he says he tries to find athletes who are high-quality people as well as athletes.
The Jayhawks lost two of 15 recruits to Proposition 48 and both cases were unusual.
"We try to investigate not only their athletic ability but also their backgrounds and what they want out of life and whether or not they are committed to getting a degree and graduating rather than just going to school to participate," he said.
decision and he didn't hesitate to take it. He always asked if we had seen the transcript and what kind of student the kid was."
One additional benefit the emphasis on studies might bring is a
"I'm a firm believer that players need to major in a degree, not just major ineligibility. They need to work hard to graduate and walk away with a degree that's meaningful and that's something that they and their families are proud of."
Jim Cochran, recruiting coordinator, said of Valesente, "Basically he told the staff we were not going to recruit a kid that was a marginal student. This was Coach Valesente's first opportunity to make that kind of
correct that. It will take time, but we have plenty of that."
Norman Yetman, former chairman of the athletic board's subcommittee on academics and professor of sociology and American Studies, said, "I think I and the faculty are extremely pleased with the way Coach Valenteis is emphasizing academics. That can't help but improve relations between the two."
Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs and faculty representative to the Big Eight Conference and the NCAA, said he hoped the changes would improve relations.
Though they bear the brunt of the coach's new plans, Valesente's players seem to approve of the tough new stand on academics. They hope the team's academic problems will end, giving players more energy to concentrate on preparing for the games.
"I think the approach being taken is a healthy one and one that should be in place," he said. "There's a lot of pressure and demands made on athletes, as with any student. There needs to be a lot of cooperation."
"I've missed a few classes, but it's just not worth it," Forte said. "There are going to be days you don't want to go, but it will help us all out."
Defensive tackle Steve Nave was one of the six players that Valesate held out of practice this fall. Nave said he was an average student his freshman year, but the more playing time he got, the more he neglected his studies. After being suspended, he cleared up his status and returned after missing only one practice.
"It's going to make people push themselves academically," he said. "Now they've got these study hall sessions going, which is great because now I know I'm going to graduate eventually."
With so much pressure to win in collegiate athletics, coaches sometimes tend to emphasize the game rather than studies, but players and members of the football
'I never dreamed I would work with a football coach who stressed academics so much.
Paul Buskurk
Administrative assistant/academics
lessening of tensions between the academic and athletic ends of the University, Buskirk says.
"KU has had more than its share of animosity between academics and athletes in the past," he said. "Coach Val has made enormous strides to
M. SALVADOR
Rovals fall to Brewers in 11
staff are quick to insist that Valesente's commitment is total - to his athletes as well as to academics.
"I've seen no indication that he's committed to anything but academics first," Cochran said. "It's not just lip service."
United Press International
MILWAUKEE — Paul Molitor and Robin Yount hit consecutive one-out doubles in the 11th inning and gave the Milwaukee Brewers a 3-2 triumph over the Kansas City Royals.
Loser Dan Quisenberry, 1.5, pitched three innings, giving one run on three hits and two walks.
National League results p. 12.
CLEVELAND — Joe Carter and Julio傅 belted two-run homers yesterday and helped Phil Niekro to his 310th career victory. The
Cleveland 5 Boston2
Cleveland Indians beat the Boston Red Sox, 5-2.
Nathaniel Crawford, limit 1.
Seattle 3. Detroit 1
DETROIT — Alvin Davis hit a solo home run, Phil Bradley doubled in a run and Danny Tartabull singled home another and led the Seattle Mariners to a 3-1 victory over the Detroit Tigers.
Oakland 11. New York 4.
NEW YORK -- Mickey Tettleton drove in five runs with a pair of bases-loaded walks and a three-run homer, pacing the Oakland A's to an 11-4 triumph over the New York Yankees.
Oakland 11, New York 4
MINNEAPOLIS — Ernie Whitt's RBI single in the top of the 10th innings ignited a three-run uprising that gave the Toronto Blue Jays a 7-9 victory over the Minnesota Twins. Texas 3, Chicago 2
California 4, Baltimore 3
BALTIMORE — Kirk McCaskill
allowed five hits over 8% innings and led the California Angels to a 4-3 victory over the Baltimore Orioles. Toronto 7, Minnesota 5
ARLINGTON, Texas — Charlie Hough survived a 90-minute rain delay last night to throw a four-hitter over $6\%$ innings and Don Slaught singled home the go-ahead run in the fifth, sending the Texas Rangers to a 3-2 victory over the Chicago White Sox.
Pfister, KU out to reverse year Javhawks will try to improve on fifth place conference finish
By RIC ANDERSON
Pfister, a senior who was bothered by shoulder injuries, struggled through the spring season much like the Jayhawks did. The difference was that Pfister made the All-Big Eight team, and the Jayhawks ended up in fifth place in the conference.
Joe Pfister, catcher for the Jayhawk baseball team, perhaps best exemplifies what the team is all about.
Pfister said he worked hard through last season and this summer to strengthen his shoulder and he had good results.
"Right now my arm is my strongest suit," Pfister said.
See more sports p.21.
Marty Pattin, KU baseball head coach, also has been trying to improve his team defensively by recruiting several freshman pitchers and infielders.
and hurried.
"This year we have some kids that I feel will be good players," Pattin said. "The talent we've got will be
pushing the older kids for jobs."
posters or more of our
kids," he said.
Baseball
"We have good students who are great athletes," he said. "They'll put forth the effort."
Pattin said his team had a good attitude.
Pattin, who has the Jayhawks training with 12-minute runs every morning, said the team's goal for the coming season was to rank in the top four of the Big Eight Conference.
Both the Jayhawks and Pfister will have to work hard to attain their goals.
Pattin doesn't hide the fact that his players will have to work this year
"And I'm not going to be satisfied until we get there and stay there," he said.
Pfister said, "Ultimately, I'd like to get drafted. I just want to contribute to the team as much as possible. This is my last go-round so I've got to make it go this time."
Although this season is far from his last, Jeff Spencer, freshman infielder, said contribution to the team also was his highest goal. He was impressed with the attitude of the team toward the work they were doing.
"In high school we won state, but we sort of did what we had to do." Spencer, who attended Enid High School in Enid, Okla., said. "I think everybody here has a pretty good attitude. We seem to be getting along pretty well, even though we only see each other 30 minutes a day. Everybody's been working really hard."
The players aren't the only ones who are sweating it out in the August heat to prepare for the season. The coaching staff is putting in extra hours of groundkeeping work at Quigley Field to ready it for walk-on tryouts, which begin tomorrow, and regular season practice, which begins Friday. An organizational meeting for players interested in trying out for the KU baseball team will take place at 4 p.m. today on the second floor of Allen Field House.
KU
All-out attack
Fred Sadowski/KANSAN
Darryl Golden, right, holds a blocking bag for Phil Forte, left, as line coach Mike Mahoney looks on. The Jayhawks practiced Friday behind Anschutz Sports Pavilion and had a controlled scrimmage Saturday.
12
Monday, August 25, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
Golfers do rely on teammates
By ANNE LUSCOMBE
Sports writer
Golf — an individual's game within a team sport.
Although the members of the Kansas women's golf team go it alone on the course, they are very aware of what teammates are doing.
NELSHAW
The Kansas women's golf team will have to replace two players who graduated last season. One of the returning lettermen, Tina Grewuch, began preparation for the fall season Saturday at Alvamar Country Club.
Women's golf
"The individual part is great because you can do your own
thing," Michelle Mulvihill, a returning sophomore from Des Moines, Iowa, said yesterday. "But the team can really help you get through the tournament.
"We learn from each other, by watching each other's swing and getting advice."
While the performance of a golfer does not directly affect how her teammates play, the pressure to shoot a low score to help the team's standing can psych the player out, KU head coach Kent Weiser said.
Sue Pekar, Wausau, Wis., junior, and the team's most valuable player last year. agreed.
"There is more of a sense of contributing," she said. "You can't slack off because you make up a fourth or a fifth of the team."
Weiser and the players agreed that confidence and potential are key factors to the team's success, and Weiser said he hoped this confidence would rub off on the younger players.
The team has added two freshmen, both of whom have won important tournament titles. Donna Lowen of Hays is a two-time Kansas State Junior Champion, and Sherri Atchison of Duncan, Okla., is the reigning Oklahoma high school champion.
Tina Gnewuch, a junior from Green Bay, Wis., who held the No. 2 position for most of last year, said she thought competition within the team would be as strong as it is against other teams.
"I know the two new girls are both good players," she said. "The rest are just as good. There is going to be a lot of competition and playoffs for tournament spots this year."
Weiser must fill the gap left by team captains Maureen Kelly and Brenda Sanders, who graduated in the spring. Kelly played the No. 1 position last year in most of the tournaments.
"It's a funny feeling not to have them on the team and not to have
them around anymore," said Pekar. "We all looked to them for guidance."
Although their absences will be felt, Mukivillh said, she did not think it would be detrimental to the team.
"We have a lot of youth on our team, which helps," she said. "And we have youth with experience."
LSU coach wants to meet with Soviet leader
United Press International
"Secretary-General Gorbachev said on Jan. 1, that this will be a year
BATON ROUGE, La. — Louisiana State head basketball coach Dale Brown wants to meet with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev in hopes he can recruit star player Arvidas Sabonis.
of direction for the United States and Soviet Union, a year devoted to peace and harmony." Brown said Saturday night. "If the secretary-general was sincere, and I believe he was, here is a living opportunity to prove it."
Brown's proposal calls for as many as 250 students to go to the Soviet Union to attend a basketball camp
and for Sabonis to attend Louisiana State.
"If we can't work this simple exchange out, how can we work out nuclear disarmament?" Brown said.
nuclear disarmament. Brown said Soviet Embassy officials in Washington met with Brown last week but gave no indication whether Sabonis would be allowed to join the Tigers.
QUESTION #3.
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e) Too good to pass up, because it lets you save 15% off AT&T's already discounted evening rates.
If you can guess the answers to this quiz, you could save on your long distance phone bill, with AT&T's "Reach Out America" long distance calling plan. If you live off campus, it lets you make a full hour's worth of calls to any other state in America—including Alaska, Hawaii, Puerto Rico and the U.S.
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Pirates complete sweep of Braves
PITTSBURGH — Joe Orsulak went 4-for-4, stole two bases and scored a run yesterday, helping the Pittsburgh Pirates complete a three-game series sweep of Atlanta with a 4-3 victory.
United Press International
Houston 5. St. Louis 1
ST LOUIS — A pair of throwing errors by pitcher Tim Conroy led to a three-run second inning and helped the Houston Astros snap a three-game losing streak yesterday with a 5-1 triumph over the St. Louis Cardinals.
Cincinnati 7, Chicago 1
CHICAGO — Barry Larkin knocked in the go-ahead run with a double, and Ron Oester added a two-run single in a six-run eight inning that carried the Cincinnati Reds to a 7-1 triumph over the Chicago Cubs yesterday.
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SAN FRANCISCO — Candy Maldonado drove in five runs yesterday with a homer, double and single, and Mike Krukow pitched a four-hitter to pace the San Francisco Giants to a 10-1 rout of New York. Philadelphia 6. San Diego 5.
SAN DIEGO — Milt Thompson drove in three runs, two with a single
in the ninth inning yesterday to help the Philadelphia Phillies complete a comeback from a 5-0 deficit with a 6-5 victory over the San Diego Padres. Los Angeles 3, Montreal 2
LOS ANGELES — Dave Anderson doubled home Mike Sciosia with one out in the 10th inning yesterday, giving the Los Angeles Dodgers a 3-2 victory over the Montreal Expos.
Where you go to shop for guys and gals in a casual friendly setting:
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ATTENTION:
The 1987
JAYHAWKER YEARBOOK
is now accepting applications for the following staff positions:
- Photographers
- Copywriters
- Photo Editor
- Advertising Staff
- Living Groups Editor
- Organizations Editor
- Senior Pictures Editor
Applications are now available in the Organizations & Activities Center, (3rd floor, Kansas Union,) and must be returned no later than 5 p.m. on Friday, September 5th.
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- weight room
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COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
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© 1986 AT&T
University Daily Kansan / Monday, August 25, 1986
13
The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
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For every 5 words add: 50%
AD DEADLINES
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Tuesday Friday 4 p.m.
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Classified Display $4.60
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Classified display advertisements can be only one column wide and no more than six inches deep. Minimum depth is one inch. No reveres allowed in classified displays. No overtrails. No overbrakes allowed in classified display ads.
4-5 Days 2 Weeks
5.70 0.50
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7.70 12.00
1.00 1.25
- Words set in ALLCAPS count as 2 words.
* Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words.
* Dealline is 4 p.m. – 2 working days prior to publication.
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
Tear sheets are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
POLICIES
thinly earned rate discount
Samples of all mail order items must be submitted
- Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be place in person or simply by calling the Kansas business office at 864-4358.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
until credit has been established
* Tearsheets are not provided for classified or
to The University KyatKantha
• All advertisements will be required to pay in advance
- Classified display ads do not count towards monthly rate discount
- Hint bots ad-sales add +$4 service charge
* Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed
VOLUNTERS Headquarters, Lawrence's Crisis
training center. Contact the crisis
training center, Training required, experience in
informational meetings August 27 (Wednesday) or
September 1 (Monday) 4:14h Massachusetts
ATTENTION STUDENTS WITH CHILDREN:
Come by the Student Assistance Center, 121
Strong, for a listing of centers and licensed homes
for child care in the Lawrence area
or responsibility is assumed the more time one can
be responsive to changes in policy.
* No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classifi-
cation.
BE POLLLED - a good natural food supplement.
Contains all essential enzymes, proteins and amino acids.
Available at Round Corner Drug Co. 801 Mass or Community Mercury Toad 700 Mass Ask for Bee Pollen
COMMUTERS. Sell Serve Car Pool Exchange
Main Lobby, Kansas Union
GRADUATE WOMEN'S POTLUCK
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
Invites You to Join Us For a Potluck Dinner. Come Meet Other Women on Campus and Share Good Food and Conversation.
Time: 6:00-8:00 p.m
Date: Wednesday,
August 27,1986
Bring: Any dish you like Drinks and place settings provided
Time: 6:00-8:00 p.m.
Place: Ecumenical Christian Ministries Building
1204 Oread
For more information contact Lorin Loving at The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 844-352-352 or drop by 218 Strong Hall.
Douglas County Rape Victim Support Services now taking applications for volunteer advocates. Applications available at Headquarters, 14th St., Douglasville, GA. Contact Wednesday, September 10, 7:30 PM
Please feel free to bring a friend
DEALING WITH THAT UNEASY FEELING which commonly occurs when you walk into a room full of strangers, you see someone you'd like to know. you're waiting for an interview or any meeting. You're invited to Thursday, August 28 from 6:30-9:00 p.m. and Thursday, September 4 from 6:30-7:30 p.m. 100 Smith Hall Free/no registration. Presented by the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hill.
Get started right this semester! Attend the Academic Enhancement Program Wednesday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Topics include time management, listening and notetaking, study reading FREE Presented by
*Learn Message* 5 week class starts Sept. with *Cod-Learn instructor* Limited Enrollment.
*Learn Message* 10 week class starts Oct.
LAWRENCE. FLOAT CENTER offers a safe, comfortable, private way to relax and unfold. Stress relief calm the body and the mind. Try "float tank at $30 per l hour session"
NEED A RIDE/RIDER' Use the Self Service Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union
ROTC Students, Journalists, Sociologists,
Graphic Artists, Veter/Nam Veterans, Musicians,
Business People, Environmentals, Christians,
Humanists, Lawyers, Poets, the People of Latin
America are more than cheap labor to supply us
with fast food, bananas, coffee and copper, Cane
freshwater lilies, and other consecrated M.D. or
M.A. 1049 Oread. Please check us out.
Latin American Solidarity.
ATTENTION BASEBALL PROSPECTS
Students interested in KU baseball tryouts, report to Allen Field House in the Southwest corner on the second floor Monday,
August 25 at 4:00 P.M.
TUTORS. List your name with us. We refer student inquiries to you. Student Assistance Center
The Graduate School 1-2.3: How to Get There program sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center and scheduled for September 9, as was previously advertised here. TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available students. Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall.
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Now taking applications for 86-87 school year.
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Private room, evening meal, free laundry and kitchen available for members use, equal sharing of housework, democratic participant House, Student Center, Campus House,
840-4711 843-938 evenings.
One bedroom Condo, 1728 Heath, $350 mo. Includes
Furniture. Available immediately. Call
842-253-2932
Rooms for rent on the hill, 1/1 mile from Union
$100 to $125 call 842-5749.
Serious female student share house private room, central air, TV, kitchen equipped Dishwasher, microwave, walk to campus, call Morroe at 841-4478
Sublease one bedroom Ap. From now to July 31,
1978 *1875 month plus 1/4 utilities* Cap 843-5190
Vacancy for male in Konsonau Christian Living
Community to be held by Municipal
Come to 1924 Oread or cap 843-4933
FOR SALE
MASTERCARE offers completely furnished 1. Call
(802) 354-7950 or all near camp. Call
(812) 354-7950 or 354-7945.
Classified Ads
Dist溅手Kenmore Portable Excellent买
Call after p. $15 p. $15 Parvail Vivah
622 7566
TGV Tucson PSB ACAM/FM Cas. Great
Griffin Guild, Bldg 1000, 810-234-7550
Comic Books, Playbies, Penthouses, etc. Max's
Carnival is on Tuesday, Tue. Friday, Sat. 10-5 8/11
New Hampshire
185 Honda Spree, red, low mileage, like new. $390
or best offer. 842/3239
29 Gall fish tank with stand and all other equipment included. 842-6659
Can you buy Jeepers, Cara. A 4' x 12' seated in drug
602-837-1911 For face care for today.
602-837-1911 Exit 602
S
75 Plymouth Horizon For Sale 4 cylinders, 4 airbags, Air Conditioner amd radio, 30 MPG Price
Technica Telecom, 300 receive, auto furnatable,
tape deck, low speakers, audio mixer, dvd-
players, fax machines, 94-9533, 94-9538
www.telecom.com
Metobee to speed with accessories, great condition.
$185. Calls 91-761-7643
cellent condition $250.8432772
COMIC BOOKS, Science Fiction, Games at
Taylor's Bookstore
OSCAR BOURS, 49, Games at
Boston College, 111 MASS, 8472298
Benjamin, Joe. *Bees.* Cars + "A"
New Sawai S-1117 Tower Speakers, 160 watts $155
each. Kenwood Integrated Sounder Audio, 160 watts $275 each. Aicaw top of the line X220 Prograde tape deck. Leave message 841-7641 $390
Antique oak partners desk with top top. Excellent condition $250 8432772
Oriental print chair #4. Burburgund small print foam couch inserts into door bed $110 798-301-2566
Western Civilization Notes: Now on Sale! Make sense to use them. 1) As study guide. 2) For course review. 3) In class. Analysis of Western Civilization: available now at Town Creek, The Jayhawk Bookstore, and online.
SALES-MICROCOMPUTER Lawrence's largest computer store, COMPUTER OUTLET, seeks a sales clerk to assist customers inside sales and store maintenance. Full or part time workable. Requires Micromicro familiarity. Salary commensurate with experience. Send resume to COMPUTER OUTLET 904 New York, NY 10026.
PLYMOUTH THIRFTH SHOP FOR used clothing,
house attire-mat, Tuesday 4-Thu.
hat is not required.
Will buy one or two (400 or 200 model) Boston Acoustic Speakers. Leave message 841-7614.
Desperate. I need to sell Honda Civic 74 Bent .80
desperately. I need to park car lot LX
the rest of the day, see car parking LX
1971 Plymouth EX motor good tires, all in good
condition. $400.1,923.9651
AUTO SALES
W44 WSU PERFECT New Tires, brakes,
30.000 m on rebuilt engine. One owner,
receipts well maintained. Annual per-
year warm $1,000
847-7137 - leave name and number.
1900 SAAB 900 Sunroof, 4 door Hatchback, FWD,
Makellar, No Buit. R842/73420
65 VW Bug, runs good, reliable $499 842-3378
78 Yamaha Rd 400. Excellent shape and
dependable transportation. Please call after 5 pm at
841-9753
LOST/FOUND
HELP WANTED
Lost 8/20 rvt velocity wallet between Naismith and Learned Hall 749-4726
16 month old active toddler needs sister陪伴
month old and Thursdays from 12-4 p.m.
Must be non-smoker with transportation. West
Call 814-0043 for arrival. Required. Call
814-0043 morning after 7 p.
3. 0000 GOVERNMENT JOBS L1817.
2. 0000 GOVERNMENT JOB L2909. Now Hiring. Call 1-817-645-6074
Ext. R. 6188
Clark-Teypter in East Asian Language and Cultures (12-15 hours) or international Theater Studies Center (5-7 hours). Work study approved. For details, call 864-3010.
babysitting wanted for 3 month baby. Flexible
wanted at 20 hours per week Call Salyba 844-4000
Companion-Cook. To assist disabled KU staff member weekday afternoons, 10-15 hours a day, $4 per hour. Cooking experience and reliable transportation required. KU student preferres
Corpus Christi Catholic Church needs four nursery workers with two hours free time on the job, three with two hours of eightteen years of age and have own transportation. Early Childhood Education field preference.
Data entry position, half time requires familiarity with computer entry, proven reliability and consistency. Must have a BS degree or equivalent and BASIC program to enter handwritten data. Prefer formal grammar training required. Prior experience in available and resume to Research Assistant, AX133 Bristol Terrace, Kansas, 66044
Editor/Writer, University of Kansas Division of Continuing Education. Half-time position. Duties: writing and editing a semi-annual newsletter and a monthly in-house newsletter. copy-editing course outlines and other instructional materials. copy-editing and proofreading materials for student writers, program
working in the job offered; program
working with others in the job offered;
and others in the job offered for
brochures, newsletters, and other public
resources. Position requires: MS Degree in Journalism,
the Humanities, or other appropriate discipline from
public or private institution. Position requires: MS Degree in Journalism, the Humanities, or other appropriate discipline from public or private institution.
calerateur in name, plus 3 years professionally working as a printer, proofing or brochure and ad writing. Excellent writing and editing skills required. Finalist for the writing test. Salary $0,000 per year. Applications must be received by January 15th, 2019.
Graduate Assistance position. Prefer microcomputer and or production experience, graduate degree in Computer Science or related, 600-900 per month. Starts immediately Apply at Instruational Tech Center, Hall Baxley HA148 806-357
contact and references. For full position description,
contact Stephen Burch, University of Kansas
Continuing Education Building, Lawrence, KS.
6053, 413-894-4875, ETEA/AA Employer
Local moving company needs drivers, packers &
lockers. We prefer $50 and up
843-0700 for full
Mature, gentle nonsnake needed for all-day
daycare of one toddler and housekeeping from
sept. thru May. exc. Christmas holidays. Reply
5xx DD Max Stauffer-Flint
public relations department or for the Regional Recycling Program. Those with business, economic and marketing expertise will help conduct research on recycling programs. Research Data Center. Account Students will perform program reviews and audits of MARC materials. Contact Mary Beth Gordon at 816-474-2424.
MARC the association of local governments, is looking for fall and spring student interns in the fields of journalism, English, and communications accounting. Learn what the business world is really like and acquire the experience you need to get a better job in journalism or as an extracurricular professional activities. These are not "go-for" positions. Students with communications background will write articles and report on events.
Now hire Mass St. Del food service employees
must have 1 year *experience* and daytime
availability. Starting pay $3.75 per hr plus
approximately $2.50 per hour profit. Apply at
www.hiremassstdel.com
*art time housecleaners wanted.* If you enjoy cleaning and are matriculous, Buckingham Palace is interested in your talents. Call 842-6264. Must be available over breaks.
post advertisement on campus write *College Distributors, 33 Pebblewood Trail, Napa*
The Audio-Visual Center is hiring Audio Visual Assistants on Work Study and regular hourly Experience preferred, but not required. Apply in Lapincoft J. Lapincoft, Equal Opportunity Employer.
munication skills and ability to make decisions.
Must be currently enrolled. Apply in person at AA131 Bristol Terrace. (Meadowbrook Apart
Housing) Apply online. Application deadline Aug 28. EOE/AA
student hourly position, 15-20 hours per week
run errands, campus mail, photo coping,
and older for busy research office. Requires
equivable transportation available daily, good com-
fort.
WE HAVE THE IDEAL JOB FOR THE STU-
FFS. We are available to work Monday,Wednesday/Fri-
day or on Tuesday/Thursday, 9:2 or 10:1 UNAZ
for a full day. I KWA needs you. Apply to
manager
The University of Kansas Office has a position opening for a continuous half-time student assistant. The person in this position will assist the campus office with budget budgets and other financial reports, do work pre-commissioned.
Wanted maintenance person. Duties include general maintenance and cleaning of two bedrooms, two bathrooms, a m.a.m.11 a.m. Mon-Fri and 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Weekdays. Apply at 718 Mass. above Buffalo Avenue.
cessing, typing spreadsheet preparation, and preparation for receptionist duties. Theposition requires a Bachelor's degree in computer science and adm oral communication skills. $400 to $480 per month for a half-time appointment. Closing date may be determined by information call Jana H., Budget Office, 863-3163. Applications available in 319 Strong Hail. Equivalence
MAKE HUNDREDS WEEKLY MAILING CURRALS FULL/PART/TIME, RUSH SELF ADDRESSED STAMPED ENVELOPE A. 1,1020
CURRALS SUITE 388 DEPT. Q, STUDIO CITY.
C. 914648
Registered Nurse Unique opportunity to use your assessment skills to see homebound patients. On call one evening per week and every fifth day. Visit www.douglascounty.vn VA 843 738 801 EOE.
McDONALYS IS HIRING Quick, clean, quality minded individuals to work daytime; hours 10 to 30 hours a week. Previous McDonald's employees encouraged to apply. We provide uniforms, half-prepared meals, and flexible scheduling. 901 West State Street, Ninth St. Phone number: calls please. EOE/AA
Add class, comfort, & privacy to your car with
their App. For app 841-7872. Student
phone: 841-7872.
BUS. PERSONAL
GREENS PARTY SUPPLY 808 W.23rd Weekly Beer Special
Aug. 25 - Sept. 3
Bud Lt. 12 pk. $5.42
Old Style 12pk. $4.21
Busch 12pk. $3.98
Meister Brau 24pk. $6.95
Weidemann 12pk. $3.75
Rent-18' Color T $ 29.80 a month Curtis
7135 West, 9:00am 842.75715 Mon; Sat 9:30am
Sun; W 1:00am 5:15
Leaving Town?
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization card, visa, ID 1 and 2, of course, ferrari passport, driving license.
We Sell Airline Tickets
at
Airline Counter Prices!
NO SERVICE CHARGE!
ON-CAMPUS
LOCATION!
Maupintour travel service
749-0700
KU Union
RU Union
831 Massachusetts
Modeling, theatrical and art portfolio: Slides
on stage. High quality, low prices. Swell$ 799
1911
Quality furniture doesn't have to be expensive
Quilters stores from $118, amber books from K5,
Lincolnshire from £99, bookcases from $39,
chair from $199, bookcases from $39, lamps
from $19.95, and much, much more. Furniture
is available in the UK.
SURFING
Board Sailors!
Sunflower's Intermediate Windsurfing lessons start soon...
Learn beach starts, water starts, jibing, freestyle and use of harness.
B.I.G. Certified School
* All harnesses now on sale*
10% OFF!
SUNFLOWER
804 MASSACHUSETTS
DOWNON LAWRENCE
- Licensed coop preschool
* Class openings TTH, A.M. M
W F M P
* Certified teachers
Thousands of R & R albums—$2 or less. Also collectors items, Sat and Sun only. 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Quintailts 811 New Hampshire. Buy, Sell, or Trade all music styles.
- Licensed coop pre-school
KANSAN 864-4358
Sell tomorrow
- Parent participation
HOMESTEAD
Lawrence Community
Daily (Mon.-Fri.)
on Campus Delivery
Aug.25-Dec.19
Send only
The sun is out and the sunglasses are in at
10 a.m. Mass 8321 Mass 8431 Mon 10-11 5:36
pm Tues.
*Starting Stress & Strength? If you haven't tried massage, you have! REALLY relaxed. Student rates licensed by appl. Call Bruce or Dayla at 841-6062 Lawrence Massage Therapy
SAY IT ON A SHIRT! Custom silk-screen printing jerseys and caps, SHIRT CAPS: 79-161.
New York Times
$29.99
Call today...
SCIENCE FUCTION, Comic book, Simulation & Role Playing Games. Kwality Comics, 1111 MASS 843 7299
842-0064 645 Alabama
841-5073
to: N.Y. Times
P.O.Box 1721
Lawrence, KS 66044
for Sunday Service
or more info call
Rate Adjusted for later orders.
SERVICES OFFERED
Alternative counseling using archetypal images visualization, dream analysis Sue Westwind
Black and White film processing, contact sheets,
and enlargements. Push and Pull procession also available THE PICTURE WORKS 13th and Haskell. 843-0470
LLM Tailoring 007 Alterations and Custom
Design 007 Massachusetts Rear Entrance
842/527/398
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716
Same day Extechoname/E/6 slide processing
PACKAGE EXTECHONAME 120745 Haskell 83-9470
PICTURE WORKS 120, 130 and Haskell 83-9470
Sunflower Drift School will prepare you, within two weeks upon successful course completion, to get your driver's license, without patrol testing. Provided a special summer discs: 841-2136
DRIVER EDUCATION offered (through Midwinter
for 30 days) for students for 20 yrs we are the professionals 891-7654
SUFLOWER DRIVER SCHOOL will prepare you, upon successful course completion, to get your driver's license within 2 weeks, without patrol testing. Transportation provided 841-2316. Used cameras and photographic equipment bought, sold, and traded THE PICTURE
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., 40 minutes$_{88}$,
849-9032
TYPING
1,100 pages. No job too small or too large At-
taching. Typed typing. 842 945 or
842-902 903
1 plus Typing: Call Terry 842-4544 or 842-0871
5:30 to 10 p.m. Resumes, books, thesis, law review papers, letters, term papers. Sharp XZ 505 Memoribay Electronic Typewriter
24-Hour Typing, 12th semester in Lawrence
Hospital, dissertation papers, paper
bundles, and training courses
841-3000.
A.3 professional tying. Term papers. Thesis.
B.18M professional tying. Thesis. 18M
Wbwriter 2. Reasonable. 824-326.
Wbwriter 5. Reasonable. 824-326.
Absolutely Your Type! Word processing, typing and
computing. Eagle Valley edu. 844. Illinois. 843-6618
Eagle Valley edu. 844. Illinois. 843-6618
DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced
JEANETTE SHFFER - Typing Service
TRANSCRIPTION also; standard cassette tape
843-8877
DISSERTATIONS / THESES / LAW PAPERS/
Typing, Editing and Graphes. ONE-DAY SERVICE
other student paper papers (up to 30
pages). Call Rita Mommy T. Marymur, 843-2758
before 9 p.m. Please
THE FAR SIDE
Theses, resumes, and papers:
WRITING LIFEELINE, 841-3409
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, term sheets, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter qa-
llity printing, spelling corrected. 842-7247.
TYPING PLUS assistance with competition editting, grammar, spelling, research, theses dissertations, papers, letters, applications Resumes HAVE M.S. Degree 814-6254
EXPERIENCED TYPEB Term paper, these
phone 845640. Mrs. Wright
EXPERIENCED TYPEB Term paper, these
phone 845640. Mrs. Wright
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing, manuscript, resumes, themes, letter
WANTED
6 WM, law student, seeks studuist M or F roommate for large two bedroom apartment 1/2 block away. Required responsibility. 1/2 of month-to-month rent and utilities. Available September 1st. Contact p. Box 1308
Female Roommate need: $140 to attract 2 attractive females; $47.50 plus 1/2 utilities. Call at 643-789-8000 at bed #4741
Ambitious person to call on campus organizations with costumed entertainer imparty parties. Contact us for more information.
Wanted: Non-smoking室mate to share
ig. furnished 2 Bdmm. Apt. 2 bikins. from campus
off-street parking $159.50 mo. plus 1/2 low heat
841-4985
Student work study position on campus
publisher seeks help 10-15 hourweek to open and
distribute daily mail, answer phones, type,
and assist in various duties. MUST be eligible for
the University of Kansas. Requires experience.
Come to University Press Of Kansas,
129 Carruth, to complete application by #8286.
Clean and sociable student for a beautiful 2 BTH
AP at NYC Kentucky, furnished and paid
daily.
Wanted full and part time delivery drivers. Hourly wage plus commission, must have own transportation. Apply in person. Pizza Shoppe 601 Kasid, Westridge Shopping Center.
**DRIVERS WANTED:** Domino's Pizza is now hiring delivery drivers. Earn approximately $6hr Must be 18, have own car and insurance. Apply in person at 1445 W. 32rd Street or 1824 Iowa EOE.
Get Something Going!
Don't do without the things you really want simply because they are hard to find. Many of the same items available in stores are listed at lower prices in classified. Sometimes you can even buy them for free! Many many items in classified are sold by private parties. Don't do without - do it with care.
Kansan Classifieds
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
864-4388
If you can't buy it . . . bargain.
Get The MOST
For Your Dollar
CLIP
KANSAN
COUPONS!
By GARY LARSON
© 1986 Universal Press Syndicate B.25
"Allen, you jerk! Dad told us not to do that or that the fish!"
Opus, Milo and the gang will return to the Kansan soon. Watch for Bloom County to appear in this space in the coming days.
14
Monday, August 25, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
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Second Section
KU's image helps boost enrollment
By BILL RAYNOLDS Staff writer
What do the KU men's basketball team and a favorable rating of the University of Kansas in a national guide to U.S. colleges and universities have in common?
Both could explain an increase of 591 students who attended summer orientation sessions, a University administrator said recently.
This summer, 4,367 students attended the 14 sessions compared to 3,776 students who attended in 1985.
Bruce Lindvall, director of admissions, said the increase in the number of freshmen and transfer students attending summer orientation indicated that total enrollment should increase.
Last fall, the first-day enrollment figure at the Lawrence campus was 24,774. Lindvall said he expected this semester's first-day enrollment to exceed 25,000.
However, he said, the University doesn't have a standard procedure to predict enrollment figures.
"The success of the basketball team has given the University national public," said Lindvall. "Edward Fiske has clearly pointed out the quality and low cost of KU."
Fiske is an education writer for the New York Times and author of "The Selective Guide to Colleges." He gave KU a four-star academic rating, the best in the Big Eight Conference. The top rating used in the guide is five stars.
More students may be attending because of an increase in out-of-state recruiting, Lindvall said, and because students visit the campus and tell their friends about it.
The University's full-time equivalency enrollment, which is used by the Kansas Legislature to determine a budget for the University, will not be available until Sept. 16.
The figure is calculated by dividing the total number of credit hours by average full-time credit course loads. For undergraduates the average course load is 15 hours; for law students, 12 hours; and for graduate students, nine hours.
MJ
Fred Sadowski/KANSAN
Band on the beach
Cindy Campbell, Overland Park freshman, plays the tuba on Wescoe Beach with the rest of the Marching Jayhawks. The band was featured at the beach during Hawk Week.
More campus lighting waits in the shadows
A seemingly sluggish bureaucracy repeatedly has delayed campus灯光 improvements, keeping students in the dark, the student body president said last week.
By BETH COPELAND
Staff writer
"I don't know what the holdup is," sain David Epstein, the president. "If students have to suffer another winter walking in the dark, that's a shame."
The campus lighting issue dates back to 1970 when Student Senate was formed. The current project started in 1985, when William Easley was the student body president.
During Easley's administration, the Senate allocated $10,000 for a study that identified campus areas that had inadequate lighting.
Epstein's administration picked up where Easley's left off and worked for improved lighting. Earlier this year, Student Senate allocated $25,000 to help pay for the project. At that time, Epstein understood that the new lights would be installed by this summer.
"I really don't know what I'm doing wrong," Epstein said. "Do I have to go out there and dig the holes myself?"
Greg Wade, a landscape architect for the University, last week speculated that the first stage of construction would be completed by the winter or during the spring semester.
Meanwhile, the Senate's $25,000 is sitting idle in a University account, said Keith Nitcher, director of business affairs.
Wade said completion of the project was snagged by the complexity of the new light fixtures and the length of time state officials took to approve the project.
The University lacked enough money to accept bids in May. The funds now have been acrued and bidding will open in September.
Nitcher said $75,000 had been tagged for lighting. The bill will be divided equally among Student Senate, the University's operating budget and the Board of Regents.
Wade said the project could cost $75,000 to $100,000.
Wade expects five to eight construction companies to offer bids to erect new light poles on Jayhawk Boulevard from the Chi Omega Fountain to Mississippi Street, located between Stauffer-Flint Hall and Watson Library.
After the companies bid, the state's architectural and purchasing divisions in Topeka will approve one bid, a process that adds another six weeks to the project.
The study that Student Senate commissioned in 1985 was supervised by Ronald Helms, director of architectural engineering. The study identified the boulevard as an area that most needed improved lighting, Wade said.
Watkins takes appointments
By ALISON YOUNG
A new appointment system that should cut patients' time in the waiting room at Watkins Hospital should begin today, hospital administrators said last week.
"This is something students have been wanting for a long time," said James E. Strobi, director of student health services.
Lawrence Magee, chief of staff at Watkins Hospital, said students complained about the amount of time they had to wait to see a physician.
About 120 appointments will be available each day. In addition, four physicians will take patients on a first-come, first-serve basis.
Magee and Strobl estimated that Watkins now sees from 180 to more than 300 patients a day in the general medicine clinic.
The appointments will be scheduled at 15-minute intervals from 8:30 a.m. to noon and from 1 to 4 p.m. Mondays through Fridays.
"I'm not going to say they will be seen at exactly the time of the appointment," Magee said, "but within a reasonable amount of time: in the range of 20 minutes.
"Hopefully the program will progress to the point where all will be taking appointments." Appointments should be scheduled at least a day in advance. However, be said, patients
may be able to call and get an appointment for later the same day.
During the last two years, most patients didn't wait more than 45 minutes, Magee said, but during the flu season some waited more than an hour.
Appointments should be scheduled at a regular day in advance. However, he said, patients
Initially, about half the physicians will be taking appointments and half will be taking walk-ins.
With the exception of the gynecology clinic, which has taken appointments for the past three years, this will be the first time the hospital will schedule appointments for most physicians.
The scheduling system allows patients to make appointments for a specific physician. The system is designed to improve patient flow to the various services, such as the laboratory and X-ray.
The program also will distribute patient load throughout the day and week. Traditionally, the hospital has been its busiest on Mondays and in the early afternoon.
The plan will include a screening nurse who will direct walk-in patients, pull the patient's medical records and possibly recommend lab work. Nurses and nurse practitioners also will administer treatment under the new system.
Strobl said he would increase the hospital's night staff to pull medical records for the next day's appointments.
WELCOME BACK KU
featuring EVERYDAY LOW PRICES on Film Photo Supplies Health & Beauty Aids School Supplies Automotive Supplies Clothing Home Furnishings Household Goods
KU
GIBSON'S
A Chaffin, Inc. Store
DISCOUNT CENTER
2525 Iowa (on the 25th & Ridgecourt bus route)
9 a.m.-9 p.m. Daily
10 a.m.-6 p.m. Sundays 842-7810
Tonight-
First Day of Classes Party! featuring: capitol recording artists
Walk The West
Also: $2.50 pitchers prizes party pics $2.00 cover Don't Miss It!
Cogburns
737 New Hampshire
16
Monday, August 25. 1986 / University Daily Kansan
LEAN
LEAN
GROUND BEEF
78¢
Lb.
5 Lb. Pkg.
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ROCKY FORD
CANTALOUPES
59¢ ea.
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49¢ Lb.
ARMOUR ALL MEAT
JUMBO
HOT DOGS
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We Accept Gov't. Food Stamps We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities
University Daily Kansan / Monday, August 25, 1986
17
KU to select Rhodes,Marshall nominees
By TONY BALANDRAN
Staff writer
When Cecil Rhodes, an English statesman and entrepreneur, died in 1902, he bequeathed a legacy that every year would attract the attention of many worldwide colleges and universities.
And the University of Kansas once again is preparing to choose its nominees for the scholarship which carries his name.
The KU Honors Program is receiving applications from interested students for the Rhodes Scholarship and the Marshall Scholarship, both of which are sponsored by the United Kingdom, said David Katzman, director of the college honors program.
An informational meeting on the Rhodes and Marshall scholarships is scheduled for 4 p.m. Thursday at
Nunemaker Center. The meeting will explain the process and provide an opportunity for interested students to meet campus committee members, Katman said.
Application deadline for both scholarships is Sept. 11.
Although the scholarships are separate, the nomination procedures at the campus level are similar.
Upon receiving applications, the Honors Program selects qualified applicants to sit before an all-faculty campus nomination committee, said Katzman, chairman of the committee.
undergraduates." said Katzman.
"We try to look for well-rounded individuals having the ability to integrate both personal and academic life, who have demonstrated leadership, and really there is no prejudement as to how the leadership qualifies and who have grown as
The Rhodes Scholarship, which is awarded to 32 U.S. students each year, entails payment of all fees, including living and travel expenses, during the scholar's two year education at Oxford University in Oxford, England
Part of the Rhodes Scholarship application states, "Quality of both character and intellect is the most important for a Rhodes Scholarship, and this is what the committee will seek.
"The Rhodes Scholar should not be one-sided or selfish. Intellectual ability should be founded upon sound character, and integrity of character upon sound intellect."
A potential Rhodes Scholar must
be a U.S. citizen between 18 and 24 by Oct. 1, 1986, and must have received a bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university by October 1987.
The campus committee nominates two applicants to the state committee, where they may be interviewed for advancement to the district committee. The eight districts, each comprising either six or seven states, then choose four Rhodes Scholars per district.
"The Rhodes Scholarship is incredibly competitive and intense," said David Fidler, one of last year's two KU nominees.
"There was a sense of nervousness among the competitors because you knew the judges were watching you
from the beginning," he said.
The last KU student to receive i Rhodes Scholarship was Bob Hockett, who was awarded the honor in 1982.
The Marshall Scholarship, which was established in 1953 by the British government, is named after U.S. General George C. Marshall and was established in gratitude for the Marshall Plan, which provided economic assistance to help the recovery of Europe after World War II.
Unlike the Rhodes Scholars, the 30 Marshall Scholars may attend any university in England.
The Marshall Scholar must be a U.S. citizen who is not 26 years old before Oct. 1, 1986.
themselves to the state committee for the Rhodes Scholarship, the university must nominate students for the Marshall competition.
Although students may nominate
The KU Marshall nominees will advance to the Mid-Western Regional level in Chicago, Katzman said.
The last KU Marshall Scholar was Robert Wyttenbach, who received the scholarship in 1984.
"I think we run an excellent screening process," Katzman said. "The Rhodes and Marshall Scholarships are something students ought to aspire to as juniors and seniors.
"The list of scholars for both in this country is very prestigious."
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18
Monday, August 25, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
Fraternity moves into house
By Brian Snyder Staff writer
The Zeta Beta Tau fraternity has found a home for good, according to Scott Loochtan, ZBT rush chairman.
The fraternity, which has had three different residences in four years, moved its belongings out of storage and into the former Evans Scholars fraternity house, 1942 Stewart Ave., this summer.
Fraternity members recently moved from 1625 Edgehill Rd.
after the sale of the house,
Oloch坦 said last week.
The Sigma Delta Tau sorority is renovating the old ZBT house, and members probably will move into the residence in the fall of 1987, said Lisa Zurovsky, Leawood senior and SDT social chairman.
The KU chapter of Evans Scholars folded after membership decreased.
"The house was really in good shape," Lochtan said. It needed only interior repair
It needed only interior repair
and plumbing, and the outside was painted and reroofed, he said. Members also installed a basketball court.
A building block fund, created by the ZBTs, allowed them to buy the house. The fund, named KUZBT Building Corp., received loans from national banks and donations from private sources.
The house, which took four days to renovate, was ready for formal rush, he said. Men's formal rush was from Aug. 15 to Aug. 18.
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University Daily Kansan / Mondav. August 25. 1986
19
JOHNSON
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6090A
20
Monday, August 25, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
Grant to aid development of new drugs
By PAM MILLER
Staff writer
A research grant of about $2.4 million given to the KU pharmaceutical chemistry department will support a project that may help develop a new generation of drugs, two of the researchers said last week.
The grant, awarded in January by the Upjohn Company, supports to researchers studying the transporting of drugs and nutrients in the human body. The money is divided into yearly payments of $480,500, said Carolyn Cross, director of the research support and grants administration.
Andy Tramml, a member of the research team and a Lawrence graduate student, said he thought the project was the beginning of making more effective drugs.
"If you take an aspirin, it goes in every part of the body — it's one of the reasons you have bad side effects." Trammler said. "Someday we're going to give a patient a drug, and it will go only to the brain. People can take it without side effects."
Ronald Borchardt, chairman of the department and director of the research project, said that the grant was the largest the department ever had received and that it would last at least five years.
Upjohn, a producer of pharmaceutical and agricultural commodities based in Kalamazoo, Mich., set up the grant for the University of Kansas, Borchardt said.
Any important discoveries could be beneficial financially to the University. he said.
"The University will maintain the patent rights of any discoveries, and Uipohn has the right to license these patents for five years," he said. "The University could gain substantial financial resources."
Researchers study how certain drugs are being transported by cells to areas in the body, such as the central nervous system, Borchardt said. The team also studies how to target drugs to specific parts of the body.
City, gun dealers say sales, law not linked
By COLLEEN SIEBES
Staff writer
Handgun sales in Lawrence have decreased since the handgun ordinance passed in March, but city commissioners and gun dealers say the two are not directly related.
Nina Smith, head of the sporting goods department at Gibson's Discount Center, 2525 Iowa St., said that summer sales of handguns tended to be lower and she that thought the ordinance had not threatened sales.
"If anyone wants a gun, even if they have to wait 72 hours, they're going to buy one," she said.
Commissioner David Longhurst said that actual sales were lower than the projected sales that dealers presented to the commission before the ordinance passed.
Commissioner Howard Hill said sales could be down because the largest gun dealer in Lawrence
The JPL Gun Shop, Lawrence's largest gun dealer, moved to Lenexa. The owner, James Ludwig, was opposed to the ordinance. Ludwig would not comment on
recently had closed.
Ladwig would not comment on his move.
Hill said he thought Ludwig left town because Ludwig philosophically was opposed to the ordinance, not because he feared the three-day waiting period drastically would damage his business.
Longhurst said, "I think the ordinance has achieved the objectives we set out for and satisfied the concerns of those who were opposed."
At the time the law was passed, city commissioners said it was to ensure that no one bought a handgun for emotional reasons and to allow the police department to review the records of gun purchasers.
By SALLY STREFF
Epstein reviews presidency
When David Epstein looks forward to his last months as student body president, he sees a lame-duck presidency, and an administration that he thinks has accomplished most of its goals.
"We came in here like gangbusters," Epstein said last week. "I've been very happy with everything we've done. I don't know what more we could have done."
During Epstein's administration, Student Senate has endorsed the "tipsy taxi," a driving service for students at night, established a lecture series and approved a guide describing courses, all of which were campaign promises.
But, several of the Senate's projects have bogged down.
After meeting last semester with Don Kearns, director of parking, Epstein decided that only a chancellor's involvement could solve the campus parking problem.
And he admits that Senate can do no more to push for campus lighting.
The Senate laid the groundwork for most of the campaign goals last spring, he said, and now he wants to ensure that they are carried out.
"It is out of Senate's hands," he said.
The Senate's first meeting will be 7 p.m. Sept. 10, and subsequent meetings will be every other Wednesday.
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Epstein also said Senate must work to complete projects begun last semester.
If you have questions,
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221 AFH
864-4737
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"It'd give students the chance to see how their representatives voted," Kurtenbach said.
Epstein said he would propose a method to change the way senators who resign or graduate are replaced.
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He said he hoped to begin the lecture series the Senate approved last spring. The Senate, which appropriated $25,000 for the series, wants to bring at least two famous speakers to campus this year, he said.
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Epstein said the Senate's No. 1 priority is a guide describing freshman and sophomore courses. It should be printed and out to students by October, he said.
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Monday, August 25, 1986
21
ANZAC
Kansas outfielder Jill Williams slides into base. The Jayhawk softball team in the spring will try to improve on Kansas' second place finish last year in the Big Eight Conference tournament. The journey began last week with the start of fall practice.
Timmons wants team effort
By RIC ANDERSON Sports writer
Although two of his lettermen won't be returning, and he admittedly doesn't have any front-runners, Bob Timmons, men's cross country head coach, is planning to have a better season than last year.
The key to this year's success, Timmons said last week, is teamwork. not individual standouts.
"At this time, there's no runner that dominates the team," Timmons said. "It's going to be a team effort. And from what I've seen, the attitude is very good."
Gordon Way, Shawnee senior, agreed with Timmons and said the team's attitude might even help the Jayhawks attain their goal of placing in the top four in the Big Eight Conference.
"This year we have a bigger group who are right at the same level." Way said. "Everybody on the team is motivated. They'll do the extra
work. With that attitude anything is possible."
Way said not having a front-runner could even inspire the entire team to run faster and place higher.
Mike Tribolet, freshman, said he was surprised at the camaraderie he and his teammates had developed.
“It’s great,” Tribolet said. “I thought everybody would look down on me because I was just a freshman, but it wasn't that way at all. Now we go out and do things together.”
Tribolet said he was glad that everyone was running at about the same pace because they could encourage each other.
Seven of last year's nine lettermeter returned. In addition to Way, the lone senior letterman, there is one junior, Gerald Harder, and five sophomores: Matt Bell, Matt Mellor, Clint Pevril, Mike Spielman and Craig Watke.
Lawrence Thomas, who lettered as a freshman last year, bowed out this
year because of asthma
"We're just sick about him," Timmons said. "He's in engineering and making straight A's. He really was a good athlete."
Ben Welch used up his eligibility and is the other letterman the team lost.
However, Timmons said, four strong freshmen were added this year: Triblet, Steve Heffernan, who won two high school cross country titles in Nebraska; Tracy Gilmore, who won the two-mile run and the cross country title in West Virginia; and Mike Thomas, a transfer student from Michigan State.
"He was probably the closest thing we had to a front-runner," Way said.
The Jayhawks are preparing for an intrasquat meet Sept. 5 at Timmons' Rim Rock Farm. The top seven runners will represent the team at the Kansas Invitational on Sept. 12 at Rim Rock Farm.
Jayhawks have experience
By ANNE LUSCOMBE
The era without Bunge and Brent has begun.
12 returners should offset the loss of Bunge and Brent
However, the Kansas softball team does not lack experienced players.
The Jayhawks lost All-Big Eight selections Tracy Bunge, pitcher, and Ann Brent, outfielder. The two graduated last spring. Although their absence will have repercussions for the team, head coach Bob Stancliff isn't worried about filling the gap.
"The two were tough losses," he said last week, "but 12 returning players are a definite plus. It's hard to replace the type of experience Tracy and Ann had, but we have six seniors to pull up the slack."
Stanclift is looking for freshmen Virginia Honea of Oklahoma City and Roanna Brazier of Mora, III., to round out the pitching staff. Last season, Kansas relied on Bunge, who also was named first team All-America as a designated hitter, and Sherri Mach to handle the pitching
Laura Cramer, senior first baseman, said that with so many players returning, the team couldn't do anything but get better.
This season, however, Kansas has four strong pitchers that Stancilf
can use. In addition to the two rookies, the starting pitchers will include Mach, senior, and Reenie Powell, sophomore.
Mach, who won 22 games last year,
said she thought the pitching would
Softball
be stronger this year than in the past.
“With four of us, if one can't handle it, we can jerk her out and put in another one,” Mach said.
The fall season games aren't figured in the team's record, but they do count toward the 60-game limit set by the National Collegiate Athletic Association. However, the fall games are more than just an opportunity to warm-up and practice.
The team gets a chance to gauge how tough the competition is, Stancliff said, and the battle against the weather is less intense in the fall
"I feel it's a great opportunity to determine the squad and give the players the opportunity to win positions," Stancliff said. "Without the fall season, we would have to do all that on paper. Then we can't see it happening like we can with fall play."
joyed by Stanclift.
"Last year we had a lot of depth with people playing more than one position," he said. "Players could come off the bench and contribute greatly. We had a strong offensive team and steady performances on the mound."
Versatility is an added bonus en-
Sheila Connolly, a second team All America choice, and Mach agreed the offense still needed work.
"I think we've always been strong defensive,y." Connally said. "If we could have our offense equal our defense we'd be great. We need strong hitting up and down the line-up, like Nebraska has."
Last fall, Kansas was ranked as high as sixth in the nation and Stanclift said the team had its toughest schedule ever — until this season.
"We have the opportunity to play against some of the best teams in the nation," Stanclift said. "I feel really optimistic that we have the talent to be competitive with them."
The Jayhawks took on Top 20 ranked teams in 25 of their games. This year, the schedule looks much the same, with an additional tournament in California.
Stenerud coaches KU kickers
By HEATHER FRITZ
BY HEATHER PRITZ
Associate sports editor
Several Kansas football players had the chance to practice with an NFL legend last week in Memorial Stadium.
Placekicker Jan Stenerud, a 19-year veteran of the National Football League, came quietly onto campus Tuesday for a short practice with the Javahawk kickers.
Stenerud played 14 seasons with the Kansas City Chiefs, three with the Green Bay Packers and two with the Minnesota Vikings. He retired at the end of last season. Along the way, he kicked the most field goals in NFL history.
Stenerud, 43, watched the KU players kick and gave them tips on technique.
He came, he said after practice,
"Because Bona Valesente is a very nice man, and he asked me."
Head coach Valesente said, "Just his presence is an uplifting and positive experience because he's been such a great performer. It's a thrill for the players to be around him."
Stenerud retired after last season because of a hurt back, but before he was injured he set an NFL career record of 373 field goals. He scored 1,699 points in his career, second only to George Blanda, who had 2,002. This summer was his first away from football, but he said he missed only a few aspects of the sport.
"I disliked training camp the most," Stenuerd said. "It's constant pressure, constant competition. It's almost like boot camp."
But he does miss the game. The first time he realized that was two weeks ago when he went to the Vikings training camp to help the coaches select a new kicker.
"I miss the excitement of the game," Stenerud said. "You experience such high emotions playing. I miss the satisfaction of the team winning, the satisfaction of a job well done.
"But I won't go back. My back was very bad last year. If you don't feel you can be a positive contributor, you don't want to play."
Stenerud has a long list of records and honors, but the one he treasures
most is not the Super Bowl victory with the Chiefs, but his sixth trip to the Pro Bowl, which came after his 18th season.
"I was the oldest player to make the Pro Bowl," he said proudly. "And to make it after being traded to a third team — that was something."
Stenuerd, who was a soccer star in Fetsud, Norway, went to Montana State University on a skiing scholarship in 1962. His football career started three years later when he passed a field where some of the team's kickers were practicing field goals. He tried one from 50 yards out — wearing tennis shoes — and made it.
Stenerud was one of the first kickers to kick the ball soccer-style. He was around in the days when kicking half the field goals attempted was enough to make the team.
"It it used to be if you kicked 50 percent you were OK," he said. "Now you have to kick two of three. They're more accurate now because more teams have artificial turf and domed stadiums. Also, now teams have special teams coaches."
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Monday, August 25, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
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MONDAY, August 25, 1986 University Daily **B**.
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15
The chase is on
Mac Smith is one of three players who are challenging kicker Chase Van Dyne for the No.1 spot he earned in the spring.
Story, page 9
What's up, dock?
Lawrence boaters will have a shorter jaunt to set sail at Clinton Marina in the spring when the dock will be moved closer to the city.
Story, page 6
Patchwork wilt
Today's high temperatures may cause a few Jayhawk wings to droop under cloudy skies with a slight chance of rain.
Details. page 3
WOLF
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Vol. 97, No. 3 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
August 26,1986
Official says U.S. is ready to raid Libya
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Reagan administration, in response to alleged evidence of renewed Libyan terrorist plots, is prepared to launch another military strike against Col. Moammar Gaddafi, a senior official said yesterday.
The official said the administration has put together contingency plans for a bombing raid because of signs that the Libyans have expanded planning, recruiting for and inspiring terrorist acts.
"It's our intelligence that he is still causing problems," the official said of Gadhafi. He said the administration wants to make clear to Gadhafi that the United States will not tolerate any further terrorist activities.
"It's a warning shot across the bow," the official said. But this official would say that only after insisting that he not be identified.
He said the administration had evidence the Libyans were broadening their terrorist planning beyond their embassy-like "People's Bureau" to Libyan airline offices.
Another administration official, also demanding anonymity, said he wanted to emphasize that the administration's preparations had been going on for some time and had not reached an alert status.
An inter-agency task force has been following Gadhafi's actions closely, he said. But the official also said that a new military strike would be triggered by a provocative act on Gadhafi's part against U.S. military exercises in the Mediterranean Sea or "firm, documented evidence" that he was involved in a terrorist act.
"We have not reached that threshold vet," the official said.
Just two weeks ago, President Reagan warned would-be perpetrators of international terrorism that he would not be shy about taking swift action, as the administration had done within days of the bombing of a discotheque in West Berlin. U.S. warplanes conducted a series of air bombing raids against Gadhafi's Libya on April 15.
The Wall Street Journal reported yesterday that the administration
See LIBYA. d. 5. col. 3
Linkup to join KU to supercomputers
Staff writer
Researchers at the University of Kansas soon will have access to a nation-wide network of high-tech supercomputers, a KU official said last week.
By ANDREA FULLEN
wide network of high-tech supercomputers, a 160-mile $4.7 billion The National Science Foundation recently approved a $1 million grant to establish a computer linkup between KU and seven other midwestern universities.
The project is expected to be operational before the end of this school year, said Richard Mann, director of information resources.
The eight-member consortium called MIDnet will link KU, Kansas State University, Oklahoma State University, the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Washington University in St. Louis, the University of Missouri-Columbia and the University of Oklahoma.
MIDnet will allow the schools to exchange information. But more importantly, MIDnet will give KU immediate access to six of the
Barbara Cochran/KANSAN
See COMPUTER, p. 5, col. 5
PLEASE DO NOT USE THIS PHOTO TO MAKE MEMORIALS OR RECOGNIZE ANY OFFENSIVE ACTIVITIES. THE PHOTO IS NOT FOR SALE.
This conference room in Elsworth Hall serves as a temporary home for Amy Hupp, Shawne sophomore, Tezcan Zaim, Cyprus freshman, and Debbie Paulo, Dellanco, N.J., junior.
Housing hits overflow snag
KU property and violent crime INCLUDES LAWRENCE AND MED CENTER CAMPUSES
Bv KAREN SAMELSON
Inside, the fireplace was almost hidden from view by the 12 beds, the suitcases and the crates belonging to the seven members of the "fireplace gang," the nickname given to the women living in overflow housing on the first floor of Lewis.
Staff wri
The official sign on the door in Lewis Hall read "Fireplace Room." A new, handmade sign under it added: "Please Knock Before Entering, Respect our Privacy. Thanks."
"This is so ridiculous." Lisa Udesky, Chicago sophomore, said yesterday. "Hopefully we won't be here too much longer."
Udesky and her six roommates are a few of the KU students who are living in temporary housing because the University residence halls have more residents than rooms.
Dave Ryan, assistant director of the office of residential programs, said that as of Monday morning.
The women put the sign up because maintenance men had walked in on them, they said.
hence he said, "I was ready to go home," Vanassail said of her first glimpse of the room. "I didn't expect this."
A letter she received from the office of residential programs and signed by McElhene reads:
Overbooking halls is common at universities, the officials said, because in the fall some students pledge fraternities, move off-campus or drop out of school and cancel their contracts.
"We have experienced an unusually high demand for residence hall space this year. As of this date, we are unable to guarantee you an assignment into a regular double room in a residence hall. We do have overflow housing available . . . These spaces will be shared by one or two other persons with the larger spaces being shared by no more than five other persons."
Fred McElhenie, director of residential programs, said that more students were in overflow this year but that it wasn't the most the system had ever held.
Another member of the fireplace gang, Kim VanAsselt, Hutchinson freshman, said she signed her contract earlier this month and was warned before she moved in that she would be in temporary housing.
The students living in overflow housing are those who signed their residence hall contracts after the halls were full. The system runs on a first-come, first-served basis, Ryan said.
The room is large enough to hold seven women, but VanAsselt quickly pointed out that the room did not have any desks, and the only closets were standing racks in the middle of the room.
49 50 84 39
30
Bill Skeet/KANSAN
"We're doing our best to accommodate people as quickly as possible," he said. "We know there's going to be openings."
McElheney responded, "I had not planned on using those multiple rooms, to but keep people from
See HALLS, p. 5, col. 1
Burglar, Larceny/Theft, Motor Vehicle Theft and Arson Violent crime includes: Murder, Rape, Robbery and Aggrivated Assault
But the accommodations that she got were not what she had anticipated.
227 students were living in overflow housing. The eight residence halls normally house about 4,750 students.
Aid cut increase possible
1,228
1,141
1,018
979
'82 '83 '84 '85
A few students may suffer from the Gramm-Rudman budget cutting ax now, but the worst effects may not come until next year, the director of student financial aid said last week.
At this point, Peil Grants and the College Work-Study Program are the main programs that have been cut back, said Jerry Rogers, the director. The cuts may increase considerably next year depending on what happens in Congress.
Staff writer
By KAREN SAMELSON
One of the main blows to student financial aid at the University of Kansas has hit the work-study program. Rogers said this year's program received almost $93,000 less than last year's total of about $568,000.
Ruth Hurst, student employment coordinator for the KU library system, said the library had received less work-study money than last year.
Because the Gramm-Rudman law says that the federal deficit, which could go as high as $230 billion this year, must be reduced to zero by 1991, legislators are looking for places to make cuts.
"That is a significant drop," he said. However, he didn't know whether the cut was due entirely to Gramm-Rudman.
Property crime includes:
Rogers estimated that the outback would affect about 35 students who average 15 hours of work a week.
"We are hiring pretty much as we did last year." she said
Pell Grant money has been cut back this year mainly because of Gramm-Rudman, Rogers said.
The library system employs 250 to 300 students, and many positions still are open, she said. Work-study positions pay minimum wage. $8.33 an
Gramm-Rudman cuts led to a reduction of $154 million in Pell Grant funds nationwide, and a miscalculation by the U.S. Department of Education caused a projected shortfall of $215 million.
However, Congress restored $146 million to the program, so some students who earlier were declared
See GRAMM, p. 5, col. 3
FBI reports 4-year trend
KU crime steadily decreasing
By BETH COPELAND
Staff write.
The University's crime rate has decreased steadily during the last four years while the number of law enforcement personnel has remained the same, according to a recent FBI report.
The report, "Crime in the United States," compiled statistics on four violent crimes: murder, non-negligent manslaughter, forcible rape, and robbery and aggravated assault. Property crimes listed were burglary, larceny or theft, motor vehicle theft and arson.
According to campus crime statistics for 1985.
James Denney KUPD director
'Law enforcement at KU has become more efficient. We've streamlined.'
released last month, 939 violent crimes and 979 property crimes were reported that year. These figures are down from 1982, when 30 violent crimes and 1,228 property crimes were reported.
and 1,250 people were injured.
The number of incidents reported - 1,018 — represents a 19.1 percent decrease from 1983, when 1,258 incidents were reported. In 1984, 1,068 incidents were reported, and crime decreased 4.7 percent during the next year.
Over four years, property crimes dropped 20.3 percent. In 1985, the number of property crimes fell 3.8 percent from 1984 crime levels. In 1984, 1.018 property crimes were reported.
1,000 property crimes were reported. Although James Denney, director of KU police, said that KU's decrease in crime was a reflection of a nationwide trend, he attributed part of the
drop to a more efficient police force since the 1970s.
drop a more efficient price cut.
"I can't take credit for KU's drop, because those numbers could suddenly begin to rise again," he said, referring to reported crimes. "But law enforcement at KU has become more efficient. We've streamlined."
He explained that in the early 1970s, parking was the primary concern of campus police, with the Lawrence police handling investigation of serious crimes.
Parking and law enforcement separated in 1979, and KU police were able to devote more time to patrolling the campus, Denney said.
He said the more efficient force helped curb the campus crime rate, even though the number of police officers had remained virtually the same.
The FBI report lists 89 officers and civilians as working in law enforcement on KU campuses in Lawrence and at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. The same number was working in 1983 and 1984, and 86 persons were working for KU police in 1982.
Moreover, Denney attributed the drop in reported crimes to a conservative mood on campus.
campus:
William Arnold, professor of sociology and a criminologist, agreed, saying, "The more conservative attitudes among college students promotes a responsible attitude toward people and property and a decrease in vandalism."
Arnold also said the KU police department's efforts in crime prevention and an increase in building security might partially account for the decline in the crime rate.
higher Urgent Care The University of California at Los Angeles had
The figures also are deceiving because schools with higher student enrollments tend to have higher crime rates. Denney said.
Denney said that the report tallied only eight categories of crimes and that other violent and property crimes, such as kidnapping, vandalism and forgery, were not included in the report.
the most incidents on campus, with $\frac{2}{192}$ violent and property crimes reported.
Behind UCLA was Michigan State University in East Lansing, with 2,134 reported crimes. The university with the third highest number of reported crimes was the University of California at Berkeley, with 1,912.
Crime up in Kansas p. 7.
KU's peer schools provide a better indicator of trends in campus crime. Peer schools, chosen by the Board of Regents, are universities in the country that are comparable to KU in enrollment.
The Regents schools are KU, Kansas State University, Wichita State University, Emporia State University, Fort Hays State University, Pittsburgh State University and the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina.
Peer schools include the University of Colorado at Boulder, the University of Iowa, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the University of Oklahoma. Crime statistics weren't available for the University of Oregon, another peer school.
The crime rates of all these schools have indicated a general decline during the last four years, mirroring KU's drop in crime.
Of the peer schools, only Iowa and Oklahoma indicated an increase in property crime from 1984 to 1985. At Iowa, the university's crime rate increased 20.8 percent, from 829 reported property crimes to 1,001.
Oklahoma's property crime rate jumped 9.5 percent, from 664 to 727 in one year.
During the same year, however, the number of violent crimes dropped at both schools, as well as at KU and the other peer schools.
Despite the decline, Denney said he forsaw a shortage of law enforcement personnel at KU
"I want to be ready for an increase in crime rather than let the increase run us over," he said.
2
Tuesday, August 26, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
News Briefs West Africa death toll at 1,200 after volcano spews toxic gas
YAOUNDE, Cameroon — President Paul Biya announced yesterday that at least 1,200 villagers were killed when toxic gas burst from a lake and belled into the skies over a remote mountain region.
At a news conference at the presidential palace, Biya said the explosion occurred Friday without warning. About 300 villagers were in the area around Lake Nios, located 250 miles northwest of Yaounde, the capital of the western Africa country of Cameroon.
He gave the casualty toll on his return from a visit to Bemenda, the regional capital located about 40 miles south of the disaster site.
"There are 1,200 deaths, 300 injured and the surrounding population has been evacuated," Biya said. He said rescuers in the stricken area reported the 1,200 figure.
The president, who spent part of his day meeting with visiting Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres, called the disaster a "national calamity" and said the death toll could increase.
The gas has stopped leaking from Lake Nios, but the cloud of gas hasn't completely dissipated into the atmosphere. Relief teams from five countries have reached the area and are administering aid, Biya said.
Scientists haven't yet determined what kind of gas was spewed from the lake.
Frontier closer to bankruptcy
DENVER — Frontier Airlines — shut down by parent company People Express after months of losses — moved closer to bankruptcy when talks to revive a stalled merger with United Airlines broke off early yesterday.
People Express said in closing Frontier on Sunday that it would seek bankruptcy protection for the carrier unless the talks in Chicago among United, the union for Frontier and United pilots cleared the way for a merger.
A deal to sell Frontier to United for $146 million fell apart when United could not agree with the Air Line Pilots Association on how soon Frontier pilots would achieve wage parity with United pilots after a merger.
Talks between United and ALPA resumed Sunday but broke off at 2 a.m. yesterday without an agreement, said Matt Gonring, a spokesman for United. No new talks were scheduled, he said.
Official warns of classroom crack
HILTON HEAD, S.C. — The nation's governors were told yesterday an epidemic of crack — cocaine's deadly concentrate — will sweep through the nation's classrooms within weeks.
The drug crisis is so serious that several governors suggested the military be mobilized to seal the U.S. borders against an invasion of airborne drug smugglers.
"The emergence of crack is the most insidious thing to happen to the United States except war," Robert Dempsey, commissioner of the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, told the National Governors' Association.
"We are at war," he said. "We are being invaded by a substance that is killing thousands of Americans every year."
Crack is a purified, concentrated form of cocaine ingested by smoking the vapors given off as the drug is heated.
"If the epidemic hasn't hit your state yet, it's on the way." Dempsey said. "The people who have been using it all summer will bring it into the schools this fall, showing their friends how easy it is to use.
- showing their friends how easy it is to use.
"They are lying on slabs in morgues all over this country, and because their names are not Len Bias or John Belushi you haven't heard of them."
KOKOMO, Ind. — Teenage AIDS victim Ryan White, who spent more time in court battles than in the classroom last year, started the eighth grade yesterday without incident.
Ind. AIDS victim returns to class
There were no protests outside the school as White, 14. arrived for 8 a.m. classes at West High School.
Parents opposing his presence in the school say they will ask the Indiana Legislature to establish a policy about students who have acquired immune deficiency syndrome and who are attending regular schools.
White arrived by bus at the school near Kokomo, north of Indianapolis. He was greeted by a handful of reporters and photographers, but did not speak to anyone and headed straight to his locker to prepare for his first class.
Instead of attending class in person last year, White was linked with the school by a telephone-computer arrangement.
White, who contracted AIDS in December 1984 while being treated for hemophilia, won his right to be just another student in a regular classroom setting in the spring after a series of court battles which started last year.
China may test visitors for AIDS
PEKING — China is expected to pass a law that would force foreign visitors who plan to remain in the country for more than six months to undergo medical examinations for AIDS and other diseases, the China Daily newspaper said yesterday.
Chinese public health officials are concerned about the introduction of acquired immune deficiency syndrome by foreign visitors.
An Argentine tourist who died of the disease while visiting China in June 1985 is the only known case so far in the country.
A draft law that would require foreigners that plan to stay in the country for more than six months to undergo medical exams for AIDS and other diseases
will be submitted to the National People's Congress for approval later this week.
"It is intended to prevent infectious diseases from spreading both inside and outside China from seaports, airports and exit and entry stations along borders." China Daliy said.
WEST PITTSTON, Pa. — A demonologist who says he has records that prove a West Pittston house is haunted failed to produce the evidence yesterday at a news conference that turned into a shouting match.
Edward Warren, director of the New England Society for Psychic Research, said the evidence of demonic infestation of Jack and Janet Smurl's house will not be released to the public until it is reviewed by the Roman Catholic Church.
"Show us something," the reporter said. "Give us something to go with."
"We're giving you everything you're going to get," Warren replied. "But we really don't have to give you anything."
For the last 18 months, the Smurri and their four daughters have been living with what they say are demons who physically abuse them, make strange noises and create unusual odors.
At a news conference outside the family's duplex, a reporter challenged Warren to produce evidence of activity in the home.
Brazil wants 'Cobra' off screens
"The old regulations are no longer adequate under the policy of opening to the outside world."
Evidence of demons withheld
RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil — The government is trying to ban the movie "Cobra," starring Sylvester Stallone, because it considers the film too violent, the justice ministry said yesterday.
Justice Minister Paulo Brossard ordered federal censors to reconsider permission for the film to be shown, a ministry spokesman said.
Running
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From Kansan wires.
Wednesday, August 2
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UNIVERSITY PHOTOGRAPHY WELCOME BACK!
University Photography has been serving the KU market for over 14 years and we're looking forward to serving you again this year!!!
CALL US FOR YOUR NEXT PARTY!!! 843-5279
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INSURANCE
morning evening Sunday
843-0511
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This price includes consideration for non-delivery when classes are suspended for holidays, breaks and other periods when service is not requested. The offer becomes effective Aug. 21 and expires Dec. 19, 1986. DELIVERY TO BEGIN WITHIN 3 WORKING DAYS OF PAYMENT which can be made in person at the local office at
ADDRESS: ___
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R
union ENOVATION
SIXTY·YEARS·AND·GETTING·BETTER
The Oread Book Shop, previously located on level three of the Kansas Union, has been moved to level four as a result of the renovation at the Union.
The Oread will remain in this temporary location for two years until it is moved to a new, permanent location on level two of the Kansas Union.
For more information about the Union renovation, please inquire at the Information Counters at either the Kansas or Burge Unions.
Level 4, Kansas Union
OREAD BOOK SHOP
1
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, August 26, 1986
3
News Briefs
State Rep. Runnels to speak at meeting
State Rep. Judy Runnels,
Democratic nominee for Kansas
secretary of state, will speak at
the KU Democrapes meeting at 8 p.m.
today in Alderson Auditorium
of the Kansas Union.
Runnels, a native of Lawrence and a KU graduate, will be joined by Bob Miller, Democratic candidate for the 43rd legislative district seat, and Lyric Bartz, Johnson County legislative candidate.
Runnels served as a lobbyist for the Kansas State Nurses Association and for Gov. John Carlin. She now is serving her second term in the Kansas House and represents part of Topeka.
Walk to fight hunger
The Lawrence chapter of the Community Hunger Appeal of Church World Service will sponsor a 10 kilometer walk Sunday to raise money to combat local and world hunger.
The chapter wants to raise $10,000. Seventy-five percent of the money will go toward fighting world hunger and 25 percent will go to the Lawrence Interdenominational Nutrition Kitchen and the Emergency Service Council. The groups assist low-income Lawrence residents.
A meeting for anyone interested in participating will be at 7 p.m. today at the Baptist Campus Center, 1629 W. 19th St. For more information, call Rick Clock at 841-8001.
Senate to alter rules
A temporary Student Senate committee will meet at 5:15 p.m. tomorrow in the Burge Union cafeteria to revise election rules.
In the spring, the Senate changed the date of its elections from November to April. Because elections will take place twice this academic year, in November and in April, officers elected this fall will serve shortened terms.
Stephanie Quincy, chairman of the Student Senate Executive Committee, said the committee would make language changes in the Senate rules and regulations and the University Code, which govern Senate activities.
Audit grant received
The committee consists of StudEx members.
Three KU business professors have been awarded $36,650 to dc research in auditing.
Professor Glenn Shafer,
Associate Professor Prakash
Shenoy and Assistant Professor
Rajendra Srivastava were awarded
the grant by the Peat Marwick
Foundation for their proposal titled,
"An Interactive Tool for
Managing Uncertainty in Expert
Systems for Auditing."
Shafer, Shenoy and Srivastava were three of 18 chosen from 83 candidates nationwide.
Grants totaling $4 million are expected to be awarded in 1966 to business or accounting faculty at U.S. colleges and universities, according to F. David Fowler, secretary of the foundation
The Peat Marwick Foundation was established in 1968 to support academic excellence in accounting.
Weather
Today will be partly cloudy with a 30 percent chance for showers and a high temperature of 85 to 90 degrees. Southerly winds will blow at 10 to 20 miles per hour. Tonight will be mostly cloudy with a 40 percent chance for showers and a low temperature of 60 to 65 degrees.
From staff and wire reports.
Barbara Cochran/KANSAN
HOLY SACRAMENTO
ing Opening Convocation at Hoch Auditorium. Roskam was named the recipient of the Irvin Youngbear Award for research achievement.
an Roskam, Deane E. Ackers distinguished professor of aerospace engineering, receives congratulations from Chancellor Gene A. Biduq i
Record-breaking $36 million received
Budig says grant money increased
By NANCY BARRE
Staff writer
At the 121st annual Opening Convocation yesterday, Chancellor Gene A. Budig expressed pride in KU's ability to receive a record amount of grants despite inadequate financing from the Kansas Legislature.
Budig announced that the University of Kansas received a record-breaking total of $36 million in grants for its projects, which is an increase over the previous year's total.
The Lawrence campus received about $24 million and the University of Kansas Medical Center received about $12 million.
About 2,000 people attended the
speech in Hoch Auditorium.
Members of KU police were outside the auditorium to help with any possible emergencies or security problems, but no problems arose.
Budig also said the KU faculty and staff submitted a record-high number of proposals for grants.
"Two things must be noted about these record-breaking figures," said Budig.
"First, they are a very real tribute to our faculty and staff — to the ideas and imaginations of those who write proposals, a tribute to the hard work of sitting down and writing grant proposals at nights and on weekends. That we do all this without an adequate resource base cannot be ignored."
Secondly, Budig said KU was an important factor in the state economy.
The $36 million in grants can be multiplied by three, making it $108 million, when estimating its total effect on the Kansas economy, he said.
Budig will attempt to increase the University's positive effect by continuing to challenge state legislators to allocate more money to KU, he said.
"Without adequate faculty compensation and basic state support we cannot maintain this kind of contribution," he said. "With adequate support we could do much, much more."
Robin Eversole, director of University Relations, later explained what Budig was referring to.
"When you bring a dollar into the state, it passes hands several times, thereby stimulating the economy," she said. "Therefore, the overall effect of each dollar can be multiplied by three."
Budig also offered some words of encouragement to new students.
"The opportunity is there," he said. "You must seize it. We hope you will and encourage you to do so. You will be challenged and enriched by it if you do."
State lack of funds is KU crisis
By NANCY BARRE
Staff writer
Both Budig and Dubnick said the financial health of the University was vital to the financial health of the state.
The University of Kansas is facing a severe financial crisis because of the lack of state funds, Chancellor Gene A. Budig and Melvin Dubnick, chairman of the University Senate Executive Committee, said yesterday at Opening Convocation.
"A weak economy calls for investment and not cutbacks," Dubnick said.
The state Legislature gave KU's Lawrence campus $176.3 million last year.
But the amount was not enough to cover one of KU's vital needs — a significant increase in faculty salaries. Budig said in a letter to the University in the spring.
After the speech, Dubnick explained some of the University's financing problems.
The Legislature approved a 2.5 percent increase in salaries to be awarded on a merit basis and a 1 percent increase in the state's contribution to retirement funds.
The increases were unsatisfactory to the majority of the faculty, Dubnick said. KU is facing the danger of valuable faculty leaving for more lucrative employment, he said.
"I know of other people who have been offered more at other places, but who are wading through for another year or two to see what KU will do for them."
Each in-state student pays only 25 percent of the total cost of his education, and the University picks up the rest of the tab, he said.
When enrollment increases, the University must pay for the extra students without additional subsidies from the state, Dubnick said.
Course guide to be out soon
Dubnick said the University already was almost $500,000 short because of an unexpected increase in freshman enrollment.
Staff writer
"We usually have some flexibility in the fall and then run low on funds in the spring, but this year we're already low on funds," he said.
By NICOLE SAUZEK
Freshmen and sophomores will have more help in finding their way through a maze of class choices when spring semester pre-enrollment begins, a student senator said yesterday.
Jayhawk Course Source, a course outline recently created by the Student Senate, almost is completed and scheduled to be distributed this fall.
Beginning Oct. 27, 10,000 copies of the free course guide will be distributed to freshman and sophomores. Several University departments also will receive guides for all students to use.
Missy Kleinholz, Topeka junior and Panhellenic senator, spent the summer preparing the course guide. Course Source will include class descriptions and information on class organization and types of tests.
"I'm excited about Course Source," Kleinholz said. "I want it to become a normal part of KU life — something that freshmen and sophomores will automatically pick
up with their time tables and catalogs before enrollment."
Professors in each department supplied the guide's information. Kleinholz sent questionnaires to faculty asking how long they had been teaching the course, what their teaching approach was and what type of exams they gave.
'Course Source is the Student Senate's small attempt to help a big problem.'
David Epstein
David Epstein Student body president
Course Source possibly could cut down on the number of students who go through add-drop.
Gary Thompson, director of student records, said 20,000 to 25,000 students went through add-drop every semester to change their schedules for a variety of reasons. Thompson said he thought Course Source might help reduce the high numbers.
"Response from the instructors was wonderful," Kleinholz said. "Not only would students know what the teacher is like — Course Source could help instructors get the kind of students they want in class."
"It's not going to solve the problem completely," he said, "but it does have the potential to reduce the number of students who go through add-drop. Whether it will or not, I can't say. I've never seen the guide."
A guide to professors and classes was a campaign promise of David E. Kernahan, co-founder
"Course Source is the Student Senate's small attempt to help a big problem." Epstein said.
The Student Senate allocated $13,500 from its unallocated fund for the project.
"We wanted to give the students more information than what is given in the Timetables and the campus catalog." Epstein said.
Higher candy prices leave students bitter
Inflation. If it's not tuition, it's books. And if it's not books, it's candy bars.
This was how Robyn Brown, Lawrence freshman and concession worker at the Wescoe Hall cafeteria, responded to the 5-cent increase recently placed on candy bars in campus vending machines.
Other students who purchased candy at Wescoe also expressed dismay because of the new 50-cent price of the beloved chocolate treats.
"How could they do this?" asked Norman McClendon, Lawrence sophomore. "Candy bars are a staple of student diets and shouldn't be raised."
By a Kansan reporter
James Todd, Overland Park graduate student, said, "I'm not sure the price increase in the machine correlates with the price increases of their suppliers."
Robert Derby, concessions manager for the Kansas Union.
Derby, who has been with the concessions department since last month, said he initiated a review this summer of the wholesale and retail costs of the candy products. After the review, the department decided to increase the price.
The price had to be raised so that the vending machines could remain stocked with a wide selection of name-brand products, he said.
"Students don't generally buy non-name products at lower prices," Derby said.
said the 9 percent increase didn't even match up with the 13 percent increase last year in the candy products' wholesale price.
TENNIS
The price after the increase still remained below the national average for college and university vending machines, he said.
KU students pay 50 percent more than the wholesale price while students nationwide pay an average of 53 percent more on vending machine candy.
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Tuesday, August 26, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Stern tone for opening
The Opening Convocation usually gives speakers a chance to wallow in a mash of tired superlatives and cliches about the University.
However, this year, two speakers — Chancellor Gene A. Budig and Melvin Dubnick, chairman of the University Senate Executive Committee — sounded an alarm.
Their messages were meant for the state's legislative leaders and candidates running for office. Give us more money, or face the social and political consequences, they said.
There was good news — the University received a record $36 million in research grants during the last academic year. However, the tone of the messages still was grim.
Budig's delivery was typically low-key. His words were not.
"Our greatest asset, indeed our state's greatest asset, is the human capital, the intellectual capabilities, of this University community," he said. "We do not intend to let our elected leaders ignore this fact."
In the spring, the Kansas Legislature approved a budget for Board of Regents schools that included a 2.5 percent
salary increase for faculty and some staff. The Regents had asked for for 7 percent. In July, the Regents approved a proposal that included an 8 percent increase in salaries.
Budig and Dubnick by inference pointed out a fundamental fact of University life. A 2.5 percent salary increase simply is too little to keep faculty members satisfied.
Dissatisfied faculty members leave. A university without a strong faculty dies slowly. A state without a strong university system also dies slowly.
Budig's speech was surprisingly political for an administrator who prides himself on not using his office for political purposes. But if there is a time to do so, it is now, when the politicians are groveling for votes.
For his part, Dubnick pointed the way for faculty members. His speech was both a warning for politicians and a necessary call to action for the University.
"This year, students and faculty must do more than attend classes and conduct research," he said.
He was right.
Card games
Once again, a sound — a mixture of the profound and the silly — has come from the back of the room, where the young and idealistic sit.
The KU Coalition for Peace and Justice wants to bring President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev to Lawrence for a summit to promote international understanding.
However, the coalition is relying on a gimmick. They plan to send at least 6,000 postcards, each signed individually by students, to U.S. officials and Soviet diplomats in Washington. Members of the coalition will travel there at their own expense.
The idea hardly is new. City Commissioner David Longhurst proposed the same thing three years ago, when the pro-peace movie, "The Day After," was filmed here.
Of course, questions should
be raised: Why not do something more practical? Why not raise money for the University's excellent program that brings Soviet authors to campus? Why not raise money for books or a film series?
"This is just our project right now for the months of August and September," said Eric Matheis, Overland Park senior and coaltion president. "We'll have other projects later on this fall and this spring."
While the postcard campaign is a catchy, political publicity creation, it probably will not be successful in getting a summit in Lawrence.
Yet, it should make many students think about their world, and it may keep them from feeling utterly hopeless about their role in it.
And that's not a bad way to start a semester.
843-2401
Sticker is a life saver
It is a number that could save your life, but thanks to some recent developments, memorizing it won't be necessary.
Simply put the sticker on the back of your KUID, and a safe ride home will never be more than a phone call away.
The SecureCab program began in March provides a free ride to any student who has been drinking or who needs a ride home late at night.
Red and white stickers with that number — the SecureCab line — are being distributed in campus bookstores, making access to the free taxi service easier than ever.
The student activity fee pays for the program, and the spring's ridership figures show a reassuring success story.
In the beginning, there were plenty of jokes and jibes about the "tipsy taxi" and "wino wagon." But eventually the word got around, and many students grabbed the chance to avoid a DUI or a scary walk home.
Freshmen and other new students would do well to get acquainted with this service. It's simple, safe and, best of all, free.
Opinions
So when you buy your books,
make sure you look carefully
in the bottom of the bag. What
you find there someday may
prove invaluable.
News staff
News staff
Lauretta McMillen ... Editor
Kady McMaster ... Managing editor
Tad Charles ... News editor
David Silverman ... Editorial editor
John Hanna ... Campus editor
Frank Hansel ... Sports editor
Jacki Kelly ... Photo editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
David Nixon ... Business manager
Gregory Kaul ... Retail sales manager
Denise Stephens ... Campus sales manager
Sally Oppen ... Classified manager
Lisa Weems ... Production manager
Duncan Ccalhoun ... National sales manager
Beverly Kastens ... Traffic manager
John Oberzan ... Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words and should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
Guest shots should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The
writer will be placed in charge who reserves the right to reprint or edit letters and guest shots. They can be notified or brought to the Kansan school, 111 Staaffer-Flint Hall.
The University Daily Kansas (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer Fitt-l Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6045, daily during the regular school year; excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and on Wednesday, Friday. Mail enclosure requests may be made to Kansas State University, Kansas 6044. 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.
de
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118
Snauder Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kanus, 66045.
Chicago Bears 1997
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groups on a need to abdication
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tations, strife, chaos and poverty.
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Read the statements I made with the
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the various population groups in north Africa. Since we have to contain our population within south Africa the air pressure from abroad in the northern region will be low, so government into giving in to our aid. " Our emphasis is on providing our people with all prevent us from being peaceful as an intention to help in its will lead to it in the program as it progresses."
monopolites all pled
doubt about who
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are the true targets of
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I wish to deal with another matter raised by people who press pressure on Africa from outside and from within. From certain international,
when I make that statement,
I am an prominent member of a
anonymous members of a
extern world, beheads of government,
selling me that they agree with an
agreement to treat them as troublemakers,
and to nightlight what I imply.
The vision is:
women is to warn to women,
committed warning to
warning to men,
our randomness to negotiate dialogue not to misbehave
to avoid misunderstanding,
self-disciple during the past week
months I've been laughed at and
"Don't pinch us too far."
I am not the target.
I guess that was why I liked Sam scmuch; he wasn't afraid to be unique. We used to share sack lunches in the basement of the library and discuss world problems. I didn't talk about nuclear war, what pollution was doing to the ecosystem or a woman's position in society with most of my other friends. Instead, we would discuss the important things like men, booze and clothes.
BOTHA
But something had changed.
I saw him again in the spring of my sophomore year. He looked the same with his rumped hair and dancing green eyes, and his voice was still full of wonder and enthusiasm.
At the beginning of my second year at KU, Sam left. He waved goodbye, telling me to not forget that I was going to run for president one day. We hadn't decided what I would be president of vet.
Now do we bul-
nar culture,
which are domes
heterogeneous so
Sam spent my entire sophomore year hiking across the United States, something I found a little odd and a bit stupid. I also realized that it was something I would never have quite enough nerve to do.
gutiation is not
It was seven degrees and snowing outside.
Love me
We are reserves
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Finally, by birth
By letting the goe
the leaders. By
We will not prescribe, and we will not demand. To do so would be to abuse our rights. We can also give towards a better future for each and every one.
Secondly, the overriding common denominator is our mutual interest in each other's freedoms and well-
Faded friend rekindles lost hope
Sam and I met while I was working at the information desk in Watson Library. He just stomped up one day, stocking hat and all, and commented on how beautiful the weather was.
When I was a freshman, I had a friend that we'll call Sam. He wasn't your ordinary kind of guy. In fact, he was, well, a little different.
time working in a floral shop so he could afford to go on.
Lori Polson
Columnist
When I started my junior year, I didn't see Sam very much. I was much too occupied with my latest love - success - to have the time to talk to Sam about his crazy ideas. While he was planning a bicycle trip across Europe, I was dressing for success and learning how to market myself
All during the year, if I saw Sam on campus, I would hide, because I
didn't want to be embarrassed by his booming, friendly voice and overly rambunctious manner. After all, what would people have thought?
Looking back, I wonder when I had changed, because Sam hadn't. While I was taking tests, writing resumes and meeting all the "right" people, Sam was dropping smiles and a little sunshine on other people's lives.
I used to think Sam represented a part of my childhood that I had outgrown. Now, in my last year at KU, I don't understand why anyone has to grow too old for ideals, too busy for dreams and too realistic for hope. Once these are gone, they are hard to replace.
Sam probably will be the way he always is, at least I hope so. I wonder what the world would be like if there were more people like him.
Hacker very best at being the worst
I happened to be near the city of Moline, so I stopped to chat with Jack Puffalow at the bar and restaurant he owns in that Mississippi River town.
Chicago Tribune
"Let's see," he said, using his fingers to count, "I did Steve Allen CBS ABC a morning show radio talk shows.
Within minutes, Pulford was sitting at my booth, proudly ticking off the television shows he's been on and his many other public appearances since becoming a celebrity.
Trabuah shows.
"And I'll be flying to Pittsburgh on Monday. I'm going to be roasted for some charity. After that? I've got so many appearances coming up, I can't keep track."
Who, you ask, is Jack Pufford? And how did he get to be a celebrity? I'll jog your memory.
Pulford shot a 208, but that wasn't bad enough. One of the others scored an incredible 257 and won the worst trophy.
Last year, a magazine called Golf Digest had a clever idea. It launched a search for the worst avid, able-bodied golfer.
After choosing the four finalists, the magazine got them together for an 18-hole playoff in Florida to determine which of the four was the most inept.
Readers sent in hundreds of nominees — devout golfers who never hit drives past the women's tees, or routinely dribble a dozen balls into the same water hole every time they confront it.
Mike Royko
The magazine narrowed the list to four, including Pufford, who was a worthy choice. He so loves the game that his restaurant, the Greenbriar Pub, is filled with golf themes — boots named after golf's most famous holes, wallpaper that gives the rules of golf, and a menu offering "sandwedges" instead of sandwiches.
He even looks like a pro. Yet, the best score he has ever shot is 112, and he talks wistfully about getting par the way others describe getting a hole in one.
What the match proved was more than the obvious, which is that there are a lot of ridiculous golfers playing the game. You can stand near the first tee of any course and see that.
No, the message is that it doesn't matter if you win or lose, or even how you play the game.
Fifteen months after the match, Pufford laughs and says, "It's amazing. I've been approached about writing a book, and I might do it. A golf club company sponsors me. I'm working on doing a TV commercial for cut-proof balls. It would be great. If I don't cut a ball, nobody can."
What matters is that what you do is seen on television.
What secret?
Golf is a lifetime search for the secret. Golf magazines come out with new secrets in every issue. So what is the secret to your disastrous golf swing.
But what is your secret?
He shook his head and said, "I just don't know."
"What secret?"
President Reagan says he has "always felt the nine most terrifying words in the English language are 'I'm from the government, and I'm here to help.'"
President seeks less government
The president spent eight years as the governor of California and is nearing the end of his sixth year in the White House, and yet he speaks of government with disdain.
There was a time in recent history when President John F. Kennedy spoke in terms of public service when he spoke of government. In speeches to young people particularly, he said public service could be the crown of their careers.
Of course, he muttered about the bureaucrats who were not carrying out orders. All presidents in recent times have felt that they were being circumvented by career employees.
But in recent years government has been the whipping boy of politicians and aspiring presidential candidates.
If government is so bad, and so often the scapegoat, one has to wonder why politicians choose it as their careers. However, in the case of Reagan, the goal was clear cut — to get rid of as much government as possible.
A case in point was his perennial attempt to abolish, among other agencies, the Small Business Administration, but he was cut off at the pass by Congress. Last week, Reagan told the Second White House Conference on Small Business that he would see to it that small business would have a voice in government councils, and
ne promised to select a permanent new administrator of the SBA.
Since he came into office, Reagan has denounced government, particularly in speeches outside the capital, and sometimes
Helen Thomas
UPI
before supporting groups that are summoned for a lobbying session. He speaks of the "Puzzle Palace on the Potomac" and how private industry and private charities can do a much better job.
Voluntarism in this country is admirable and necessary, but it cannot take on all needs of millions of people living below the poverty line. President Abraham Lincoln said, "the government should do for people what they cannot do for themselves."
The only government servants who may feel an esprit de corps with the president, and who do not fall into the category of overgrown intrusive government, are those who serve in the military.
It is for the Pentagon and the armed services alone that Reagan seems to reserve his deepest respect.
This fall the president will be on the stump almost as much as he is tending the store in Washington.
And when he isn't denouncing the opposition party for seeking to obstruct his goals, be sure he still will be running against Washington.
MR. BADGER by A.D. lang
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have been the same people who approved the new air terminal site.
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, August 26, 1986
5
Halls
Continued from p. 1
not having any housing at all, we fudged a bit."
Vanasset and her roommates also pointed out that they did not have free access to a telephone to dial off-campus but that they still were paying full rent.
McEhlenie said the University had spent extra money to set up the temporary rooms, so the charges basically canceled each other out.
In other halls, residents were not quite as upset.
Donna Winslow, Liberal sophomore, who lives in one of the multiple-bed rooms at Ellsworth Hall, said, "I was kind of surprised to be in a room with eight people, but it turned out all right.
"The main thing is the cramped quarters. I feel like I'm at camp."
Paul Smith, Kansas City, Kan,
sophomore, who lives in the study
room at Oliver Hall, said, "It
hasn't been that bad."
One of his seven roommates, Mohamed Tfali, Beirut, Lebanon, senior, was more critical of the housing.
Tialli pointed out that the room had no natural light or fire escape. As other students living in multiple-bed rooms, the Oliver men must go up a flight of stairs to shower.
Smith, however, obviously was pleased late yesterday afternoon when he announced to his roommates. "I heard that tomorrow we'll be out."
Alan Wendell, Oliver Hall director, said that along with the 38 students living in rooms normally public, such as Smith's, 32 students also lived in end rooms.
"They're much more private than the more dorm-style housing we have set up on first floor," he said.
Wendell said Oliver and McCollum were the halls with the most temporary housing.
Jesus Casim, Tampico, Mexico,
freshman, lives in one of the end
rooms at McColum. End rooms
usually are used as guest rooms.
The room that he and his room-
mate share has bunk beds, desks,
some closet space and a sink
behind the bed.
It would be OK for one person, he said, adding, "I hope it changes really soon."
The staff members are trying to integrate the students into hall activities, Sonya Clark, Lewis Hall director, said.
"I think my staff is handling it very well," she said.
Libva
had prepared a three-pronged program of military, covert, and economic actions against Libya, with the aim of preempting any terrorist strike.
Continued from p.1
The contingency plan also would be designed to stir political and economic dissent against Gadhafi's regime inside Libya, where tensions already are building, and to remind him that new terrorist activity would spark a repeat of the April air strike by U.S. bombers, the Journal said.
The administration official seemed eager to confirm the report, calling it "very authoritative." But the White House would not deliver an on-the-record warning to Gadhafi.
However, White House spokesman Larry Speakes, in Santa Barbara, Calif., with the vacationing President Reagan, did not deny that the administration had taken such action.
"We have reason to believe that the Libyan state headed by Colonel Gadhafi has not forsaken its desire to create terrorist activities worldwide and the capability is still there to do so." he said.
Speakes confirmed that a highranking U.S. official was being dispatched to Europe to discuss with U.S. allies anti-terrorist planning and a possible tightening of political and economic sanctions against Libya.
Gramm
Continued from p. 1
ineligible for grants, now may get some aid. Rogers said.
He said the office had processed 692 Pell Grant applications before it was notified of the extra money, so the staff then had to re-evaluate those applications.
The office usually gives out about 3,000 Pell Grant a year. Rogers said.
once real Grants a year, Rogers said. Students who have received a lot of Pell money in the past still will receive a lot, he said. Those who got a moderate amount will receive less money this year, and those who received a little won't get any this
If Congress fails to meet the $144 billion target for the 1987 deficit, then it may enact across-the-board cuts.
year.
The exact effects are uncertain because Congress still is working or the 1987 budget and trying to rework the Gramm-Rudman law. During the summer, the Supreme Court declared part of the law unconstitutional because it allowed the General Accounting Office to trigger automatic cuts, thereby violating the separation of powers principle.
Computer
NSF-funded supercomputer centers, said Mann, who oversees all computing operations for the University...
Continued from p. 1
Jerry Niebaum, director of KU computing services, said the $25 million price tag of one supercomputer alone far exceeds the $15 million computer budget for all seven of the Kansas Board of Regents schools for fiscal 1986
KU will spend about $45,000 for the first year of MIDnet's start up. The second and third years will cost the University about $42,000 each. The money will come from the computer center's budget. Niebaum said.
Both Mann and Niebaum agreed that MIDnet is the most cost-efficient way for KU to compete in the field of scientific research without purchasing a supercomputer.
"There's just not enough faculty and research to support a supercomputer." Mann said.
A supercomputer is designed to calculate several operations simultaneously at a speed 50 times faster than KU's current system, which calculates operations sequentially.
The supercomputer linkup will save time and money and will enable researchers to pursue projects that otherwise would be abandoned.
"In many of those problems, to solve them on a conventional computer would require months," Mann said. "The supercomputers open up a whole new sphere of problem-solving we can do."
The NSF grant will cover the cost of access lines between MIDnet and the supercomputers for three years, Mann said. The individual universities will pay for the costs of the communications hardware and software and for a trained expert to educate and assist users.
Although the initial research will be in the sciences, Niebum expects researchers in other disciplines to apply for computer time.
The supercomputer centers are located at the University of California-San Diego, the University of Colorado-Boulder, Cornell University, the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana, Princeton University and Carnegie-Mellon University.
Mann estimated that about six researchers on campus with research projects already are lined up for the new linkup.
One early user will be Thomas Armstrong, professor of physics and astronomy, who already has had computer time allocated at the San Diego supercomputer. However, on the University's current system, he could not use the time because the system was incapable of interacting with the supercomputer.
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6
Tuesday, August 26, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
Barbara Cochran
Light load
A lightnole near 6th and Frontier streets serves as an early morning perch for these birds.
Film to recap Jayhawk athletic history
By BRIAN SNYDER
Staff writer
Jayhawk fans should be able to relive the great moments in KU athletics in the comfort of their own homes by the end of the semester.
Philo Films, a St. Louis promotion and marketing company, is making a KU sports video cassette for retail sale. Doug Vance, sports information director, said yesterday.
The company has been interviewing KU sports legends on campus and collecting pieces of old film footage to create a history of KU athletics, Vance said.
The cassette, which should be for sale in early November, will cost $29.95.
Lawrence Miller, staff member of Philo Films, would not disclose the exact terms of the deal, but said KU would make a share of the profit.
Philist staff members have talked with former KU athletes, including football players Gale Sayles and John Hadl, discus thrower Al Oter and basketball player Clyde Lovellet.
"KU athletics has touched so many people over the years." Vance said. "This is a product that people would like to have. It focuses in on all the sports. It contains interviews with great athletes and takes an in-depth look at the sports tradition here."
Miller, maker of similar films for the Detroit Tigers and St. Louis Cardinals, said the full-length movie is not a documentary, but a celebration of athletic accomplishments at KU.
The film captures the affection felt between current students and alumni, Miller said, and it captures the feeling of competition in the 20s and 30s, besides great moments in KU sports history.
"I see families watching this together," he said.
"It's a connecting thread for the generations."
The film will be viewed the evening of Nov. 1, after the football game against Oklahoma, at Allen Field House
Philo Films, which chose KU to be the first university for such a project, plans to make similar films for the University of Southern California and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
"We chose Kansas as our first university project because of its rich athletic tradition in basketball and track." Miller said. "Kansas has produced so many outstanding athletes."
Vance said KU was eager to have Philo Films produce the film because of the quality of similar cassettes it had produced for professional sports clubs.
Clinton Marina to move
Staff writer
Bv ATLE BIORGE
Those who sail the mighty waters of Clinton Lake will have to drive only 10 minutes from Lawrence to reach their boats beginning in the spring.
During the winter season, Clinton Marina will move from the Bloomington public use area to the Kansas State Park. Bloomington, located across the Lake, is a 25 minute drive from Lawrence.
"I'm definitely happy about the move." Mark Retonde, owner of the marina and a Lawrence resident, said yesterday.
Retonde said he had been working on the $50,000 move for the last four years and expected business to increase because of it.
"A few people who live in the Clinton area are bummed," she said.
Emily Kitos, 1304 Ohio St., who has worked in the marina store for four years, said most people seemed happy about moving.
The actual moving will take about a week, Retonde said. The marina will be moved in seven sections. Developing the boat storage yard and the final anchoring of the marina will take time, he said.
The marina has 165 slips, or docking places, that are rented on a yearly basis from $250 to $600.
During the move, Retonde said, 30 slips will be added to those existing and 30 may be added right after that. He said he hoped to add
many more slips over the next four to five years.
Retonde said he planned to expand the food and boat services in 1988 and put some buildings on land. Presently, the marina is aflat.
Judy Billings, director of the Conventions and Visitors Bureau in Lawrence, said the move was a combined operation by the owner and the state.
The state will improve the accommodations in the state park, she said.
A spokesman at the Kansas State Park and Resources Authority said the state would finance construction of a large parking lot and provide water, power and sewage pumps.
An estimate of the cost is not available yet, he said.
The spokesman said the marina was built in Bloomington in 1979 because the state didn't have available funds at that time. The Corps of Engineers in Lawrence, which decided in 1978 that one marina would be enough, was willing to bear the costs, he said.
"They said they weren't interested." Carey said.
However, Tim Carey, park manager of the corps, said that when the lake was constructed the state was given first rights to a
The corps thought a marina was needed, so they provided a site and advertised for bidders, he said.
KU can't find carrier for liability insurance
By SALLY STREFF
Staff writer
For the second year in a row, the University of Kansas has been unable to find an insurance carrier willing to offer professional liability insurance to faculty and staff.
The policy was offered through the Teachers and Employees Association of the University of Kansas until June 30, 1985, said Vickie Thomas, University general counsel.
The company offering the policy quit writing insurance policies, and the University has been unable to find a replacement.
Because they are state employees, faculty and staff are covered by the Kansas Tort Claims Act, which was passed in 1979, Thomas said.
Thomas said the University's dilemma reflected a national trend in the insurance industry, which has begun cutting back on liability coverage because of the rising number and costs of lawsuits.
The Tort Claims Act says that the state must defend its employees who are sued for actions occurring in the course of their work. The state also is responsible for paying monetary damages resulting from lawsuits.
A KU employee could be represented by the University's general counsel, the attorney general or an outside counsel hired by the University.
"Many companies have simply stopped writing liability insurance," she said.
"It is a very comprehensive type of coverage," Thomas said.
Professional liability insurance covers actions that arise in the course of employment. In the case of college professors, insurance includes such areas as defaimation, negligence and academic misconduct, Thomas said.
Thomas estimated that five to 10 lawsuits are pending at any time against individual employees, the University or both.
Robert Hohn, professor of educational psychology and research, said he wanted additional coverage because he was not sure that the Tort Claims Act would protect him under all circumstances.
Hohn is a member of the American Association of University Professors and soon will acquire a liability policy offered by the organization.
Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, said that many professional organizations offered liability coverage to members for additional fees but that some of those organizations also have stopped renewing policies.
KU students keep bus service going
By PAM MILLER
For instance, the American Association of University Professors will not sell any more policies after Oct. 1 because it has been unable to find a new insurance carrier, Cobb said.
Staff write
The big wheels will keep on turning on the KU campus.
As of yesterday morning, more than 4,700 people had bought passes to ride KU on Wheels, the University's bus system. And as the weather turns cold, more people are expected to buy passes, the KU on Wheels coordinator said yesterday.
Charles Bryan, coordinator since April, said he expected that more than 1,000 passes would be sold this week and that the total number sold would surpass last fall's total.
Last year, about 6,000 students bought passes during the fall semester. Of that 6,000, Bryan said, 1,084 passes were sold during the first week of classes.
The money from the bus passes and money allotted from the student activity fee pays for the transportation services.
For this year, the Student Senate allotted $779,980 of the student activity fees to the transportation board. That amount, which is the same amount allotted last year, covers about half of the cost, Bryan said. The other half of the cost comes from revenues collected from bus passes.
Money allotted for University transportation supports KU on Wheels, SecureCab, a van for handicapped students, salaries for drivers and office workers and ads for the services.
Twenty-one buses run 11 routes every weekday.
This semester, routes have changed only slightly. But no apartment complexes have been cut or added.
we changed the East Lawrence route," Bryan said. "We were going within two blocks of Haskell Junior College. What we did was alter that route to go through the college without costing anything."
the bus had always run close to Haskell when going to the Pine Tree Townhouse complex, 149 Pine Cone Dr., so the transportation board altered the route through the college to try to sell more non-student bus passes.
The West Campus route, which started last year, has not been a busy route, Bryan said.
Only one change was made on the West Campus route. The buses will not circle the Burge Union but will stop in front of it.
"We found that students didn't 'particularly like the extra five-minute scenic tour of the parking lot.' Bryan said.
Although some of the routes have changed, bus fares are the same as they were last semester. A student pays $30 a semester for unlimited bus service, and a non-student pays $40 a semester.
Less than 5 percent of the passes sold are non-student passes. Fare for a single ride is 50 cents.
Students who have lost their bus passes will have to wait until about mid-September before they may be replaced. Bryan said there would be a charge of $7.50.
8
Sidewalk shuffle
Fred Sadowski/KANSAN
"Sir Light," Topeka sophomore who asked not to be identified, dances outside Wescoe Hall. He was exercising yesterday.
VANGUARD
KARATE TEAM
Is there life after country club week? Vanguard Karate Team is betting on it! Vanguard will be conducting a 4 week conditioning program open to all students that will put energy back in a neglected body. The program will emphasize the attributes needed to be successful in sport karate, both point and full contact. We will work on endurance, flexibility, control and basic techniques.
The program runs Aug. 25-Sept. 19
Meets in room, 102 Robinson
Times: Mon. 8-10 p.m., Wed. 8-10 p.m.,
Fri. 6:30-8:30 p.m.
The cost is $20. The class is limited to 22 people For more info. call David Rank 749-1738.
Get In Shape For Less! No Sweat.
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For just $75.00 a semester you can work out in a relaxed atmosphere with resistive universal equipment, free weights and hand weights, while enjoying our whirlpools and saunas. We even have tanning beds.* Free towels and amenities!
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, August 26, 1986
7
KU officials change student rights code
By JOHN BENNER
KU officials recently revised the Code of Student Rights for the first time in its 16-year existence in an effort to keep up with the times, an official said yesterday.
"I had been trying since 1978 to get some changes made," said Caryl Smith, dean of student life. "It took a while to get enough departments at the University interested in getting the new code."
The revision was a cooperative effort between Smith's office and David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs.
The revised code, which appears in the 1986-88 Student Handbook, was completed in May, so it could not be included in the fall Timetable, which was printed in February, said Sheila Immel, assistant to the dean of student life.
The guide states that students or organizations charged with violating the code are entitled to
University hearings. The University will take action against individuals or groups if they are found guilty.
One change in the code includes the addition of rules barring hazing under a section titled "Offenses Against Persons."
"The section pertaining to hazing was not included in response to any specific incident on campus." Smith said.
Another change states that student or campus organizations or their representatives may be responsible for their conduct and punished, if necessary, in a manner "similar to those outlined for individual students."
Organizations that violate the new code may be subject to suspension, which can exclude them from University privileges and activities for up to two years.
The revised code allows the University to hold someone responsible for non-academic misconduct
Crime rises in '85. KBI statistics say
United Press International
TOPEKA — Murder and nonnegligent manslaughter showed the largest increase — 36 percent — of the various serious crimes committed in Kansas in 1985, according to state statistics.
The Kansas Bureau of Investigation yesterday said that crime index offenses, which include both violent crimes and crimes against property, had increased 1.2 percent, to 106,911 in 1985 from 105,644 in 1984.
The KBI listed the statistics in its annual report of crime in Kansas, based on information collected by 260 law enforcement agencies in the state.
Violent crimes increased by 6.8 percent, to 8.689 in 1985 from 8.138 in 1984. Murder and non-negligent manslaughter increased 36 percent, to 121 from 89 in 1984.
All other violent crimes also increased; rape, up 8.3 percent to 720; robbery up 10.5 percent to 1,924; aggravated assault up 5 percent to 5,924
The agency calculated that a crime index offense — those crimes logged for statistical purposes — occurred in Kansas every four minutes, 55 seconds in 1985. A violent crime was committed on the average of once every 61 minutes. A murder was committed every 72 hours, 24 minutes.
A property crime occurred in the state every five minutes, 21 seconds in 1985.
Property crimes increased by 7 percent to 98,222 in 1985 from 97,506 in 1984. Burglary increased 4.9 percent to 26,751, from 25,505 in 1984. Motor vehicle theft increased 4.9 percent to 5,277 from 5,032 in 1984.
However, reports of larceny and arson decreased. Larceny decreased 1.2 percent to 66,194 in 1985 from 70,376 in 1984. Arson increased 13,3 percent to 798 from 128 in 1984.
The KBI said the value of property stolen in 1985 increased 9.7 percent to $54.7 million, compared with $49.8 million in 1984. However, the value of property recovered increased 31.5 percent to $19.6 million.
Fulbright continues despite cuts
By TONY BALANDRAN
Opportunities for KU graduates to enter the national Fulbright student exchange programs probably would not be affected by a congressional recommendation to cut the funds that help support the program. Mary Elizabeth Gwin, KU's Fulbright adviser, said last week.
"I don't think this should be cut," Gwin said. "I don't think Congress thinks things like this should be cut.
"Funding will probably be less than expected but not enough to affect KU."
The U.S. Senate Appropriations Committee recently voted to recommend a 25 percent cut from the fund that supports the Fulbright grants and other student exchange programs, said Sandy Vallianceck, a member of the liaison group for International Educational Exchange in Washington, D.C.
The full Senate is scheduled to act on the recommendation in mid-Sentember.
The U.S. Information Agency, which has existed for 40 years, finances the Fulbright program, named after former Sen. J. William 'Bulbright of Arkansas.
"(The cutback) coul be a damage to the whole field of
international education," said Gwin, director of the office of study; abroad, "But because the United States Senate realizes the importance of the Fulbright program, it will probably be least hit by budget cuts.
"Although there is definite cause for alarm, historically they have never cut to that degree. The Reagan administration has always looked at the positive aspects of the Fulbright program."
The program, which was established in 1948 under Congressional legislation, entails more than 700 graduate scholarships, study grants and travel grants awarded by the United States and many foreign governments.
During the 1986-87 competition, Gwin said, 3.129 applications were received nationwide, and 752 grants were given under the program.
Fulbright applications, which are available in the of fice of study abroad, are due Sept. 26.
An informational meeting is scheduled for 3 p.m. Thursday in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
WE'RE BACK...
Tuesday—Comedy Shop
10 a.m. Rud Anderson
Wednesday—Premium Night
Premium Beers—$1.50
Premium Drinks—$1.50
Thursday—Strawberry
Dance—$1.00
Friday—Comedy Shop
8 p.m. Bill Wilva
Saturday—Warm Up
For Labor Day
AND HOTTER THAN EVER!
PUBLIC RELATIONS
SCOTT M. CULIP / ALLEN H. CENTER
THE WEEKLY NEWS
IN THE REGULAR CLASSROOM
Physical Chemistry
Principles and Applications in Biological Sciences
HAY
THE BIOMEDICAL HISTORY
OF SPORTS TECHNIQUES
GET OFF YOUR ASSETS!
Any student with good business sense knows to expect a return on a solid investment.
But, the bottom line with textbooks is that they have a very short lifespan and lose all monetary value after a very short time.
If you've got textbooks that you're just sitting on, now's the time to sell them back.
You'll find our "Buy Back" representative in the Trail room next door to the bookstore, today from 8:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
Don't be backward about your textbooks, sell them back to us on a regular basis to lower the cost of your investment.
TRYOUTS
K.U.
WOMEN'S
SOFTBALL
TEAM
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If you are interested in trying out, you must attend a meeting on Wednesday, Aug. 27 at 5:00 PM at 221 AFH.
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KU Bookstores
Kansas Union
If you have questions
call: Bob Stancifl
221 AFH
864-4737
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8
Tuesday, August 26, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
Bank drops loan program for students
By a Kansan reporter
Students who in the past obtained Guaranteed Student Loans from Lawrence National Bank, 647 Massachusetts St. will have to look elsewhere for loans
In June, bank officials decided not to offer any more student loans, Virginia Wilson, assistant cashier, said Friday.
Bank officials looked at the loan demand in the community and the return on bank investments to determine where to invest money, she said. They considered many factors and decided to invest the money in other projects.
The withdrawal from the program is temporary, she said, and the bank may rejoin the program next fall.
However, another local lending institution, Capitol Federal Savings and Loan Association, 1025 Iowa St., has joined the student loan program within the last year.
Capitol Federal, which has 20 of fices in Kansas, entered into the GSL program late last fall, said Russ Wiglesworth, bank vice president.
The offices gave out 509 loans between July 1 and Aug. 19 of this year, he said. Not all of those went to KU students.
Wiglesworth said first-time borrowers were charged 8 percent interest, but those who took out loans earlier paid the same rate that they paid on the first loan, which might have been 9 percent or 7 percent.
A Honda Spree moped, valued at $500, was taken from a house in the 300 block of Elm Street about midnight Sunday.
A tool box containing various hand tools, valued at $300, was taken from a truck parked in the 200 block of North Michigan Street between 11 p.m. Saturday and 8 a.m. Sunday.
On the Record
■ A 1982 motorcycle, valued at $1.495, was taken from a house in the 900 block of West 29th Terrace between midnight Saturday and 6:45 a.m. Sunday.
C-0
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Saving an old item doesn't do anyone good. You gain nothing. Neither does the person who may want such an item. Don't save it—it sell for profit when you classified Ask our friend Ad Visor for help in writing a letter, classified, classified ad, and getting today.
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Radio tower site causes stir
oy PAM MILLER
Staff writer
A couple of clowns were walking around Lawrence and the KU campus yesterday.
But they weren't clowning around. They were serious.
Barbara Cochran/KANSAN
Pauline Beatty and Jim Woods, dressed as clowns, protest the future installment of a radio transmission tower at Topeka's Forbes Air Field. They were protesting between Wescoe and Stauffer-Flint halls yesterday.
In another part of town, a radio station vice president sat in his office, and he, too, was serious.
KEEP FORBES FLYWAY SAFE FOR
KHUM TOWER
UNSAFE
and he, too, was schooled.
The clowns and the vice president
represent opposite sides of a
contradiction.
The clowns were Topeka residents, Jim Woods and Pauline Beatty, who protested the future installment of a radio transmission tower close to Topeka's Forbes Air Field.
Woods and Beatty walked up and down Massachusetts Street and between Wescoe Hall and the Kansas Union yesterday trying to increase awareness of the situation.
They said they were concerned that the tower, when built, would be too close to the Forbes Air Field and would endanger airplanes taking off and landing.
Scott Davis, vice president of KHUM-FM of Ottawa, the station that wants to build the tower, spoke from his Lawrence office yesterday.
"The Federal Aviation Administration, the agency that regulates air safety, told us that this site was safe," Davis said. "We submitted another independent investigation, and it was determined again that everything is safe."
"The location is nine nautical miles away from the field, near Overbrook. The only adjustment that pilots would have to make is a 200-foot adjustment on an instrumental landing approach."
But the protesters do not agree.
"From our viewpoint, we can't see why it was put there in the first place," Beatty said. "Our guess is that the FAA approved the location before the carrier, United Airlines, was put in at Forbes Field. But they had to know that eventually there would be a carrier there."
United Airlines and five other Kansas organizations are protesting the location of the tower, according to Wood's flier.
"We're not asking that they not put
up the tower, we just want them to relocate it." Woods said.
However, Davis said relocating the tower wouldn't be easy.
"We would have to go through the review all over again" he said. "We looked at a number of sites that would work well to serve the Topeka and Lawrence area. The FAA said this site was safe. I'm only acting on the advice of the FAA."
Woods said he hoped the protesting organizations would be able to convince the FAA to reconsider.
The radio station has to wait to install the tower until the Federal Communications Commission approves its use. Davis expects the approval soon.
If for some reason the FAA reconsidered and said the area wasn't safe, Davis said. "We would change it in a heartbeat. We would drop back and punt. But look at KCI, it's in a major metropolitan area with tall buildings. This site is safe."
$10 FRAME SALE
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KU Tae-Kwon-Do Club
(Lawrence Tae-Kwon-Do School)
* Self-Defense
* Self-Confidence
* Self-Discipline
* Physical Conditioning
* Male and Female
everyone welcome
Chief Instructor: Master Choon Lee
Assoc Instructor: Master Ki-Jun Park
KARATE
Assist, Instructor: Ed Brunt (3rd-degree black belt)
Robinson Gym Room 102
Mon. & Wed. 6:30p.m.-8p.m.
Beginning Sent. 3. 1986
Beginning Sept. 3,1986 864.6363
DEALING WITH THAT UNEASY FEELING
which commonly occurs when...
you see someone you'd like to know
fee for an interview
- you're waiting for an interview or any other social situations
a two-part workshop:
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday. August 26, 1986
9
Kickers get down to business
1
Kansas place-kickers Mac Smith, above, and Chase Van Dyne, below, practice their kicks in Memorial Stadium. They are contending along with two other kickers for the top kicking spot for the Jayhawks.
13
He's the son that inherited his father's business. After grasping the idea that he's now the boss, the son must prove to the stockholders that he belongs.
By FRANK HANSEL Sports editor
Kansas place-kicker Chase Van Dyne is that son.
With the father, last year's kicker Jeff Johnson, retired. Van Dyne inherited the No.1 kicking job in the spring. Now the stockholders, including head coach Bob Valesante, want the son to prove that he can run the business.
So far, Van Dyne said yesterday the business is failing.
"I've kicked poorly." Van Dyne said. "I have had maybe a day and a half where I've kicked the ball as well as I can. That's one out of every 10 days."
At that rate, it won't be long before the son files for bankruptcy. The coaching staff has let Van Dyne know that his job is in jeopardy, and he said he was feeling the pressure.
"All along I had been the one fighting to get up to number one, and now I'm the one there and I'm just trying to stay there," he said. Last season, Van Dyne almost reached the top spot, but the results were disastrous, and it has haunted the Mission Hills sophomore ever since.
"The one I kicked against Colorado was the most embarrassing thing I've ever lived through." Van Dyne said. "I just wanted to dig a hole in the turf, crawl in it and never come out. It was the worst feeling in the world."
Last year's head coach Mike Gottfried gave Van Dyne a chance to kick against the Buffaloos because Johnson was struggling. Van Dyne entered the game with 39 seconds left in the third quarter and Kansas trailing 7-3. His 28-yard attempt didn't even reach the end zone.
Throughout the summer, Van Dyne reminded himself of that nightmarish moment, and he said he wouldn't let it happen again.
But now the son who stabilized the business in spring practice is faced with a possible takeover in the form of three kickers — Mac Smith, Gregg Robisch and Louis Klemp — who also want to run the company.
"Right now, I'd say they're all equal as far as kicking field goals," Joe Pannunzio, tight end and special teams coach, said. "Mac is ahead on kickoffs. He seems to have the stronger leg."
Smith, a freshman from Jackson, Miss., has just one year of kicking experience, which includes a 48-yard field goal at Jackson Preparatory School.
"I was off the first week," Smith said. "I think I've done all right though, but there is always room for improvement."
Valesente said he was giving the kickers as many game-like situations as possible so they would be ready when the season started.
"In high school there was never any doubt what was going on," Van Dyne said. "Now there is a lot of competition. It's an all out battle. If I can get my act together and kick the way I have in the past couple days, I should pull out all right."
Smith came through yesterday, hitting a 52-yard field goal to conclude a two-minute offensive drill at the end of practice. Van Dyne and Robisch were short and wide, and Klemp had enough distance but just missed to the left.
If he doesn't, the board could be looking for a new chairman.
Smith, Klemp and Robisb are giving Van Dyne plenty of competition.
Volleyball recruit follows dad to KU
By ANNE LUSCOMBE
Like father, like daughter. For the Oelschlag family the cliche fits.
Jodi Oelschlager, the only new recruitment for the Kansas volleyball team, is following in her father's athletic footsteps.
Ron Oelschlager, a 1965 KU graduate, was a running back on the Kansas football team. He played behind the legendary Gale Sayers for three years.
Even though he said he tried not to push Kansas over any other school, the self-proclaimed proud father was happy with his daughter's decision to stay close to home.
"We tried to stay pretty neutral during her recruiting, but there were subtle pressures because we're a KU family." Oelschlager said yesterday. "KU filled the bill for what she was looking for, and she knows we want to be able to watch her play."
Jodi, a two-time all-league selection and a first-team all-state and all-state tournament selection, chose Kansas over Notre Dame, Florida State and Virginia to be closer to home.
Her family may get more of an opportunity to watch her play than it
bargained for. She may be filling in for starting hitter Eileen Schwartz, a junior, who will undergo knee surgery tomorrow morning at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
Head coach Frankie Albizt said Oeishlager was the only recruit because the Jayhawks had just one scholarship to offer. The team did not lose any players after last year, and only one player will be lost next year. However, Albizt seemed satisfied with her selection.
"She's real explosive and an exceptionally good blocker," Albitz said. "It's her power that we like."
The younger Oelschlager said she was not having any problems fitting in with the KU program, but she said the training was much more intense than what she received at Lawrence High School.
Oelschlager has had her share of adjustments since coming to Kansas. Albitz changed her position from a left-side hitter to a right-side or center hitter — a change Oelschlager said did not make her happy.
NCAA academic rule affects mostly blacks
She also no longer has the superstar status she attained while playing in high school. Now, her claim to fame is being the only freshman on the team.
United Press International
DALLAS — Blacks make up 85 percent of freshmen football players who will be ineligible to play this fall because of the NCAA's Proposition 40 academic regulations, the Dallas Times Herald reported recently.
A Times Herald survey of the 105 football programs in the National Collegiate Athletic Association's Division I-A indicated that 9 percent of 2,227 incoming freshmen — 206 athletes — failed to meet the Proposition 48 requirements for standardized test scores and grade point averages on 11 basic high school classes.
Of those 206 who failed to meet the requirements, 175 were black, the newspaper said.
Bethune-Cookman College of Daytona Beach, Fla., lost 11 of its 16 recruits, all black, to the Proposition 48 requirements, the Times Herald said. Alabama State of SWAC lost 15 of 22 Grambling, where Coach Eddie Robinson set a record for most career victories by a college coach, lost 14 of 28.
"This is the first time anyone has seen the impact, and it's devastating," Brutus Jackson, athletic director at predominantly black Prairie View A&M, told the newspaper. The school lost three of its 10 recruits.
Among major conferences, 21 of the 22 ineligible athletes in the Southwest Conference are black, as are 10 of 11 in the Pac-10, all 25 in the Southeastern Conference, 14 of 15 in the Big Ten, 21 of 23 in the Big Eight and all 12 in the Atlantic Coast Conference.
Proposition 48 requires that incoming athletes with a minimum 1.8 grade point average on 11 basic high school classes also score a minimum of 740 on the Scholastic Aptitude Test or 17 on the American College Test exam. Test score minimums are lower for students with higher grade point averages.
Students who do not meet the requirements may retain their scholarships but lose a year of eligibility. They also may retain four years of eligibility by paying their own expenses the first year, or they can transfer to a school in NCAA Division II or III or the NAIA, where Proposition 48 does not apply.
Black coaches and educators, citing what they think is an ethnic bias in standardized tests, fought the Proposition 48 regulations when they were introduced earlier this year and said the failure rate confirmed those fears.
"We don't support the cutoff arbitrary score," said Marino Casem, athletic director at Southern. "The tests were not meant to measure a child's ability to perform in (college). It measures what you have learned.
"I if I came from an impoverished environment, I'm going to test poorly because I haven't been exposed to some situations in which others have experience. Historically, (blacks) have tested badly."
ACT officials dispute accusations of racial bias in the test, saying standardized exams have become a whipping boy for substandard education systems.
Robinson agreed that some students lacked a basic education.
"It it goes back to the mommas and the daddies," he said. "I think they knew when John was a little boy he couldn't read. They can't assume that by the time he gets to college he will.
Among Division IA schools, the Times Herald said, 26 lost no recruits to Proposition 48 — Duke, North Carolina State, Iowa State, Nebraska, Northwestern, Wisconsin, Central Michigan, Miami (Ohio), UCLA, Oregon State, Stanford, Washington, Washington State, New Mexico State, Pacific, Kentucky, Mississippi, Tennessee, Vanderbilt, Rice, Southern Methodist, Wyoming, Boston College, Louisville, Virginia Tech and Penn State.
Among other Big Eight schools, defending national champion Oklahoma suffered the heaviest losses, with 10 recruits declared ineligible. Kansas State lost one recruit; Oklahoma State, four; Colorado, three; Kansas, two; and Missouri, three.
Royals beat Chicago,Cards fall to Atlanta
White's 18th homer beats White Sox
United Press International
CHICAGO — Frank White's two-run runner with two out in the eighth inning broke a scoreless tie and gave the Kansas City Royals a 2-10 victory over the Chicago White Sox.
White's homer, his 18th of the season, came off Jose DeLoon. 3-3, who permitted just three hits over eight innings.
Rookie Scott Bankhead, 7-7, scattered eight hits over $7^2$ innings to help hand Chicago its fourth straight loss and sixth in its last seven games. Bud Black, who relieved in the eighth, earned his sixth save.
ARLINGTON, Texas — Gino Petrielli tied the score with a two-run pinch hit homer on Roger Clemens in the eighth inning and Ruben Sierra won the game with a two-out, two-run homer in the ninth inning last night to lift the Texas Rangers to 4-2 victory over the Boston Red Sox.
Texas 4. Boston 2
Clemens, bidding to become the major leagues' first 20-game winner, carried a two-hit, 2-1 lead into the ninth inning and had retired 14 batters in a row before Sierra beat out a checked-swing hit with one out. Petrali was sent up to bat for Steve Buechele and hit Clemens' first pitch just inside the right field foul pole for his second home run of the season.
remain three games behind first-place California in the AL West.
The win went to Dale Mohoric, 2-1,
who pitched the last two innings in relief of Bobby Witt.
California 5, New York 3
The victory enabled the Rangers to
NEW YORK — Doug DeCinces hit home runs in his first two at-bats and Bob Boone contributed a pair of run-scoring singles to lead the California Angels to a 5-3 victory over the New York Yankees.
The loss prevented the Yankees from gaining ground on the Red Sox, who lead the AL East by six games.
since returning from elbow surgery, pitched $5_{1/2}$ innings for the victory. The left-hander struck out seven and allowed seven hits to help the Angels even their current nine-game road trip record at 4-4.
John Candelaria. 7-2 in 10 starts
Vern Ruble pitched two hitless innings of relief before Gary Lucas took over. Donnie Moore pitched the ninth inning for his 17 save.
DETROIT — Rookie Mark McGwire hit his first major league home run, a booming 450-foot two-run shot over the center field fence, and Mickey Tettleton followed with a solo home run to highlight a five-run fifth inning that gave the Oakland A's an 8-4 victory over the Detroit Tigers.
Murphy, Griffey spark Braves to win
Jose Rijo tossed a five-hitter and raised his record to 6-9 despite giving up three runs in the first inning, two coming on Darrell Evans' 22nd home run.
Rijo gave up two hits in the first and one in the second, then held the Tigers hitless until the ninth inning.
United Press International
David Palmer scattered four hits over seven innings to improve to 10-8. He walked three and struck out seven Gene Garber finished for his 20th save. Bob Forsch, 12-8, who allowed six hits in $7 \%$ innings, took the loss.
ST LOUIS — Dale Murphy delivered a two-run double in the eighth inning and Ken Griffey homered to open the ninth last night, sending the Atlanta Braves to a 4-2 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals.
Houston 3, Chicago 2
HOUSTON — Craig Reynolds singled and drove in Dave Lopes in the eighth inning last night, lifting the Houston Astros to a 3-2 victory over the Chicago Cubs.
Reynolds' third hit of the game made a winner of Charlie Kerdelf, 8-2, who worked the seventh and eighth innings in relief.
The triumph marked the 20th time this year Houston has won in its final
time at-bat.
PITTSBURGH — Relief pitcher Barry Jones' wild pitch allowed Buddy Bell to score from third base in the eighth inning with the tie-breaking run last night and gave the Cincinnati Reds a 5-4 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates.
time at bat.
Cincinnati 5. Pittsburgh 4.
New York 5. San Diego 2
The victory went to Ron Robinson, 9-3, who pitched 11/8 innings of relief. John Franco pitched the ninth for his 22nd save. Larry McWilliams took the loss and dropped to 2-10. Montreal 6, San Francisco 5
SAN DIEGO — Ray Knight's two-out, pinch hit single to left in the eighth drove in Howard Johnson
Andy McGaffigan, 8-4, pitched four innings for the victory while Jeff Reardon pitched the ninth for his 28th save.
SAN FRANCISCO — Tom Foley drove in three runs and led the Montreal Expos to a 6-5 triumph over the San Francisco Giants last night.
from second base with the tiebreaking run last night and sparked the New York Mets to a 5-2 victory over the San Diego Padres.
Jesse Orosco, who relieved starter Ron Darling in the seventh after Garry Templeton had doubled, got credit for the victory to even his record at 5-5. Orosco retired pinch hitter John Kruk for the final out of the seventh and then was pinch hit for by Knight in the eighth-inning rally. Roger McDowell went the final 1% innings for his 17th save.
Craig Lefferts, 7-5, came in at the start of the eighth and took the loss. Los Angeles 3. Philadelphia 1
LOS ANGELES — Fernando Valenzuela became the first 16-game winner in the National League, pitching a four-hitter and leading the Los Angeles Dodgers to a 3-1 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies.
Mike Scioscia and Bill Madlock hit solo home runs to help Valenzuela, 16-9. snap a personal three-game losing streak.
10
Tuesday, August 26. 1986 / University Daily Kansan
Sports Briefs
Game time changes for Southern Illinois
Gametine for Kansas' Oct. 4 home game against Southern Illinois has been changed from 1:30 p.m. to 11:30 a.m. The change was made because the game will be televised.
Three other games scheduled to start at 11:30 a.m. will be televised on the Big Eight-Raycom network.
Those games are the season opener against North Carolina on Sept. 13 and road games at Kansas State on Oct. 18 and at Missouri on Nov. 22.
KU tackle injured
Junior left tackle Jim Davis pinched a nerve in his neck yesterday at practice behind Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
"I went out and hit somebody and dropped my head and pinched a nerve," Davis said.
Davis is expected to miss only two practices, Lynn Bott, director of sports medicine said.
There were no new developments concerning the five players head coach Bob Valesente is holding out of practice because of academic questions.
Valesente put the Jayhawks through a $2^{1 / 2}$ hour practice that emphasized the team's physical conditioning.
"We have three weeks before our first game and we've got to get into playing condition." Valesente said.
Rivers may not play
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Notre Dame basketball star David Rivers, injured in a weekend automobile accident, might not recover in time to play in the 1986-87 season, a hospital spokesman said yesterday.
Rivers, a guard who transformed a sluggish team into a fast-
breaking one in his first two years, was listed in stable condition after surgery for a severe abdominal cut suffered in the accident Sunday, said Barbara Barrett, a spokesman for Elkhart General Hospital, about 20 miles east of South Bend.
Barrett said that Kirby Gross, the surgeon who operated on Rivers, predicted a complete recovery but that the player's return for the coming season was questionable.
Rivers was injured when a van driven by former teammate Ken Barlow went out of control when Barlow swerved to avoid an oncoming car about 15 miles southeast of the university campus, police said. Rivers was thrown through the windshield when the van rolled over, they said.
Murray seeks trade
BALTIMORE — All-Star first baseman Eddie Murray, stung by criticism from a club owner, reportedly has asked to be traded from the Baltimore Orioles. However, his agent said yesterday that the dispute would be resolved soon.
According to the Baltimore Sun, the mainstay of the Orioles for 10 years is upset about how the club has treated his injuries this season and criticism in the press by Orioles owner Edward Bennett Williams.
This is the first time Murray has been on the disabled list since he joined the Orioles. In July, Murray pulled a hamstring and re-injured it while testing the leg on a strength machine.
Murray, a Gold Glove winner,
has a career average of .298.
From staff and wire reports.
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4
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, August 26, 1986
11
The University Daily
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$10-$460 WEKLY/J Up./Mailing Circulars? Quotes/Rossey. Sincerely interested rush Self-Address envelope: Network-CDF, POLB1072, Crystal Lake, IL 60014.
VOLUNTERS Headquarters. Lawrence's Crises
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BEOL PELLEN, a good natural food supplement Contains all vitamins, minerals, enzymes, probiotics and prebiotic compounds available at Round Corner Drug Co. 801 Mass or Community Mercury 700 Maine. Ask for Beol PELLEN.
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DEALING WITH THAT UNEASY FEELING which commonly occurs when, you walk into a room full of strangers, you see someone you like dressed up and looking at you. Other other social situations. Two-part workshop on Thursday, August 28 from 6:30-9:00 p.m. and Thursday, September 4 from 6:30-7:30 p.m. 100 Smith Hall. Free free registration. Presented by Access Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall, 844-4644
Douglas County Rape Victim Support Services now taking applications for volunteer advocates. Applications available at Headquarters, 1419 N. Broadway, Suite 200, Dayton, Ohio. Meet Wednesday, September 10, 7:30 PM
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Protection Services
Management Services
HILLVIEW APT
1745 W. 24th
841-5797
NOW LEASING, FOR FALL!
starting at
Classified Ads
$250
Now taking applications for 86-87 school year. Discover cooperative living, it makes sense. Private room, evening meal, free laundry and kitchen available for members use, equal sharing of housework. democratic participatory House government. Sunflower. Student Co-op house.
Serious female student share house private room, central air, TV, kitchen equipped Dishwasher, microwave, walk to campus, call Monroe at 841-4478.
832 YAMAHA TOWNY Perfect condition, looks and runs well. Must see to appreciate it. 606 Old Route. 906 Old Route.
1985 Honda Spree, red, low mileage, like new. $390 or
best offer. 842/323-7890
- Plymouth Horizon For Sale 4 cylinders, 48V,
or AM radio, AM radio, 30MP. Price
Call 795-6965.
19 Gal fish tank with stand and all other equipment included. 842-6659
73 Garo Tuanpo PS_BP,CAB/AFM Cas, Great school
73 car $1000 B O 479-4726
Antique oak partners desk with glass top. Excellent condition $250.8437727
Council Books, Platybus Press, eticum M. 'Sai'
Council Books, Platybus Press, eticum M. 'Sai'
Council Books, Platybus Press, eticum M. 'Sai'
COMIC BOOKS, Science Fiction, Games at
Kwality Coaches, 1111 MASS, 843-7239
Dishesaver Kenmore Portable Excellent buy,
like new Call after 5 p.m. $160 Frarie Village
Store
Electric Smith-Corona typewriter Excellent condition Used very little. Php 843-7792, after 5.
iPhone/Very little iPhone. fm: 654-732. Host is
FOR SALE. Six Component System Must hear to
Furniture - bookshelves, desks, chairs. Open seven days a week. Boy's Bed's Antiques and Antiques.
Motobleone 10 speed with accessories, great condition,
$185. Call 841-7614
New Sawai S-117 Tower Speakers, 160 watts $155 each. Kenwood KW-1300 stereo Amplifier, watts $275 each. Aiva top of the line XL20 Pro with tape deck. Leave message 841-714-6030.
Oriental print chair $45. Burgundy small print foam cushion intros double bed $10 - 749-5310
PLYMOUTH THIRP SHOP for used clothing,
thursday 12-30, Tuesday 0-4. Thurs.
12-12 to 19. 985 Verm.
SALES MICROCOMPUTER Lawrence's largest computer store, COMPUTER OUTLET, lets a personable, aggressive salesperson. Work in the same office as an employee for part time work available. Requires Micro familiarity.
Join the sharper computer team in NE Kansas.
Salary commensalize, with experience. Send resume to COMPUTER OUTLET, 894 New Hamphire, Lawrence KS, 65044 EOE/ME/F
Technics Telecom, 600, receive auto, furniturable tape deck, 00 speakers, 2 years old, hardly used. Fax machine available.
Western Civilization Notes: Now on Sale! Makes sense to use them. (No new material needed.) For exam preparation. New Analysis of Western Civilization; available now at Tom Crescenzi, The Jayhawk Bookstore, and online at www.jayhawkbooks.com.
Companion Cook - To assist disabled KU staff member weekday afternoons, 10-15 hours a day, $4-5 per hour. Cooking experience and reliable transportation required. KU student preferrered.
Will buy one or two (400 or 200 model) Boston Acoustic Sneakers. Leave message 841-7614.
AUTO SALES
1971 Plymouth EX motor good tire, all in good condition. $400 1-242-9061
images runs good, reliable $499 842-3378
78 Yamaha Rd 400. Excellent shape and dependable transportation. Please call after 5 pm at 841-9975
Desperate. I need to sell Honda Civic 74. Best
of them! You see. Our car parking Lot X
the rest of the car's area.
1980 SAAB 900 Sunroof, 4 door Hatchback, FWD Michele, No Rust, Nr. B24/3420
Corpus Christi Catholic Church needs four nursery workers every one time on Sunday and two on Sunday for eighteen years of age and have own transportation. Early Childhood Education field prefers teachers.
LOST/FOUND
3.000 GOVENMENT JOBS List.
3.000 GOVENMENT JOBs Now Hiring Call 816-765-4000
Ext. R4148
2 part time positions at Harwood Meats.
Job location: Portsmouth from 6 a.m. - 3:30 p.m.
Must be in appearance.
HELP WANTED
Lost 8.20 rust velco wallet between Naismith and Learned Hall 749-479-6
Data-entry position, half time requires familiarity with computer entry, proven reliability and competence in data entry. Experience with established BASIC program to enter handwritten data. Prefer formal grammar training. Req's Master's degree in any applicable field available and resume to Research Assistant, AX31BRI Terrace, Lawrence, Kansas, 60444
Babygirl wanted for 3 month old baby. Babyfairt hours at 20 hours per week. Call Saly 864-4560
16 month old active toddler needs sitcomer on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 12 a.p. Must be non-smoker with transportation Went local for an appointment. Required Call 408-355-7484 or after 10 a.m.
Graduate Assistance position. Prefer microcomputer and or production experience, graduate degree in computer science or related month. Starts immediately. Apply at Instruational Tech Center, Hall Bayle, HA148 860-307
Clark-Teypter in East Asian Language and Cultures (12-15 hours) or international Theater Studies Center (5-7 hours). Work study approved. For details, call 8643100.
sanure, gentle nonmama needed for all-day
daycare of one toddler and housekeeping from
sept. thru May, excl. Christmas holidays. Reply
Box DD Staffer-Flint
Now hiring Mass St. Deli food service employees.
Must have 1 year experience and daytime availability. Starting payment $3.75 per hr plus approximately $25 per hour for delivery or delivery by phone (Josh's Smokhouse).
Local moving company needs drivers, packers and
expert help. Please preferred $50 and up!
Call (817) 624-3925.
Part time housecleaners wanted. You enjoy cleaning and are matriculated, Buckingham Palace is interested in your talents. Call 842-6294. Must be available over breaks.
MARC, the association of local governments, is looking for fall and spring student interns in the fields of journalism, English, and communications. Students will learn about accounting. Learn what the business world is really like and acquire the experience you need to get a better job in professional activities. These are not "go-for" positions. Students with communications background will write articles and economic and market analysis for public relations department or for the Regional Recycling Program. Those with business, economic and market analysis for public relations department or for the Research Data Center. Accounting Students will perform program reviews and audits of MARC's projects. Contact Mary Beth Mergedh at 818-474-2424.
post advertising material on campus. Write College Distributors, 32 Pembroke Trail, Napoleon
Student hourly position, 15-20 hours per week
Rural emergency services
For hire at business request. No hours required
reliable transportation available daily, good communication skills and ability to make decision
A431 Brixton Territory
A431 Brixton Territory
10-4 weekdays. Application deadline Aug. 19.
The Audio-Visual Center is hiring Audio-Visual Assistants on Work Study and regular hourly Experience preferred, but not required. Apply in person at 17 Lippincott Hall. Equal Opportunity.
The Institute for Public Policy and Business Research has telephone interviewer openings for the months of September and October. Applicants must have a Bachelor's degree in a field capable and able of precise, accurate work. A pleasant and clear voice is essential. All interviews should be completed with experience in interviewing or working with the general public desired. Help for morning, afternoon and evening shifts is not needed. Interested applicants should send resumes.
The University of Kansas Budget Office has a position opening for a continuous half time supervisor, responsible to assist in the preparation of the University's budgets and other financial reports, do word projections, and perform other duties.
senior or graduate student status and good written ad communication skills $140 to $480 per month for a half-time appointment. Closing date is September 5, 1986. Start date is flexible. For inquiries contact the budget officer of Applications available in 318 South Halton.Equal Opportunity Employer
assist in the preparation of the University's budgets and other financial reports, do word processing, send resumes to the job site or receptionist dates. This position requires senior or graduate student status and good writ-
Wanted maintenance person, Duties include general maintenance of two bedside cabinets and one office. Must be a.m., 11 a.m., Mon-Fri and 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Apply to: 179 Mass. above Buffalo Bob's Bed & Bath.
WE HAVE THE IDEAL JOHN FOR THE STUDENT WORKING IN MAINS OFFICE. We work Monday, Wednesday, Friday or Tuesday/Thursday, 9-2 11-5 RUNA ZONE. If you need WAEs you apply to manager after a certain period.
MAKE HUNDREDS WEEKLY MAILING
CIRCULARS! FULL/PART/TIME, RUSHI SELF
ADDRESSED STAMPED ENVELOPE. A. 1, 1021
CITY, SUITE 368 DBF. Q. STUDIO CY.
A. 1090
McDONALY IS HIRING Quick, clean, quality-minded individuals to work daytime hours, 10 to 30 hours a week. Previous McDonald's employees encouraged to apply. We provide uniforms, half-prepared meals, and flexible scheduling. 901 West 6th Street. No phone calls please. EOE/A
Garden House
half time temporary position to assist with ongoing research involving persons with disabilities. Req. Master's degree, currently enrolled, able to work flexible hours, and now available transportation. Prefer job with transportation unit. Job will apply in person at AA23 Bristol Terrace, 1019 Boston Ave., Boston, MA 02118. Application deadline: August 29 EOE/AA
Registered Nurse Unique opportunity to use your assessment skills to see homebound patients. On call one evening per week and every fifth day of the week. Call Doctor in County VA 843-780- EOE
CHISUMS SUN N is looking for young women to develop a modeling portfolio. Call 841-900-8000 or visit chisumsun.org Daylight Dagen at 279 Massachusetts. We now serve baskery items in addition to our dandys and jewelry.
Add class, comfort, & privacy to your car with
unlined windows. For app call 841 777-6271. Student
phone: 841-777-3905.
Enroll now in Midwest Driving School! Receive driver's license in three weeks without patrol testing, upon successful completion, transportation provided. 841-7749
BUS.PERSONAL
Rent' 19.0* Tour $ T 28.98 a month Curtis
Martinus H W 2rld 482 8757 M sat 9:30
Munich H W 2rld 482 8757 M sat 9:30
Downtown of R & R Albums—42 or less. Also collectors items, Sat & Sun only. 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Quintailts 811 New Hampshire. Buy, Sell, or Trade all music styles.
- Class openings T.TH A.M.
F.M W.F.P.M.
THE FAR SIDE
- Certified teachers
- Licensed coop pre-school
Lawrence Community
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa, I.D. and of course, fine portraits. Swells Studio 749-1611
Modeling, theatrical and art profiles Slides or prints High quality, low prices Sweets
Nursery
New York Times
Daily (Mon.-Fri.)
on Campus Delivery
Aug.25-Dec.19
$29.99
N.Y. Times
P.O. Box 1721
Lawrence, KS 66044
for Sunday Service or more info call
841-5073
Rate Adjusted for later orders.
Quality furniture doesn't have to be expensive. Quality stores from $118, student desks from $99, dressers from $69, bookshelves from $49, chair from $199, bookcases from $39, lamps from $19.95, and much more. Furniture is available online.
YAIT ON A SHIRT! Custom silk-screen printing, T-shirts, pierces and caps SHIRTAP! YAIT ON A SHIRT! Custom silk-screen printing, T-shirts, pierces and caps SHIRTAP!
CINEMACÉ FICAT (Cinemacé)
BUSINESS PLAY (Business Play)
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The sun is out and the sunlampes are in at the
Sunrise for 0722 Mass. 8431 Mon 01T 15:30
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SERVICES OFFERED
Alternative counseling use archtypal images visualization. dream analysis Sue Westwind
Black and White film processing, contact sheets,
and enlargements. Push and Pull processing also
available THE PICTURE WORKS 13th and
Haskell. 843-0470
LLM Tailoring 907 Alterations and Custom Made Clothing 1007 Massachusetts, Hear En
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in
Lawrence, B41-5716.
HARPER
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SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL will prepare you, upon successful course completion, to get your driving license and pass your driving Transportation provided. 841.2316 Toltec. Better grade schools.
Tutoring Better grades from better com precession, help get improving your study skills.
Used camera and photographic equipment bought, sold, and traded THE PICTURE
MATH TUOR since 1976, M.A., 40 minutes.$8.
843-9023
TYPING
1.1,000 pages. No job too small or too large
affordable and affordable typing. Judy: 842-945-943
and Jerry: 842-945-942
, plus Typing. Call Terry 842-7454 or 843-2671
5:30 to 10 p.m. Resumes, books, thesis, law review papers, letters, term papers. Sharp ZX 305
Miniature Electronics
A3 professional typing. Term papers. Thesis.
Dissertations. Resumes. e.g. Using IBM
XML.
24-Hour Typing 12th semester in Lawrence
Resume Writing papers. Good to campus-
ally use. Apply by February 5th.
DISSERTATIONS / TIBEES / TIME PAPERS
Typing, Editing and Graphics ONE DAY Service available on shorter student papers up to 30 pages ! or Kathy, Mommy's Magazine, 348.328-3120
8.26
© 1995 Universal Press Syndicate
Absolutely Your Type! Word processing, typing
and formatting. 855-347-9220. same day service
available 444 illinois.
"He's dead, all right — beaked in the back ... and you know this won't be easy to solve."
Bv GARY LARSON
DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced
JEANETTE SHAPFER - Typing Service
TRANSCRIPTION also, standard cassette tape
443-8877
Theses resumes, and papers
WRITING LIFELEVEL 811.3460
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, term sheets, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter quali-
tion, spelling corrected 842-7247
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes HAVE M.S. Degree 841-6254
EXPERIENCED TYPIST, Term papers, theses
EXPERIENCED TYPIST, Term papers, correct spellring
81.954.954, Mrs. Wright
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing, manuscripts, resumes, letters, letterheads, etc.
WANTED
6 WM, law student, seeks study room M or F room for large two bedroom apartment 1/2 block away. Resumes to: kathryn.jackson@cbs.edu responsible. 1/2 of month to room rent and abilities. Available Sept. 1st. Contact p.乔 30188
Ambitionous person to call on campus organizations with customized, imprimted party favors. Contact us at ambitionsupport.com
Clean and sociable student for a beautiful 2 BHT AT, at 119 Kentucky, furnished and paid up.
Female Rnmatmate needs to share attractive
bedroom apartments $17.50 plus 1/2 utilities. Call
(800) 635-4392
I WANT AN ALL-SPORTS TICKET NOW. Call
843 8454 for alam
Roommate to share half of expenses for BR Apt 4 only 2 binks: from campas: $12.13 rent includes utilities! plus phone, furniture, etc. Call 842 560 61-2 p.m. or stop by 1423 Ohio Bd.
Wanted: Non-nominee roommate to share
ig, furnished 2 Bdmm. Ap. 2 Bkks. from campus
off street parking $159.00 plus 1/2 low heat
414-4865
Student work-study position on campus
publisher seeks help 10-15 hourweek to open and
distribute daily mail, answer phones, type,
and assist in various duties. MUST be eligible for
work-study. $3,643.84 per week depending on ex-
ample. Call 212-766-1490 or email careshr.com.
$199 Carnarth, to complete application by 82966.
The Topeka Capital-Journal
Wanted full and part time delivery drivers. Hourly wage plus commission, must have own transportation. Apply in person. Pizza Shoppe, got Kasold. Westridge shopping center
from
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12
Tuesday, August 26, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
Students to try out for baseball team
By RIC ANDERSON
"I just thought I'd give it a shot."
Ask any of the 60-odd men who attended the Jayhawk baseball walk on tryout meeting yesterday why he was there, and that probably would be his answer.
Todd Fowler, Winnetka, Ill., freshman, said that was why he was there. He said he decided to try out after a friend made the team as a walk on last year.
Fowler, a right-hander who can play first base, catcher and left field, said he was eager to bring his talents to the team.
"I'm a pretty consistent bitter," he said. "I can get a piece of the ball. Also, bunting is a strength."
The high point of Fowler's career so far was playing for his high school team, which made it to the sectional finals. But, he said, he always reaches higher.
"If you play college ball, it's one more achievement," he said.
Pat Murphy, a transfer student from Tarkio, Mo., said playing college baseball meant something different to him.
"Being on a Big Eight team, even as a role player, you get publicity," he said. Role player refers to a position such as designated hitter or pinch runner.
Murphy isn't new to trying out for baseball teams.
"I tried out for the Mets, Royals and the Cubs this summer, and I spent two years as a college player at
Baseball
Tarkio College," he said.
Murphy said the professional clubs he tried out for had spoken to Jayhawk baseball head coach Marty Pattin about him.
"I feel like maybe I have an edge," Murphy said.
Not all of the men at the meeting had as much experience.
"I've never played baseball, but I've played softball for a long time," said Tim Nisly. Hutchinson junior.
However, Nilsly said, he thought he could make the transition from softball to baseball and perhaps make the team.
"I think I have as good a chance as some of these other guys, just because I'm a little bit older," he said.
"It'd be great if I made it. I think it'd be a lot of fun," he said. "I'd have to do some playing with my priorities, though. Right now I have classes that I'd have to change if I made the team."
Tryouts begin at 4 p.m. today at Quigley Field. The second session is scheduled for Sept. 5, and players who have shown they have what it takes to make the team will be asked back to practice with the Jayhawks.
Dan Ruettimann/KANSAN
Al Feresheti, assistant coach for the Kansas track team, demonstrates proper javelin form. Feresheti went through a drill with Dain Kerny. Lyons
freshman, and Melvin Rohr, Ellsworth freshman, yesterday near Memorial Stadium.
McEnroe to challenge at Open
United Press International
NEW YORK — Now that he has convinced himself he can't win the U.S. Open, John McEnroe would like to prove that he, too, can be wrong.
The Open begins its arduous two-week run today at the National Tennis Center. No one can deny that Big Mac is back.
Although he is seeded in the middle of the pack at No. 9, MeEnroze is receiving far more attention than any of the 256 other singles players.
Just how ready McEnroe is for this ultimate test may be determined today. He is scheduled to play an opening-round match against a fellow New Yorker, Paul Anacone.
McEnore defeated Annacone in straight sets last week in the
Hamlet Challenge Cup at Jericho, N.Y., but Annacone is a strong player, ranked 20th in the world, and represents a particularly difficult first-round opponent.
McEnroe is playing in his fourth tournament after a six-month sabbatical, during which he got married and became a father.
He is as demanding as ever on himself, yet he is trying to convince himself he no longer has to be No.1 to find peace.
"Your priorities change and you do things differently," he said recently.
On another occasion, he said,
"Once you've been No. 1, it's not easy losing to guys you shouldn't lose to. Part of the problem was that I was trying to come back better than ever. Now I feel the sooner I lower my expectations the better off I'll be. I won't be as
frustrated."
After the first match of his comeback, when he struggled to beat Marko Ostoja at Stratton Mountain, Vt. McEnroe said, "My odds of winning the Open went from 2-1 to a million to one." More recently, he stated, "I have to be realistic I wouldn't give myself a chance to win. In the back of my mind I thought I'd come back and play better than I have. But I'm not in sync. Maybe I took it for granted that I'd be just as good as before.
Although he is a four-time Open champion with a match record of 50-5 in the national championship, the 27-year-old left-hander insists he is not ready to win this year.
"When you haven't played for six months, you find your concentration level is in and out. In the past I could question line calls and get it back, but now I can't."
College season kicks off tomorrow
Tragedy follows Alabama coach
United Press International
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
Alabama Coach Ray Perkins returns
to Giants Stadium followed by
traced again.
Perkins coached the New York Giants from 1979 to 1983. During that time, defensive tackle Troy Archer died in a car accident and running back Doug Kotar developed a brain tumor that later killed him.
This is Perkins' first visit to Giants Stadium since leaving the National Football League to coach his alma mater. But Alabama, which meets Ohio State tomorrow night in the Kickoff Classic, opens the college football season against a grim backdrop.
On April 28, running back George Scruggs was killed in an auto accident. Sunday, starting defensive end
William Ryles was declared brain dead after collapsing at practice last week because of a blood clot in the brain.
"It's been a difficult week, probably the most difficult week of my life." Perkins said yesterday at a news conference. "I've gone through some tough situations before. I went through two tough situations here with the Giants with two players. But this has been the toughest week because this happened on the football field and the other three didn't."
As for Ohio State, Coach Earle Bruce dismissed two players for the season Thursday and suspended another for tomorrow's game Two seniors, starting safety Terry White and reserve tailback Roman Bates, were removed from the No. 9 Buckeyes. Starting outside linebacker Derek Isaman, a
sophomore, was suspended.
sopportune.
"No one likes to do this," said Bruce, who did not specify his reasons for the removals or the suspension. "One of these young men (White) is a tremendous football player, but he decided to go another way and he is no longer with us."
In 1981, Perkins guided the Giants to their first playoff appearance in 17 years. Near the end of the next season, he announced he was leaving to succeed Bryant at Alabama.
"I came here to carry the Giants to the Super Bowl," he said. "We didn't do that. I think they're doing all right without me and I'm very happy for them."
“It’s nice to be back. It brings back some good and some bad memories because we had some good and bad times here.”
---
Iconographics
ORIGINAL
MOVIE POSTERS
Iconographics
ORIGINAL
MOVIE POSTERS
MOVIE POSTER SALE
Lobby Cards
Still Photos
rare classics
Visa, MasterCard,
Amex accepted
contemporary releases
In the Kansas Union Gallery
Mon.-Fri., Aug. 25-29
9 a.m.-5 p.m. each day
---
Lobby Cards Still Photos rare classics Visa, MasterCard, Amex accepted contemporary releases
Iconographics
ORIGINAL MOVIE POSTERS
MOVIE POSTER SALE
Lobby Cards
Still Photos
rare classics
Visa, MasterCard,
Amex accepted
contemporary releases
In the Kansas Union Gallery
Mon.-Fri., Aug. 25-29
9 a.m.-5 p.m. each day
Sponsored by Student Union Activities
501®
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830 Mass • 843-6155 • M-S 9-6 Thurs. 9-9 Sunday 12:30-5:30
Levi's
Foreign rackets
A growing number of U.S. collegiate tennis programs are recruiting in foreign countries to bring talent and variety to their teams.
Story, page 11
Drug testing soon may be available in the privacy of your own home. A Dallas firm is marketing a drug test that will be sold over-the-counter to concerned, or curious, consumers.
Take-home test
Story, page 7
Don't believe it until it happens, but the National Weather Service says that the high today will be in the 70s and that it may get down to 50 degrees tonight. Sure.
Call of the mild
Details, page 3
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Vol. 97, No. 4 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Wednesday August 27,1986
Soldiers bury dead of volcano tragedy
U.N. reports 1,543 killed in W.Africa
The Associated Press
SOUBOUM, Cameroon — Soldiers,
their faces covered with bandanas to
mask the stench, worked yesterday
to complete the burial of more than
1,500 victims of a volcanic eruption
of lethal gases.
Witnesses to the disaster in the Cameroon Highlands said they saw the ground covered with corpses and entire villages devoid of life.
Most survivors fled this mountain village five miles from the Nos volacano, leaving herds of longhorned cattle bloated and rotting in the fields of this west African country.
In Nios, which had a population of 1,200, only one woman and her child survived, authorities said.
When the first group of reporters reached the stricken area in northwestern Cameroon, army units had buried most of the victims in shallow graves that marked the countryside
"If you had come two or three days ago, you would have seen corpses in the same way you see the cattle now," said Lt. Gen. James Tataw, the chief of Cameroon's ground forces.
On Thursday, at about 9 p.m., a volcanic tremor unleashed a huge bubble of gas that burst through the surface of Lake Nios with a thunderous clap, sending deadly
gases over a 10-square-mile area where 5,000 people lived.
"The smell was like cooking with kitchen gas," said Chia David Wambong, a farmer. "Everyone started coughing and spitting up blood."
In Geneva, the United Nations Disaster Relief Organization reported 1,543 bodies had been counted and others were being discovered. On Monday the government placed the death toll at more than 1,200.
Israeli army medical teams said the fumes also killed more than 7,000 cattle.
Tataw said relatives had buried many of the victims before his army units arrived Sunday, making an accurate count impossible.
A main concern was preventing an epidemic that could be bolstered by the decaying carcasses of cattle and other livestock. Tataw said bulldozers were on their way to dispose of them.
Viewed from a helicopter, lemon-shaped Lake Nios had the reddish-brown color of the clay that had been churned up from the bottom. A few yards away was a small pond of brilliant blue water.
Gideon Taka of the Ministry of Information and Culture in the provincial capital of Bamenda said word of
Experts unsure what lethal gas killed villagers
By SHANE A. HILLS
Staff writer
A KU professor, whose specialty is organic chemistry, speculated yesterday that hydrogen sulfide and carbon dioxide were the probable gases that killed 1.534 villagers in Cameroon on Friday.
But Albert W. Burgstahler, the professor, said he did not rule out hydrogen cyanide as another possibility.
See CAMEROON, p. 5, col. 1
Experts investigating the gases that escaped from Lake Nios are not certain exactly what gases killed the villagers of the west African country.
The New York Times reported yesterday that an educated guess had surfaced: hydrogen sulfide and carbon dioxide. But recent reports indicate that because of the scabs left on the bodies of the victims, experts are beginning to see hydrogen cyanide as another possibility.
"These gases weigh more than air, and will drift close to the ground." Burgstahler said. "Hydrogen sulfide is very insidious in high concentrations. A concentration of less than one percent (in air) is lethal. It could make you pass out in a hurry. A person could asphyxiate with only a few breaths.
"Usually you can smell hydrogen sulfide and get away from it. It smells like rotten eggs. Was surprised about the disaster in Cameron because usually you'd have enough warning to get away."
Burgstahler said hydrogen cyanide probably would not exist in a high enough concentration from a natural source to kill that many people.
See GAS, p. 5, col. 2
Disaster strikes closer to home for 2 students
By SHANE A. HILLS
Staff writer
On television they saw a disaster, and the death toll was rising daily.
First it was "at least 40," according to the New York Times.
It then became official: more than 1,500 had perished - asphyxiated in their sleep under a dense cloud of toxic gas.
They have been hearing since Friday that an unidentified natural earth rumble triggered the escape of toxic gases from the bottom of Lake Nios, which lies in a volcanic crater in northwest Cameroon.
Of the 10 million citizens of Cameroon, a country about the size of California in western Africa, two are students at the University of Kansas — Bichin-a numb AmTae Awasom, his cousin.
The cloud drifted through a valley only 50 miles from their hometown of Bamenda, in the northwestern province of Cameroon.
"I was just hoping the gas didn't spread very far," Ambam, a senior, said yesterday.
They made telephone calls halfway around the world to get the story from family and friends.
"If it had spread to Bamenda, it would have reached a densely populated area and killed thousands. And that's where my parents live.
"But one of my parents called to say it was not so bad."
Awasom, a sophomore, said he knew people in Wum, one of three villages most severely affected by the toxic gas.
"I have friends in Wum whom I haven't been in touch with," he said. "But the phone system in Wum is not very good, so that's not unusual. I'm not worried about them yet."
---
A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z.
Tse Awasom
Bichin-a-nu Ambam
Ambam said he was curious about whether the gas was going to affect the food and livestock that people in the cities and villages eat.
Awaison and the Vendetta over the cellphone with a friend who worked for the government in Yaoundo, Cameroon's capital city. Yaoundo is about 600 miles north of Lola Nye.
"He said the information being broadcasted was very confusing," Awasom said. "But he did know that the army was digging graves."
Neither Awasam nor Ambam had ever been to Lake Nios, they said, but Awasam understands a tradition about the lake.
"The natives of Cameroon believe the lake is sacred," he said. "Swimming and fishing in it are prohibited. Europeans who didn't know this have tried to swim in the lake, and one or two have drowned.
"The natives won't even fish their bodies out of the water. I never went to the lake because I could not make use of it."
Star turtle floats off after rain
Staff writer
By NICOLE SAUZEK
The rain was heavy in July near Onion Creek in the southeast Kansas county of Montgomery.
In fact, it poured.
It poured so much that Omar floated away.
Omar, whose moments in the KU spotlight, were brief but bright, wandered back to the land she loves, possibly forever. Worse, she may never be seen or heard beeping again.
TURKEY
Omar, a 60-pound alligator snapping turtle, has been officially listed as lost since she escaped from the electronic tracking system researchers were using to trace her in Onion Creek.
Omar is one of only five alligator snapping turtles ever found in Kansas during the last century, and one of only two found alive. Omar, who was turned over to KU's Museum of Natural History, was the first of her breed to be handled by museum employees in the state.
Omar and friend, Joe Collins, a KU Museum of Natural History zoologist. Omar has been missing since July when he floated away in heavy rains.
Doug Blex, a Kansas Fish and Game Commission worker, found Omar in April in Onion Creek — which is southwest of Independence — and gave her to Collins.
"Whether Omar walked upstream or floated downstream, we may never know," said Joe Collins, a zoologist from the museum. "Omar just disappeared, and I'm afraid she's gone for good."
She also is the first to be lost.
File photo
After she was studied briefly, Omar became a star for an afternoon on Museum Day this spring. She was the favorite of adoring masses, a much-photographed celebrity turtle.
But fortune was fickle, and Omar found herself tagged and returned to the small creek where she once lived. She wore an electronic tracking device, a reminder of her moments of glory.
Omar was tracked by Marty Capron, a biologist from Oxford, Kan. for several days until almost 23 inches of rain around the creek area caused water levels to rise over the banks, making signals impossible to receive and Omar's living conditions unbearable.
injured. Aligator snapping turtles usually
stay in waters anywhere from 2½ to 6 feet, Capron said. When water levels in Onion Creek swam from 15 to 20 feet, Omar traveled to safety, possibly all the way to Oklahoma 10 miles downstream.
After the rains subsided, the search began. Capron camped along the creek, searching four miles downstream. Property owners upstream denied Capron permission to search.
Dangerous wading up and down Onion Creek provided no sign of Omar or Alice, as Capron calls her, and his search was abandoned.
It was then that Omar was declared lost.
Though researchers are disappointed about losing Omar, hopes remain high in finding another snapper just like her or bigger.
"She could be anywhere by now
People assume that turtles basically lay around all day. In reality, they travel great distances," said Capron. "Alice could walk 125 yards in 45 minutes. That's not bad for a 60-pound reptile."
"I've not optimistic about finding her ever again," said Capron, who still plans to start looking for Omar again in September. "Alice liked to move around a lot between midnight and sunrise — she never sat still."
"Right now, I'd guess she's just happy to be anywhere that we're not bugging her."
Experts study radiation
Chernobyl may kill 20,000
United Press International
VIENNA — Experts studying a Soviet report on the Chernobyl disaster projected yesterday that more than 20,000 people could die of cancer as a result of the accident, but some questioned the Soviet data used to make the estimates.
Earlier Western interpretations of the Soviet report on the disaster to the International Atomic Energy Commission said as many as 6,500 people could die of cancer caused by the accident.
But the initial translation of the report from Russian into English omitted the projected effects of exposure of the Ukrainian food chain to the radioactive element cesium-137.
Cesium-137 fission takes 30 years to lose half its radiation, while most of
The effect of cesium-137, a radioactive by-product of nuclear fission, is considered more significant than all the other types of radiation released by the plant, which was crippled by an explosion and fire on April 26.
the other types of radiation released have a half-life measured in days or months.
The figures were included in a 380-page report issued by the Soviets for use by 550 nuclear experts at a conference on the Chernobyl accident sponsored by the International Atomic Energy Agency.
The nuclear experts stressed that the estimates were only mathematical projections based on Soviet figures of the amount of radiation released by the damaged reactor.
Moscow presented the report on the disaster, which has been called the world's worst atomic power accident, to the agency last week. The figures on cesium-137 were accidentally omitted in an earlier English translation and were made public in a draft report released Monday.
An annex on health effects of the accident estimated the collective dose of exposure to cesium-137 by people living in the Ukraine and in the neighboring Soviet republic of
Byelorussian may lead to an increase in the cancer mortality rate not exceeding 0.4 percent of the natural mortality rate from malignant neoplasms.
A high-ranking Western nuclear power expert, who spoke on the condition he not be identified further, said the figures meant that during the next 70 years, as many as 20,000 people in the area could die from cancer resulting from exposure to cesium from Chernobyl. Another 6,500 could die of external exposure to radiation, he said.
U. S. nuclear power and health officials at the conference reportedly placed the cancer death toll caused by the radioactive isotopes from Chemnobly even higher Frank Cogel, a Nuclear Regulatory Commission official attending the conference, earlier told the Washington Post that the Soviet report indicated that 30,000 to 40,000 deaths would occur.
But the Western experts are con-
See CHERNOBYL, p. 5, col. 3
StudEx's action called improper
By KIRK KAHLER
Staff writer
Five senators said the committee violated a recently amended section of the Senate rules and regulations when it voted to postpone the hearings — known as "revenue code" hearings — until fall 1987.
The Student Senate Executive Committee acted improperly when they voted Sunday to postpone important budget hearings, some student senators said yesterday.
But other Senate officials, including David Espstein, student body president, defended the committee's action, saying it only used its power to act for the full Senate in an emergency.
The senators protested StudEx's action in a letter to Stephanie Quincy, StudEx chairman. The letter, dated yesterday, also was sent to David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, and Caryl Smith, dean of student life. A copy also was delivered to the Kansan newsroom.
"It is obvious that the Senate Executive Committee's action at its most recent meeting is inconsistent with Student Senate's decision on this matter," the letter said.
Those who signed the letter were Brady Stanton, Nunemaker senator; Jason Krakow, Nunemaker senator and Minority Affairs Committee chairman; Martie Aaron, Liberal Arts and Sciences senator; Cindy Cohen, Nunemaker senator; and Kelly Milligan, Nunemaker senator. Nunemaker senators represent freshmen and sophomores in the college.
The senators said that in legislation passed in the spring, the full Senate declared that revenue code hearings must end by Sept. 15 and that StudEx could not change
the schedule.
Revenue code hearings are held every two years to determine how much money campus organizations receive. Student Senate allocates the funds for these groups by dividing up the student activity fee. Students pay the fee, now $28, at the beginning of each semester
"We were within the boundaries." Quincy said.
However, the senators and other Senate officials were unable to produce copies of the original legislation. In addition, an updated, printed version of the rules has not been compiled yet, officials said.
By Senate rules, StudEx handles the mechanical functions of Senate, such as scheduling meetings and putting items on committee and Senate agendas. The rules give StudEx the power to act for the full Senate when classes are not in session.
And, Senate officials said, StudEx has the power to act for the full Senate in an emergency.
Quincy said StudEx faced an emergency because not enough time remained for student groups to prepare budgets or for the senate to consider them. Therefore, the revenue code hearings had to be postponed, she said.
However, Aaron said StudEx was using its power simply to overturn a previous Senate decision.
The Senate voted in the spring to move its elections from November to April. Elections will be held in November and in April 1987.
Tim Henderson, Senate Finance Committee chairman and a StudEx member, said he voted to postpone the hearings because of the possible motives of political gain that might influence senators considering approval of the budgets.
2
Wednesday, August 27, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
News Briefs
Assad promises aid to Gadhafi if U.S. launches strike on Libya
BEIRUT, Lebanon — Syrian President Hafez Assad promised Libyan leader Moammar Gaddafi that his country would aid Libya if the United States launches another strike against the North African nation, both governments said yesterday.
Assad's promise of unspecified aid — contained in a statement released in Tripoli, Libya and Damascus, Syria — came a day after U.S. officials indicated that Gadhafi was planning new terrorist attacks and warned that the United States would take action to thwart him.
"The two leaders agreed to confront the provocations by America," the statement issued by Libya and Syria said. "President Assad reassured the colonel that he was placing all Syria's resources on the side of Libya."
President Reagan ordered a raid in retaliation for Libya's purported support of terrorism 10 days after the bombing of a a West Berlin nightclub that killed two U.S. servicemen. The United States said Libya was involved in that attack.
In Moscow, the official news agency Tass said yesterday that U.S. accusations of Libyan involvement in terrorism were false and that it was clear the United States was planning a new strike against Libya.
Libya and Syria are the Soviet Union's closest allies in the Middle East. Middle East observers said Syria would at least provide Libya with spare parts or ammunition and launch a campaign in the Arab world to rally support for Tripoli if the United States launched another strike.
HONOLULU — Deposed Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos, who marked six months in self-imposed exile yesterday, has been granted permission to stay in the United States at least another year.
Marcos allowed to stay in U.S.
in the United States, district director of the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service, extended the routine six-month parole visa of Marcos, 68, and his entourage through 1987. It had been due to expire yesterday.
The extension also applies to the 120 to 140 noncitizens and family members who fled the Philippines with Marcos in February or joined him shortly afterwards, Craig said.
Mis, Craig said. Marcos and his party may travel freely in the United States, INS agent Ben Alexander said. But if they leave the country, they will have to apply again for parole status, he said.
The agency can extend the parole status indefinitely for Marcos, who now lives in a rented beachfront home with his wife Iwela in Honolulu. Craig said.
The Marmosets arrived in Hawaii on Feb. 26. They stayed at Hickam Air Force Base until March 24. Marcos has said he would prefer to remain in Hawaii if he cannot go back to the Philippines.
FBI requested to reopen inquiry
WASHINGTON — Four Democratic senators yesterday asked the FBI to reopen its investigation of charges that chief justice nominee William Rehnquist acted unethically as a lawyer before he joined the Supreme Court in 1971.
Democratic Sens. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts, Howard Metzenbaum of Ohio, Alan Cranston of California, and Paul Simon of Illinois wrote to Chairman Strom Thurmond, R.S.C., of the Senate Judiciary Committee and asked him to get the FBI to reopen its inquiry into whether Rehnquist defrauded his ill brother-in-law by setting up a trust account and then keeping it secret from him.
The three were among five Democrats on the committee who opposed Reinhquist's nomination earlier
cher justice.
The senators' letter referred to an Aug. 15 New York Times story that quoted Rehnquist's brother-in-law, Harold Dickerson Cornell, 73, of San Diego, for whom the trust account was set up in 1961 while Rehnquist was a lawyer in Phoenix.
this month when the committee voted 13-5 to recommend to the Senate that Rehnquist be approved as chief justice.
10 S. Korean officials named
SEFOU, South Korea — President Chun Doo Hwan yesterday replaced almost half of the 22-member Cabinet of South Korea, which has been jarred by a series of scandals and opposition protests.
series or selections. He served 10 of his 22 ministers after Prime Minister Lho Sho-yong and the other ministers resigned en masse yesterday morning to give Chun a free hand to form a new government.
hand to form a new government. Chun chained Prime Minister Lho and Kim Mahn je, economic planning minister, but replaced 10 others, including the foreign minister.
including the foreign intern. Chun has been under pressure to dismiss Cabinet members allegedly connected with a series of scandals, including a sex-torture case involving a detained dissident and a fire that partially destroyed Independence Hall.
dependence hall.
Half the new appointments were filled by members of the ruling Democratic Justice Party, indicating that it will play a bigger role in politics as the government and opposition camps tackle the issue of how to amend the constitution.
the 2018 campaign the past few months, Korea has been rocked by demonstrations with the opposition demanding constitutional change to allow presidential elections by popular vote.
New president named at NBC
NEW YORK — General Electric Co., the parent company of NBC, installed a G.E. financial specialist with no entertainment background as president of the peacock network yesterday to succeed programming wizard Grant Tinker.
Robert C. Wright, who was entrusted with $20.2 billion in assets as president of General Electric Financial Services, was named president and chief executive officer of NBC, effective Sept. 1.
John F. Welch Jr., chairman of the board and chief executive officer of G.E., will become chairman of NBC.
N
Tinker, whose entertainment programming background helped lift NBC to the No. 1 position for the first time this year, voluntarily stepped down after five years to devote his time to production interests.
Welch said Wright had an "unbroken track record of success" with G.E. and in his former position as president of Cox Cable Communications Inc.
five years. He was unanimous first choice to run NBC was obviously Grant Tinker." Welch said in a news conference at NBC that was sent closed circuit to NBC offices across the country and sent by satellite to about 200 NBC affiliate stations. "He made NBC No. 1, and we would have loved for him to stay."
Actor Ted Knight dies of cancer
LOS ANGELES — Actor Ted Knight, the white-haired comedian best known as the egotistical anchorman on "The Mary Tyler Moore Show," died of cancer yesterday. He was 62.
Knight won two Emmys for his portrayal of bumbling newscaster Ted Baxter, joining an all-star ensemble that included Mary Tyler Moore, Ed Asner, Betty White, Cloris Leachman, Valerie Harper and Gavin McLeod.
Publicist Henry Bollinger said that Knight died yesterday afternoon at his home in Pacific Palisades of cancer that was diagnosed about a year ago. He said the actor's wife, Dorothy, and three children were with him when he died.
Knight was born Tadeus Wladyslaw Konopka on Dec. 7, 1923, in Terryville, Conn., where he was raised. During his career he played more than 300 television roles. He also provided voices for hundreds of radio and TV commercials and cartoon shows.
From Kansan wires.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, August 27, 1986
3
News Briefs
Hearings set to start for 2 ex-KU students
Preliminary hearings for two former KU students arrested on cocaine-related charges are scheduled this morning in Douglas County District Court.
Robert F. Bell, 35, is charged with one count of selling cocaine. Kevin Sommer, 20, is charged with one count of possession of possession of cocaine.
Both were arrested late last month after a yearlong investigation that led to the arrest of 21 people.
The hearings will begin at 9 a.m. at the Justice and Law Enforcement Building, 11th and New Hampshire streets.
Honors post filled
Sharon Brehm, professor of psychology, will become the director of the College Honors Program and an associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences in January.
Brehm will replace David Katzman, director and an associate dean since 1981, who will resume teaching in the history department, said Robert Lineberry, dean of the college.
Lineberry made the selection July 31 after a committee of students and faculty made recommendations. A search for a new director began in the spring after Katzman decided to return to teaching Lineberry said.
Brehm joined the KU psychology department in 1975.
Ex-student to speak
Latin American Solidarity will start a fall education series with a rice and beans supper at 6 p.m. tomorrow at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
'After the supper, Rhonda Neugebauer, a former student and activist at the University of Kansas, will give a presentation titled, "An Update on the Nicaraguan Revolution."
Neugebauer returned Saturday from a two-week trip to Nicaragua, which was sponsored by the Latin American Studies Association.
The dinner and presentation is open to the public, but a donation of $1.50, to help pay for medical supplies for El Salvador and program expenses, is requested.
grand expensives This will be the first in a series of eight dinners and presentations
Where to call
Readers who have ideas for stories or photographs may call the Kansan at 864-430.
For ideas about campus and area coverage, ask for Abbie Jones, planning editor. For arts and entertainment ideas or On Campus items, ask for Grant Butler, arts editor.
For sports, ask for for Frank Hansel, sports editor, and for photographs, ask for Jacki Kelly, photo editor.
To report any problems or complaints, ask for Lauretta McMillen, editor, or Kady McMaster, managing editor.
Correction
Because of an editor's error, a story in yesterday's Kansan incorrectly stated the number of violent crimes that occurred in 1985. The number should have been 39.
Weather
Today will be mostly sunny with a high near 75. Winds will be from the north at 10 to 15 miles per hour. Tonight will be mostly clear with a low near 50.
From staff and wire reports.
Only parts of Towers remodeled
Some laud, others boo work
By NANCY BARRE
Amy Schwartzburg is happy with her remodeled apartment at Jayhawk Towers, but two floors away. Denise Stockton thinks she's getting a 'raw deal' in her old-looking room.
dear in her door looking round.
Ascending the staircase from the third floor of Tower B to the fifth floor one can see the difference.
The third floor apartments sport brand new beige carpeting, mini-blinds, lights, refrigerators.
On the fifth floor, things are dimmer and dingier. The carpet is a faded, spotted greenish-blue, the rooms have dim ceiling lamps and no dishwashers, and the refrigerators are only small cubes.
The office of student housing has spent about $306,000 on the apartments since the remodeling project began in the spring. In addition to redecorating some of the interiors and adding new appliances, the office has added a new roof to one building and waterproofed two others.
Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said KU, which has owned Jayhawker Towers since 1981, started the remodeling project in order to attract more tenants.
"We figured we'd spend a little money in order to get more people living there." Stoner said. "The
Some of the students with remodeled rooms are delighted, but others, whose rooms haven't been worked on, are a little disgruntled.
Occupancy in the towers already has increased by 150 students from last year, he said.
higher occupancy rate would then eventually cover the cost of remodeling."
'We've got this little tiny refrigerator, and they expect four people to use it, and everything just doesn't fit.'
Rina Taufan, Jakarta, Indonesia, junior
Schwartzburg, Lawrence junior, whose apartment has been redone, said she was pleased with the results. She belongs to the Pi Beta Phi sorority, which rented six apartments in the complex to house an overflow of members from the sorority house across the street.
"So far everything's been great. The new carpeting makes all the difference," Schwartzburg said.
"They're giving us a raw deal," Stockton said.
Other residents expressed dissatisfaction with the older, tiny refrigerators.
"We didn't get new lighting, new carpeting, a new refrigerator, or anything. I don't understand why some people got everything done, and we didn't get anything done."
"We've got this little tiny refrigerator, and they expect four people to use it," said Rina Taufan, Jakarta, Indonesia, junior, "and everything just doesn't fit."
Some rooms have been completely remodeled while others haven't received new carpeting. Stoner said was because the office wanted to remodel one floor at a time.
"We couldn't do everything, so we've tried to do a whole floor, or a whole tower at once, rather than one room here and one room there," he said.
FORD ORD
Although there is no projected completion date or estimated total cost for all the towers, Stoner said the housing office planned to continue with the remodeling project.
Brenda Steele/KANSAN
Facilities operations department employees T.J. Reyes, left, and Marvin Robb prepare the area around the Vietnam Memorial for landscaping Robb said that sod would be laid today and that shrubs would be planted
Program is tabled by NASA
soon. Reyes said the University planned to have the area landscaped in time for the first home football game, Sept. 13 when KU plays North Carolina.
Dirty job
By BRIAN SNYDER
The explosion of the space shuttle Challenger in January not only set the shuttle program back years, it also put the Journalist-in-Space selection process on hold indefinitely, the project's director said yesterday.
Staff writer
The goal of the Journalist-in-Space project is to choose and train a journalist to ride aboard a shuttle.
"NASA asked us to cease all selection activity on July 1," Eric Johnson, the director, said yesterday from Columbia, S.C. "and we informed the 40 semifinalists that we would comply with their wishes. We closed our office at that time."
Meanwhile, semifinalist don't know whether they'll ever get a chance to ride in space. Diane Eicher, a reporter for the Denver Post, said she didn't know whether or when the process would continue.
"I think the whole thing is done for but I like to hope it will get started again," Eicher said.
Johnson said the selection process would resume after NASA had approved a new design for the shuttle and had successfully completed two or three flights. It would be possible for the selection to continue before the end of the decade, he said.
In a letter to Richard Musser, KU associate professor of journalism and a regional selection project coordinator, Johnson said there probably would be a delay of several years before NASA would return to normal launch operations.
However, when an opportunity arises to ride the shuttle, the 40 national semifinalists would be contacted.
"Mankind will go on with space exploration," White said. "This is an opportunity to cover an important news story. The shuttle will be the press box. The program is shelved now, but it's still a viable project."
Eicher's feelings were echoed by Robert White, a journalist representing the Mexico, Mo., Ledger. He said he hoped the delay in the selection process was only temporary.
Staff writer
Hotel to return to luxury look
By KIRK KAHLER
The rubble inside the Eldridge House Hotel makes the historic building resemble a bomb-torn casualty from World War II.
But Nancy Longhurst, the hotel's general manager, said that when the $3 million renovation is completed in December, it will be comparable to the Alameda and Raphael hotels on the Country Club Plaza in Kansas City. Mo.
Construction began last month to convert the structure, at Seventh and Massachusetts streets, from low-cost apartments back to a luxury hotel. Longhurst said the restoration was
an effort to return the structure to its appearance when it was rebuilt in 1925.
The hotel, rich in history that dates back to the Civil War, was placed on the Kansas State Historical Register this weekend and was recommended to the Federal Historical Register for approval. Longhurst said.
In addition to guest rooms, Longhurst visited visitors would see a doorman in full dress take baggage and guests to the front desk and on to their rooms.
Longhurst said the hotel would offer 18 luxury suites. Each will have two telephones, a refrigerator and a wet bar,
Other services offered by the hotel will be a gift shop, a piano lounge, three retail shops and an outdoor pavilion, Longhurst said.
Construction should be completed by Dec. 31, Longhurst said.
Longhurst said the Kansas Sports Bar and Grill and the Eldridge House Restaurant and Club that once occupied first-floor space in the building, both closed July 1.
The bar will reopen in the basement under the new name of The Big Six Sports Bar and Grill, named after the first bar in the basement of the hotel, Longhurst said. The restaurant will also reopen but has not been renamed, Longhurst said.
Enrollment up in initial count
By a Kansan reporter
Administrators' expectations that the student population would increase were met Monday, when the semester's first official head count showed that 3.8 percent more students have enrolled this fall.
This year, 939 new students enrolled at KU, bringing the total number to 25,599, including those on the Lawrence campus and at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. Last year, 24,660 students were enrolled on the first day.
"I am gratified that such a large number of able students find that Kansas University can assist them in meeting their educational objectives," Chancellor Gene A. Budig said in a prepared statement.
increased 3 percent, with 641 students, bringing the total to 21.81. The Med Center gained 111 new students.
Off-campus enrollment increased by 187 students, or 15.2 percent, for a total of 1,415 students. Off-campus enrollment includes those students who attend classes at the federal penitentiary in Leavenhood, at the Regents Center in Overland Park, and in Topeka for the Capitol Complex program.
Complex program. Robin Eversole, director of University Relations, said that the number of enrolled students usually increased as late enrollment continued.
On the Lawrence campus, the size of the student body
However, the first-day figures include part-time and full-time students. Full-time figures, which are the ones used to determine the financing that the University gets from the state, will not be computed until enrollment ends Sept. 16, Eversole said.
Staff writer
Network to change location next year
By JANE ZACHMAN
Just as students have settled into their new homes for the year, the University of Kansas AudioReader Network is looking forward to moving.
The audio-reader network is planning to relocate to the former Phi Kappa Tau fraternity house, 1120 W. 11th St., by next summer, after the house is renovated.
The fraternity is now located at 1100 Indiana St., former home of the Acacia fraternity.
Since the network, now located in Sudder House, 1150 W. 11th St., began broadcasting in the early 1970s, the lack of sufficient space has been a constant concern, said Rosie Hurwitz, network director.
The network is a service for the blind and handicapped which broadcases to at least 6,500 audio-reader receivers in use in homes, nursing homes and hospitals.
Hurwitz said the University's network mainly served the Lawrence and Kansas City areas, providing recorded materials and audio equipment.
Through the Association of Radio Reading Services' National Tape Exchange Program, the KU
"The new building will finally put us under a dry roof and give us room to add some badly needed equipment," Hurwitz said.
network distributes an average of 20,000 hours of tape each year to other radio reading services and individuals.
She said that in 1975 a 50-foot mobile home had been added to provide more room but that the growing network still had been crowded for space.
The Sudder House allows the network only 450 square feet. The new building will provide 4,000 square feet of usable space.
The network's services will be located on the first two floors of their new location, Hurwitz said. The attic will be used for storage and equipment. The garage will be an engineering workshop and will provide library space.
"The project is really stretching us." Harwitz said. "We don't have the funds to renovate the basement area vet."
Half of the $300,000 for renovations was a gift from the Louis and Dolpha Baehr Charitable Foundation of Paola and the other half was raised by matching donations. Hurwitz said.
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Wednesday, August 27, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Don't forget the students
Thanks to some creative planning by the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation, about 600 more fans should be able to attend Jayhawk basketball games in Allen Field House this season.
That fact undoubtedly came as welcome news to some loyal Jayhawk followers who had to listen to games on the radio or watch them on television when the 15,129 seats in Allen were consistently sold out.
But it will be even better news if KUAC remembers to include students when tickets for the new seats are sold.
It's the screaming, chanting student sections of the field house that have charged the swelterting field house for the Jayhawks during the last several years.
Head coach Larry Brown repeatedly has praised the student fans, while opposing coaches have grown to dread a trip to Lawrence. They are always forced to play in an almost bewareable din.
We're suggesting a 50-50 split.
On the other hand, Williams Fund members and other nonstudent ticket holders also provide a lot of the support for the Athletic department in many different ways. So it makes sense that they, too, should have some of the new seats made available to them.
Williams Fund members usually can provide more monetary support than students, and every program needs money.
But students provide a different — and much needed — form of support, and 300 more student voices in the confines of the field house couldn't hurt.
KHUM tower is bad plan
It's hard to understand why a radio station would want to build its transmitter tower near an airport landing strip. After all, planes would be sweeping the tower at all times of the day and night.
It seems like the station would only be endangering its investment.
But officials of KHUM-FM in Ottawa think their tower, scheduled to be built only nine nautical miles from Topeka's Forbes Field, will be safe.
Scott Davis, vice president of the station, admitted that the station didn't want to look for a new site. Repeating the review process to approve a new site, he said, would no doubt delay progress on the tower's construction.
But the real questions are: why did the station want to build the tower near the airport in the first place; and then, why did the Douglas County Commissioners and the Federal Aviation Administration approve the tower without first consulting the airlines that land their planes there?
Supporters of the tower site say that the FAA's approval is enough and that the planned location for the tower should not be changed. Opponents say the site was approved before United Airlines began service to Topeka.
The radio station concedes that the construction of the tower will force United pilots to make a 200-foot adjustment on dicey, inherently dangerous instrument-only landing approaches.
Instead of having the pilots make adjustments, and possibly force United to discontinue service to Topeka, why not just find another place to build the tower?
Army study is dirty work
The University of Kansas has joined the Reagan administration's chemical warfare bandwagon.
The United States stopped production and development of chemical and germ bombs in 1969 because of their potentially horrible effects. President Reagan, citing Soviet advances in chemical warfare, lobbied to have the 1969 ban repealed — and won.
The result has been a flood of Army grant money to study neurotoxins and their effects. The Army also plans to build a new generation of chemical bombs that will bring us in line with the Soviets.
Researchers at the Med Center won't talk about the studies. However, Elias Michaelis, biology professor and coordinator of the research in Lawrence, said the studies were focusing on finding the most potent toxins and
Two million of those Army dollars are being spent by KU researchers at the Lawrence campus and at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., to study the effects of natural and man-made neurotoxins.
evaluating the body's ability to defend against the chemicals. They also will look for ways to reverse the chemical's effects. He said the study would not evaluate the toxins' military application.
But what will prevent the Army from using the researchers' findings, which will identify potent and possibly incurable toxins, to create their new generation of chemical weapons?
While the researchers may not intend for their results to be used for aggressive purposes, what is going to stop the Army from doing just that?
Research is an important function of any university. But when it is possible that the research results will be used to create an arsenal, the project should be rejected. It appears that it is too late for anything to be done about the University's decision to accept the Army money.
We learn from our mistakes. Accepting the grants was a mistake.
In the future, officials should look at all the possible uses for research results before they step into the lab.
News staff
News staff
Lauretta McMillen ... Editor
Kady McMaster ... Managing editor
Tad Clarke ... News editor
David Silverman ... Editorial editor
John Hanna ... Campus editor
Frank Harrell ... Sports editor
Jacki Kelly ... Photo editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
David Nixon ... Business manager
Gregory Kaul ... Retail sales manager
Denise Stephens ... Campus sales manager
Sally Depew ... Classified manager
Lisa Weems ... Production manager
Duccaita Calhoun ... National sales manager
Beverly Kastens ... Traffic manager
John Oberzan ... Sales and marketing adviser
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Opinions
Call back McCallum's double play
It cost the taxpayers a hefty buck to give Napoleon McCallum a very fine college education.
he went to the U.S. Naval Academy for four years at a cost to the government of about $140,000.
At the end of four years, he graduated, and that's when the taxpayers are supposed to get a return on their investment.
McCallum became a commissioned naval officer and is obligated to spend five years on active duty. It was a commitment he accepted when he went through Annapolis and took his commission as an ensign.
But because we are a sports-crazed society — and that includes the Pentagon — the taxpayers are going to get something else for their money
Besides being a naval cadet, McCallum was a football player, and quite talented. He set several records as a running back and was named an All-American.
We are going to get a somebody who is paid handsomely to run with a football.
He is so good that the Los Angeles Raiders drafted him to play pro ball even though he has that obligation to serve in the Navy. The football sharpies clearly thought some kind of deal with the Navy could be worked out.
And they guessed right. Navy Secretary John Lehman is allowing
McCallum said he had talked to the Navy brass and "they've said it would be great to use you for something you're better suited for -- public relations and recruiting for the Navy."
McCallum to be a professional football player and a part-time naval officer.
S. P. S.
Naturally, McCallum is enthusiastic. Although life as a naval officer isn't bad — especially if you're an Annapolis man — there's far more money to be made scoring touchdowns. And I suppose running back a kickoff is more exciting than going on deck to see if the enlisted men have given it a proper mopping.
But as a taxpayer, I'm not sure that I want my money spent to provide the National Football League with still another twinkle-toed running back.
I assume that the Navy needs well-trained young officers, and that's why we spend $150 million a year on the Naval Academy.
vesting $140,000 on the education of a young officer, the Navy's brass could find something more useful for him to do.
Aren't these the same people who keep rushing to the White House and Congress, pleading for more and more billions to keep the Russians from our shores?
They should explain how our national defense is made more secure by Napoleon McCallum running back a kickoff in Los Angeles.
And I would think that after in-
Public relations and recruiting?
Just who is he going to recruit? His offensive line?
Professional football is a business, with franchises worth up to $100 million. And the highly paid athletes who clobber each other on the field are part of this business.
So I don't understand why McCallum should be permitted to work in another business when he already is paid by the Navy to work for them. And after he has been educated at our expense to do just that.
If McCallum can work in the football business, why can't some ordinary swabby swabby in and say: "Hey, admiral, my uncle has a furniture store, and business is pretty good, and he can use me to sell living room sets. Pays pretty good. How's about if I do that for six or seven months of the year and swab decks for you the rest of the time?"
When I was an enlisted man, I might have told my commanding officer: "Say, would it be OK if I go home for six months and help my old man run the family tavern? I promise to try to recruit any of the customers who are still on their feet at closing time." But I doubt if my C.O. would have gone for the deal.
When he was still chief of staff of the Army in 1947, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower didn't go for a similar deal.
At that time, the most famous college football players in America were Felix 'Doc' Blanckard and Glenn Davis, both all-Americans at West Point. When they graduated, they asked the Pentagon whether they could have a few months off from the Army to play pro football.
Ike told them to pin on their second lieutenant bars and had them shipped overseas.
So, since the Navy decided that Ensign McCallum should serve his country by playing pro football, I'd appreciate a tax rebate.
Putting my kids through school cost me a bundle. I don't think I should have to finance the education of someone who might end up doing Lite Beer commercials.
MAMAS, DON'T LET YER BABIES GROW UP T'BE FARMERS!...
Professorial optimism is misplaced
Archie Brown, an Oxford scholar, has a gift for irony, even if it be the unconscious sort. His article, "Change in the Soviet Union," in a recent issue of "Foreign Affairs" is a stock response from the West to a new Soviet leader — cautious hope. And it ends, "though the fate of Gorbache's policy innovation will be determined essentially within the Soviet Union, it requires something more from the West than the stock response."
Mikhail Gorbacev today sets off the same warm fuzzies in certain Western precincts, notably university classrooms and editorial offices, as Yuri Andropov once did.
Comrade Andropov also was going to revamp the system and introduce practical reforms. The Soviet Union was finally going to have a leader with the muscle to attack corruption, sloth, and an irrational economy. There was little more in Comrade Andropov's background than an old KGB man to encourage such hopes. But that was brushed aside. It was
explained that, once given power at the top, he would reform the system.
Brown now says of Gorbach,
less-than-dashing success as com
Paul Greenberg Columnist
missar for agriculture: "The fact that when he was the Central Committee secretary responsible for agriculture such changes were not instituted on a wide scale is sometimes cited as evidence of a lack of reforming zeal for Gorbachev's part.
"It should be more correctly interpreted as a reflection of the strength of political and administrative resistance, which Gorbachev was in a position to overcome only when he had the resources of the general secretaryship at his disposal." This
is where many of us came in.
Archie Brown is nothing if not an optimist. Anybody who can be upbeat about Soviet agriculture can be upbeat about Soviet anything.
In this piece for Foreign Affairs, he writes that "perhaps a more surprising obstacle to the sale of American grain to the U.S.S.R. than the deterioration of superpower relations may yet emerge — a significant improvement in Soviet agriculture performance."
But even before the article saw print, he had to add a cautionary footnote. "The accident at the Chernobyl nuclear plant could provide unexpected complications for Soviet agriculture, but the extent of the setback — how much of the surrounding Ukrainian farmland has been rendered unusable — is at the time of this writing unclear."
Not even Chernobyl, and more relevant, the Soviets' same old heavy-handed handling of the aftermath may be able to shake the faith of the West's Pollyannas in a new
Soviet premier.
Let it be said that Gorbachev is a notch or two above his immediate, semi-comatose predecessor as a diagnostician of what asks the Soviet system. That is, he can point out the obvious. He did so in the spring of this year when he told a meeting of automotive workers: "Can you manage an economy which runs into trillions of rubles from Moscow? It is absurd, comrades. Incidentally, it is in this — in the fact that we have attempted to manage everything from Moscow up until very recently — that our common and main mistake lies."
Well, he's getting warm.
The main mistake of communism is communism. But one can't expect the general secretary of the party to admit as much, even if he should come to suspect it.
After Russia's new leader had made his cogent diagnosis of overcentralization, what did he propose to do about it?
Nicaraqua more akin to Cuban fiasco
Congressional critics of President Reagan's $100 million aid package for the contras fighting the Marxist-led government of Nicaragua warn "no more Vietnams," but Cuba may be a better test case.
Fidel Castro, a charismatic revolutionary in Havana, frustrated President Dwight D. Eisenhower in the closing years of his two terms with Cuba's leftist policies and ties to the Soviet Union. Ike turned over the problem to his youthful successor, John F. Kennedy.
The CIA program Kennedy inherited was far along in recruiting, training and arming a group of Cuban exiles to invade their homeland and topple Castro's government.
The covert plan, held secret from congressional scrutiny and public opinion, ended in disaster at the Bay
or Pigs. Kennedy rejected the CIA's call for critical air cover for the disorganized invasion force, and it founded.
Units of the U.S. Army are in almost constant exercises with the
E. Michael Meyers
UPI
troops of neighboring Honduras. U.S. servicemen are building landed strips and storing arms near the border. A Pentagon official says U.S. forces could invade Nicaragua as easily as "rolling off a log."
Like the Cubans of 25 years ago, the Nicaraguaans fighting the government of President Daniel Ortega are largely recruited and advised by the CIA. The CIA has had little success
with the contras and Congress shut them out of the program in 1984 over concerns about deepening U.S. involvement.
The CIA will be unleashed again under the new aid program awaiting expected passage in September. But this time the training program will include special military forces such as the Green Berets. It is intended to sharpen up the contrast into a disciplined, effective fighting force
If they indeed can be molded into this force, the contras must find what the Cubans were seeking and the CIA promised Kennedy — a widespread, popular uprising. It never arose in Cuba.
The Ortega government in Managua threw out a despised dictator, Anastasia Somoa, who had been tolerated by Washington for
years. There is a deep resentment in Nicaragua about the Yankee to the north.
U. arms and advisers can fuel the fire of the Nicaraguan conflict — as do Soviet arms and Cuban advisers — but cannot easily seize victory.
the contras must find and nourish local support. Without it their cause is hollow and the next, dreaded step in the conflict is the entry of U.S. combat troops.
conflate troop.
Washington must decide whether the contrasts are on anybody's side other than the CIA and some exiles who lost their wealth in the revolution.
Within months it should be decided whether the "freedom fighters" are a legitimate force backed by the people or a misguided and ineffective group of mercenaries who cannot win alone.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, August 27, 1986
5
Cameroon
Continued from p. 1
the catastrophe had not reached Bamenda until Friday. He said the delay was because the isolated region near the Nigerian border had no telephones and only dirt tracks for roads.
He said local authorities first learned of the disaster from a government official who was going to his home in Nios. The official saw bodies along the road and when he became dizzy he turned back, Taka said.
In Nios, Taka said he found bodies in the vards.
"The victims came out of their rooms and tore their dresses off because of the heat," he said. "They were mostly naked or half-naked. I opened one of the rooms and saw there was food in the dishes, which meant that, at the time, they were eating."
A U.S.-made C-130 Hercules of the Cameroon army carried 16 tons of ractions for survivors evacuated to the town of Nkaba.
Michael Wiener, a colonel in the Israeli medical corps, said local authorities told him there was a one-time explosion followed by volcanic
activity that occurred for two or three hours at the most.
Wiener said the concern now was for possible medical aftershocks, including chemical inflammation of the lungs that could cause pneumonia.
Franceois Leguern, from the French National Center for Scientific Research, said the reddish color of the Lake Nios, 200 miles northwest of Yaounde, was a warning of possible further outbreaks.
Leguern said the lake's color was from particles of laterite, indicating continuing underwater volcanic activity.
He said the disaster was caused by a volcanic gas long trapped in the lake and released by an explosion deep down in the waters of the long-dormant crater.
"The gas was heavier than the air, so those on low ground were the first victims," he said.
The U.N. relief agency said that reports indicated at least 300 people were hospitalized and that about 20,000 suffered effects from the deadly fumes.
Chernobyl
cerned about the accuracy of the Soviet figures used to make the projects and whether the Soviet report was translated accurately into English.
Continued from p. 1
"There seems to be some type of inconsistency," said Morris Rosen, chairman of the International Atomic Energy Commission's safety division who traveled to the Soviet Union after the accident.
"The only question is whether the Soviets may somehow be mistaken about the extent of the contamination," Cogel told the Post. "Frankly it comes as a bit of a surprise."
Western experts attending the conference in Vienna said Monday that the disaster stemmed largely from reactor design defects that Moscow had been warned about nine years ago.
At a news conference, Soviet experts said a protective wall was being built around the plant's No. 4 reactor. Entombment of the reactor is expected to be completed by late next month or early October.
Gas
Continued from p. 1
However, in a similar Cameroon incident in 1984, which killed 37 people, hydrogen cyanide was the cause of death.
The occurrence in Cameroon was not necessarily rare on a geological timetable, said Don Steeples, associate director for research at the Kansas Geological Survey.
But Steeples said a disaster such
as the one in Cameroon last week would be highly unlikely in the United States.
'Captain Midnight' given a $5,000 fine
As an example of a lake that lies in a volcanic crater. Steeples cited Crater Lake in central Oregon. Crater Lake is in the Cascade Range of the United States, the same region as Mount St. Helens, which erupted last in 1985 in Washington state.
United Press International
KSQNVILLE Ela
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — a satellite dish salesman who called himself "Captain Midnight" was fine $5,000 and given a year's probation yesterday for interrupting a Home Box Office movie to protest the cable network's decision to scramble its signal.
"I have been watching the 'Great American Dream' slip from my grasp," said John MacDougall, whom prosecutors characterized as an electronics expert. "And the worst part was that I was unable to do anything about it. This was my only way of striking back."
MacDougall appeared before U.S. Magistrate Howard Snyder in a 10-minute hearing for approval of a plea-bargain agreement he reached with prosecutors shortly after his ar-
est July 22. He is the only person very known to have taken private control of a commercial satellite signal.
MaeDougall said he broke in the HBO broadcast of "The Falcon and the Snowman" on April 27 because the scrambling of signals by payable TV channels and selling descramblers for $12.95 a month was hurting his once-thriving satellite dish business in Ocala.
On April 27, MacDougall sent a signal to the HBO satellite from Central Florida Teleport, a satellite uplink operation that sells satellite uplink time to television stations and others.
The message, which appeared on viewers' screens for more than four minutes, read:
"Good Evening HBO
"From Captain Midnight
"$12.95/month
"No Way!
"'ShowtimeMovie Channel Beware.'"
On Jan. 15, HBO became the first cable TV network to scramble its signal full time.
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The program runs Aug. 25-Sept.19 Meets in room, 102 Robinson Times: Mon. 8-10 p.m., Wed. 8-10 p.m., Fri. 6:30-8:30 p.m.
The cost is $20. The class is limited to 22 people. For more info. call David Rank 749-1738.
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6
Wednesday, August 27. 1986 / University Daily Kansan
---
Representative urges students' registration
By BILL RAYNOLDS
Staff writer
The woman who hopes to become Kansas's next secretary of state said last night that she wanted to get more students registered to vote.
"A lot of university students don't change their voter registration when they come to school, and many don't vote by absentee ballots," said State Rep. Judy Rumnels, the Democratic nominee for the office.
Runnels, whose district includes part of the Topeka area, spoke to about 70 people at a meeting of the KU Democrats in Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union.
Runnels is running against Republican Bill Graves, now the assistant secretary of state. They are seeking to replace Jack Brier, who ran unsuccessfully for the Republican gubernatorial nomination.
Runnels said she wanted to mount a strong voter registration campaign at the University in cooperation with the KU Democrats to get as many students as possible registered to vote.
However, Runnels said the lack of registered voters in Kansas was not limited to college students.
"We don't do enough in the inner city areas . . . to register voters," she said.
Runnel's main campaign goal is to set up permanent voter registration sites throughout the state, particularly in each state high school.
"There's no reason kids shouldn't be able to register to vote in their own high schools when they turn 18." Runnels said.
The secretary of state is chiefly a record-keeping office, Runnels said. The duties of the office include keeping track of corporate registration of state and national businesses in Kansas, administering the Uniform Commercial Code on banks and mortgages, and managing elections.
"My broad experience in government puts me in a good position to run." Runnels said.
She was elected to the Kansas Legislature in 1982, and now is serving her second term. From 1979 to
On the Record
*Stereo equipment, valued at $850, was taken between Friday and Sunday from a house in the 1800 block of West 24th Street.
A video cassette recorder and stereo equipment, valued together at $840, were taken July 23 from a house in the 800 block of Avalon Road.
A car stereo system, a radar detector and a car alarm, valued together at more than $1,200, were taken from a car parked at a business in the 1100 block of West 22nd Street Terrace between midnight Sunday and 8 a.m. Monday.
A car stereo and speakers and a wallet, valued together at $475, were taken from a car parked in the 400 block of North Second Street between midnight Saturday and 10 a.m. Sunday.
A 10-speed bicycle, valued at $150 was taken at 3:45 a.m. yesterday from the garage of a residence in the 2500 block of Ousdahl Road.
**Tools, sunglasses, and cologne,**
valued together at $240, were taken
from a car parked in the 1700 block of
West 23rd Street between a 4 a.m.
and 6:15 a.m. yesterday.
A bicycle, valued at $200, was taken between 10 p.m. and midnight Monday from the bicycle rack in front of Watson Library.
On Campus
The KU Soccer Club will have team trouts and a practice at 5:30 p.m. today at the University soccer fields at 23rd and Iowa streets.
The KU Dungeons and Dragons Club will meet at 7 p.m. today in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union.
A free movie, "Brazil," will be shown at 7:30 p.m. Friday at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
Happy days
Do it with the Personals
call me
HAVE
CN!
GOOD LUCK
1981. Runnels served as legislative laison to Gov. John Carlin. Her duties included monitoring legislation for the governor and enhancing communication between the legislative and executive branches.
Before that, she was a lobbyist for the Kansas State Nurses Association. She graduated from the University of Kansas in 1958 with a bachelor's degree in nursing.
unels plans to run a door-to-door campaign with the help of her family. "The whole Runnels family is going to do an imitation of the Kennedy family," she said. "I can't physically knock on all the doors in Kansas."
City residents will decide in November whether a $1.3 million recreation center should be built in Holcom Park in the southwest part of Lawrence.
By PAM MILLER
City OKs ballot on recreation center
Staff writer
Lawrence City Commissioners unanimously approved a new proposition for the November general election ballot at the regular commission meeting last night. The proposition allows residents to vote on whether $1 million in general obligation bonds should be used to finance the construction of the center
The recreation center was proposed three years ago to serve citizens of the Lawrence area, including handicapped individuals. The original plan was to issue $500,000 in bonds and to have the members of the recreation foundation raise the other half.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student afairs, fries on behalf of the Board of Directors of the Holcom Recreation Center Foundation. He told the committee that, despite efforts, the board had been unable to raise $50,000 in private contributions for the center.
In a nine-month period, 250 campaign workers had collected about $250,000 from 680 donors, he said.
After expressing continued support to the proposed center, the commission approved the placement of the proposition on the ballot.
In other action, George Schmitendorf, 1211 Kentucky St., spoke to the commission about the decision to remove about 15 parking spaces on Kentucky and 11th streets. The traffic safety commission recommended the removal of those spaces.
Schmitendorf was concerned there would be no other parking alternatives and the intersection would be more dangerous if the safety commission's recommendations were carried out.
"How would removing parking make the intersection at 11th and Kentucky safer?" Schmitendorf asked. "Lower speeds would make it safer. Removing the parking opens up the street for higher speeds."
Commissioner Ernest Angino told Schmitendorf that the situation was one that no one was 100 percent happy with.
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Mayor Sandra Praeger said, "It's a compromise in the favor of safety over parking." The commission unanimously accepted the recommendation.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, August 27, 1986
7
Mail brings drug test results
By JANE ZACHMAN
Drug testing has gone mail order.
Staff writer
Drug testing has gone mail order. By the end next month, Kansas consumers will be able to buy a drug testing kit over-the-counter in drug stores. They'll have to mail the kit back to a lab for results, but the test can be administered in the privacy of the home.
American Drug Screens of Dallas developed the Aware kits, which consist of a plastic specimen bottle, a mailing label and directions. They will cost about $25
"Recently, people have been asking us for personal drug testing kits," Jim Erwin, spokesman for American Drug Screens, said Monday.
"The rise in drug use by teen-agers has parents concerned. We hope that the Aware drug testing kits will help to relieve some of the anxieties parents have about their children's use of drugs." Erwin said.
After a sample has been collected, the American Institute for Drug Detection in Rosemont, Ill., will analyze it. The cost is included in the price of the kit.
The samples are tested for traces of drugs including cocaine, amphetamines, marijuana, barbiturates and tranquilizers.
Although the tests are meant to help parents, Bruce Beal, director of the Douglas County Citizens Committee on Alcohol and Drug Abuse, said he thought drug testing conducted by parents might have a harmful effect on the family.
Beal said, "If parents start using it, a child may see it as 'you don't trust me' and not want anything to do with his or her family.
"In a business setting, the test has value because our jobs are important to us, but I don't know how much the tests will have in a family situation. We hope it is a step in the right direction."
Mike Browning, superintendent of student services at Lawrence High School, said, "I think students would appreciate their parents' concern.
Students wary of KC rapist
By PATRICIA FEENY
KU students are taking precautions when they head toward the Westport area of Kansas City, Mo., because of a series of sexual assaults that have occurred there.
Staff writer
Police say a man, who has been dubbed the Westport Rapist, has stalked and raped 15 women in the area since October.
"Personally, I got scared when I first heard about it," said Heather McLeroy, Overland Park senior. "You always think that it could never happen to you."
Missy Carico, Overland Park
junior, said she was in the habit of parking in a well-lit area close to the place she was going to.
"We always go out in groups and have male friends walk us to our cars." Carico said.
Though initially these women were frightened by the reports, they said they were not planning to stop visiting Westport.
Kathryn Gilbert, Tula, Okla., senior, said she and her friends were taking precautions by locking their car doors and staying in groups.
"I'm just surprised that he hasn't been caught yet. It is an
isolated area," said Gilbert.
Though the incidents have occurred only in the Westport area, the Rape Victim Support Services in Lawrence has received calls about the incidents.
Ellie LeCompte, agency director, said police were advising women to radically vary their habits because of the rapist.
"He watches a long time in advance. He usually goes through windows in the early morning hours when he knows victims are at home," said LeCompte.
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Wednesday, August 27, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
Jayhawks now cheer for Chiefs
By a Kansan reporter
College athletes were not the only students aspiring to make a professional team this summer - nine former KU varsity cheerleaders tried their luck with the Kansas City Chiefs football team.
The nine men and women were chosen from a group of 80 participants May 31 to be a part of this year's 28-member Chiefs cheerleading squad. They became part of the first coed cheerleading
team in the National Football League.
"It's more professional," Genee Johnson, Salina junior, said. "It’s nice to get money for something you enjoy doing."
Besides Johnson, the former KU cheerleaders on the Chiefs squad are Sy Byram, Jenny Ziegler, Roger Nelson and Rick Inglima, all Overland Park seniors; Lisa Ragland, Leavenworth senior; Kim Twiggs, Grandview, Mo., junior; and KU graduates Jeff Davis and Michon
Quick.
Squad members are paid $50 for each game and $4 for each hour of rehearsal. They practice from 6 to 9 p.m. Friday and from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday at Arrowhead Stadium.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, August 27, 1986
9
Domino's outlines drug testing policy
By BETH COPELAND
Staff writer
The company that delivers the most pizza in the country has delivered memos outlining its new policy of drug testing.
Officials at Domino's Pizza announced last week that employees who are in line for promotions or are suspected of using drugs or drinking on the job would be required to take drug tests. No tests have been conducted at Lawrence stores, but local company officials have endorsed the new policy.
Bill Adamson, director of Domino's regional office in Dallas, said that the pizza chain had had scattered problems of drug use but that the problems merely reflected a countrywide problem of drug and alcohol abuse.
"We're in the delivery business, the people business," he said.
He said drug testing was a positive policy that would uphold the high reputation of the pizza chain.
The policy affects supervisors at the 13 regional offices and more than 11,000 Domino's outlets, said Ron Hingst, the national director of public relations at Domino's headquarters in Ann Arbor, Mich.
Tests for people in line for promotion will be scheduled, but tests for those suspected of using drugs will not be announced, according to Donald Dufek, Domino's human resources director.
Some employees who test positive will be encouraged to attend a rehabilitation program at the company's expense. Others will be fired, but Hingst said the details of the policy had not yet been defined.
As of yesterday, about 50 employees, including Domino's Pizza owner Tom Monaghan, had been
No tests have been conducted at individual stores, including the two in Lawrence at 832 Iowa St. and 1445 W. 23rd St.
Hingst explained that the cost of drug tests, ranging from $22 to $35 each, probably would prevent Domino's from requiring that all employees be tested.
Lisa Northern, manager-in training at the Iowa Street store, and Mike Paluka, head manager of the 23rd Street store, said they weren't aware of drug or alcohol abuse in their stores.
Paluka said he supported the program because it ensured the safety of
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Northern also favored the program but said she was afraid the tests could single out employees.
"Anytime you have a policy like this, people will be singled out," she said. "If the 'higher-ups' don't like a driver, they could ask him to take the tests."
Neither Northern nor Paluka has been tested.
Adamson said the policy's goal was to ensure high-quality employees.
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10
Wednesday, August 27, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
Dole rates 91 percent on conservative scale
United Press International
WASHINGTON — Five conservative Republican senators — James McClure and Steve Symms of Idaho, Chic Hecht of Nevada, Jesse Heels of North Carolina and Jake Garn of Utah — got perfect scores yesterday in the American Conservative Union's annual litmus test.
And the group applauded Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole for bringing up conservative issues in the Senate and gave him a 91 percent rating.
Union chairman David Keene labeled Dole a fairly conservative senator.
Former Sen. John East, R-N.C., who committed suicide in June, was among those who got a 100 percent rating.
The ACU selected 21 key issues that the senators voted on in 1985 as a basis for their ratings — including such things as supporting the confirmation of Edwin Meees as attorney general, MX missile
financing, and aid to Nicaraguan rebels.
At the bottom of the conservative group's rating chart were liberal Democrats. Sens, Gary Hart of Colorado and Howard Metzenbaum of Ohio flunked with a zero rating. Sens, Christopher Dodd of Connecticut, Spark Matsunaga of Hawaii, Donald Riegel of Michigan, Frank Lautenberg of New Jersey and Daniel Moynihan of New York each received 4 percent ratings.
In the House, eight Republicans got the group's top rating, including Joe Barton, Bill Archer, Beau Boulter, Larry Combes and Tom Delay, all from Texas. Republican Reps. Bob Stump of Arizona, Dan Burton of Indiana and Richard Cheney of Wyoming also got 100 percent approval ratings.
Rep. Jack Kemp, R-N.Y., who has portrayed himself as the conservatives' presidential candidate for 1988, received only an 81 percent favorable rating.
Platforms adopted
The Associated Press
TOPEKA - Although they worked in distinctly different fashions, the Kansas Republican and Democratic platform committees yesterday adopted party platforms that were similar in many respects.
The Republicans rammed through a 14-page platform, fending off the only unauthorized attempt to change wording in a draft put together by party leaders. The GOP platform committee packed the Kansas House chamber for speeches by Republican candidates and to formally approve the platform.
the panelists. Meanwhile, only about two dozen members of the Democratic Party platform committee met in the old Supreme Court room of the Statehouse. In contrast to the GOP meeting, no major Democratic candidates appeared.
Instead, the Democrats spent the afternoon wrestling with wording and adding some planks. Although they were not platform committee members, representatives of Wichita's Rainbow Coalition — led by the Rev James Saiz, an unsuccessful 4th District congressional candidate
- contributed language on several planks.
Both party platforms spoke in general terms on many subjects, often with similar proclamations in support of agriculture, economic development, education and other topics.
Among major differences was the GOP's support of reinstatement of the death penalty. The Democrats proposed a mandatory 30-year minimum sentence for first-degree murder.
In addition, on the issue of medical malpractice and other types of liability, the Democrats said they were hesitant to make further changes in the civil-law system, restricting the right to sue for damages, until evidence proved that as the source of the problem of rising liability insurance premiums.
However, the GOP proposed a list of changes in the civil law system, including turning over punitive damage awards to the state rather than to an injured plaintiff, ensuring a greater portion of actual damages is paid to injured parties rather than to lawyers, and giving immunity to members of governing bodies.
Former senator forms state Rainbow party
TOPEKA — The state's political parties must start earning support from blacks, hispanics and native Americans, according to a former state senator who announced yesterday the formation of the Rainbow Coalition of Kansas.
The Associated Press
"The Rainbow Coalition provides an option, a third party option if necessary," said former Sen. Darryl G. Gray, of Wichita, the state coordinator of the new political group.
Members of the organization attended a meeting yesterday with
state Democratic Party leaders to press for the inclusion of several issues in the party platform.
The Rainbow Coalition officials also met with the Republican Party platform committee. Gray said he made arrangements to meet during the next two weeks with House Speaker Mike Hayden, the GOP nominee for governor, and other party officials.
During the Democratic meeting, the Rainbow Coalition members suggested a number of changes in the platform and several were adopted.
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, August 27, 1986
11
Foreign students filling U.S. tennis rosters
0
Tennis, at the university level, has taken on an international perspective.
By ANNE LUSCOMBE Sports writer
Sports writer
Within the last 10 years, recruitment abroad has picked up considerably, the Kansas and Wichita State head coaches said yesterday.
Kansas head tennis coach Scott Perelman said many coaches were looking overseas for players to bring their programs up to par with the top U.S. teams.
Schools with tennis programs not over-appealing to top U.S. collegiate players are chief recruiters of foreign athletes, he said.
Problems for the schools may be on the horizon, however. The coaches said the National Collegiate Athletic Association was considering limiting the number of foreign athletes a school could recruit.
But until this happens, schools such as Wichita State will be able to maintain a culturally mixed team. Of the nine Wichita men's tennis players, five are foreign. Two are New Zealanders, one is Australian, another is Swedish and one, West German, Rex Coad, Wichita State's men's tennis head coach, said he might recruit two more foreign players at semester.
The athletes, as well as the tennis programs, prosper from the students' move to U.S. schools, he said.
"We offer the foreign athletes the best of both worlds," Coad said. "They get to fulfill their dream of playing tennis, and they are getting a good education at the same time."
Kansas has joined in the search for outstanding foreign tennis players, although not to the extent of Wichita State and Oklahoma State, which
Dan Ruettimann/KANSAN
I will do my best.
Jeanette Jonsson, Marsta. Sweden, freshman, left, practices her swing while Sven Groeneveld. on the Jayhawk tennis teams.In the last 10 years collegiate coaches have been looking to foreign Vyhuizen, Holland, junior, right, takes a break during practice.The two are the only foreign players athletes to help their teams compete with stronger U.S. teams.
have had predominantly foreign teams. Kansas now has only two foreign players on its team. Two foreign students who played for the Jayhawks last year transferred at the end of the school year.
Perealm said his lack of interest in the foreign market was because of personal preference and because Kansas had the ability to recruit top U.S. players.
In the five years Perelman has been at Kansas, he has signed three top-50 players — Mike Wolf, Chris Walker and Craig Wildey — and several others who are nationally ranked. John Falbo, the No. 2 ranked player in the United States, plans to visit Kansas next week.
Jeanette Jonsson, Marsta, Sweden, freshman, won the Big Eight Championship in the No. 2 spot last spring. A year ago she was ranked eighth in the 18-year-old women's division in Sweden. She attended a special tennis school in Sweden which takes only the top four women and men in the country.
She came at Perelman's request last spring Perelman accepted her on the recommendation of the Swedish National coach, whom Jonsson played under.
The men's tennis team this year gained Sven Groeneveld Vfhuizen, Holland, junior. He transferred to Kansas from Southwest Baptist where he played the No. 2 spot his freshman year and the No. 1 position last year.
Groeneveld also is ranked on the international professional circuit. He can only go up, he said, because he holds the ranking of 781, the lowest possible ranking.
One reason the two decided to come to Kansas was that the university offered them an opportunity to help themselves as well as the team.
"I knew if I wanted to improve my tennis I had to go somewhere," Groeneveld said. "Kansas had what I wanted and what I liked. There are many good players here and I like the coach."
Jonsson said she enjoyed the combination of school and tennis, something she did not get in Sweden.
"When tennis gets me down, i... school, and when school gets me down, I have tennis," she said. "In Sweden, everything there in my life depended on tennis."
Royals beat Chicago
United Press International
CHICAGO — George Brett hit a pair of solo homers and Steve Balboni added a two-run shot to back the seven-hit pitching of Charlie LeBRandt and gave the Kansas City Royals a 6-1 victory over the Chicago White Sox.
The loss was the White Sox's fifth straight and seventh in eight games.
Brett, who went 3-for-4, hit a solo homer in the third and another in the seventh. Balboni slammed a two-run shot to third off Richard Dotson, 8-13, who gave up the first four runs. Balboni's homer was his 28th.
Leibrandt, 11-10, struck out six and walked none in pitching his seventh complete game of the season.
Boston 8, Texas 1
ARLINGTON, Texas — Dennis "Oil Can" Boyd struck out a season high 10 Tuesday night and allowed four hits in pitching the Boston Red Sox to an 8-1 decision over the Texas Rangers.
The Red Sox, leaders of the American League East, broke a three-game losing streak while the
Rangers tell four games back of the Western Division leading California Angels.
California 2. New York 0
NEW YORK — Mike Witt fired a four-hitter for his seventh straight victory and third shutout of the season and Jack Howell and Dick Schofield contributed second-inning RBIs, leading the California Angels to a 2-0 victory over the New York Yankees.
Milwaukee 6, Minnesota 5
MILWAUKEE — Paul Molitor's single with one out in the bottom of the 10th inning scored Jim Gantner and gave the Milwaukee Brewers a 6-5 victory over the Minnesota Twins.
CLEVELAND — Rain forced postponement of the game between the Toronto Blue Jays and the Cleveland Indians after nine innings with the score tied 6-6.
Cleveland, Toronto postponed
DETROIT — Alan Trammell doubled home Lou Whitaker with two out and capped a six-run sixth inning that gave the Detroit Tigers a rain-delayed 8-7 victory over the Oakland A's.
Detroit 8. Oakland 7
Cubs defeat Houston
United Press International
HOUSTON — Terry Francona and Ron Coy homered to help the Chicago Cubs defeat the Houston Astros, 5-3.
Starter and winner Ed Lynch improved to 4-3 by working the first six innings, allowing to hits and all three Houston runs. Ex-Astro Frank DiPino hurled the seventh and eighth, striking out four. Lee Smith pitched the ninth for his 25th save.
Danny Darwin, making his first National League start, allowed four runs in six innings and fell to 0-1.
with the score tied 1-1; Chicago scored three runs in the sixth. Manny Trillo led with a single and Gary Matthews grounded to shortstop Craig Reynolds, who threw to second too late to force Trillo. Second baseman Bill Doran's throw to first bounced off Trillo's helmet and caromed all the way into the stands. Trillo scored what proved to be the game-winner and Matthews wound up at second on the play.
Matthews went to third as Keith Moreland grounded out and scored on Jody Davis' sacrifice fly to give the Cubs a 3-1 lead. Francona then hit his second homer of the season, a drive over the right field fence, to make it 4-1.
The Astros made it 4-3 in the sixth. With one out, Kevin Bass singled. After Alan Ashby flied out, Reynolds hit his career-high sixth homer of the season.
in the top of the seventh, Cey pinch hit for Lynch and hammered a 3-1 pitch from Aurelio Lopez over the left field fence for his 13th home run of the year and a 5-3 Chicago lead.
The Cubs took a 1-0 lead in the second. With one out, Francona singled and was doubled home by Chris Speier.
Houston tied the score 1-1 in the fifth on a double by Doran and a single by Billy Hatcher. The double by Doran extended his hitting streak to 11 games.
PITTSBURGH — Dave Parker drove in his fourth run of the game in the ninth inning with a sacrifice fly and gave the Cincinnati Reds a 5-4 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Cincinnati 5. Pittsburgh 4
Dan Dameles led off the ninth with a single of loser Ray Krawczky, 0-1. He stole second and took third on catcher Tony Pena's throwing error. Buddy Bell walked to knock out Krawczky in favor of Pat Clements. Parker's sacrifice fly to right made a winner of John Franco, 5-4.
Road ends at starting spot for Blackledge
KANSAS CITY, Mo. - The time has come for Todd Blackledge to determine his future as a professional quarterback.
In May, Kansas City head coach John Mackovic said Blackledge, a fourth-year player from Penn State, was going to be his starting quarterback this fall.
United Press International
Watching most intently will be 44 other Kansas City Chiefs, who all know that their hopes of success ride with Blackledge's fortunes.
back at the bank.
"It's been a long road, and I was happy to be named the starter." Blackledge said. "I was happy that it was announced when it was because it gave me a couple months to prepare myself and it gave the team an opportunity to recognize what the situation was going to be right away."
with the
The Chiefs had been very patient
with Blackledge. He was the second
quarterback seventh player
overall taken in the gold-mine
Most of those players were immediately thrust into action, and none had to wait long before given an NFL team to direct. Blackledge, meanwhile, became a familiar figure on the Chiefs' sideline, wearing a baseball cap instead of a helmet and holding a clipboard instead of a football.
draft of 1983 in which fellow quarterbacks John Elway and Dan Marino also were selected.
Blackledge said the waiting definitely helped him.
"I really don't know what would have happened to me if I'd gone right into starting," he said. "I think realistically, I knew it would take some time. I don't regret what I've gone through and I don't regret sitting for as long as I did, because I have been conscientious and I haven't pouted about it. I have tried
"It's been a tough road to get here for me — coming out of college and being drafted as highly as I was and going through what I've gone through in three years," Blackledge said.
to work hard and prepare myself because I knew I'd get an opportunity sooner or later."
Blackledge was given a test at the starting spot the final five games of the 1985 season. The Chiefs were riding a seven-game losing streak to the depths of the AFC West when Blackledge went out against Indianapolis.
It's now later.
Kansas City won that game and went 3-2 — including a 14-13 loss at Denver — the rest of the way. Blackledge completed 54 percent of his 113 passes for 944 yards in those games. He said that “little success in an unsuccessful season” helped him win the start job.
"I felt good after those last five games." Blackledge said. "I felt like I'd been given an opportunity to start because they wanted me to start. They wanted to see what I could do in that capacity and that I responded the way they wanted to see me."
The test completed, Mackovic gave
the results in May: Blackledge was the starter, and incumbent Bill Kenney, of whom Blackledge cannot say enough, was second string.
"No, I wasn't surprised" the new starter said. "He had said he was going to make a decision early, that it wasn't going to drag into camp, that it wasn't going to be a controversial thing in camp, and I felt I had a real good chance to be named the starter."
"From the season's end my thinking was all geared towards being the starter. Had it gone the other way, I would have adjusted at that point."
The waiting wasn't easy for a quarterback who had had nothing but success. At Penn State, Blackledge led the Nittany Lions to the 1982 national championship and set 28 school records. He was expected to be a positive factor right away.
there were times I was frustrated," Blackledge said. "There were times I didn't know if this was the best situation for me or not. There were times I wasn't sure if things were going to work out or not."
Mac beaten easily at U.S. tournament
The Associated Press
"I felt like I was in a reasonably good frame of mind," said McEnoroe, the ninth seed who was appearing in his third tournament since his seven-month sabbatical
NEW YORK — There was no fire in John McEuroe's game yesterday, no temper tantrums, no arguing with spectators. Now, there is no John McEuroe in the U.S. Open Tennis Championships.
John McEnroe
"I just hoped that I would go out and play well today," Annacone said. "And if I did, then I'd have a chance. Fortunately, I got a lot of chances."
McEnroe became the first finalist to lose in the first round of a subsequent U.S. Open since Tom Okker of the Netherlands lost to Britain's Mark Cox in the first round in 1969. In 1968, Okker lost to Arthur Ashe in the title match.
from tennis, after being stunned by fellow New Yorker Paul Anapone 1-6, 6-1, 6-3, 6-3.
Annacone overpowered McEnroe, who, until a year ago, was ranked No. 1 in the world.
Last year, McEnroe fell to Czechoslovakia's Ivan Lendl in the men's singles final. Yesterday, Lendl followed McEnroe onto the Louis Armstrong Stadium Court and crushed Glenn Layendecker 6-3, 6-2, 6-0.
"Eventually I could have played McEnroe in the quarters, but it a long way there for me and for him," Lendl said. "For him it proved to be too long. I hope it doesn't prove to be too long for me."
Argentina's Guillermo Vilas, who won the U.S. Open in 1977, lost to Paul McNamee of Australia 7-5, 5-7, 2-6, 6-1, 6-3.
Earlier, defending women's champion Hana Mandikova of Czechoslovakia, the fourth seed, crushed into the second round with a 6-2, 6-2 victory over Marie Christine Calleja of France, Kathy Rinaldi, the women's No. 10 seed, tumbled to Michel Torres 6-1, 6-4.
It was Annacne, a hard-serving right-hander, who was dominant on this day as McEnroe constantly found himself out of position or committing unforced errors.
The match ended when McEnroe, once almost untouchable at the National Tennis Center, hit a volley wide when he had most of the court to aim at.
"I'm sorry that he lost." Anacone said of McEnroe. "I want to see him come back because I think he's great for tennis.
"I'm not sorry that I won, but it feels kind of awkward beating him."
Other early first-round winners included eighth-seeded Henri Leconte of France, 6-3, 6-4, 6-4 over Argentina's Martin Jaite; Israel's Amos Mansdorff, 6-4, 7-6, 6-3 over Tomas Sáez of Czechoslovakia; Nduka Odizor of Nigeria, 3-6, 7-5, 6-1, 7-6 over Brazil's Carlos Kirmayr; and Mexico's Francisco Maciel, 3-6, 4-6, 7-6, 6-1 over Poland's Wojtek Fikab
With the defeat, McEnroe dropped to at least 21st in the world computer rankings, his lowest ever Sixth-ranked Jimmy Connors is now the only American player ranked in the top 10.
In women's play, Katieheen Horvath stopted Susan Sloane 6-3, 6-2; Hungary's Csilla Bartos-Cserpey downed Andrea Betzner of West Germany 6-1, 7-6; and Pascale Paradis of France defeated Argentina's Adriana Villagran 6-7, 6-3.
top-seeded Martina Navratilova easily moved into the second round by defeating Czechoslovak Andrea Holikova 6-4, 6-2.
In one of the closest matches of the day, Australia's Amanda Dingwall edged Gigi Fernandez of Puerto Rico 7-6, 7-6, winning the first-set tiebreak 8-6 and the second-set tiebreak 10-8.
1
12
Wednesday, August 27, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
Rowers look for new recruits
By RIC ANDERSON
The Kansas crew team is out to get you.
But don't hide, because Cliff and Libby Elliott, men's and women's crew coaches, said people would not be shanghailed and made to row while a taskmaster stands over them with a whip.
In fact, Cliff Elliott and members of the crew team said rowing was a satisfying and therapeutic experience.
Elliott said he was looking for anyone who would be interested in rowing. There is only one stimulation.
"So much of our success depends on the people who are trying out," Elliott said. "The key is getting people who are dedicated to getting a good crew team at KU."
He said that although some athletic training was preferable for prospective rowers, it wasn't a necessity because the squad starts training slowly and works up to competition form over a long period of time.
Varsity crew team practice begins Tuesday and will last through the spring. The team will compete in its first regatta during spring break in Austin, Texas.
Laura Hamilton, women's varisity captain, said anyone interested in
Call today...
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joining the team should attend the novice meeting, which will be held 4:30 p.m. Sept. 3 at the team boathouse near the corner of Sixth and New York streets.
Scott Long, men's varsity captain,
said that although he played football,
ran track and wrestled in high
school, he was out of shape when
he came to the team.
"The first day of practice we ran two miles," Long said, "and I had to stop three times."
Although he said taller people are the ideal rowers, he encouraged everyone, short and tall, to try out for the team.
KANSAN 864-4358
sport until I came to KU. I came out because I was intrigued."
"We'd just like to have people come out and give it a shot," he said. Hamilton said, "I didn't do any
Hamilton said her lack of athletic experience didn't hamper her ability to row.
Elliott said that though being on the crew team was hard work, the benefits were more than worth the effort.
"Rowing is a lifetime sport," he said. "People will row until they're 80 or 90 years old."
But health isn't the only benefit of team rowing.
Hamilton said., "If people need an activity to fill out their time, if they don't mind the work and if they want to meet a lot of people and get close to these people, it's a really great sport."
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1
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, August 27, 1986
13
Sports Briefs
Two players injured at football practice
Senior fullback Dave Cohn reinjured the shoulder he separated last season, and junior defensive end Jon Stewart suffered lower back spasms yesterday during the Jayhawks practice in Anschutz Sports Pavilion, head coach Bob Valente said after practice.
Lynn Bott, director of sports medicine, said that he didn't know the extent of the injuries and that junior tackle Jim Davis, who suffered a pinched nerve Monday, would be out until at least Friday.
Rain forced the Jayhawks to move their workout inside the sports pavilion.
"I like it better than being out there in the downpour and mud." Valesen said. "I'd rather take on
the Miami Dolphins than that lightning."
Estell cut by Chiefs
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Kansas City Chiefs yesterday released 10 players, including former Kansas wide receiver Richard Estell and Jim Arnold, who led the National Football League in punting just two years ago.
Former KU running back Arnold Fields also was cut dayby day by the Pittsburgh Steelers.
The cuts, which included seven veterans, put the Chiefs at the NFL roster limit of 50 players.
Arnold, a fifth-round pick from Vanderbilt in 1983, led the NPL in扑unting in 1984 with a 44.9 yard average, but slipped to 19th last year and was unable to regain his 1984 form in the preseason.
Arnold's departure leaves rookie Lewis Colbert, an eighth-round pick from Auburn, as the Chiefs' punter.
Among the other veteran casualties were linenmen Scott Auer and Bob Olderman, linebackers Jeff Paine and Louis Cooper, fullback Bruce King and defensive back Garcia Lane.
Albeck takes BU job
PEORIA, III. — Former Chicago Bulls coach Stan Albeck yesterday accepted a job as basketball coach at Bradley, his alma mater.
Albeck replaces Dick Versace, who left the school to take a job as an assistant coach with the Detroit Pistons.
From staff and wire reports.
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Wednesday, August 27. 1986 / University Daily Kansan
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CLASSIFIED RATES
Words 1-Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 2 Weeks
0-15 2.70 4.00 5.70 0.50
16-20 3.20 4.75 6.70 10.75
21-29 3.70 5.50 7.00 12.50
For every 5 words add: 50c 75c 1.00 1.25
AD DEADLINES
Muniday Thursday 4 p.m
Tuesday Friday 4 p.m
Wednesday Monday 4 p.m
Thursday 4 p.m
Friday Wednesday 4 p.m
Classified Display ... $4.60
overflow-less
$4.60 per column inch
POLICIES
Classified display advertisements can be only one column wide and no more than six inches deep. Minimum depth is one inch. No recesses allowed in the screen area. No overhangs allowed in classified display ads.
- Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words.
* Deadline is 4 p.m. — 2 working days prior to publication.
- Words set in ALLCAPS count as 2 words.
- Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words.
- Deadline is 4 p.m - 2 working days prior to
- Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only.
- Tearsheet are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge per week of change business office at 804-4350. These are in person or simply by calling the Kansan business office at 804-4350.
- Checks must accompany all classified and marked to the University Daily Kansas.
• All advertisers will be required to pay in advance of their order completed.
- All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established
- No responsibility is assumed for more than one in correct insertion of any advertisement
* Refunda on refunds of pre-paid classified
- % earned rate discount
Samples of all mail order items must be submitted
within the stipulations.
- Checks must accompany all classified admail to The University Daily Kansan
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
correct insertion of any advertisement.
* No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising.
- Blind box ads—please add a $4 service charge.
* Encourage applicants all classified ads mailer.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
$10-$360 WEEKLY/I. Mailing Circular! "Quotas/Boxes. Sussex Interestly rushed Self-
Addressed envelope. Network CDF, POLB1072,
Crystal Lake I, 60014.
VOLUNTERS Headquarters, Lawrence's Crisis
Services Center. Volunteer coordinator,
training required, experiential,
formalized meetings 27 (Wednesday) or
September 1 (Monday): 8 p.m. 1419
(September 24) at The Bunkhouse.
ATTENTION STUDENTS WITH CHILDREN-
Come by the Student Assistance Center, 121
Strong, for a listing of centers and licensed homes
for child care in the Lawrence area.
BEE POLLEN a good natural food supplement. Contains all amino acids, important enzymes, prebiotics and all amino acids. Further available at Round Corner Drug Co. 803 Mass or Community Mercury 700 Maine Ask for Bee Pollen.
OMMUTERS. Self Serve Car Pool Exchange
Linden Lebby, Kansas Union.
DEALING WITH THAT UNEASY FEELING which commonly occurs when you walk into a room full of strangers, you see someone you'd like to know, you're waiting for an interview, or any other reason. On Thursday, August 28 from 6:30-9:00 p.m. and Thursday, August 4 from 6:30-7:30 p.m. 100 Smith Hall Free, no registration. Presented by Strong Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hill, 844-604-4964
Douglas County Rap Victim Support Services now taking applications for volunteer advocates Applications available at Headquarters, 149 I Street, Fredericksburg, Wednesday, day. September 7, 10:30 PM
FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY SKILLS PROGRAM: Topics include overcoming mental blocks for exercise and learning, and listening comprehension. Wednesday, September 3, 7-3:00 p.m. p 308. Short Hair FHI FREE! Presented by the Assistance Center, 121. Strong Hall, 843-6944
IMPROVE YOUR READING COMPREHENSION AND SPEED! Three class sessions, six hours of instruction. Tuesdays; September 2, 9 and 16, 7:00 - 9:30 p.m. Materials fee is $15 in the Student Assistance Center, I121 Strong. 5:00 p.m. on September 2. Class size limited.
Get started right this semester! Attend the Academic Skill Enhancement Program, Wednesday, August 27 6:30 p.m. o.p. 300 Strong Hall, 128 Gold Street. Visit our notebooking study reading FREES. Present to the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall. Gold Silver. We buy and sell gold and silver, class rings, jewelry, coins. Open seven days a week. Gold, Silver and Antique 713 New Hampshire.
THE FAR SIDE
HARAMBEE (Black Christian Fellowship)
Every Friday, 7:00 p.m. at the Baptist Campus
LAWRENCE FLOAT CENTER offers a safe, comfortable, private way to relax and unfold. Stress relief calm the body and the mind. Try our massage therapy for an appointment. Please call 814-5466 for an appointment.
LEARN TO FLY airplanes and get 4 hours
credit. Private license only $1996. Econflight飞
船
*"Learn Massage" 5 week class start Sept 6th
*LCD licensed instructor Limited Enrollment
Call Today! B11 4662. Lawrence Massage Therapy
NEED A RIDE? RIDES UP to 9pm on Tuesdays at Union Caron
**Excelsior RIDE/RISE/RIDER** Use the Self Service Car Pool Exchange **Main Lobby, Kansas Union**
ROTC Students, Journalists, Sociologists,
Graphic Artists, Navy-Nam Veterans, Musicians
and Other Professionals
Humanities, Environmentalists, Christians,
Humanists, Lawyers, Poets, and other concerned
people who believe that food should be clear labor to supply us
with fast food, bananas, coffee, and copper. Come
Aug 28 4:00 PM to eat Rice and Talk at Latin
American Solidarity. Please check us out. Latin
TUTORS. Last your name with us. We refer you to you. Student Assistance Center 121 Storm River
The Graduate School 1-2-3: How to Get There program sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center and scheduled for September 9, as was previously offered in 1-2-3. HIRS A TUFUR? Our see our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall
Freshman/Sophomores - The quickest route to a naval flying career is through Naval Mott Joon. Jonn
Freshmen/Nipponherbs. Learn about the Naval Officer and career opportunities. Join Navy HQTOL
By GARY LARSON
© 1968 Universal Press Syndicate
Loom
B-27
RISE
SET
SUN-Tribune
Inside the sun
TODAY. A READER
RESPONDS TO LAST WEEK'S
CONTENDERED EPISODES
WHICH DEALS SENSITIVELY
WITH TRUCKPERS NEWS FROM
THE BRUSH MONTAGHY.
TIME TO GO.
FETCH YOUR FATHER.
HEY
GNARLY
CHARLIE!
Classified Ads
A TYPICAL EXCERPT
FOLLOWS :
Guitarist looking to form/join rock band. Will play about anything except H.J.M. 642, 841-2491. I sang. Gave a lota songs. I will also help with this thing and these dropped names appeal to you. Veldwer, those names are fun to help me. Patti Smith, etc., and on and on, give me a call and we'll talk about making some noise. I'm a guitarist.
Bloom County
VIEWPOINT
SONIC 502ND MUNDER Disc Jackets. The best and first DJ's in Lawrence use compact discs. When you want quality at a truffle affordable price, call us. Don't buy a party is worth the money. #924-62890
BLOOM COUNTY
ENTERTAINMENT
FORRENT
1. brm. Furnished Air conditioning One block from Kansas Union. Quiet. Water Paid Sublease
Avail now. 1 bed. Apt. Close to KU. $800. Utilities.
wpid.call("492-1058")
FREE RENTAL ASSISTANCE. Kaw Valley Mgt has one of Lawrence's largest selection in quality affordable housing. Offering studies, 1.2 room 3 bedroom apts., duplexes and townhouses. Available now or next Fall. Watch for our Spring open houses. Contact 641-6800 to solv your home.
modern 2 bedroom apartment for rent. 2 Blocks
romm. Camp Call D83-1691 or 843-9066
HILLVIEW APTS
1745 W. 24th
841-5797
now taking applications for 8-6et school year
children (age 7-10) at Sunflower
Private room, evening meal, free laundry and
kitchen available for members under the
discount of $25 per semester (president)
House government Sunflower Student Coop House.
$250
Room for Rent $159 plus utilities 3 bedroom, next to
Hospital. 249-2976
1 & 2 BR units
* Furnished & furnished
* New carpets, rugs
* Bedding and mattresses
* On busy new shopping
* Ample off-street parking
Professional managed by
professionals
Sublease one bedroom Apt. From now to July 31,
1987 $13/month plus 1/4 utilities. Call 843-5190.
Two blocks from Univ. furnished two bed apartment
Watf. at oem* on pats. 861-5190.
MICHAELCAFTER offers completely furnished 1,2,
and 3 bedroom apartments all near campus. Call
(804) 576-8000.
Vacancy for male in Koimaona Christian Living Community at Ecumenical Christian Mission Trust.
Serious female student share house private room, central air, TV, kitchen equipment Dishwasher, microwave, walk to campus, call Monroe at 841-4478.
FOR SALE
YAMAHA TOWYN. Perfect condition, looks and runs like new. 2 pads. Must to see appreciation.
1985 Honda Spare, red, low mileage, like new $390 or
offer best offer. 842/73229
2500 Osadshil Electric piano, Oak Antique qualling frame, fishing equip, oo 49. Stanley teams, Toy's Chain link furniture. Small appliances. Loads of Miscellaneous. Sat. Aug. 3:9 a.m. to 4:45 m.
The Perfect Bed.
- New hatch in front of perfect pair of windows.
- A large window with sunlit view.
- Bedroom location of three adjacent and comfortable. And now, the perfect bed is on downtown Lavender.
--ment included 842 6690
For Sale 111 mercury Lynx A/ C Sunroof, Good
Lynx Lights 749 2930
...AND FRANKLY, I THINK THAT COMIC STRIPS LIKE THIS ONE REPRESENT SECULAR HUMANISM'S FIFTH COLUMN. SWEAKING IN AND WARPING THE MINDS OF OUR YOUTH WITH--
These fastens first became popular with
Blue Heron
COUTTAIL POTTERY FONTS
Cat. Train 1083 (Akshara) $1200
Train 1083 1200
Fall 125 155
Pillow 127 165
King 197 155
Ming 195 155
79 Plymouth Horizon For Sale 4 cylinders, 4
tonnes. FM radio, 30 MPG. Price
Call 794 6956.
73 Gran Torino P.S. PB.AC AM/FM Cas. Great school
$1000.00 B.O.B 749-4726
B.East 12th Street, Lawrence, KS 76041-1943
10 a.m. - 1 p.m. Monday, June 25th
77 Pontiaer Aster, 4 speed Low mileage, Sound body Mech Body Call Good 442; after 579
(NIS IDENTITY has
BEEN NEWN BEFORE
COMMUNITY
RETRICTION... )
--ment included 842 6690
For Sale 111 mercury Lynx A/ C Sunroof, Good
Lynx Lights 749 2930
A CONSIDERED READER...
CHOSEN AT FORUM...
FOLLOWS WITH HIS
COMMENTS :
BLOOM COUNTY
...HEY!
WHO TURNED
ON THE LIGHTS !
SAM WILSON
THIS SORT OF "HUMOR"
IS SIMPLY DISGRACEFUL.
WHY DONT WE see MORE
"FAMILY" HUMOR ON THE
COMIC PAGE like 'NANCY'
OR 'DON'BEE'S BURY'?
by Berke Breathed
→
by Berke Breathed
AND FRANKLY, I THINK THAT
COMIC STRIPS LIKE THIS
ONE REPRESENT SECULAR
HUMANISM'S FIFTH COLUMN
SNEEKING IN AND WARNING
THE MINDS OF OUR YOUTH
WITH--
HEY!
WHO TURNED
ON THE LIGHTS!
UN-
HA HA!
DOORS!
GOTTA GO!
LATE DATE!
BVE!
THANK YOU FOR WATCHING
Bloom County
VISIONPOINTS
THE OPPORTUNITY WE G
YOU, THE READER, TO RE-
TO OPINIONS EXPRESSED
THIS FEATURE.
JOIN US WHEN WE
THE SECOND IN
OF VIEW
THE SAME TA.
FREEZE!
UH...
HA! HA!
OOP'S!
GOTTA GO!
LATE DATE!
BYE!
Antique oak partners desk with glass top. Excellent condition. $250.8427277
Comic Books. Playbills. Pentebanks, etc. Mac's
Comics. Open 10 a.m. Tue Fri. Sat & Sun 10-6 Saturdays.
Barnes & Noble.
Dishwasher Removes Portable Excellent buy
Call after 5 p.m. $15. Prieve Village
766 766
Electronic Smith Corona typewriter Excellent condition Used very little pth. 843-7792, after 5
29 Gall fish tank with stand and all other equipment included. 842-6659
COMIC BOOKS, Science Fiction, Games at
Kaleigh Comics 1111 MASS 843-7209
Furniture, Bedding, Pots and Fans. Decorations
and upholstery. Thrift Stores to serve you at 8,
6th, 5th and 4th floors.
Honda Elite Scatterer 124 ce engine, flipped up
and stored in $900 Firm Call. Dan Cairn
301, work 817, work 301, work 817.
Furniture: bookshelves, desks, chairs. Open seven days a week. Boyd's Coins and Antiques. 731 New Hampshire.
Mobotecane 10 speed with accessories, great condition.
$185. Call 841-7614
New Sanmu S-117 Tower Speakers, 160 watts $155
each. Kenwood IW1030 stereo Amplifier, 160
watts $27 each. Aiva top of the line X200 Pro-
fessional laud deck device. Message
841-7041 $300
PLYMOUTH THIRD SHOP for used clothing,
houseware, cosmetic tape, Tuesday 9-4. Thurs.
10-6.
Sofa, nice. $100 and lounge chair $10 After 4:00 p.m. 843-4247
Technica Sierra, 60% receiver, auto furnace
Technica Sierra, 75% receiver, auto furnace
749-1380, 749-1480, 749-1580, 842-6038
**Note Notes:** On Sale *Now on Sale*. Makes use of them. 1) As study guide. 2) For class preparation. 3) Analysis of Western Civilization, available now at Town Creek. The Jayhawk Bookseller, and
White three drawer dresser with gold antique finish. Price negotiable. 843-4986.
Will buy one or two (140 or 200 model) helios
for $495. HP-12C calculator with math pad
FOR SAS 12P-HP-12VU calculator with math pad
FOR SALE: HP-41C calculator with math pa-
manuals and case: $100.841.7906
AUTO SALES
Great Buy! Silver-Reed Typewriter with correction, 8753, Call 749-1081 evenings.
96] WV Ket生 48,000 miles on rebuilt engine
New interior, very comfortable.
Call of arm of 844-1259
1971 Plymouth EX motor good tires, all in good condition.
$400. 1-823-9021.
1974 WV SUPER REEKT. New Trees, brakes,
300 mi on roofthe rebuilt engine. One owner, all
receipts, well maintained and gets Gels up
Oread without fail every winter. $1,600
1953 Toyota Corolla, AC, AMF MSTerose, Auto,
$750 1952 Honda 300 Motorcycle $230 Both run
and look good. Call Hong, 843 1948 or leave your
name and number.
1977 Pratt 62,300 miles; good condition; clean interior;
$800 notepad; 841-6931
terror: 1000 négatifé. 387 volts.
Ninipo Stiped. Hands with pins.Zip around card.
Ninipo Stiped. Hands with pins.Zip around card.
Ninipo Stiped. Hands with pins.Zip around card.
SAS v5.049 'Nomura' x86
10x00 SAMI x86 a door Hatchback, FWD.
10x00 SAMI x86 a door Hatchback, FWD.
962 3420
1065 Sushara hatchback w/AC, 15,000 highway
miles, $4995, 749-5741 for 6 p.m.
78 Yamaha Id 400. Excellent shape and de-
pendent transportation. Please call 5 am at
pm for pick up.
18. Rabbit GTI loaded with after market accounts 4300 or Thur. 2 p.m. in Pine; See app. and email for details.
**Rabbit GTI loaded with after market access card** to Trim or Fr 3.5 p.m. in San Francisco. See and appleseed info.
**Rabbit GTI loaded with after market access card** to Trim or Fr 3.5 p.m. in San Francisco. See and appleseed info.
Can you buy Jeepers, Cars, 4x4's Seated in drug
radios for up to $900? Can you call for facts
when the police say you are armed?
LOST/FOUND
Lost 8 kt 20 wt velcro wallet between Nausmith and Learned Hali 749-4726
The honest person WHO FOUND $20.92 CASH near Nasmith and University Dr. on Thursday evening, 8:21, Contact Gay Guy Rupp, 749-123, 1635 University Dr. to claim the reward for your
HELP WANTED
3. 0000 GOVERNMENT JOB List:
6. 0000 GOVERNMENT JOB List:
9. Nowiring Hair: 187-650 467-600
Ex Rufus 777
2 part time positions at Harwood Meats.
Apply to person on site at lowbay from 6 a.m. - 3:30 p.m.
16 month old active tender needs sister/companion on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 12-4 p.m. Must be non-smoker with transportation. Need *location* specified. Required. Call *annums or after 7 p.*
Ambitions person to call on campus organizations with customized, imprinted party favors. Contact us at info@campusparty.com
A Korean Institute of English Conversation is looking for an instructor who is a native speaker in Korean, and who can teach to and from Korea, an apartment and $70/hour. Needs one year experience with the Certificate of Bachelor's Degree to Choi Ch. 26, 12 Stouffer College, Kansas 66044. Call 842-8891 at p.m.
Clark-Tester in East Asian Language and Culture (12-15 hours) and/or International Theater Studies Center (5.7 hours). Work study required. For details, call 864-3100.
Companion-Cook. To assist disabled KU staff member weekday afternoons, 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. $4.3 per hour. Cooking experience and reliable transportation required. KU student preferr
Hailyshire wanted for 3 month old baby. Flexible hours. At 20 hours per week. Call Bubly 654-1180.
Corpus Christi Catholic Church needs four nursery workers with two tours free time on campus. They also need eighteen years of age and have own transportation. Early Childhood Education field preferred.
Data entry position, half time requires familiarity with computer entry, proven reliability and consistency. Must be able to conduct BASIC program to enter hand written data. Prefer formal grammar training and a Master's degree in Computer Science available and resume to Research Assistant, 1A131 Brustell Terrace, Lawrenceville, 60044 USA. EOE/AA
Day Care needs cook to prepare simple meals for 14 pre-school M.F. I:11 Call 843-4147
*MARC* the association of local governments, is looking for fall and spring student interns in the fields of journalism, English, and communications business. Students will learn what the business world is really like and acquire the experience you need to get a better job by assisting MARC with research activities. These are not "go-for" positions. Students with communications backgrounds will write articles and reports on topics relevant to the recycling department or for the Regional Recycling Program Those with business, economic and marketing expertise will perform research for the Research Data Center Accounting Students will perform program reviews and audits of MARC subcontractors, contact information
Local moving company needs drivers packers & loaders. Experience price $3.50 and up.
vow hiring Mass St. Deli food service employees.
dust have 1 year experience and daytime availability. Starting pay $7.35 per hr plus $15 per day.
vow hiring Mass Abbey Bob's Smoketown.
vow hiring Mass Abbey Bob's Smoketown.
Maria gentle nonsmile needed for all-day
daycare of one toddler and housekeeping from
sept. thru May, excl Christmas holidays. Reply
Box DD Shaer-Flint
Now hiring. Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse. Table service employees. Must have Tuesday through Friday shift. Please call 516-278-2031. Base Pay $2.01 per hour plus approximately $7.10 per hour tips. Apply to 419 Massachusetts, above.
Drivers wanted: must be 18 & over. Must have car own car & insurance $39/hr-commission Apply in person or call. Checkers Pizza. 2214 Yale, 841-8010
Day Care needs afternoon assistant 3-5
Call with children and references call
Custody number
Graduate Assistance position. Prefer microcomputer and or production experience, graduate degree in a related field or 6 months month. Starts immediately. Apply at Instru-
ntional Tech Center Bailey Hall Aa194 864-3057
Hemp Wanted. Part-time day and evening delivery
of food and supplies of proof of insurance. Ap-
p in person only at Bothell, WA.
Hemp Wanted. Part-time sales representative.
Must be at least 18 years old. App in per
person for 10% of total hourly earnings (10%
18W, 23rd. Ask for J.K.)
Hiring both full and part-time pizza delivery drivers. Must be it or older with own car and insurance. Apply in person at Pizza Shuttle in the Southern Hills Mall 1901 W. 23rd.
PERSONAL CARE ASSISTANT NEEDS MOREM
weekends. No weekends are required. 740-698-2350.
Part time housecleaners wanted. You enjoy cleaning and are meticulous. Buckingham Palace is interested in your talents. Call 842-6264. Must be available over breaks.
Part-time positions for breakfast and dinner shifts on weekdays and weekends at Natsimh Hall Food Service. If interested in becoming a part-time or full-time HAIl be sure to specify food service. EOE/M/F/HAL post广告宣传材料 on campus Write. College Distributors, 33 Pebblewood Trail, Napoleon
SALES MICROCOMPUTER Lawrence's largest computer store, COMPUTER OUTLET, lets a personable, aggressive salesperson. Work inside inside sales and store maintenance. Full or part time available. Requires Req's degree in NE Kansas. Salary commensurate with experience. Send resume to COMPUTER OUTLET 804 New Hamphire, LAKES KS 60044 EOE/MF
SOCER REFERESERS The Kaw Valley Soccer Association is looking for officials at eight days and all runs for eight saturdays. Need some extra exercise? Short of contact. Contact Leu Lei 814351 or Larry
STUDENT ASSISTANT. Operation of blueprint machine, measuring campus facilities, updating of small scale drawings and filing of drawings and plans to the campus experience. This is a work study funded position and requires pre qualifications under the work study program. Deadline 01/26/16. Call for interview.
Student hourly position, 15-29 hours per week
Run errands, campus mail, photo oppusions,
business meetings. Expand the reliable transportation available daily, good communication skills and ability to make decision.
AAB13 Bristol Terrace (Meadowbrook Apartments)
114 4-week days). Application deadline Aug
Student work-study position on campus
publisher seeks help 10 hours/week to open and
distribute daily mail, answer phones, type,
and assist in various duties. MUST be eligible for
work-study position. Please serve as per-
spective. Come to University Press of Kansas,
329 Carruth, to complete application by 8/29. 86
The Audio Visual Center is hiring Audio-Visual Assistants on Work Study and regular hourly Experience preferred, but not required. Apply in person at 7. Lippincott Hall. Equal Opportunity.
The Institute for Public Policy and Business Research has telephone interviewer openings for the months of September and October. Applicants must be knowledgeable in computerizable and capable of precise, accurate work. A pleasant and clear voice is essential. All interviewing will be conducted on campus and at the general public meeting with the general public is desired. Help for morning, afternoon and evening shifts in now needed. Interested applicants should contact us.
The University of Kansas Budget Office has a position opening for a continuous half-time student assistant. The person in this role must be proficient in the University's budgets and other financial reports, do word processing, typing spreadsheet preparation, and good writing and oral communication skills. A senior or graduate student status and good written and oral communication skills $40 to $45 per month. September 15, 1988. Start date is flexible. For information call Jana Hine. Budget Office, 844-3134. Applicant Education: 319强火华 Iliqual. Employer:
WE HAVE THE IDEAL JOB FOR THE STUDENT WANTED. We will work on Monday, Wednesday, Friday or Tuesday/Thursday; 9-2 or 11-5 RUNA INN 1200 10WA needs you. Apply to us.
Wanted Sitter for cat I will pay bills, food extra &
per month, cat deacclamed, all pet shots, call
for care.
Wanted maintenance person. Duties include general maintenance and cleaning of two vacant buildings, each 10 ft. by 10 ft., a.m.-11 a.m., m.11 a.m., Mon-Pri and 2 p.m. 4 p.m. wednesday. Apply at 719 Mass. above Buffalo Avenue.
Wanted full and part time delivery drivers. Hourly wage plus commission, must have own transportation. Apply in person. Pizza Shoppe Kqoap, Westport Shopping center
Warm, caring people who like children ages 3-5 are needed at Head Start as volunteers for a minimum of 2 hours per day, 1 day per week. But sometimes it can be more convenient call 842-2515. For more information call 842-2515.
Half time temporary position to assist with ongoing research involving workers with various disabilities. Must be currently enrolled, able to work flexible hours, and have availabie research experience in a collection or research. $3.75 per hour, apply in person at AASH Trieret Temple. Call 812-640-7100. Application deadline: August 29. EOE/AA
DRIVERS WANTED Domino's Pizza is now offering delivery drivers. Earn approximately 6thr Must be 18, have own car and insurance. Apply in person at 1445 W. 32rd Street or 62nd Low EOE.
MAKE HUNDREDS WEEKLY MAILING CURRALS FULL/PART TIME, RUSHI SELF ADDRESSED STAMPED ENVELOPE A.1.108 VENTUA, SUITE 88 DEP. Q, STUDIO CITY, NY
McDONALYS IS HIRING Quick, clean, quality minded individuals to work daytime hours, 10 to 30 hours a week. Previous McDonald's employees encouraged to apply. We provide uniforms, half-prepared meals, and flexible scheduling. You can apply at 514-866-2100 or phone calls please. EOE/AA
PART-TIME OFFICE HELP 15-30 hours a week usually late morning and afternoon. Must be available year round. Duties will include typing data entry on microcomputer and receptionist duties. This is a non-smoking office. Send resume to Exau University Institute, Inc. 1814 W. 21rd, Lawrence, KS 66049.
Registered Nurse Unique opportunity to use your assessment skills to see homebound patients. On call one evening per week and in case of emergency, contact Daniels County VA NAM 934-7380 EOE
Add class, comfort, & privacy to your car with
tinted windows. For app up to 768.776 Student
with no tint.
BUS. PERSONAL
CHRISMUS SUN is looking for young women looking to develop a modular portfolio Call 841 6859 Rent' 19 Color 'T V $29.80 a month Curtis Mathews 147 W. 2frd. 843753) Mesh: 9:30 - 10:30
**8XTRA BAYS-XTRA MOVIE V4L 4-room**
bays 114 x 9, videoprog. 14W2 fwd 80 iow 80 every
day x 9, videoprog. 14W2 fwd 80 iow 80 every
--instant practice, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration to 11 and 12 of course, foreign travel, visit with SSI staff.
Are You Paying Too Much For Your Health Insurance?
For comparable rates call
Jim Kelly Schmidt or Knight
841-6535 843-6887
--instant practice, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration to 11 and 12 of course, foreign travel, visit with SSI staff.
Driver Education offered through Midway Driving School. Experienced program, one week Beginners program, two weeks. Driver's license available, 441,774.
Modeling, theatrical and art portfolios. Slides or prints. High quality, low price. Swells
Board Sailors!
I
B.I.G. Certified School
★All harnesses now on sale
10% OFF!
Sunflower's Intermediate Windsurfing lessons start soon.
Learn beach starts,
water starts, jibing,
freestyle and
use of harness.
2. Certified School!
SUNFLOWER
BCH MASSACHUSETTS
TOWNHOUSE LAWNFRONT
SAY IT ON A SHIRT! Custom silk screen printing. T-shirts, jeans and capes. SHIRT printing.
- Licensed coop pre-school
* Class openings T,TH A.M.
G M.W,F P.M.
* Certified teachers
* Parent participation
Lawrence Community
A HOME FOR YOU
842-0064 645 Alabama
SCIENCE FICTION, Comic book, Simulation & Game
MASS 8412798 Game Kwality Collection, 111
MASS 8412798
We Sell Airline Tickets
Leaving Town?
Airline Counter Prices!
NO SERVICE CHARGE!
ON-CAMPUS LOCATION!
Maupintour travel service 749-0700
KU Union
831 Massachusetts
Thousands of R & R albums = $2 or less. Also loss-
items items Tat Sat & Sun only 10 a.m to 5 p.m.
qantrillts 811 New Hampshire Buy, Sell, or
Trade all music styles
CAMP-RITCHT TRANSH RETRO LOUGE 1021
Massachusetts, Tues. Sat 15, Thru 31. G1.7.0
DOUBLE DAY-BOOK FEATURE 2 tapes 2 pages
$3.95 Videxpress, 1447 W. St. 8; e is to
live
GREENS
PARTY SUPPLY 808 W.23rd
Aug. 25 - Sept. 3
Weekly Beer Special
Bud Lt. 12 pk. $5.42
Old Style 12 pk. $4.21
Busch 12pk. $3.98
Meister Brau 24 pk. $6.95
Weidemann 12 pk. $3.75
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, August 27. 1986
15
*Starting Stress & Strrain?* If you haven't tried massage, you have! REALLY relaxed. Student rates licensed-by Lawrence. Call, Bruce or Dayla at 841-6626. Lawrence Massage Therapy.
The sun is out and the sunlamps are in at the KITCHEN 725 Mass 843 6011 Mon-Sun 11:5-30.
New York Times
Daily (Mon.-Fri.)
on Campus Delivery
Aug.25-Dec.19
$29.99
to: N.Y. Times
P.O. Box 1721
Lawrence, KS 66044
for Sunday Service
or more info call
841-5073 Rate Adjusted for later orders.
Quality furniture doesn't have to be expensive.
airbnb furnaces from $118, student desk from $99,
kitchen cabinets from $450, chair from $199, bookcases from $30, lamps from $199 and much more. Furniture
from $199 and much more.
SERVICES OFFERED
Alternative counseling using areabetalial images, visualization, dream analysis. West Widow, NY.
Black and White film processing, contact sheets,
and enlargements. Push and Pull processing also
available THE PICTURE WORKS 13th and
Haskell, 843-0470
LLM Tailoring 007 Alterations and Customized
Models 1902 Massachusetts Hear En-
rollment BRINCE
Professional Housecleaning, experienced,
references, reasonable rates. Call 841-3920
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in
Lawrence. 841-5716
Same day Ektachrome/E/4 slide processing
with or without two available, THE PICTURE WORKTHIS XPS and XPS.
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL, get your driver's license in two weeks without patrol testing, upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-2316.
Tuturing Better grades through better comprehension. How help improve your study skills?
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., 40 minutes-48.
843-9023
Used camera and photographic equipment
PICTURE WORKS, 12 and Haskell, 849-079
DRIVER EDUCATION offered through Midwest Driving School, serving KS for 20 yrs. or younger.
TYPING
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing, Judy. 842-7485 or
mail: judy@scribnerbooks.com
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing.
Term papers, terms, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter-quality
printing, spelling corrected. 842-724-274
TYPIING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications, resumes. HAVE M.S. Degree. 841-6254
EXPERIENCED TYPIST Term papers, theses
IMC Correcting letters will correct spelling
words, Mr. Wright
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional wordpress
manuscripts, resumees, theses, letter
compilers
1 plus Typing. Call Terry 842-4754 or 843-3671
5:30-10 p.m. Resumes, books, thesis, law
review papers, letters, term papers. Sharp ZX 305
Memory Electronic Typewriter
24-Hour Typing, 12th semester in Lawrence
School, papers. Close to campus,
quality and faculty.
A3 professional typing. Term papers. Thesis.
A12 professional typing. Term papers. 18H.
A3 wireless charging. 842-326.
W5 reasonable. 842-326.
Absolutely Your Type! Word processing, typing and editing are easy. "Same day service" available. 8434, Illumi. 8434, Illumi. 8434
DEENDABLE, professional, experienced
JEANETTE SHAPER-- Tipping Service
TRANSCRIPT also; standard cassette tape
843.8877
DISSERTATIONS / THESES/ LAW PAPERS/
Typing, Editing and Graphic, ONE-DAY Service
available on short student paper (up to 30
papers), Mommy's Tape, Tyler's, 849-257-
before 9 p. Please
Theses, resumes, and papers WRITING
UNIVERSITY DREXEL 841-3409
Come and discover hampers and baskets at Pier 1 Imports. They're on sale right now. You can choose from a wide assortment of sizes, colors and styles. They're just what you need for storage and they are great decorator accents at the same time. Discover Pier 1 Imports today! The sale ends August 31, 1986.
Pier1 imports*
738 Massachusetts: Mon.-Sat. 9:30-5:30, Thurs. 9:30-8:30, Sun. 1-5.
A PlaceToDiscover.
VISA
MasterCard
CHECKERS PIZZA
Perfect "10"
! Fantastic Fall Savings Spectacular!
1 12" 2-topping pizza + 2 pops $4.99 + tx.
2 2 12" 2-topping pizzas + 4 pops $8.99 + tx.
3 16"² 2-topping pizza + 4 pops $8.99+tx.
4 2 16" 2-topping pizzas + 6 pops $14.00 tax incl.
5 16" 2-topping pizza (Dine-In Only) $5.99 + tx.
6 12" -2-topping pizza + 2 all-you-can-eat salad bars (Dine-In Only) $5.99 + tx.
7 12'' DELUXE PIZZA (sausage, pepperoni, onion, mushrooms, & green peppers) $5.99 + tx.
9 12'' PRICE BUSTER
(sausage, pepperoni, onion,
mushrooms, green peppers,
canadian bacon, black olives,
ground beef, & extra cheese.)
$6.99 + tx.
8 16" DELUXE pizza $8.99 + tx.
25° DRAWS & $1.25 PITCHERS—MON. & SAT.
(beer & Pop) (only)
10 16" PRICE BUSTER $10.99 + tx.
Sorry, no item substitutions on specialty pizzas)
CHECKERS
25¢ check charge
2214 YALE RD.
841-8010 ! DELIVERY IS FREE!
11:30-2:00 a.m. Mon.-Thurs
11:30-midnight Sun.
WANTED
DISSATISFIED WITH YOUR PRESENT HOUSING? You could be living at 1653 University Dr, just 2 blocks off campus. Call Guy or Jim at 749-1208.
Female Roommate need: *need to share attractive 2 bedroom apartment $14.50 plus 1/2 units. Call me at (866) 354-7890.*
GWM, law student, seeks stuition M or F roommate for large two bedroom apartment 1/2 block from library and responsible. 1/2 of month to month rent. Utilities available. Sept 1st. Contact p. B318 304-567-0211.
STADIUM BARBER SHOP
770
Female Christian roommate share nice 129
or mature 843 966 or 843 3628
843 966 or 843 3628
ALL HAIRCUTS $6
Quality Haircuts at Reasonable Prices
appt. necessary . Closed on Mon s
Young's
Young's Auto & Mower Repair
• Import • Domestic
Transmission, carburator
& brake repair
Truck upgrades
I WANT AN ALL-SPARTS TICKET NOW. Call 843-8544 for Albert.
1209 E. 23rd 749-2401
Male mRNAiimate needed to share a 3 bedroom apartment. 16/3/18. Call Bob or Steve
Mala roommate wants share condo. Own room &
room. W/D, Bus, completed furnished,
more. 843-6971.
Clean and sociable student for a beautiful 2 BR HT at 114, Kentucky, furnished and paid.
Non-smoking, responsible senior or graduate student to share two bedroom furnished house. Walk to campus; $100/month plus 1/2 ushirts; 842-2958 need new needs members. We depart Washburn area of Topeka at 7 a.m. and KU campus at 5 p.m. Mon-Fri. Call Fred Frederickson at 847-4355 during weekends.
Roommate to share half of费份 for 2 BH Ap. only 2 bks. from campus: $12.19 (rent includes: roommate fee, call #443 5050) 6-12 p.m. or stop by 1423 Ohio JS) Wanted: Non-smoking female roommate to shar ge; furnished 2 Bdrm. Ap. 2 bks. from street parking $159.50 plus 1/2 low heat.
DEALING WITH THAT UNEASY FEELING
which commonly occurs when...
* you walk into a room full of strangers
* you see someone you'd like to know
* you're waiting for an interview
...or any other social situations
a two-part workshop:
Thursday, August 28 and Thursday, September 4
6:30 to 9 p.m.
6:30 to 7:30 p.m.
Both in 100 Smith Hall
FREE
Presented by Student Assistance Center
Presented by Student Assistance Center
STC
of Hupei Invites KU Students To Dinner
House of
Free beverage, appetizer and soup with selected Main Dishes Only 8.95
Featuring our TIGER SPECIAL
Open Daily:
Lunch 11:30-2:30 p.m. 2907 W. 6th
Dinner 4:30-9:30 p.m.
843-8070
Fri. & Sat.
'till 10:30 p.m.
House of HuPEI
House of
HUPEI
湖北
湖北
KU STUDENTS
KU STUDENTS THE KANSAS CITY STAR/Times NEWSPAPER has a Special Student Discount Rate
HALF PRICE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
FALL SEMESTER - 86 Aug. 21 to Dec. 19, 1986
$20.80 morning evening Sunday
This price includes consideration for non-delivery when classes are suspended for holidays, breaks and other periods when service is not requested. The offer becomes effective Aug. 21 and expires Dec. 19, 1986 DELIVERY TO BEGIN WITHIN 3 WORKING DAYS OF PAYMENT which can be made in person at the local office at
932 Mass. St., Lawrence, KS, 843-1611.
NAME: ___
DATE: ___
ADDRESS: ___
PHONE: ___
STUDENT ID: ___
SIGNED: ___
1
16
wednesday, August 27, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
2018.11.29 16:35:54
WOLF
STARTS
8 A.M.
SHARP
AUG. 14
CLEARANCE
Store Hours
This Weekend
Thursday 8-8 p.m.
Fri.-Sat. 8:30-5:30
Wolf Face
Here is your opportunity to save on photography and Video merchandise throughout the entire store. We must make room for fall inventory now. Wolfe's has low close-out prices on demonstrators, discontinued models and overstocks, but you must hurry. All items are limited stock and subject to prior sale.
35mm SLR CAMERAS
IF NEW RETAIL | SALARY
Nikon F15 50mm 12 (used) | 179.99
Nikon F2 Body (used) | 559.00 | 189.99
Nikon F2 Body No Meter (used) | 519.00 | 239.99
Nikon F8 Body (used) | 395.00 | 129.99
Canon AE I w/50mm 11 (used) | 430.00 | 129.99
Canon AE I w/50mm 11.8 (used) | 350.00 | 119.99
Canon AT I w/50mm 11.8 (used) | 250.00 | 59.99
Olympus M10 Body (used) | 240.00 | 129.99
Olympus M2 Body (used) | 190.00 | 89.99
Chrono CS y/55mm 17 (used) | 290.00 | 129.99
Pentax Spotting仪 11.4 (used) | 329.00 | 99.99
Panasonic SP50 50mm 12 (used) | 249.00 | 99.99
Panasonic TL-eurota 42 (used) | 299.00 | 69.99
Yashichai TL-eurota 42 (used) | 299.00 | 69.99
Seers K1S 79.99 | 199.00 | 59.99
Kenko SES-K5 Super 50mm 12 (used) | 179.00 | 59.99
Fuji XA50 50mm 12 (used) | 179.00 | 59.99
Makro ML517 11.7 (used) | 189.50 | 59.99
Rosh TL 401 11.4 (used) | 289.50 | 79.99
Kanono A31 7.7 (used) | 399.00 | 99.99
Kanono P11 11.8 (used) | 399.00 | 109.99
Kanono ML517 11.7 (used) | 389.00 | 119.00
Kanono TL 401 11.4 (used) | 289.50 | 149.99
Kanono TC11 7.7 (used) | 429.00 | 149.99
Kanono TC11.8 (used) | 429.00 | 149.99
Mamiya 1000 DTL 11.8 (used) | 299.50 | 79.99
Kanono TC10 50mm 11.8 (used) | 299.50 | 129.99
Canotifx used | 239.00 | 610.00
Kanono ATI 1-program Body | 450.00 | 310.00
Kanono ATI 1-program Body | 450.00 | 200.00
Kanono New F1 w/AE Finer | 870.00 | 580.00
Kanono T90 Body | 600.00 | 460.00
Contax 137MA Body 45mm 12 | 680.00 | 299.00
Contax 139MP Body 45mm 12 Zens | 680.00 | 299.00
Contax RT5 Body 11.7 Zens | 970.00 | 499.99
Kanono FT-1 Body | 990.00 | 109.00
Kanono FT-1 Body | 990.00 | 109.00
Kanono B4 50mm 12 | 1600.00 | 1399.00
Lenses B450 50mm | 1200.00 | 1099.00
Minolta X700 Body | 374.00 | 220.00
Nikon F3 Body High-Eyeapint | 610.00 | 450.00
Nikon F2E Body | 479.50 | 320.00
Nikon F5G Black 11.8E | 355.00 | 1399.00
Nikon F60-20 11.8E | 299.00 | 1399.00
Nikon F60-20 11.8E | 299.00 | 1399.00
Olympus OM-25 11.8E | 400.00 | 299.99
Olympus OM-4 Body | 640.00 | 360.00
Olympus OM-G18 11.8E | 450.00 | 320.00
Olympus OM-G18 11.8E | 450.00 | 320.00
Pentax 3000B body | 263.00 | 130.49
Pentax ME Super Body | 272.00 | 164.99
Pentax P3 Body | 218.00 | 164.99
Rokin RR 307MP 12.8E | 499.00 | 306.00
Rokin RR 307MP 12.8E | 499.00 | 306.00
Rokin RR 307MP 12.8E | 499.00 | 306.00
Tokina FX3 28-80mm Pro | 439.00 | 220.99
KonicaDX
Cela-Print
Film
135 ZP
SR 100
COLOR PRINT FILM
Three $707
Pack $707
Less $2 Rebate
Konica ASA100 35mm, 24 expo-
vation
vacation
Stock up for
vacation
Final Cost $169 per roll
MOVIE CAMERAS/
PROJECTORS
| | RETAIL | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Bell & Newell 10MS Projector | 199.95 | 109.99 |
| Chiona 350 Sound Projector | 199.95 | 239.99 |
| Chiona 358 Sound Projector | 1395.00 | 1499.99 |
| Kodak 475 Movie Deck (used) | 139.95 | 79.99 |
| GXL 2-1 Sound Camera (used) | 279.50 | 99.99 |
| Chiona X16/17 Camera (used) | 759.00 | 39.99 |
| Chiona X16/17 Camera (used) | 899.00 | 899.00 |
| Bell & Newell 16mm Camera (used) | 895.00 | 249.00 |
| Bell & Newell 1312 Sound (used) | 298.00 | 59.99 |
| Chiona 6100 Sound (used) | 349.00 | 99.99 |
| Vivitar 16mm (used) | 1195.00 | 299.99 |
| Vivitar 16mm (used) | 149.00 | 69.99 |
| GAF 2000 Sound Projector | 394.90 | - |
MOTORS FOR 25mm CAMERAS
BATTERY CHARGER
SHOOT CANYON.
Shoot canyons on or seek-
er views. Available for NIKG FG. Minolta, Ricoh,
Cenpent, Pentax, Olympus.
NIKON CAMERA WITH Your Choice of Lens 35, 50 or 135mm Nikon E Lens with
Orig.
Retail
To $130
$5999
NIKON FG-20
$19999
Nikon
Compact aperture preference automatic 35mm, manual over ride, timer, accepts winder.
With NIKON N2000 $27999
Nikon
100%
Dual program exposure for easiest operation, auto-load and motor film advance, manual, much more.
35mm f2.5 Nikon E wide angle, best for scenic and groups.
135mmf2.8 Nikon E, fast telephoto lens, great for sports and candids.
BOLT
CHOOSE YOUR LENS
50mm 11.8 Nikon E, fast general use lens,
"normal."
BONUS! When you buy the camera and lens, you may buy the other lenses at the same time for only $60 each.
NIKON CAMERA With ZOOM
MEDIUM FORMAT CAMERAS and ACCESS.
Every used items in our stock reduced dramatically. Choose from Mamiya, Bronica, Yashica, Hasselblad and more.
$29999
Nikon FG-20 with 35-70mm 12.8 Sigma Zoom
Nikon FG-20 with 28-70mm f12.8 Pro Zoom
Nikon N2000 with 35-70mm f1.8 Sigma Zoom
POINT & SHOOT CAMERAS
$31999
$37999
$39999
Kodak
1234567890
1234567890
FLA
LENSES FOR CANON
IF NEW RETAIL SALUE
300mm 14.5 Midea (used) 319.50 59.99
85.20mm 14.5 Vizard (used) 298.00 32.99
80.20mm 14.5 Pro (used) 298.00 59.99
135mm 12.8 Bushnell (used) 139.50 19.99
135mm 13.5 Canon (used) 169.50 19.99
135mm 13.5 Bushnell (used) 169.50 79.99
280mm 12.8 Bushnell (used) 169.50 24.99
75.25mm 14.5 Sigma (used) 139.50 99.99
80.25mm 14.5 Sigma (used) 298.00 99.99
280mm 13.4-5.3 J C Penney (used) 199.50 99.99
80.20mm 13.9 J Penney (used) 119.50 49.99
35.10mm 13.4-5.5 Pro (used) 249.00 69.99
135mm 12.8 Pro (used) 199.50 19.99
100mm 12.8 Canon 230.00 219.99
100mm 14 Macro Canon 475.00 319.99
135mm 12 Canon 460.00 299.99
24mm 12 Canon 460.00 319.99
28.85mm 14 Canon 460.00 319.99
28mm 12 Canon 413.50 269.99
300mm 14 Canon 513.00 379.99
35.10mm 15.5 Canon 284.00 379.99
35.10mm 15.5 Canon 170.00 209.99
35.10mm 12 Canon 319.50 139.99
75.20mm 14.5 Canon 290.00 139.99
85mm 8.8 Canon 277.00 169.99
80.20mm 15.5 Makon 199.95 169.99
80.20mm 15.5 Makon 259.00 99.99
80.20mm 15.5 Downe 249.50 99.99
IF NEW RETAIL SALE
Olympus QuickFlash AFL (used) 229.50 199.90
Konica C35 (used) 129.90 19.99
Konica C35 Flash (used) 129.90 19.99
Ansa 1080 (used) 89.50 39.99
Fujica G6R (used) 139.50 39.99
Agfa Optima (used) 129.50 49.9
Muji MAL (used) 189.50 49.9
Huawei Huawei (used) 119.50 49.9
Canon GIII QLU (used) 169.50 59.99
Canon I9 (used) 139.50 59.99
Rollei B3S (used) 169.00 195.00
Nikko III Body (used) 169.00 239.99
Canon Camet IV B17 195.00 149.99
Canon Camet G17 204.00 179.99
Canon MC W/Flash 295.00 139.99
Canon Super Survetail 298.00 149.99
Chion S35II 198.00 159.99
Konica FF-2 199.50 159.99
Konica FF-2 85.00 49.99
Konica Pop 10 79.95 49.99
Konica Tomato 89.50 49.99
Olympus Infinity 165.00 235.00
Olympus Quakeshaver 125.00 119.99
Olympus A5-1 190.00 119.99
Reoh AF-5 198.00 109.99
Reoh FT-90 AF 269.95 109.99
Yoshida Partner AF
Yoshida T" AF New D"
Kodak K-10
Kodak AF-70
VHS TAPE
Kodak XHG
Extra High Grade
VHS — T-120
Kodak $599 each
Retail
$1099
Konica T-120
Standard Grade
$499
MICROPHOTO
LENSES FOR NIKON
IF NEW RETAIL SALE
80-70mm 13.5 Lentor (used) 198.00 24.99
80-70mm 14 Takino (used) 193.50 79.99
28mm 12.5 Venter (used) 169.40 9.99
28mm 12.5 Venter (used) 169.40 19.99
90-23mm 14 Bauschull (used) 329.50 14.99
75-25mm 14 Sgma (used) 289.50 89.99
36-72mm 13 Nikon E (used) 290.00 99.99
100mm 12.8 Nikon E (used) 180.00 99.99
70-21mm 12 Nikon E (used) 631.00 189.99
100mm 12.8 Nikon E (used) 180.00 198.99
135mm 12 H-MO (used) 69.50 4.99
35-70mm 12-8 Dsgma (used) 290.00 19.99
28mm 12.8 Seiru (used) 79.95 19.99
135mm 13 Nikon (used) 197.50 19.99
24mm 12 Nikar (used) 421.00 349.99
24mm 12 Nikar (used) 341.00 339.99
24mm 12 Nikar (used) 326.50 209.99
28-85mm 13-5 Dsgma (used) 470.00 349.99
28mm 12 Nikar (used) 500.00 219.99
* 18 Nikar (used) 215.00 219.99
* 18 Nikar (used) 215.00 109.99
* 18 Nikar (used) 215.00 529.99
* 18 Nikar (used) 583.00 349.99
* 18 Nikar (used) 179.99
- - - - -
SAVE
VIDEO RECORDERS and CAMERAS
Assorted demonstrators, display and close-out models.
SAVE
$50 to $300
TRIPODS
Unglued V truck conversion
w10mm (denum)
50mm (diameter)
379.95 199.99
Beaver 232* (1st A) denom.
450.00 149.99
Lentz Valve (odys)
450.00 149.99
IF NEW
Homo Monopod
89.95
RALLY
24.99
Lets Tihull
198.00
119.99
Prima Compa
32.00
139.99
Tihull
19.99
139.99
SiK M722 Grand Master
124.95
119.99
SiK U102
19.95
139.99
SiK U17
99.95
149.99
SiK U17 Deluxe
69.95
149.99
SiK U17 Deluxe 120GHQH
44.95
149.99
Video Paktronics PST 1001
109.95
69.99
Video Paktronics PST 704
89.95
69.99
Video Pro 550W
119.95
69.99
Video Canon D3-10-11
109.95
69.99
Viror 924
| | RETAIL | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Omnigo C700 w/50 3.5 | 239.95 | 119.99 |
| Phillips M51 130 Condenser | 490.99 | 199.99 |
| Omnigo C700 Dissus only | 169.00 | 119.99 |
| Omnigo C800 Dwb w/50mm 12.8* | 269.95 | 339.99 |
| M237 w/30mm Dwb | 406.95 | 249.99 |
| Durist C900 d/w 12.8 | 299.95 | 199.99 |
| Omnigo C700 Dwb used | 349.95 | 169.99 |
| Durist C801 (Genie) | 390.95 | 159.99 |
| Omnigo C700 Condenser | 490.99 | 199.99 |
ENLARGERS
SUNPAK
SLIDE PRINTER
And VIEWER
Was $189.99
SALE $11999
Minuteira 300X (w1) FPW
Rockchip R4000 (w1)
Rockchip Speed240 (or
Rockbit V272 (or
Device N 260 (or
Device N 1600 (or
Device N 16000 (or
Driver 215
Driver 25
Carbon CM K #
Canon 1558 (or
Firmware
too busy to set a new ad! Many items are already sold many more items have been added including more used cameras and lenses traded during the sale.
Sow.
Sowyers 32u.
Kodak 260 Aduview.
Kodak Medalist 1'4"
Entre 7605 Discive
Entre 7610 Discive
349.99 *
Canon 155A (ave),
Nikon S8R (used)
Nikon S8E (used)
Promatek Acer T2200 (used)
Promatek T12200 (used)
Canon Flash 16A
Canon Flash 199A
Canon Flash 274I
Canon Flash 277I
Canon Flash 299I
Canon Flash 533G
Canon Flash 577G
Cantha Flat N140
Cantha Flat N130
Monstera Flash 280PX
Minolta Maximum 1800 Flash
Niken Flat 51-8B
Niken Flat 51-8C
Olympus 110 Ring Flash
Olympus 720 Flash
Kokubu Flash 240
Popular 611
Popular 522
Popular 622 - Standard Head
Popular 622 Zoom
Popular 3800
Popular 2110 Pan/Tentas
Popular 522
Popular 622 - Standard Head
Popular 622 Zoom
Vivitar 285 NV
Vivitar 5400
Vivitar T10000
Promatek 3440/2640
Vivitar 283
Vivitar 285 NV
Vivitar 5400
Vivitar T10000
Promatek 3440/2640
Promatek 5AC1100
Promatek 5AC1002
Sunglion 300
Sunglion 340
Sunglion 380
Colink Duplicated Flash
Diajor 260 Camed UV
Diajor 260 Minimo Dedo
Diajor 236 Pantedine UV
Diajor 236 Pantedine UV Light
CREATIVE SQUARE FILTERS
Pro brand, many fit Cokin Holder. Buy any 3 filters at $1 price, get a filter holder and lens shade set free.
G
Entire Stock 1/2 PRICE
135...
28mm I3.5 Zuke (used)
200mm I4.0 Zuke (used)
24mm I2.0 Zuke (used)
80mm I4.0 Macro Zuke (used)
35mm I2.0 Zuke (used)
32mm I2.0 Zuke (used)
80mm I4.0 Macro Zuke (used)
35mm I2.0 Zuke (used)
135mm I2.8 Olympus Macro
135mm I4.5 Olympus Macro
18mm I3.0 Olympus Macro
18mm I4.0 Olympus Macro
12mm I2 Olympus Macro
24mm I2 Olympus Macro
24mm I28 Olympus Macro
24mm I28 Olympus Macro
28mm I28 Olympus Macro
28mm I28 Olympus Macro
300mm I4.5 Olympus Macro
375mm I4.5 Olympus Macro
35/70mm I4.5 Olympus Macro
35mm I2 Olympus Macro
35mm I28 Olympus Macro
50mm I8 Olympus Macro
50mm I8 Olympus Macro
85mm I4.0 Ohr
PEN
IF NEW RETAIL
13mm (2.8 Bumper) used
15mm (2.8 Bumper) used
100mm (2.8 Ringer) used
120mm (4.5 Ringer) used
13mm (2.8 Sears) used
28mm (8.0) 12.5 4.5
9.99%
99.99%
29.99%
49 mm
BINOCULARS
IF NEW
DETAIL
| | RETAIL | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | ---: |
| x735 W/A Mercury Jonax | 69 95 | 19.99 |
| x735 W/A Explorer Bushnell | 209 95 | 109.99 |
| * "mored Sportwell Bushnell | 95 95 | 99.99 |
| Bushnell Bushnell | 209 95 | 99.99 |
| Bushnell Bushnell | 209 95 | 99.99 |
| rry Jonax | 79 95 | 99.99 |
| Sportwell Bushnell | 104 95 | 99.99 |
| Loom Bannon Bushnell | 175 95 | 99.99 |
| 20% Loom Bannon Tidy | 175 95 | 99.99 |
| 15 Zom Ensign | 129 95 | 99.99 |
| 6z10 Mintola | 146 00 | 99.99 |
| 5 Kissus | 257 95 | 109.99 |
| x50 Armored Classical Celestron | 59 95 | 109.99 |
| x50 Armored Classical Celestron | 180 00 | 109.99 |
| Lomp 10x24 Pentox | 149 95 | 109.99 |
| Lomp 7x20 Pentox | 149 95 | 109.99 |
| Lomp 7x20 Pentox | 179 95 | 109.99 |
| Lomp 7x20 Pentox HD | 179 95 | 109.99 |
| x735 Custom Bushnell | 294 95 | 180.99 |
SIMPLE
S
SALE IN PROGRESS
S
SS
Don't miss out on great savings now through Saturday, Sept. 6
Ansox 110 2020 Tale
Ansox 330
Ansox Disc Tale
Kodak Disc 4100
Kodak Disc 710
Ansox 110 845 Tale
Verizon 110 845 Underwater
Ansox Pack Camera (used)
SX70 Solar Pack (used)
SX70 Solar Pack (used)
Kodak A64
Kodak Instant Press
Polaroid 500 Film Holder A4x
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---
Supplement To The K.U. Daily Kansan, Lawrence Journal World, Lawrence "FYI"
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12
Teed off
Golf is a way of life for the young but dedicated men's golf team. The men have played golf year-round to prepare for the season opening next month.
Paper chase
The paperwork to verify all financial aid forms is slowing the process and causing some students to get their loans late.
Story, page 11
Azure like it
Story, page 3
Same song, second verse. Blue skies and mild temperatures prevail today in a repeat performance of yesterday's weather.
Details, page 3
WILDLIFE
Vol. 97, No. 5 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Thursday
August 28, 1986
Bv BETH COPELAND
Bow tie prof ready to quit after 32 years
As students await the final minutes before class begins, they place bets. What color bow tie will Professor Ketzel wear today?
They exchange glances as Clifford Ketzel, professor of political science, rushes in — donned with a bow tie — ready to hit his assault or praise on U.S. foreign policy.
TOM J. SMITH
His customary bow tie, popular in the 1950s, reflects his fondness for the days past. Ketzel, 65, will retire in January after 32 years of teaching.
His colleagues affirm his zeal for activism.
"I know that it's time to leave when I become more intolerent of students." Ketzel says. "I wouldn't like to relieve the fires or shootings of the '60s, they just made life exciting."
"He's a liberal, that's how I would describe him." says Allan Cigler, professor of political science.
Ketzel's participation in groups such as Amnesty International, the Union for Concerned Scientists and Gary Hart's Center for Democracy, confirm his enthusiasm.
Ketzel received his bachelor's degree from the University of California at Los Angeles in 1942. He then went to the University of California at Berkeley to earn his master's and doctoral degrees in political science.
Before coming to KU as an assistant professor of political science in 1954, Ketzel served at the U.S. Department of State during President Harry Truman's administration.
Now, he is the coordinator of undergraduate studies and the coordinator of the department's honors program in addition to his teaching duties.
Beyond his duties as a professor, Ketzel is active in bringing speakers to campus.
"People were calling me a communist," Ketzel says. "I just wanted the other side to be heard."
He acknowledged that his efforts in the '60s to bring communists, Nazis and self-appointed kings to campus to speak made him a controversial figure.
says. "I just wanted the other side to be heard." Students remember this devotion to present conflicting opinions.
"He never gave an opinion as fact and he always gave all sides of the issue," says Karen Greschel, Walnut Creek, Calif., senior.
Some of his opinions, however, illustrate a pessimistic world view.
"I don't think the world will outlive the century," he says. "I just can't tell you whether it's pollution, bombings or overpopulation that will end it."
Ketzel's wife, however, says his pessimistic political view does not extend into his family life.
Lee Ketzel, his wife, said that when doctors told her husband in 1963 that he had intestinal cancer, he refused to consider death as a real possibility.
"It is this optimism about life that is so contrary to a sometimes pessimistic view taught in his classes," she said.
Clifford Ketzel, professor of political science, discusses plans for his retirement. Ketzel has been teaching at the University of Kansas for 32 years.
California state funds may be divested
The Associated Press
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — A plan to divest $11 billion in state funds from companies that do business with South Africa was approved yesterday in the Assembly and sent to the governor, who has promised to sign it.
After much debate, the lower house voted 50-26 on the measure. The bill, by Assemblyman Maxine Waters of Los Angeles, requires companies to completely divest their South Africa-linked assets within four years.
divestiture policy, involving $3 billion in university investments
The Senate approved the measure Monday.
"We are making the most significant statement that that's been made anywhere in the world in terms of condemnation of apartheid in South Africa," said Assembly Speaker Willie Brown. "I think other states and other nations will follow this example."
Earlier this summer, the University of California Board of Regents approved a similar
Waters' bill, in various forms, has been before the Legislature for nearly seven years, but has never become law. A less-comprehensive measure was approved by the Legislature but was vetoed by Gov. George Deukmeijan last year.
Deukmejian, who is up for re-election, last month announced a significant policy shift. He said
"California today sent a clear, unequivocal message to the racist government in South Africa." Deukmejian said in a statement after the vote. "California's action is morally right and fiscally sound, because if apartheid is not ended soon, business investments in that country will suffer great losses."
nat he now favored across-the-board divestiture and that he would sign divestiture legislation.
Elizabeth Kurata held in her hands a reed necklace from east Africa. Years ago, the necklace, actually a choker by Western standards, had been soaked in mud and animal fat.
Merchant brings parts of Africa to Lawrence
"The bush people soak their necklaces because it wards off flies." Kurata said, before she delved into a long story about her life in Nairobi, Kenya's capital city. "The more necklaces they have, the richer they think they are."
Estimates of the amount of investments that could be sold range from $10.6 billion by Waters to $30 billion by some legislators. The governor's office and other analysts have estimated the divestiture at $11.4 billion.
By SHANE A. HILLS
Staff writer
Kurata has become an international merchant since she opened her small shop called African Adorned, 5 E Seventh St., in October Every piece of jewelry, be it a necklace, bracelet, or pair of earrings, comes with an anecdote rooted on the other
Kurata's shop sells jewelry and some woven goods from Ethiopia, Tanzania, Somalia, Uganda and Kenya. Most pieces sell for less than $30. She recently returned from a 30-day trip to Kenya, where she bought another year's worth of jewelry.
The bush people are from primitive tribes and live on the grasslands of Africa, Kuraata said. They make the jewelry she sells.
side of the world.
Kurata, who grew up in Lawrence, says she knows Kenya better than Lawrence.
Kurata also sells silver rings, earrings and bracelets, which are mostly Ethiopian heirlooms, she said.
She buys from traders in Nairobi, probably the most commercially thriving city in eastern Africa, she said. She hires craftsmans in Nairobi to clean and restring the beads into necklaces, earrings and bracelets before she sells them because the beads are dirty and not in marketable form when she buys them.
"I was running out of money when I found a trader who had bags upon bags of silver from Ethiopia," she said, referring to her last buying trip. "Famine is so bad there that they are selling their family heirlooms to buy food. I could only afford a few silver items.
"When I went back to pick them up, he had sold the rest of the silver to silversmiths to be melted down."
"When people come into my shop, or to learn that I've lived in Africa, I usually find them very interested in hearing about tribal Africa," she said.
"The rest of the world understands much more about the United States than most Americans understand about the world," she said.
In 1973, she ventured to Kenya to visit a friend. Soon she became enamored with her experiences there, most of which took place in the bush country surrounding Nairobi.
She met and married a Ugandan merchant of Indian descent and stayed in Kenya almost 11 years.
Whenever she wanted a few days of serenity, she said, she would camp on the grasslands in Kenya.
"It's like going back a million years," she said. "It's just you, the lions, the elephants — no highways or restaurants. But you have to keep your food locked away from the baboons."
Nearby was the snow-peaked mountain of Kilimanjaro, Africa's highest peak. And in Tanzania, Kurata visited the volcanic crater of Ngorongoro, where an isolated set of wildlife must remain because it cannot climb the steer crater walls.
She savors her memories of huge hordes of wildbeests, an antelope-like animal, migrating across the Serengeti plains from Kenya to Tan-
Big increases in enrollment tax resources
By ALISON YOUNG
Staff writer
See ADORNED, p. 5, col. 1
With the KU budget belt already pulled tight, the addition of at least 939 students is placing the quality of education in jeopardy, an administrator said yesterday.
"We are experiencing an enrollment increase that already is creating problems for us on several levels," said Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs.
Preliminary fall enrollment figures show a 3.8 percent increase in students.
Enrollment in fall 1985 increased by 102 students and in fall 1984 by 216.
by 10 students that in the fall Brinkman called the enrollment increases a tribute to KU, its faculty and staff.
"Many people look at that as success." Brinkman said, "but each year that happens our budget gets strained a bit more."
He said the current method of financing Board of Regents schools does not easily compensate for increases in enrollment.
KU would have to experience large enrollment increases over three years to prompt an increase in the University's base budget, he said, but the chances of this happening are minimal.
"We've been absorbing 800 to 900 students for which we've received no additions in the budget." he said. "Yes, we have been hurt."
KU has had to open additional sections of some courses this semester to accommodate the enrollment increase.
"We've essentially just spent the budget on enrollment instead of other things." Lineberry said.
The need for additional sections in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences has made its budget "tight as a drum," said Robert Lineberry, dean of the college.
Money that would have been spent on equipment or faculty has gone instead to hire additional teaching assistants, he said.
Brinkman said quality already had been hurt in some of the sciences and areas that would require improvements in equipment and laboratory supplies.
"With the kind of funding we get, programs with high costs for high quality are going to suffer." Brinkman said.
Research and graduate programs also may not be enhanced this year, he said, because of the strain being placed on the budget.
Chancellor Gene A. Budig said in a prepared statement. "Increased enrollments place great pressure on the University's ability to continue to respond to student needs without a concomitant increase in resources. KU must have the resources needed to maintain its top-quality academic programs."
Brinkman said he anticipated additional problems in the next four or five years as this larger class of students worked its way through the University.
The University's budget for fiscal
See BUDGET, p. 5, col. 1
Bv FRANK HANSEL
Sports editor
Football team loses four to ineligibility
Four of the six players that Kansas head football coach Bob Valesente held from practice for academic reasons were declared academically ineligible yesterday because they did not meet National Collegiate Athletic Association standards.
Senior linebacker Darnell Williams, senior lineman Brian Howard, junior quarterback Roby Santos and junior defensive back Derek Berry were declared ineligible for the season.
The status of Berry's brother, Tony, won't be decided until next week, the Kansas sports information department said.
The sixth player suspended by Valesen, offensive lineman Steve Nave, cleared up his academic questions and is back with the team.
"I've said quite a bit about the academic situation," Valese said yesterday. "I'm sorry they didn't make it. We were really pulling for them, but it didn't work out. Now we
have to concentrate on football and get ready for North Carolina."
The ineligibilities have forced Valesente to rearrange his depth chart. Howard was originally listed as first team right guard. Nave, who was switched from defensive tackle, now is listed first at right guard.
Santos, who redshirted last season after transferring from Fresston City Junior College in Fresno, Calif., was expected to back up first-string quarterback Mike Orth, senior. Now Tom Quick, a senior who was a reserve behind former Kansas quarterback Mike Norseth and a reserve wide receiver last season, is listed as Orth's back up.
Quick has completed 8 of 17 passes for 62 yards and one touchdown and has caught 10 passes for 184 yards.
Williams started last year and had 85 tackles, fourth highest on the team. He was listed as the starting left linebacker on the preseason depth chart. Sophomore Rick Clayton has since taken the top spot at left linebacker.
MARIA TORRES
2
Dan Ruettimann/KANSAN
Elizabeth Kurata, owner of African Adorned, 5 E. Seventh St., displays one of the necklaces she brought back from Kenya.
1
2
Thursday, August 28, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
News Briefs
Aid reaches Cameroon refugees as experts investigate Lake Nios
YAOUNDE, Cameroon — Food and medicine reached refugees yesterday who fled the mountains of northwest Cameroon as scientists investigated the muddy lake that spewed a cloud of toxic fumes.
International relief supplies began arriving in Cameroon, a tropical West African country, to help survivors of the natural disaster that killed more than 1,500 people.
Officials said almost all of the dead had been buried, most of them near where they were found. The biggest remaining concern is burying thousands of dead animals, which are decomposing in the stifling heat, they said.
Army troops evacuated about 3,000 survivors of the gas explosion, but had trouble sealing off the area from people who wanted to return to their homes. About 2,000 soliders have closed off the area, which is about 200 miles northwest of Yaounde.
Scientists think a volcanic tremor under Lake Nios released a bubble of deadly gas that rose to the surface and spread over the area Aug. 21.
Scientists began analyzing the water of Lake Nios, which the eruption turned from a blue to a murky redish brown.
"I sent a team yesterday to take samples of the water," said Bienvenu Fouda, secretary-general of the Ministry of Mines. "They will report and make proposals."
problem.
Iva Yenwo, aid to Cameroon President Paul Biya,
said residents of the disaster area had been warned not
to drink local water. He said the army had provided
tanks of purified water and bottled water was an
urgent need.
13 dead, 70 injured in S. Africa
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Raging street battles between police and Soweto residents left 13 blacks dead and 70 other people injured in the worst outbreak of violence since emergency rule was imposed in June, authorities said yesterday.
Church officials and dissidents said there were indications that the casualty toll was higher than the government had reported after Tuesday night's fighting. Black activist Winnie Mandela, a Soweto resident and wife of jailed African National Congress leader Nelson Mandela, said she thought at least 20 people died.
people tree.
Residents said the violence began as a protest against eviction of people defaulting on rent payments in South Africa's largest black township, 10 miles southwest of Johannesburg. The government denied any evictions.
any evictions. The rent boycott in Soweto began 11 weeks ago to protest poor housing conditions and the government's racial segregation policies known as apartheid.
Authorities in Pretoria said protests over the evictions escalated into running battles between police firing guns and protesters hurling rocks and gasoline bombs at patrols and private cars.
Frontier may seek bankruptcy
DENVER — People Express Inc. said yesterday that it intended to seek bankruptcy protection for Frontier Airlines, prompting hundreds of Frontier workers to apply for unemployment benefits.
While the bankruptcy filing was expected, the fate of the 40-year-old Frontier remained uncertain. People Express had promised that the Denver-based airline would be liquidated unless it could be sold to United Airlines.
"Intended to file' or 'was expected to file' would be better than 'People Express said it would file for bankruptcy for Frontier,'" said People Express spokesman Russell Marchetta.
When it shut down Frontier on Sunday, People Express promised a bankruptcy filing Monday if there were no action on a sale. The company promised action soon but closed Monday and Tuesday with no filing in U.S. Bankruptcy Court.
Even though Marchetta said negotiations with United Airlines for Frontier apparently had not succeeded, United spokesman Charles Novak said the deal still was possible.
There were unconfirmed reports late yesterday that representatives from Frontier, United and People Express still were negotiating.
Nancy Reagan's maid indicted
NORFOLK, Va. — Nancy Reagan's personal maid and three other people were indicted yesterday in an alleged scheme to smuggle small-arms ammunition from the United States to Paraguay.
In a seven-count indictment, the U.S. District Court grand jury charged the maid, Anita Castelo, 45, of Takoma Park, Md., with one count of conspiring to export 22-caliber ammunition to Paraguay without a license and one count of the willful exportation of 70 cases of ammunition.
Also named in the indictments were Julio Cesar Baez-Acosta, Hernan Duarte and Eugenio Silva.
Authorities said the plot began in November and ended with the seizure of a Paraguayan freighter in Richmond on Aug. 4. It had 350,000 rounds of ammunition aboard.
There has been no indication for whom the ammunition was intended.
Duarte, Baez-Acosta and Silva were all charged with illegal ammunition exports, while Silva also was indicted for three additional counts of dealing in firearm ammunitions without a license.
Castelo, Silva and Baez-Acosta were arrested after agents boarded and searched the Mariscal Jose Felix Estigarrisha while it was docked at Deepwater Terminal on the James River in Richmond.
NASA to return mementos
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — NASA will return mentos carried into space by the Challenger crew to their owners, officials said yesterday.
Air Force Col. Edward O'Connor, who directed the search for shuttle wreckage, told United Press International he proposed to National Aeronautics and Space Administration management that Challenger's remains be stored in one or two 90-foot-deep abandoned Minuteman silos at the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station near the Kennedy Space Center.
Thomas Utsman, acting director of the Kennedy Space Center, said the plan would accomplish two objectives: the security would keep the shuttle pieces on the base and engineers would retain access to the debris if necessary.
Among the mementos were various flags and patches, a soccer ball, a football, various pennants, a diploma, copies of the Constitution and a variety of emblems and patches.
NASA said personal items carried by the crew members would be returned to family members.
NASA said the personal items carried by the astronauts included a baby shoe, a cross, a Girl Scout pin, a family photograph, a variety of pieces of gold jewelry, a meteorite. Naval aviation wings, a sand dollar, a stuffed animal, a Virginia Military Academy ring, and 14 gold and 53 silver medallions commemorating the mission. The agency declined to say which items had been recovered.
Law protects diplomats abroad
LOS ANGELES — President Reagan signed legislation yesterday authorizing a $2.4 billion program to protect U.S. embassies and diplomas abroad
The bill signed by Reagan authorizes $2.1 billion over five years for the construction and reconstruction of more secure U.S. outposts around the world.
The construction program, $000 million less than the amount requested by the administration, was the outgrowth of a bipartisan panel.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, August 28, 1986
3
News Briefs
Cocaine hearings to continue next week
Preliminary hearings for two former KU students charged in connection with last month's cocaine arrests were held over yesterday by Douglas County District Judge Ralph M. King Jr.
The hearings will continue Wednesday for Robert F. Bell, 35, 1900 W. 31st St., and Kevin Sommer, 22nd Tennessee St.
Bell is charged with one count of selling cocaine. Sommer is charged with one count of selling and one count of possession of cocaine.
The two Lawrence men pleaded not guilty to all counts in an earlier court appearance.
Bell and Sommer were two of 21 people indicted last month on state and federal cocaine-related charges. All of those indicted have pleaded not guilty.
Seven of the people indicted on state charges have completed preliminary hearings and face jury trials in October and November. Four others were indicted on federal charges; three are awaiting a second appearance in court and the fourth will have a jury trial in October.
The trial dates for Bell and Sommer will be set during their preliminary hearing. Both men were students at KU last semester.
Studv Abroad meets
The office of study abroad will sponsor an informal question-and-answer session for graduate students interested in studying abroad during the 1987-88 school year.
The meeting will be from 3 to 5 p.m. tomorrow in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
The program is open only to graduating seniors and graduate students, but undergraduates are welcome to attend.
Information about various grants, scholarships and fellowships will be distributed. The session will help applicants with their project proposals for grants and scholarships.
Union group to meet
The KU Faculty Executive Committee and the eight member committee on collective bargaining for faculty will meet at 3:30 p.m. today in the chancellor's suite in Strong Hall.
FacEx appointed the committee to study the possibility of having a faculty union.
At the meeting, Vickie Thomas, University general counsel, will explain the Public Employees Relations Act, which allows the faculty to organize into a collective bargaining unit.
Auditions to be held
Auditions for KANU-FM's radio drama series, Imagination Workshop, will be at 7 p.m. Sept. 5 and at 10:30 a.m. Sept. 6. The Lawrence Public Library Auditorium, 707 Vermont St.
Candidates will be given a short scene to read or may use their own scripts. Those chosen must attend all the rehearsals and the four live air shows.
The performances are financed in part by a grant from the Kansas Arts Commission. For more information, call Darrell Brogdon at KANU, 864-4530.
Weather
Today will be mostly sunny with a high temperature in the mid-70s and southeastern winds of 5 to 15 miles an hour. Tonight will be partly cloudy with a low temperature in the mid-50s.
From Kansan wires.
The only sound on the 10th floor of McCollium Hall last night was the turning of pages as graduate students studied in their tidy lobby.
Freshmen keeping quiet in McCollum
By NICOLE SAUZEK
Five floors down, it was close to the same. Only one strain from a steree partially filled the hallway as freshmen bowed over books in concentration.
And five floors back up, there were smiles.
Chris Moore, Junction City graduate student and spokesman for concerned fellow residents, said that he was pleasantly shocked by the change in noise levels in McCollum but that he was not ready to give his quest to move graduate students to another hall.
On Aug. 26, Moore met with Ken Stoner,
director of student housing, about the move
because of the high level of noise by freshmen
living on the floors below.
Now, only 389 upperclassmen and graduate students live in McCollum on floors eight, nine and eleven.
graduates only. Freshmen are permitted in the hall only if other residence halls are filled.
"The grad students are pretty content laterly," Moore said. "I think for now, the freshmen might behave. I hope."
But the peaceful halles below have not changed the minds above. The graduate students said they still plan to push for their own hall.
"I agree it's gotten quieter," said Tom Hatch, West Des Moines, Iowa, graduate student. "But, then again, we haven't had a football game yet either. I don't think the silence is going to last too long."
Fingers are being crossed by the graduate students until decisions can be made by student housing officials on whether graduate students can be moved to separate housing.
Graduate complaints, though, are not top priority with the residence hall office.
"Right now, all our efforts are spent trying to
get students out of residence hall overflow," said Fred McElhene, director of residential progams.
As of Monday morning, 227 students were living in overflow housing because of residence hall overbooking.
"We haven't taken any action on the graduate students' concerns because we haven't told me." McElhenee said. "When the dust settles, we'll have more time and more sense of who is involved in the problem before we begin to make some kind of decision."
Meanwhile, the housing office has agreed to pursue several options in solving the problem, but only after a two-week freshmen grace period.
"It's always pretty hectic the first week, but once classes start, it's more business as usual," said Stoner. "We want to wait a couple of weeks to see if things quiet down first before we make any decisions."
quieted down, not all of them have been entrenched in their books.
"I thought it had gotten a little louder," said Brad Chestler, Chicago, Ill., freshman. "I do my homework early and by eight o'clock I'm ready for some fun. There's always a cause for a party."
Though most of the 800 freshmen have
"If anything, it is gotten louder because of the complaints from the tenth floor."
Louder or not, the graduate students have no new complaints. They seem to agree that freshmen have settled down.
Only time will tell whether it is a calm before the storm.
"We're still waiting for the food fights and the fire alarms," Moore said with a shake of the head. "I'm not totally convinced it's going to stay this way."
A young man is kneeling on the grass, reaching out to pet a dog. The background features trees and foliage.
Brenda Steele/KANSAN
Dog's best friend
Nancy Greenleaf, Kansas City, Kan, senior, shared a cool drink with her dog, Teddy, in front of Snow Hall on Tuesday, Greenleaf said Teddy accompanied her to campus every day.
Soviet lectures threatened after cuts in federal funds
Staff writer
By PATRICIA FEENY
The University of Kansas may lose its Soviet Writer's Lecture Series because of a cut in federal financing, the founder of the program said yesterday.
The program, established in 1975 by Gerald Mikkelsen, professor of Soviet and East European studies, brings Soviet writers to the University. Universities compete for grants provided by the U.S. Department of Education."
"The program is very good," Mikelson said. "The money is the important part."
According to Mikkelson, the Soviet Writer's Union pays for the writer's transportation from Moscow to Kansas. KU is the only university in the country with such an agreement.
He obtained financial support for the series from the office of the executive vice chancellor, Robert Cobb; the office of research, graduate studies and public service; and the office of academic affairs, Mikkelsen said.
In the spring spring when the department did not award the program a grant, Mikkelson turned to other sources.
Mikkelson said he thought his department lost the grant because some faculty members either retired or moved to other departments.
sas beginning in late October. The speeches are on topics of general interest and some of the writers use interpreters.
Joseph Conrad, chairman of the Slavic languages and literatures department, said that since the program began, 14 guest writers from the Soviet Union had visited KU.
Mikkelson said the speakers usually stayed two to three weeks in Kan
An invitation has been extended for this fall to Chingiz Almatov, a Soviet novelist. Aitmatov wrote "The Day Lasts More than Hundred Years." The English translation of the novel will be available in the Oread Book Shop sometime this semester.
Soviet writer Sergey Zalygin visited KU as part of the lecture series in the spring.
Because the Soviet Writer's program is a unique opportunity for KU students, Mikkelsen said, the educational experience of those will invite more than anyone else to be lost.
"The students have a distinct advantage over their conterparts," he said.
Increased paperwork may slow student aid
Bv KAREN SAMELSON
Staff writer
The KU student financial aid staff is wading through a pile of paperwork because of a recent decision to verify all aid forms, a move that may slow aid to some students, the director of student financial aid said yesterday.
"It's brought a lot of paper into our office," said Jerry Rogers, the director.
Nevertheless, he said, "I think we've kept pace well."
Starting this year, the staff now must check the information given on the ACT Family Financial Statement against students' and parents' tax returns, he said. In the past, the office had to verify the information only for certain students designated by the ACT processing center.
But staff members decided that if they had to verify the income information for some students, they should do it for all of them, he said.
The decision to do the 100 percent verification was a staff decision. Rogers said, and they are the ones who now are suffering from the increased workload.
The office has processed more than 9,000 applications for the 1986-87 school year.
"They're really taking it on with a great attitude," he said. "It has, we think, been a positive change. The verification is something that's been needed."
But Rogers also said he didn't know whether the office could continue the verification next year without more staff.
Employees of the financial aid of
fice aren't the only ones who have been affected by the change Students now must be extra careful when filling out their financial aid forms or their aid could be delayed.
Rogers said the verification was a problem particularly for Pell Grant applicants who estimated their income on the financial statement instead of waiting to put exact income figures on the form.
Paul Morris, Kansas City, Mo,
sophomore, said last week that he
had to take out a $100 emergency loan
from the Kansas University Endowment Association because his student
loan wasn't ready.
Morris said delays with his parents' tax returns meant that the paperwork for the loan hadn't been completed in time.
Pell Grants are federal funds given to undergraduate students who demonstrate financial need.
Because the KU office is not permitted to calculate Pell Grant eligibility, the correct figures must be sent to the federal Pell Grant processing office as well as the KU office.
The verification process also presents problems for students whose forms contain false information.
He said most of the problems with false information came when students or parents gave incorrect information on their ACT statements or didn't follow directions.
When a discrepancy shows up during the verification, the staff must contact the students to find out what is correct.
Staff write.
By KIRK KAHLER
Senate considering new freshman seat
A temporary Student Senate elections committee last night moved to form a committee of freshmen to give the freshman class a voice in student government.
David Epstein, student body president, moved to form the committee that would give freshmen one seat in Senate.
The move and the election committee's other recommendations must be approved by the full Senate before they are enacted.
"That would be a huge step for freshmen," Epstein said.
There was some debate among committee members before they unanimously moved to allow a freshman seat.
Betsy Bergman, Nunemaker senator, said she agreed with Epstein's recommendation because freshmen would be able to directly participate in University government.
The committee also recommended the elimination of special freshman elections scheduled for the fall, leaving only one election, which would be in the spring.
"The recommendation was made because of the whole election process," said Jason Krakow, Nunemaker senator.
But Woody Browne, ineral arts and sciences senator, said he thought the freshman seat would cause overcrowding because the Senate was big enough already.
Stephanie Quincy, chairman of the Student Senate Executive Committee, shared Browne's concern.
Quincy said it also would guarantee that freshmen would be included in the elections.
"Now the sophomores, juniors and seniors will demand their own committees," she said.
The committee also moved to amend Senate rules and regulations by counting only school days before candidate's filing deadlines for the elections in April.
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Thursday, August 28, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The 'brain drain' continues.
Bye-bye, brains
Last week, a study presented to the Legislative Educational Planning Committee brought more bad news about the continuing flight of Kansas's sharpest young people out of the state.
Of 101 1985 National Merit semifinalists surveyed, 59 said they planned to go to an out-of-state college or university to continue their education.
Even more frightening was the fact that only nine of the respondents said they planned to remain in or return to Kansas after college.
Opinions
These students were honored as semifinalists when they took the National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test during their junior year of high school, and this fall, the majority of them packed up and crossed the state's borders to pursue higher education elsewhere.
What a waste.
More than three-quarters of them said they had made their college choices by looking at
the schools' academic programs. Kansas colleges and universities must have come up short in the comparisons.
Instead, many of them are flocking to Stanford and Northwestern and other prestigious schools.
With all of this evidence combined with the fact that 60 percent of the semifinalists from between 1970 and 1980 are living, working or studying outside the state — higher education in Kansas still is faced with budget cuts or unsatisfactory salary increases every year. The best faculty members of the best schools in Kansas don't make as much as their counterparts at peer schools, and they leave at an alarming rate.
Who can blame them?
The river of talent and intelligence that flows out of Kansas must be dried up. Our representatives in Topeka would do well to listen when Chancellor Gene A. Budig and others say that the financial crises at our colleges and universities affect the state as a whole.
Athletic ups and downs
For Kansas University sports fans it's a good news bad news — more good news year.
First some good news. The University of Kansas Athletic Corporation has decided to sell more all-sports tickets than ever before — 7,300 in all. Additional 300 were sold to half of the newly created seats in Allen Field House. It's a credit to the creative architects who squeezed those seats in.
Why the increase?
But along with the additional seats came an increase in ticket prices — from $45 to $55 for the all-sports package.
Why the increase.
Last year, the Final Four.
Jayhawks earned $250,000 for
their performance in the NCAA tournament, and attendance in Lawrence brought in almost $1 million more. Granted, ticket prices have remained constant for three years, but don't the students get to share in last year's bounty?
Back to the good news. KU athletics has enjoyed more success, both on the field and in the classroom, than at any time in recent memory. The days when scores of academically ineligible football players were common seem to have passed.
The best news of all is that a winning tradition has been reestablished at KU. It befits us.
In good hands
Douglas County commissioners finally have seen the light. The newly created county administrator position has been long overdue.
The position was created earlier this month by the county commissioners and they hired Chris McKenzie, former county counsel or administrator-personnel director to fill the position.
As county administrator.
He will provide much-needed expertise in the day-to-day workings of the county government.
More important, though, is the fact that the position is largely free of political influence. Because it is a nonpartisan, non-elected position, political games should be absent. That will leave the administrator free to concentrate on overseeing county departments, budgets and the many support services on which the county departments rely.
McKenzie will be too busy supervising the county to worry about the pressures of re-election or the need to put political friends on the payroll.
Commissioners aren't fulltime employees. A day-to-day supervisor will have more time to stretch tax dollars to the limit and keep a close eye on county affairs.
political. Nancy Heibert, commission chairman, said that counties required more work than they did 20 years ago. And she's right. The Reagan administration's "new federalism" has stripped localities of much-needed government financing. That has left local and county governments in the lurch, scrambling for state money and juggling their books to make every penny count.
Because McKenzie already has performed many of the duties required of him, he is the ideal choice for the important position.
News staff
News staff
Lauretta McMillen ... Editor
Kady McMaster ... Managing editor
Tad Clarke ... News editor
David Silverman ... Editorial editor
John Hanna ... Campus editor
Frank Handel ... Sports editor
Jacki Kelly ... Photo editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
David Nixon ... Business manager
Gregory Kaul ... Retail sales manager
Denise Stephens ... Campus sales manager
Sally Depew ... Classified manager
Lau Weems ... Production manager
Duncan Calhoun ... National sales manager
Beverly Kastens ... Traffic manager
John Obrenzan ... Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words and should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
Guest shots should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The
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The University Daily Kansan (UGPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer-Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60405, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods. Wednesday, day of the week, costs $27 paid at Lawrence, 60404. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $67 a year at larger 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. Lawrence, 60404, telephone number: (877) 429-2541, www.kansan.edu, 118
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Snauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kanus. 66045
Let's toss the movie jabberers
I wish I could predict that it's the beginning of a national trend, but it probably isn't. Nevertheless, we can still savor this one isolated incident.
It happened on a recent Saturday night in a movie theater in Chattanooga, Teen.
Five teen-agers were sitting together and loudly jabbering. That's what many young people do when they go to movies. They jabber.
I've never understood why people want to pay money to get into a movie house to jabber. There are so many other places to jabber. On street corners, in school yards, on back porches, in hamburger joints
Anyway, they were jabbering. And other members of the audience sitting nearby were making the usual responses, turning, and glaring, saying "shhhh," sighing loudly, squirming in their seats.
But these gestures are seldom effective. Jabberers don't care if they disturb others. If anything, they enjoy it. It gives them a sense of power.
And that's one of the biggest reasons that hundreds of thousands of their victims have stopped going to the movies.
So, all a person can do is suffer through the jabber, move to a different part of the theater, or leave entirely.
That's unfair, but it's a result of a glaring defect in our legal system.
If the system were fair, a person would be fully within his rights to give a jabberer a warning. Then, if
Mike Royko
A. P. S. B. H. S.
Chicago Tribune
the warning was ignored, he could seize the jabberer by the throat and squeeze until the nuisance was unconscious or deceased.
A few, well-publicized strangulations of jabberers, and instances of rudeness in movie theaters would be sharply reduced.
But the law protects jabberers. Strangle one and you'll probably wind up in prison instead of being treated to a tickertape parade, which would be your due.
Anyway, the five teen-agers were sitting there jabbering. And every few minutes, they would fling some popcorn in the direction of the screen.
tolerated. Ushers would have tolerated the dawn up the airs, shone their flashlights, in their faces, and told them to knock it off. If they didn't, they would have been shown the door.
This night in Chattanooga, though something rare and wonderful happened.
And if they resisted? When I was an usher at a theater on the West Side of Chicago, we were issued big, heavy-duty flashlights. The sweet sound of a flashlight against a skull was like a melon being thumped for ripeness.
But today's theater owners are too cheap or too timid to hire usheres. If you go to the lobby to complain, all you'll find is some wimp of a ticket taker who will go hide in a stall in the men's room.
A man came from the lobby and told them to stop jabbering and throwing popcorn.
As evidence that jerkism isn't necessarily the result of social conditioning but might be genetic, the girl's family has been raising a terrible howl.
And they were. They were bundled off to the police station and charged with disorderly conduct and, in the case of the girl, with resisting arrest.
Then the man appeared again. And this time he told them that they were being ejected.
Naturally, they giggled. And, in a few minutes, they were jabbering again.
them that he was a cop, off duty and working for the theater, and the little obscenities were under arrest.
Even better, when he had her and her friends in the lobby, he informed
They refused to go, so he grabbed the nearest one — a female creature—and hauled her bodily from the auditorium.
Brimming with indignation, they've gone to city hall in Chattanooga and demanded that the policeman be suspended and that the theater be closed down.
Unfortunately, they didn't try to escape. So he couldn't shoot them. But you can't have everything.
Both demands have been denied, as they should be. If anything, the policeman should be promoted and a street named in his honor.
Sometimes soon, the crew of jabberers will appear in juvenile court and a trial will be held, if they can shut up long enough for anyone to be heard.
I know what the proper punishment should be. But it probably won't be imposed. Some wimpy appeals court would probably rule that it's cruel and unusual punishment to order the removal of five tongues.
MAXELEY Chicago Tribune
...and Fred here, he's in MARKETING! ...Remember "the New Coke"?...
... A (B)
Guns or grain? You can't have both
The lack of criticism that U.S. citizens display when confronted with an obvious Reagan contradiction is perplexing. It is sad commentary on the condition of the nation's critical faculties.
The Reagan administration is so often wrought with contradiction that it is depressing. What's even more depressing, though, is the lack of outrage by the American public at the glaring inconsistencies.
The Reagan administration's latest folly was the decision to sell grain to the Soviet Union at below-market prices. Is this the same Soviet Union that supposedly threatens our democratic ways?
Perhaps the vast majority of people in this country have lost the ability to even recognize contradiction. The lack of criticism by the American public has allowed Reagan to inflict upon us some of the most incoherent and amusing policies in our history.
ly a grave threat to the United States, or does Reagan merely use the "Red Scare" as a political expedient?
which is 1? Are the Soviets actual
sure I applaud the decision to sell grain to the Soviets. The United States should carry on normal and mutually
Christian Colbert Columnist
beneficial relations with the Soviets.
We have nothing to fear.
However, we've been conditioned to hate them. Our overalzeal fear of the Soviet 'Union began after World War II. It was engineered by persons in the State Department who needed a justification for spreading U.S. in fluence around the globe.
Influence once anti-communist sentiments were started, they took a life of their own. As a result, communist tears continue unabated today and pervade all of our institutions.
The administration's decision to sell grain to the Russians seems to suggest that they have become less threatening. Why else would they decide to sell the Soviets grain? Isn't food more vital to national security than nuclear warheads?
Surprisingly, the Reagan administration has been able to have it both ways. On the one hand, they have portrayed the Soviet Union as an "evil empire," which should engender fear in us. This has allowed them to push for, and get, larger and larger military budgets.
Yet, they are not opposed to selling grain to the Russians.
This is politics. It doesn't have to make sense.
make it more important. In politics, it appears that it's more important to serve the dominant economic class than to have consistent policies.
Indeed, that is precisely what Reagan has done by intensifying hostile relations with the Soviets. Tension between the superpowers
ruels the arms race and benefits the military industrial complex.
According to Harvard economics professor John K. Galbraith, weapons expenditures reward well-paid executives, technicians and wealthy stockholders.
Now is a favorable time for change.
The Soviets now are extending their unilateral moratorium on the testing of nuclear arms. In addition, they are making verifiability easier by allowing U.S. scientists to set up monitoring devices near test sites. Apparently, they must recognize the futility of the arms race.
If we could somehow weaken the power of the military industrial complex, we could join the Soviets in a test ban and abruptly end the insane arms competition.
An end to the arms race would save countless billions, without jeopardizing our national security.
Tough Nicaragua policy hardly new
Last week, President Reagan told reporters from the Mexican newspaper, Excelsior, that if Nicaragua's Sandinista regime didn't reform its policies and actions towards civilized democracy, the only alternative would be a "takeover" by the U.S.-backed contra rebels.
The decisiveness of Reagan's words, however, doesn't reflect a change in his attitude or policies toward Nicaragua.
The New York Times called it the "blunt statement" the president has made on this issue thus far.
To some, the word "bluntest" in the headline might infer that the president has been trying to conceal his true goals in Nicaragua.
but the administration has not deviated from its original policies concerning Nicaragua. Nor have they tried to hide their goals or the two main reasons for these goals: 1.
to bring a forlorn hope of eventual democracy for Nicaragua and 2. to retaliate the spreading of communism.
Supporting the contrasts is a tentative form of action and not an
Evan Walters
Columnist
M. N.
answer to the problems of the Nicaraguan people.
Even if the rebels can pressure the Sandinistas to change or remove the
And while the goal of the U.S. support may be to pressure the Sandinistas into democracy, a contravictory can only ensure an interregnum between generations of dictatorship and democracy.
Although most dictatorships don't tolerate democracy, the opposite need not be true. People in a democracy can always vote for dictatorship.
dictatorship, it won't guarantee desirable results by U.S. standards. And if democracy did arise in the form of a voting ballot, that alone might not solve the problems of human rights abuses or dictatorship.
As history has shown, Communism
the Citizen government. The Reagan administration's fear is based on a suspicion that Nicaragua's Marxist philosophy will bring Communist revolutions in surrounding countries.
The Sandinistas' totalitarian dictatorship isn't distinguishable from many other third world countries Nonetheless, the Nicaraguan government bothers the United States, unlike other dictatorships, such as the Chilean government
doesn't subside with content, but expands its roots under the soil. Wherever the seeds of revolution might lie in the non-Communist world, Moscow will find them and thereupon fertilize.
Communism now infests almost every corner of the globe. Initially stemming from Moscow, with every Soviet conquest comes a new center communist expansion. For decades, the United States has tried to contain this totalitarian force and to prevent its growth.
Communism has sustained its growth rate, however, this time hitting the American shores. President Reagan is not satisfied with mere containment with Communism in such close proximity, he desires a more forceful approach, one which might call for the overthrow of the Nicaraguan Government.
Has that not been clear all along?
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, August 28, 1986
5
Budget
Continued from p. 1
year 1987, which began July 1, saw an increase of $20,067,615 over the revised budget for fiscal year 1986. Most of the increase is in the form of restricted use funds to improve programs.
The increase provides money for programs, including additional distinguished professorships, the second year of the baccalaureate program in computer engineering and capital improvements, such as the new science library and renovation of Snow Hall.
Brinkman said that these budget increases were important but that the funds were earmarked for specific programs and could not be used to supplement areas in need.
Faculty salaries are one such area
of need, he said. KU requested an 8 percent increase in faculty salaries for fiscal 1967, but received only a 2.5 percent increase from the Legislature.
Brinkman said receiving only 2.5 percent greatly reduced the flexibility in the budget and did not allow for true merit salary increases.
"In science, not only is salary a consideration, but many schools are able to provide better equipment support." Brinkman said.
Because of budgetary restrictions, Brinkman said, some faculty positions in business and science were particularly hard to fill.
Faculty salary increases will be the top priority for next year's budget, he said.
Man arrested in Central Park slaying
Adorned
NEW YORK - A man arrested yesterday confessed to strangling an 18-year old prep school graduate in Central Park but said he had not meant to kill the woman, police sources said.
Police said the suspect, Robert Chambers, 19, who lives in a Fifth Avenue townhouse with his mother, told them that the killing had been unintentional and that he had never meant to hurt the young woman he had dated several times this summer.
United Press International
Kurata recognized the potential market in the United States for African jewelry when she brought artifacts home to relatives and friends in the United States.
zania, as they do every year.
A single bar served as a meeting place between Chambers and the victim, who also may have been raped during the attack, police said.
Continued from p.1
When he was booked for second-degree murder, scratches on his face and chest were clearly visible — marks police said were made by the woman clawing as she fought for her life.
"They just went nuts over it," she said.
was found dead. She went there with two friends for a "last get-together before school started," said Deputy Police Commissioner Alice MCGillion.
But she said Kenya was a country surrounded by other countries in turmoil. There could be a civil war there someday, or tensions could erupt and
She had graduated from the private Baldwin School in Manhattan and was going to attend Chamberlayne Junior College next month.
The body of Jennifer Dawn Levin of Manhattan was discovered by a cyclist on a grassy knoll in the park behind the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
make it impossible for her to get into the country again.
He was arrested at the Central Park Precinct after more than 10 hours of police grilling just blocks from where the body was found strangled less than a day earlier.
Boston next week.
McGillion said police found a driver's license learner's permit in her pocket that had "been doctored to indicate she was 22 years old," so she could be served in bars. The legal drinking age in New York is 21.
Her pink skirt and white blouse were torn, and authorities found her panties and denim jacket nearby. Levin was to leave for college in
An autopsy revealed that Levin had died of asphyxia by strangulation. It may take a few weeks to determine whether she was raped, said Andrew Anzalone, chief of evidence at the city medical examiner's office.
"Who knows how long I'll be able to provide these pieces," she said.
Although Kurata doesn't see any reason to move back to Africa permanently, she hopes to build her own farm in Kenya someday, perhaps, retire in Kenya.
Chambers pleaded innocent to second-degree murder at his arraignment at Manhattan Criminal Court early today, and Judge Richard Lowe ordered him to be jailed without bond.
"I don't know what the motivation was," Chief of Detectives Richard Nicastro said.
"I don't ever want to think I've made my last trip to Kenya," she said. "I just love it too much."
The couple left the bar about 4:30 a.m., police said.
Levin and Chambers had met at the bar about midnight Monday, a little more than six hours before she
"She left voluntarily. She seemed to be happy." McGillon said.
Dole rejects new Rehnquist investigation
United Press International
WASHINGTON — Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, discounting a request to reopen the FBI's investigation of William Rehnquist, said yesterday that the Senate would proceed as scheduled with his nomination as chief justice.
The letter sent by Sens. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts, Howard Metzenbaum of Ohio, Alan Cranston of California and Paul Simon of Illinois, questions whether Rehnquist defrauded his ill brother-in-law by setting up a trust account for his care and then keeping it secret from him.
Four Democratic opponents of Rehquist wrote to Chairman Strom Thurmond, R.S.C., of the Senate Judiciary Committee on Tuesday re
questing a more complete FBI investigation
"These claims were known to the committee prior to its favorable vote on Aug. 15, as were the results of the FBI investigation." Dole said in a statement. "Now the claims are being rehashed by senators who already voted against the nomination in committee in a last-ditch attempt to delay the nominations."
Earlier this month, the committee voted 13-5 to recommend that the Senate confirm Reinhardt as
new member of the Supreme Court, as soon as the Senate returns from its recess, probably Sept. 9.
He said the Senate would consider Rehnquist's nomination, as well of that of Antonin Scalia to become a
Kennedy, Metzenbaum and Simon voted against Rehnquist's nomination in committee. Cranston is not on the committee, but an aide said it was likely that Cranston, who voted against Rehnquist's nomination to the court in 1971, also would oppose his promotion to chief justice.
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Thursdav. August 28, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
Professor signs deal to motivate students
By PAMELA SPINGLER
A business professor and his students are making a deal.
Arthur Thomas, distinguished professor of business, requires students in his section of Business 240, Financial Accounting I, to sign contracts to do their best this semester.
"I wanted to give the kids some idea, in advance, what I expect of them to pass the class." he said.
Thomas said he wanted to motivate students in his class to do the required work. And he also signs the same contract, promising students his best effort.
Thomas, who started the system this semester, requires students to sign the contract during the first week of classes.
wife of students
If his students refuse to sign the contract, Thomas informs them that two other sections are open.
In the contract, the student agrees to attend class regularly, be well-prepared, participate by answering questions, do homework, take the tests honestly and work hard.
In return, Thomas promises to give well-organized lectures, attend all office hours, provide thorough exam reviews, encourage teaching assistants to help students and care about students.
The idea for the agreement came from Clark Bricker, KU professor emeritus of chemistry, who used it in his classes.
Thomas said he cleared it with KU administrators before adding it to his curriculum.
"When I talked with them, no evebrows were raised," he said.
Thomas said his teaching assistants and colleagues were positive about the contract.
So, he initiated the policy.
In the spring, statistics indicated that more than 60 percent of the students enrolled in Thomas' beginning accounting class dropped the class or received below average grades, he said.
"We have a serious situation," Thomas said. "We need to get students to do what is expected of them. Half of what I'm doing is motivational.
we try to get them fired up. When they do go out in the real world to learn, they do 90 percent of the work.
"Part of my job is to get those kids motivated to function so that they can pass other classes in professional schools."
Thomas said he thought students showed more motivation after they had declared majors. He teaches 660 students in Business 240.
"I get the feeling that neither in high school nor in other freshman classes at KU, serious demands are being made on them," Thomas said. "I plan to bridge that gap."
Thomas said students could learn much, but sometimes they needed an extra push.
"When you are in a class that you have to study effectively, you learn that, by golly, you can study effectively and learn the material," he said.
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"The Burge Party Room was originally one large open space, but it is being subdivided to accommodate the student organizations." Long said.
The Burge Union will remain the home of nine student organizations, including Student Senate, and three University services for at least two years while the Kansas Union is being renovated.
Work on the Burge Party Room began last month and should be finished in October. After the room is remodeled, it will temporarily house student offices.
The Burge Union is being remodeled to accommodate the new occupants, said Jim Long, director of the unions.
"It will also make it more convenient to the patron."
By PAMELA SPINGLEK
Staff writer
The organizations were housed on the third floor of the Kansas Union and have been moved to the Southeast Conference Room on the third floor of the Burge Union.
"Someone had to move to that level three of the Kansas Union could be renovated." Long said
He said the Kansas Union renovation project would take two or three years to complete.
Long said the first phase of renovation to the Burge Union should be completed by December. Phase one includes relocating the nine student office and the library, rebuilding the floor, adding a copy center and providing additional space on the first floor for Student Legal Services and the University Placement Office.
The project includes moving all Kansas Union food services to the third floor. The services now are scattered on the second, third and fifth floors.
Long said phase two, which included adding meeting rooms to the first floor of Burge Union, didn't have a deadline for completion.
"This will consolidate the food services and make them more efficient and effective," he said.
The University Corporate Board, the University administration and the Board of Regents gave final approval for renovation in January 1986.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, August 28, 1986
7
FAA may reinvestigate safety of tower location
By PAM MILLER
Staff writer
The Federal Aviation Administration may consider a third investigation into the safety of installing a radio tower nine miles from Topeka's Forbes Field, an FAA investigator said yesterday.
Dale Carnine, a member of the Air Traffic Division, said the FAA received new data about the site. Carnine determined in January that the location was safe. KHUM FM-96, Ottawa, plans to install a radio tower.
He plans to review the information and decide whether the location needs to be reinvestigated.
"We may or may not open the case," Carine said. "I quite frankly do not have enough information to say if we will reopen it."
In January, Carnine determined twice that the tower's proposed location wouldn't be hazardous for airplanes, he said.
Carnine said that at the time of his investigation, he did not know that United Airlines would be servicing Topeka.
Jim Zimmerman, staff analyst of airfield operations for United Airline's flight operation department in Chicago, said that United's jets would have to make some weight adjustments in the take-off procedure if KHU installed the radio tower.
United Airlines has been flying out of Forbes Field since March.
Zimmerman said the airline would have to reduce the maximum weight capacity of its 737 jets by 7,000 pounds and of its 727 jets by 19,000 pounds to avoid any contact with the tower. Maximum weight capacity depends on the circumstances, he said.
He said the airline would be willing to make the restrictions, if present.
"This procedure doesn't affect departure, but it presents the potential of not carrying a full load of passengers," Zimmerman said.
Zimmerman said that United officials weren't happy with the situation.
"Ideally, we shouldn't have to work around this tower," he said. "We agree with George Boyd, Kansas director of Aviation, that, realistically speaking, the tower shouldn't be there."
Carnine explained that all aircrafts will have to modify their landing preparations because of the tower, but won't have to drastically change them
Boyd petitioned Washington to review the situation, Carnine said, because Boyd disagreed with the FAA's findings. The petition was turned down because no new information had been supplied.
"We really had no alternative as we saw it," said Commissioner Nancy Hiebert. "Our decision is to say if the land use is fine, but of course there must be scrutiny on the safety decision. Our decision would have been null and void if the FAA said it was unsafe."
Douglas County Commissioners approved the use of the land, which is in west Douglas County, for the radio Jan. 15.
Topeka residents Jim Woods and Pauline Beatty came to Lawrence Monday to protest the radio tower site. They said the tower was in an unsafe area for air traffic. Woods picked the Lawrence KHUO office Aug. 18, and said he planned to return to Lawrence again to protest, he said.
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Shop the Kansan, Daily.
By SHANE A. HILLS
The station, which used to be called Z299 and played current top 40 hits, now goes by the name 98.9 Gold and plays only top 40 hits from the 1950s, '60s and '70s. The format changed Monday.
Mark Wodlinger, the owner, said he fired six full-time and two parttime D.J.s because he needed different radio personalities to appeal to the station's new market: members of the baby boomer generation between the ages of 25 and 49.
"We needed mature, experienced disc jockeys with deep, rich voices," he said.
"Basically, those disc jockeys knew they had been let go and they were mad," Wodinger said.
Wodinger said that after the former D.J.s knew they would be replaced, they acted immaturely. He said that Friday night on the air they used "four-letter words and made nasty comments about me and my wife."
"We feel there is a niche out there in the listening audience — the baby boomer generation that would like to hear the music it grew up with," Johnston said. "It's available on AM radio in Kansas City, but we thought they'd like to hear it in stereo on FM."
Wodlinger said the format change doubled the station's potential to draw the advertising dollar.
"We are seeing the results already," he said.
Steaey Wiegman, Hays sophomore, said. "I listened to ZZ99 all the time last year because it was the best music around. But this week I noticed they were playing all this old stuff. I like the old stuff, but I don't want to hear it all the time."
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8
Thursday, August 28, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
Service rents offices to executive travelers
By TONY BALANDRAN
A Lawrence businessman is providing a new, fresh concept to help traveling executives avoid possible headaches on the road.
Dave Fonseca, president of Your Other Office Inc., 2500 W. 6th St., Suite B, said his new business was designed to eliminate problems that traveling executives might encounter.
"If you're going to a town for one night, you can't just set up office on your own," he said. "I don't think there is any place in town that would rent you a facility for one day."
Your Other Office, a new member of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, officially opened its doors Aug. 18. A ribbon-cutting ceremony is scheduled for Sept. 9.
Fonseca, a business and marketing consultant, said he had thought of the concept of renting temporary offices earlier this year.
When executives travel to other cities on business trips, they may find themselves working out of a briefcase, telephone booth, hotel room, tavern or restaurant table, said Fonseca, who usually travels four days a week.
Your Other Office offers accommodations like those in any sophisticated business office, he said.
"I wouldn't have all the equipment or facilities I needed in order to conduct my business professionally," he said of his travels.
"Our goal is to become their office when they get here," Fonseca said. "Just as soon as they walk through the door, it is their office."
'If you're going to a town for one night, you can't just set up office on your own.'
Dave Fonseca Your Other Office Inc.
Dave Fonseca, president of Your Other Office Inc., 2500 W. Sixth St., Suite B, stands in one of the rooms he offers to rent on a part-time basis. Fonseca started his business to help traveling executives and new businesses.
Fonseca said his company temporarily could rent new office space and equipment to those who wanted to start a business.
"Most people, when they find out how much it costs to get into a business, decide not to go into business," he said.
Fonseca's clients pay a flat rental fee without the down payment or damage deposit that downtown office complexes probably would request.
Dan Ruettimann/KANSAN
Fonseca offers clients single of
fices or a conference room. He charges $35 an hour or $95 a day for a furnished office and $12 an hour or $49 a day for the conference room.
Although Fonseca said he considered the company to be experimental,he already is planning to
open branches in Denver and Los Angeles. Fonseca is from Los Angeles.
"I'm still finding out what the total cost is." he said.
But, as in any business, only time will tell, he said.
"When you come up with a new idea, you have got to educate people about it. If you come up with an old idea, you have got to persuade people away from your competition."
"If this was wildly profitable in the beginning, that would be a fluke
Arson suspect to stand trial
By a Kansan reporter
A 21-year-old Lawrence man was ordered Tuesday to stand trial on charges of aggravated arson, attempted first-degree murder and felony injury in connection with the July 14 fire that resulted in the death of a Lawrence firefighter.
District Court Judge James Paddock scheduled the trial for 9 a.m. Oct.15
At the preliminary hearing in Douglas County District Court, David P. Winebrenner pleaded not guilty to all charges. He is being held at the Douglas County Jail in lieu of $1 million bail.
Winebrenner is accused of setting a fire that destroyed his parents' home at 3028 Rimrock Drive and killed firefighter Mark Blair, 34.
His parents, Douglas and Marilce Winebrenner, were in the house when the fire started.
Douglas Winebrenner testified for the prosecution Monday, the first day of the hearing. He said his son reacted with shock at the fire and had to be restrained from entering the burning house.
David Winebrenner's court-appointed attorney, Harry Warren, told Paddock that he planned to file a pretrial motion to have Winebrenner evaluated at Larned State Hospital.
23rd & Louisiana
In the Mall's Shopping Cen
FACTOR-E AEROBICS
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3 Month $ 69.00
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LUNCH CAN BE MORE THAN
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We wanted to create a restaurant/bar concept never achieved in Lawrence. We wanted a place where people could come to eat lunch or dinner, listen to some good music and maybe play a game of pool. We wanted someplace where you wouldn't have to sit next to a kid with a cardboard burger box. We wanted someplace with a lot of class and atmosphere without the high prices. We wanted to do all of that. So we did it.
Lunch isn't just lunch anymore.
We take entertainment seriously. That's why we're one of Lawrence's most enduring private clubs. Of course we offer the best in food and drink, excellent service, and we follow the trends. But that's exactly why we last. We're always fresh, never passe.
I
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POOL·LUNCH·DARTS
BOOMERS IN GAMMONS SNOWWS
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23rd and Ousdahl
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, August 28, 1986
9
Study reveals trouble in diversion program
The Associated Press
TOPEKA - A survey by the Legislature's watchdog agency revealed that authorities last year had trouble getting about one-quarter of offenders who were placed on diversion agreements in large Kansas cities to follow through with the programs.
The finding was contained in a report the Legislative Division of Post Audit presented yesterday to an interim study panel, the Special Committee on the Judiciary.
Under diversion agreements, people charged with crimes avoid prosecution by agreeing to complete specified activities, possibly including the payment of fees, attendance at therapy sessions and the performance of community service work.
If a defendant fails to complete the assignments, prosecutors have the option of resuming criminal proceedings in the case. Diversion agreements may be drawn up either by judges or prosecutors and can apply to juveniles as well as adults.
A review of 236 diversion agreements in the state's five most populous counties indicated that offenders voluntarily completed the programs in slightly more than half the cases.
"In one-fourth of the cases, the requirements were not fulfilled, or were not fulfilled until the local prosecutor took some action against the offender," according to the report.
Auditors could not determine the outcome in about another quarter of the cases, the report said.
"This lack of documentation could allow local officials to unintentionally dismiss charges against offenders who have not satisfied all their diversion conditions," according to the report.
The report also said a survey of most cities and counties in the state showed local courts and prosecutors arranged a total of 11,000 diversion agreements during 1985, more than half involving charges of driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs.
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Sen Nancy Kassebaum said yesterday that sanctions probably would not change South African policy and described a Senate vote for such measures as a sign of American frustration about apartheid.
Hans Dirksen, the neonatologist in charge of the babies' care, said they probably would leave the hospital in nine weeks, about the time they would have been delivered had they been full term. The newborns — ranging in weight from 3 pounds, $3^{4}$ ounces to 3 pounds, 15 ounces — were larger than doctors had anticipated.
"As violence escalates here, world pressure is going to continue. It is an expression of our frustration with the intransigence of the South African government." Kassebaum said.
“Sanctions seldom throughout history changed a government’s policy,” said K萨塞巴姆, who was in Johannesburg at the invitation of a committee called Women of Our Time. She said she had no
United Press International
The first born of the quads was placed on a respirator when he didn't immediately begin breathing. Dirksen said that was fairly routine for small premature babies and he hoped to have the infant off the equipment in two or three days
The Senate voted Aug. 16 to restrict new U.S. investment in South Africa, to withdraw landing rights for South African aircraft and to place bans on the import of steel, farm products, coal and textiles.
Missouri woman gives birth to quadruplets in Wichita
Kassebaum said she doubted the government of President Pieter Botha was concerned by the Senate vote.
Kassebaum voices concern in S. Africa
"I can understand — even if I do not accept — the fear that exists among 6 million whites holding power over 24 million blacks," she said. "If this fear remains the primary force of white politics, South Africa will sink deeper and deeper into a paralysis that will suffocate any hope for the future."
WICHITA — Three boys and a girl born to a 21-year-old southwest Missouri woman yesterday were in air condition in the Newborn Intensive Care Unit of a Wichita hospital. The quadruplets were delivered by Cesarean section to Cindy McMechan of Liberal, Mo. Mrs. McMechan and her husband, Randall, 24, already have two daughters and learned in mid-July that she would have quadruplets.
"I am not sure the South African government cares who members of the Senate think, in fact I am sure they hold them in contempt," she said.
"I anticipate that they will grow up to be nice, natural babies," Dirksen said. "I'm very pleased with the way they are progressing."
The Associated Press
Kassebau called for the release of jailed African National Congress leader Nelson Mandela.
"I think that Nelson Mandela is acknowledged by black and white, after being in prison for 20 years, as a person who can be an umbrella to pull the forces together," she said.
In remarks prepared for the women's luncheon, Kassebaum said the power of whites over blacks is wrong
All aboard on a steam train through Kansas
The Associated Press
The delivery marked the first quadruplets at Wesley Medical Center in four years.
plans to meet with South African officials.
SHARON SPRINGS — At least 400 people looked on Tuesday as the first steam locomotive in 30 years pulled into this northwest Kansas town. They were heralded by blasts from the engine's whistle and a massive plume of steam and smoke.
The train, carrying government and railroad officials, is making the trip as part of the yearlong
The 1-million-pound Union Pacific locomotive was pulling a 12-car train called the "Kansas Special." It made the stop toward the end of the first of a three-day trek from Denver to Topeka.
Says sanctions won't change policy
NEW.at THE HAWK
During the stop in Sharon Springs, the train took on water from a railroad tower that still stood alongside the tracks. Observers said it was one of the first times the water tank had been used in years.
The railroad no longer has equipment in most towns along the line to deliver water to the locomotive. However, fire departments have ofered to use their equipment to pump water from fire hydrants near the tracks, officials said.
celebration of Kansas' 125th anniversary of statehood. It's scheduled to go on display at a railroad exhibition in Topeka this weekend.
A spokesman with the Union Pacific in Omaha, Tom LaHood, said the engine was loaded with 23,500 gallons of water before it left Union Station in Denver.
But instead of using coal as most locomotives do, Lalfof said, the engine uses 6,000 gallons of fuel oil to heat the water to steam. The steam powers the engine's 80-inch drive wheels.
TACOS & NACHOS
The train pulled out of Denver about an hour behind schedule as a result of mechanical difficulties. Later, it stopped in Limon, Colo., and Cheyenne Wells, Colo. In Kansas, the train stopped in Sharon Springs and Oakley.
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10
Thursday, August 28, 1966 / University Daily Kansan
NBA stars put pressure on Kansas goal makers
United Press International
DORRANCE — When Akeem Olajuwon and Julius Irving barrel down the court to execute their slam-dunk shots, they rely on a company in tiny Dorrance to ensure the goal can stand up to their enormous strength.
Toss Back Inc. designs and manufactures the snap-back basketball goals and safety backboards used exclusively by the National Basketball Association since 1981. The backboards, were granted legal status in college and high school ranks in March.
Thanks to a steel spring that allows the goal to bend under the weight of a 7-foot basketball player and an apparatus that braces the goal to the backboard frame instead of the glass, the two innovations have helped make it possible to keep the slam-dunk a part of professional and college basketball.
Toss Back president Kenneth Mahoney, a former Kansas State basketball star, founded the company with his brother in their hometown of Dorrance in the early 1960s, first carving a niche in the sports world by designing a netted device to toss back practice balls to players.
Today, the toss back almost is a standard piece of equipment in basketball gyms across the country. Mahoney said.
Since he founded Toss Back, Mahoney has had a dual purpose: to create sporting equipment that would help players develop their
skills and to make the game of basketball a safer enterprise.
The company recently won a $380,000 grant from the state to double its work force to about 40 people and to expand production to make it more competitive in the sports world.
sports v. 108.
Toss Back also is making ball-return devices for volleyball, baseball, soccer and other round-ball sports, and plans to continue expanding its horizons. Mahoney said. He expects sales next year to elceil the $1 million mark.
Mahoney credits part of Toss Back's success to the handcraftsmanship each piece receives at the production shop, which once housed the main truck stop between Kansas City and Denver.
The company is able to keep its prices competitive by cutting out middle men - sales representatives, retail points, distributors. Mahoney and his staff do it all, including showing coaches and players how to use the equipment properly and installing goals and backboards.
But Toss Back's real success so far has been in Mahoney's ability to recognize and then correct the shortcomings of basketball equipment.
In 1984, after Julius Irving hit his head on the bottom of the backboard during the Gatorade Slam-Dunk Championship. Toss Back redesigned and perfected its backboard by cutting six inches from the bottom. The NBA tested the new backboards and ordered them installed in every NBA arena in the country.
Enrollment at the University of Kansas is at a record high, but fewer students are attending Kansas State and Wichita State universities, college officials said yesterday.
United Press International
Enrollment at KU has reached all-time high
records said yesterday. The figures were based on head counts as of Monday, the first day of fall semester classes, and will change when final enrollment figures are compiled on the 20th day of classes in September. Final figures for each Board of Regents are used in determining the amount of money each school will receive from the state.
At Kansas, fall semester classes opened with a record enrollment of 25,599, according to the University's department of educational services.
The first-day figure at Lawrence and off-campus facilities — the Regents Center in Overland Park and the Capital Complex Center in Topeka — was 23,256, compared with 22,428 last year. On the Lawrence campus alone, 21,841 students were enrolled.
circulate. The head count at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., was 2,343, an increase of 111 from last year.
last year At Kansas State in Manhattan, the first-day
figure was 14,316, a drop of 68 students from last year, said Cy Wainscott, director of university relations at Kansas State.
The biggest decline, Wainscott said, was in the college of agriculture, which suffered a 9.7 percent drop to 1,370 students. The largest increase, he said, was in the college of education, up 9.1 percent to 1,000 students.
At Wichita State, enrollment stood at 15.099 when classes began Monday, down 299 from last year, said Rob Merritt, media relations coordinator.
THURSDAY
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Player loses claim in bingo decision
United Press International
COLUMBIA, S.C. — A one-legged bingo player who couldn't hobble to the podium fast enough to claim her prize is not entitled to the money, the South Carolina Court of Appeals ruled yesterday.
A Florence County jury had ordered the James F. Byrnes Academy Inc., sponsor of the bingo game, to pay Delores Taylor $3,000 and other damages for not awarding her the game prize.
But the appeals court overturned the decision, ruling that under contract law, the academy was obligated only to award the prize to the first winner to claim it.
Taylor testified that she "began hollering 'Bingo'" as soon as I-22, her winning number, was called. But she said that the caller didn't hear her and that she hobbled to an usher to try and stop another number from being called.
Taylor failed, and three other winners claimed the prize on the next number.
The Week is over, but the Shirts are back!
kansas·university
Country Club Week
1986
Hurry! Hurry! Hurry!
Shirts available thru:
Dave Walker & Mike O'Keefe 1245 W. Campus Rd.
841-6215 (Delta Chi House)
HAIR AFFAIR
Lawrence's own full service salon Presents:
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Come in and see Ginny Proctor
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Monday...Hamburger Steak
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Take advantage of our $75.00 a Semester Student Special!
Racquetball memberships also available.
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Lawrence, Kansas 66044
(913) 841-7230
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, August 28, 1986
11
S
45-hour week for 'Hawks
For the members of the men's golf team, the game is not a pastime but a way of life.
Summers are spent on the golf course, ironing out quirks and playing every day to improve. Once school begins, the routine is interrupted only by classes and homework. The players still spend about 45 hours a week at the course.
weather's nice. You've got to keep working on it."
Men's head golf coach Ross Randall knows his players work hard. He's the one who makes sure they do.
Men's golf
Luring the fall season, Randall expects the top three positions to go to senior Steve Madsen of Denver, sophomore John Ogden of Kansas City, Kan., and junior Brian McGreey of Wichita. Randall said he hoped the fourth, fifth and sixth positions would vary among his other players.
He expects Madsen, who last year came home with the Drake Relays championship and is a two-time
A. H. BARNES
"It's kind of an all-year thing," Rudy Zupetz, Minot, N.D. sophomore, said yesterday. "You can't afford to take off when the
Sophomore Rudy Zupetz left, practices his swing while his teammate, John Erickson, right, follows through on his drive. The two practiced with the rest of the men's golf team yesterday at Alvamar.
Midwest Invitational winner, to claim the No.1 spot.
Sports writer
"Last fall, Madsen was right in the hunt of every tournament," Randall said. "He was always in contention."
Dedication, a key element in any sport, is a necessary one in golf.
By ANNE LUSCOMBE
Even with seasoned players like Madsen, McGreevy and Ogden, who now is playing in the U.S. Amateur tournament in Birmingham, Ala., the team is young with limited tournament experience. Of the 14 players already on the team, 10 are freshmen and sophomores.
Team members said they anticipated a good season.
However, Randall said he was not worried about the lack of up-perclassmen Zupetz and John Erickson. Des Moines, Iowa, are sophomores in eligibility, but have been under Randall's supervision for three years. Both red-shirted two years ago. Trevor Williams, Leawood sophomore, transferred to Kansas from Penn Valley Community College, Kansas City. Mo., where he gained much tournament experience.
The tension is nothing unusual, nor will it ever completely end, Madsen said.
Jayhawks announce schedule
"The first few tournaments are kind of rough because you think everybody expects so much of you," he said. "But if you're always nervous that can't help you."
The first tournament may be easier for the golfers since it takes place at their home course. The Jayhawk Invitational on Sept. 15-16 at Alvamar Golf and Country Club is more or less an all-Big Eight tournament. All the Big Eight teams will play except Oklahoma and Oklahoma State.
By a Kansan sports writer
"This year we have a number of guys that can play well," said Zupetz, a former high school All-American. "That adds a lot of depth to the team. We have at least five guys turning in good scores rather than only three, like last year."
Highlighting the schedule are 15 games against teams that played in the National Collegiate Athletic Association tournament last year, including NCAA champion Louisville, Notre Dame, St. John's and North Carolina State.
Kansas head basketball coach Larry Brown yesterday announced the Jayhawks' 1986-87 schedule of 27 regular season games plus one tournament.
The Jayhawks' season will begin November 19 with an exhibition against the Soviet national team in Lawrence. The regular season starts ten days later against Tennessee-Martin in Allen Field House.
Basketball Schedule
Nov. 19 SOVIET NATIONAL TEAM
Nov. 29 TENNESSEE-MARTIN
Dec. 1 SOUTHERN
Dec. 4 WASHINGTON
Dec. 6 at Arkansas
Dec. 13 COLORADO
Dec. 20 TEXAS TECH
Dec. 22 THE CITADEL
Dec. 27-30 at Hawaii Rainbow Classi
Jan. 6 at Wichita State
Jan. 8 TEMPE
Jan. 11 at Oklahoma State
Jan. 15 at Oklahoma
Jan. 15 MIAMI
Jan. 20 MISSOURI
Jan. 22 NEBRASKA
Jan. 25 NORTH CAROLINA STATE
Jan. 27 IOWA State
Jan. 31 at Louisville
Feb. 4 at Kansas State
Feb. 7 OKLAHOMA STATE
Feb. 8 NOTRE DAME
Feb. 11 at Missouri
Feb. 14 OKLAHOMA
Feb. 17 at Iowa State
Feb. 19 KANSAS STATE
Feb. 21 at St. John's
Feb. 25 at Colorado
Feb. 28 at Nebraska
The increased competition within the Kansas team has some of the players feeling the pressure.
Five of Kansas' games will be nationally televised, including two from Lawrence and one from Kemper Arena in Kansas City. Mo. NBC-TV will televise the home game against Miami and the game at Kemper against North Carolina State. ABC-TV will broadcast the Notre Dame game from Lawrence, and CBS will televise the game at Louisville and the game against St. John's in New York's Madison Square Garden.
"My goal now is to do well in school because I can't stake my life on golf," said Len Johnson, Abilene freshman. "The pressures on a college team are a lot different from high school. I have to shoot better. I've never had to work for a spot on a team before like this."
Home games in all caps
Walk gives St. Louis 2-1 win
United Press International
ST. LOUIS — Rick Mahler walked Terry Pendleton with the bases loaded in the eighth inning yesterday to force home Vince Coleman with the winning run and give the St. Louis Cardinals a 2-1 victory over the Atlanta Braves.
Todd Worrell, 8-9, pitched the final $ \frac{1}{2} $ innings to earn the victory.
Mahler, 11-14, allowed six hits, walked six, two intentionally, and struck out five in taking the loss.
St. Louis starter John Tudor pitched $6\%$ innings and left when he developed stiffness in his left shoulder. He allowed eight hits and struck out four but walked four. Tudor picked runners off base in the first and second innings.
Houston 7, Chicago 1
HOUSTON — Nolan Ryan allowed only one hit in six innings to collect his 250th major league victory and Phil Garner went 4-for-5 tonight in sparking the Houston Astros to a 7-1 triumph over the Chicago Cubs.
Ryan, a 19-year veteran, increased his record to 9-8 in becoming only the 26th pitcher in major league history to record 250 victories. He walked one, struck out five and allowed only a first-inning leadoff single by Jerry Mumphrey. Charles Kerfeld worked the final three innings to register his sixth save.
The Astros grabbed a 3-10 lead in the third. Billy Hatcher drew a one-out
walk from Jamie Moyer, 5-4, and stole second — one of six steals registered by the Astros in the game. Jim Pankovits walked and Garner drilled a single to right to score Hatcher and move Pankovits to third. Glenn Davis hit a sacrifice fly to score Pankovitis with Garner moving to second. Kevin Bass singled to center to score Garner.
Chicago scored a run in the seventh. Thad Bosley singled to open the inning and Keith Moreland walked. Terry Francona beat out an infield hit to load the bases. One out later, Chris Speier grounded out to score Bosley.
San Francisco 3. Montreal 2
SAN FRANCISCO — Rookie Robby Thompson drove in the tying run and then scored the winning run on a wild pitch in the eighth inning yesterday to give the San Francisco Giants a 3-victory over the Montreal Expos.
Losing pitcher Andy McGaffigan, 8-5, walked pinch hitter Dan Gladen to lead off the eighth. Gladen moved to second on a wild pickoff throw by McGaffigan and moved to third on a sacrifice by Mike Aldrete.
Bruce Ruffin, who had left the game after eight innings, picked up
LOS ANGELES — Von Hayes singled in Jeff Stone from second base with the tie-breaking run in the ninth inning yesterday to lift the Philadelphia Phillies to a 2-1 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Philadelphia 2. Los Angeles 1
the victory to make his record 7-3.
Steve Bedrosian pitched the ninth for his 19th save. The loss went to Bob Welch, who was touched for nine hits while striking out 10.
Cincinnati 9. Pittsburgh 5
Cincinnati PITTSBURGH — Eric Davis hit his first career grand slam with two out in the ninth innings last night to lift the Cincinnati Reds to a 9-5 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates.
With two out in the ninth, Davis riped the first pitch from reliever Don Robinson, 2-3, over the left-centerfield wall for his 22nd homer of the year, after a single by Ron Oester and walks to pinch hitter Max Venable and Buddy Bell.
Rob Murphy pitched three scoreless innings of relief for his second victory without a loss.
Dave Parker homered for Cincinnati and Mike Diaz connected for Pittsburgh.
SAN DIEGO — Keith Hernandez delivered a sacrifice fly to center in the 11th inning to snap a 5-1 tie and the New York Mets pulled off a bizarre game-ending double play to defeat the San Diego Padres, 6-5.
New York 6. San Diego 5
With one out of the 11th, Len Dykstra and Wally Backman hit back-to-back singles off loser Rich Gossage, 5-7, to put on runners on first and third. Hernandez then delivered his game-winning fly ball.
Travellers to go to World Series
By RIC ANDERSON
Several faces have been absent from Jayhawk baseball practice lately.
But the reason they are missing isn't that they are lazy, are in a contract dispute or have decided to forego a year of college to turn pro.
The reason they are absent is that they play for the Maupintour Travellers, a Lawrence semi-pro baseball team, and because they can't seem to lose a tournament. Last weekend they qualified for the Stan Musial Semi-Pro World Series tournament, scheduled for today through Sunday in Battle Creek, Mich.
John Schneider, senior pitcher for both the Travellers and the Jayhawks, said the faces on one team weren't too different from the faces on the other.
"About half the KU team plays on this team." Schneider said.
Because so many Jayhawks are also Travellers, Schneider said, the entire Jayhawk team will benefit from the success of the semi-pro team.
"I believe we'll be a lot better this year than we have been in the past," he said.
The Travelers, sponsored by Maupintour Travel Agency, which is based in Lawrence, have won 16 of their last 18 games. They beat Olathe for the state championship Aug. 9 and Wichita Falls, Tex., to win the South Plains regional tournament in Dallas.
The two tournament games the Travellers lost were to Oathe in a semifinal game of the state tournament and to Dallas in the first game of regionals. The league plays double-elimination tournaments.
By John Byrn, senior first baseman for Kansas and Maupintour, said teamwork pulled the Travellers through the tournament.
Byrn said the teamwork was showing in the players' hitting.
"We're playing as a team so well now that we've been down in late innings and fought back," he said. Byrn said the teamwork was
"We're just unconscious," he said. "I guess that'd be the only term for it. Everybody's been coming through right when we need them."
The Travelers' first game in the series will be today at 5 p.m. Their opponent will be Nashville, Tenn., the defending champions.
White Sox win, end 5-game losing streak
United Press International
CHICAGO — The Chicago White Sox broke a five-game losing streak the day after a half-hour clubhouse meeting, but manager Jim Fregosi refused to take credit for spurring the club to victory.
The White Sox beat Kansas City 3-1 last night. Rookie catcher Ron Karkovice hit a three-run homer, his first major league home run, and Floyd Bannister scattered allowed hits in his fourth complete game of the season.
Fregosi gave the White Sox a lecture after their Tuesday night loss but said he did not know if it contributed to the turnaround.
"Who knows whether a meeting helps or hurts," said Fregosi. "Karkovice's homer put us on top and we shut them down."
Karkovie hit his home run in the second inning, giving Chicago a 3-0 lead against Royals starter Danny Jackson, 9-9. The Royals got a run against Bannister in the fourth inning with three consecutive singles but Bannister retired the next 15 batters before giving up a single to George
Brett in the ninth inning.
"One mistake cost Danny the game," said acting Kansas City manager Mike Ferraro. "Bannister pitched great and I thought (Daryl) Boston played a hell of a center field for them tonight. He was all over the place."
"Bannister pitched outstanding," said Fregosi. "He did a great job. He gets into a bad habit of trying to power the baseball. We've tried to get him to sink the ball more."
Bannister, who is now 8-10, said, "I got some nice plays in the field. It was one of my better games."
Bannister gave up six hits with five strikeouts and no walks in nine innings
Jackson gave up 10 hits and three runs over six innings with five strikeouts and one walk.
Karovice, called up Aug. 16 from AA Birmingham, the hit first pitch from Jackson into the left field seats for his first major league home run, Russ Morman and Ozzie Guillen had singled in front of Karovice.
"I think he surprised himself," said Fregosi about Karkovice. "He's so outstanding defensively that
it's nice to see him get some hits."
Another rookie, first baseman Russ Morman, went 3-for-4 with three singles for Chicago.
Line Royals scored a run in the fourth inning with three consecutive singles off Bannister. George Brett, Hal McRae and Frank White singled to generate the run.
Texas 4. Boston 1
ARLINGTON, Texas — Sixth innning home runs by Larry Parrish and Toby Harran paced the Texas Rangers to a 4-1 victory last night over the Boston Red Sox behind the combined five-hit pitching of Ed Correa and Mitch Williams.
Correa, 8-11, won for only the third time in 12 starts. Williams recorded his sixth save and third in a week by going the last $3^{1/2}$ innings. The Rangers moved to within $3^{1/2}$ games of the American League West division-leading California Angels.
Bruce Hurst, 8-7, gave up all of Texas' runs while going six innings.
Scott Fletcher reached base on an infield hit in the first for Texas and moved to second on a throwing error by Hurst. Pete Icaviglia's single
Toronto 6 Cleveland 3
drove in Fletcher with an unearned run.
CLEVELAND — Pinch hitter Tony Fernandez' one-out double scored Garth lorg with the winning run in the eighth inning last night, enabling the Toronto Blue Jays to complete a sweep of their double-header with a 6-3 triumph over the Cleveland Indians.
In the opener, Ernie Whit led off the 12th inning with his 12th home run of the year to lift Toronto to a 3-2 victory.
In the second game, John Cerutti, 8-3, allowed nine hits, struck out four and walked two over 7 1-3 innings to get the victory. Tom Henke, who saved the opener for Mark Elchborn, finished for his 19th save. Frank Wills, 1-2, took the loss.
In the opener, with the score tied 1-1 in the ninth, Whit sent a 2-2 pitch from reliever Bryan Oelkers, 2-3, down the right field line and inside
Henke has 32 saves in his career with Toronto, breaking the club record of 31 set by Joyce McLaughlin.
Rookie right-hander Mark
Eichhorn, 11-4, allowed one hit only at 4 2-3 innings in relief of starter Jimmy Key. Eichhorn set a club record with the 11 victories, breaking the mark of 10 established by Jerry "kriv" in 1977.
Minnesota 7. Milwaukee 5
MILWAUKEE — Kirby Puckett broke out of a 1-21 slump by going 4-for-5 with three RBI, leading the Minnesota Twins to a 7-5 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers.
It was Puckett's sixth four-hit game of the season, raising his average to 341.
The Brewers outfit the Twins 15-14 but stranded 10 runners.
Winner Neal Heaton, 5-12, got his second victory in eight decisions as a Twin. George Frazier pitched the final three innings and picked up his third save.
Seattle 4 Baltimore 1
SEATTLE — Right-hander Mike Trujillo and reliever Mark Huismann combined on a seven-hitter, and Ken Phelps' two-run homer highlighted a four-run first inning that paced the Seattle Mariners to 4-1 victory over the Baltimore Orioles.
12
Thursday, August 28, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
Alabama beats Ohio State in kickoff
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Mike Shula hit Albert Bell with a 3-yard touchdown pass with 9:33 to play last night and carried No. 6 ranked Alabama over No. 9 Ohio State, 16-10, in the Kickoff Classic, the start of college football's 118th season.
United Press International
With Ohio State leading 10-6,
Shula shook off three-quarters of
poor play to lead the Crimson Tide
73 yards in 12 plays for the winning
score. Gene Jelks carried five
times for 32 yards in the march
and Shula completed a 16-yard
shuffle pass to fullback Doug Allen
to key the drive
On 3rd-and-goal at the 3, Shula found Bell hooking in the front of the end zone and completed his first pass all game to a wide receiver.
The Buckeyes received one last chance when Darryll Thomas interfered with Cris Carter on consecutive pass plays with no time remaining, pushing Ohio State to the Alabama 17. Jim Karsatos then hit Carter in the hands in the end zone, but Alabama's Britton Cooper and Chris Goode knocked the ball away to end the game.
The Crimson Tide also received three field goals from Van Tiffin.
including a 28-yarder with 1:02 left to make it 16-10. Ohio State scored on a 26-yard run by Jamie Holland and a 44-yard field goal by Pat O'Morrow. However, O'Morrow, a freshman playing his first college game, missed two field goals, and a faulty snap stopped another field-goal attempt.
The game, before a Giants Stadium crowd of 68.296, was a messy affair with seven turnovers and numerous false start penalties.
Neither Shula nor Ohio State's Karsatos — senior quarterbacks considered Heisman Trophy candidates — was particularly sharp.
Shula completed 11-of-19 passes for 83 yards and two interceptions. Karsatos was 20-of-31 for 193 yards and two interceptions.
Although he did not play well for most of the game, Shula excelled in the fourth quarter. He was 3-for-3 in the drive that culminated with Tiffin's 28-yard field goal, as Alabama killed most of the final seven minutes.
Jelks rushed for 70 yards on 14 carries, Carter, the Buckeyes' outstanding receiver, caught three passes to extend his streak of consecutive games to 25 with a reception.
Knee injury claims KU volleyball player
By a Kansan sports writer
Eileen Schwartz, junior hitter for the Kansas women's Jayhawk volleyball team, will miss the coming season after knee surgery yesterday, said Brenda Sneed, the KU women's trainer.
Schwartz will be out six to eight months. She injured the knee in May and re-injured it the first day of volleyball practice in August.
The 1½ hour surgery, to repair a stretched anterior cruciate ligament, was performed at Lawrence Memorial Hospital by Ken Wert-
zberger, the team's orthopedic surgeon.
Schwartz was to back up starting hitter Judy Desch this season, and she will be replaced by freshman Jodi Oelschlager.
"Hopefully we can get around it," Albitz said. "It's a real shame because she was just starting to get comfortable in that position."
Albizt moved Schwartz to the outside hitting spot behind Desch last fall.
Albitz, who spent last evening with Schwartz, said Schwartz probably would be redshirted.
Connors, Lloyd win in Open
United Press International
NEW YORK — Jimmy Connors, feeling at home in his favorite tournament, crushed Henrik Sundstrom in straight sets last night to advance to the second round of the U.S. Open along with Chris Evert Lloyd and Boris Becker.
By wiping out Sundstrom 6-2, 6-2,
6-2 in 1 hour and 49 minutes, Connors
joined Brad Gilbert as the only two
seeded U.S. men to survive the opening
round.
Connors, a five-time Open champion, insists it is foolhardy to dismiss his chances despite his age, and the sixth seed proved himself a strong factor with his easy victory over Sundstrom. He had his service broken only once as he converted 76 percent of his first serves.
"Right now I have a chance," the left-hander said. "I'm not going to say I'll win it and I won't say I don't have a chance, but I have played my best tennis here. The people bring out the best in me.
"If I'm going to do it (win another Grand Slam), this would be a nice place to try. If you go out and play the kind of tennis I'm capable of,
anything can happen."
Connors, who celebrates his 34th birthday next week, now has won 78 matches at the U.S. Open, the most of any man, and he has been the finalist in each of the last 12 years.
Becker, at 18 almost half the age of Connors, feels he is a lot older and wiser than a year ago when he made his initial appearance in the Open, and says this maturity helped him earn a 6-2, 5-7, 6-4, 6-2 decision over Canadian Gilchibita.
Evert Lloyd had less difficulty in disposing of Barbara Gerken 6-2, 6-1. It was a record 84th victory in the U.S. Open for Evert Lloyd, a six-time champion.
"I feel great," the 31-year-old Floridian said after her 57-minute workout. "I'm in a good frame of mind. I haven't overplayed to this point. I feel very fresh at this stage of the year. I'm real optimistic."
also won opening-round matches on a windy, overcast afternoon, as did Steffi Graf and Pam Shriver, Nos. 3 and 5 among the women.
Wilander, yet to get past the third round in nine previous attempts, defeated Todd Nelson 6-3, 6-1, 4-6, 6-4; Edberg crushed Stephane Boneaune 6-0, 6-3, 6-0; Graf beat Susan Mascarin 6-0, 6-1, and Shriver routed Terry Holladay, 6-1, 6-0, in 41 minutes.
None of the seeds to play during the afternoon was beaten. And of the 11 women seeds to play first-round matches, all were successful in straight sets.
Becker, the two-time Wimbledon champion, remembers all too well his upset loss to Joakim Nystrom in the fourth round of the 1985 Open.
Sports Briefs Basketball meeting next week in Parrot
"I lost my head completely in that match," Becker said. "There was no way I could win it by just playing tenis. You have to be mentally better. I learned a lot from those kir⁻² of matches.
Swedes Mats Wilander and Stefan Edberg, seeded second and fourth.
An organizational meeting for students interested in trying out for the men's junior varsity basketball team will take place at 7 p.m. Sept. 4 in the film room of Parrot Annex, which is between Allen Field House and Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
Women's tryouts
2 young athletes die
Any female students wanting to try out for the women's basketball team should contact head coach Marian Washington in room 101 of Allen Field House. Tryouts will begin Sept. 15.
PHOENIX. Ariz. — A high school football player died after a non-contact practice drill, the second Phoenix area high school player to die in the last 10 days.
Craig Larsen, 16, a junior defensive lineman for Deer Valley High School, was pronounced dead at 8:40 p.m. Tuesday at Thunderbird Samaritan Hospital, about an hour after he collapsed on the school's football field.
Deer Valley Athletic Director Wayne Kindall said Larsen passed the physical examination Monday and was taking part in his first oficial practice.
Larsen, 6-foot-1 and 190 pounds,
had just finished a half-speed
tackling drill when he collapsed
about 7:45 p.m.
In the earlier death, Chandler High School lineman Ricardo Arzaga collapsed and died at his family's home in nearby Queen Creek. The 6-2, 215-pound junior was a two-way starter for the Wolves.
Trainer Rob Archer administered cardiopulmonary resuscitation until paramedics arrived. Kindall said.
Coaches and teammates said that the cause of Arzaga's death was listed as heart failure but that he had showed no signs being ill
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1
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, August 28, 1986
13
Team scrimmages
By Frank Hansel
Sports editor
Quarterbacks Mike Orth and Tom Quick each threw touchdown passes in a 45-minute controlled scrimmage yesterday on the practice field behind Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
Quick, guiding the second team offense, threw six yards to running back Scott Sehriner for the touchdown. The drive was kept alive by an off-sides penalty on a fourth-down punt. Quick also passed to freshman tight end Tracy Jordan for 22 yards to keep the drive going. Place kicker Louis Klemp added the extra point.
Orth brought the first string offense back and capped a 27-yard drive by hitting fullback Mark Henderson on a 22-yard scoring pass. "We were a little sluggish," head coach Bob Valesente said after the scrimmage. "We weren't as crisp as we were before." The team's first scrimmage was Saturday.
Valesente said he was pleased with the Jayhawk's situation scrimmage that followed. The offenses worked
on converting third and first down situations from inside the 15-yard line.
Orth completed two of seven passes for 28 yards and a touchdown. Quick went four for five for 40 yards and a touchdown. Freshman quarterback Kyle Donhooe was three for three for 18 yards.
Running back Arnold Snell led the rushers with 25 yards on eight carries.
Henderson led the receivers with two catches for 30 yards. Wide receivers Jordan, Schriner, Quinton Smith, Sal Lewis, Tony Harvey and John Brehm each had one catch.
"He has excellent instincts and has added depth to our running game," Valesente said.
Valesente will put the team through its third controlled scrimmage at 10 a.m. Saturday in Memorial Stadium.
Doug Vance, sports information director, said the team had voted Orth, free safety Wayne Ziegler, center Paul Oswald, defensive end Phil Forte and linebacker John Randolph team captains.
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BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Len Mattiace's 137 total led medal play, and his roommate at Wake Forest, Tim Straub, was one stroke behind when a thunderstorm stopped play in the U.S. Amateur Championship late yesterday.
Rain halts Amateur
706 E. 23rd
The Associated Press
be cut to 64 for match play starting later today and ending with two finalists Sunday.
However, their scores may improve when 47 golfers complete their rain-delayed rounds this morning.
After that and any needed playoffs, the 282-player field will
Mattiace, an 18-year-old junior from Sawgrass, Fla., toured the host Shoal Creek course with an eagle, seven birdies, a bogey and a double bogey for a 6-under par 66.
Mattiace had a 1-under 71 in the opening round at the Country Club of Birmingham, the other course used for the first two rounds.
Straub, a 19-year-old sophomore from Orchard Park, N.Y., had a 68 at Shoal Creek to go with his Tuesday round of 70.
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SOCCER COACHES NEEDED
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14
Thursday, August 28, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358
The University Daily
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Fond items can be advertised 'FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days.' These ads can be placed in or simply by calling the Kansan business office at 864-4358.
- Classified display ads do not count towards monly earned rate discount.
- Blind mail ads - please add a $3 service charge *
* Checks must accompany all adsmitted mails added *
$0-$369 WEEKL/V/Up, Mailing Circulals? NoQuotes/Bosses. Sincerely Interested rush Self-Addressed envelope. Network CDF, POLB1072 Crystal Lake, IL 60014.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
VOLUNTERS Headquarters, Lawrence's Crisis
Training center. Training required, experience not
informational meetings 27 (wednesday) or
September 1; Monday 8; p. 348, 1418
ATTENTION STUDENTS WITH CHILDREN:
Come by the Student Assistance Center, 121
Strong, for a listing of centers and licensed homes
for child care in the Lawrence area.
BEE POLLEN, a good natural food supplement
Contains all vitamins, minerals, enzymes, pro-
tein and fiber.
Available at Round Corner Drug Co. 801 Mass or
Community Mercury 700 Maize Ask for Kelp
COMMUTERS. Self serve Car Pool Exchange Main Lobby, Kansas Union
LOCALING WITH THAT UNEASY FEELING which commonly occurs when, you walk into a room full of strangers, you see someone you'd like to know, you are waiting for an interview, or any other event. Monday, August 28 from 6:30-9:00 p.m. Thursday, August 28 from 6:30-7:30 p.m. 100 South Hill Free no registration. Presented by Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall, 804-4644
Douglas Hope Veltim Volunteer Services now taking applications for volunteer advocates. Applications available at Headquarters, 1419 Massachusetts; Information meeting Wednesday.
Gold and Silver We buy and sell gold and silver,
class rings, jewelry coins Open seven days a
week Boyd's coins and Antiques 731 New
Hampshire
FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY SKILLS PROGRAMS: Topics include overcoming mental blocks, preparing for exams and improving skill sets. Training includes English and prepares Wednesday. September 3, 7:30-9:00 p.m., 900强 Hall FREE! Presented by the student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall.
BARAMEEE Black Christian Fellowship/
Every Friday, 7:00 p.m. on the Baptist Campus
LAWRENCE FLOW CENTER offers a safe, comfortable, private way to relax and unfold. Stress relief calm the body and the mind. Try our floatation tank at $30 per 1 hour session.
IMPROVE YOUR READING COMPENSIZATION AND SPEED! Three class sessions, six hours of instruction. Tuesdays, September 2, 9, and 17; 7:30-9:30 p.m. Materials fee of $12 to pay in the Student Assistance Center, I21 Strong Hall. By 5:00 p.m. on September 2. Class size
NEED IRDER/ADREN? Use the Self Service Car
Pole Exchange Lobby, Kansas Union
*Learn Massage* 5 week class starts September 6th
*Licensed instructor* Licensed International Education
*HIDE HIDE HIDE!? Use the Self Service Car
*OE Exchange* Main Lobby, Kansas Union
LEARN TO FLY airplanes and get 4 hours
credit. Private license only $195. Econflight
FUTURS. List your name with us. We refer
our students to you. Student Assistance Center
Applications may be picked up in the Office of Academic Affairs, 129强华墙壁. Questions should be directed to Carol Prenice at al985@ucl.edu for application is September 24th, 1996.
The Office of Academic Affairs is now accepting applications and nominations for the University Scholars Program. The program is designed to recognize and enhance the achievements of our undergraduate careers. First semester sophomores with cumulative GAPs of 3.4 or higher are encouraged to apply. Applications may be picked up in the Office of Academic Affairs or submitted to the university should be directed to Carol President. 4455.
WANT TO HIKE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance center 121
DOUBLE DAY-DOUBLE FEATURE 2 pages 2
day35 days15
DAY-DOUBLE feature, 1447 days 6-10
for each page
Freshmen/Naphonores. The quickest route to a naval flying career is through Naval ROTJ. Join
Freshmen/Sophomores. Learn about the Naval Officer and career opportunities. Learn about the Navy Officer
NTLA NITRA-DATA MOVIE VCU 4 movie-
days $114.95 $147.95 1447 WED 6 o'clock to
everyday
ENTERTAINMENT
Bring the Music of the Mad Hatter to your next party $100.00 get you the Best mix of music in town, from the Beatles to the Bar-Kays. Call Mickey at 842-2990
Guitarist to form/join rock band. Will play about anything except H.M. Sieve, 842: 2419. Have a Beach Party on your back Yard? Heat a Hot Tub? Call Tab-to Go, 841: 2911, evening and weekends.
I sang. Got a lotta songs. Need to get some more help. If you wanna help with this thing and these dropped names appeal to you, Velvets, Chilton, Dylan, Fur, Them, Lloyd Cole, Pilmus, Pattts Smith, etc. and on. give me a call and we will meet on the same phone. I am 481-3544 or 749-2692.
Av now, i bed Apt Close to KU = 190, Utils
paid, Please call: 749-1058
FOR RENT
Form Furnished Air conditioning One block from Kansas University Quilt Water Paid Sublease
Modern 8 bed apartment for rent 2 Blocks
from campa, Call Dick 843-160 or 843-906.
ASSISTANCE. RAW TRAINING.
has one of our RADS in town to safely afford loaning. Offering tuition, 1.2 and a bedroom, 1.0 or more room for rent or need Fall Watch. For our Spring open house. Contact 811-6000 to solicit your local phone number.
FREE RENTAL ASSISTANCE Kaw Valley Mgt has one of lawerness largest solicitors in guad. Send resume to: kawlawverness@gmail.com
HILLVIEW APTS
1745 W. 24th
841-5797
$250
- & I. J BUILT units
* Furnished & furnished
* New laundry facilities
* On bus near-rouring park
* Ample off-street parking
Professionally managed by
now taking applications for 86-47 school year
Take cooperative living, it makes sense.
Private room, evening meal, free laundry and kitchen available for members use, equal sharing of housework, democratic participatory House 749-6817, Co-op House 749-6871, 843-8938 evenings.
Room for Rent $150 plus utilities 3 bedroom, next to Stadium, 749 2076
Serious female student share house private room, central air, TV, kitchen equipped Dishwasher, microwave, walk to campus, call Monroe at 841 447.
Two blocks from Univ. furnished two bedm apt.
W off st. parking, no pets. 841-5500
Vacancy for male in Konnaon Christian Living Community at Central Christian Ministries. Send resume to Vivian Jin.
AASTERCAFT offers completely furnished 1.
bedroom apartment all new campus. Call
0847-962-3500 or visit us at www.aastercaft.com
FOR SALE
1-4 adults. catamaran sailboat with trailer. Will carry
1-14 adults. Look like awn. Will sell for $700 or more.
Will carry 2-5 adults.
Classified Ads
1973 Honda 350. 16K miles, Great transportation
Best Offer, 841.9652
189 YAMAHA TOWNY Perfect condition, looks and runs like new. 2 kph. Must to see at appreciation.
1985 Honda Spree, red, low mileage, like new, $390 or
offer, @424/3229
2550 Osudashi, Electric piano, iooA 'Okkirigui quilting frame, fishing equip. oo4 10, Stanley teams, Tops Chain Link furniture, Small appliances, Loads of Miscellaneous, Sat, Aug. 30-9 a.m. 4
W4 Watt Pioneer Receiver, 150 Watt Speakers,
Complete System. Must Heat to Average $750
77 Pontiac Aster, 4 speed, Low mileage, Sound body Mech BEC Call 842-2582 after 5:30
The Perfect Bed.
A bed with a mattress on top and storage space below.
These letters first became popular with apartment dwellers in the New York and Boston because of their versatility and usefulness, and now they are in downtown Lawrence!
Blue Heron
COMIC BOOKS. Science Fiction, Games at Kwaiyalty Cools. 1111 MASS. 843-7239
BMX Racing SKY WAY T A., 20 inch, sealed ZI-8M. New Custom paint, one kind, a must see, competition ready, ask about parts After 6, 749-198, Ask for Todd
Antique ak partner desk with desk top. Excellent condition 8250 8437727
Cot $80, (Worn Cot) $123
Twin 103
Fall 137
Pull 140
King 195
King 195
Furniture : bookhelves, desks, chairs. Open seven days a week. Boy's Bed, Cards and Antique Jewelry.
79 Plymouth Horizors For Sale 4 cylinders,
air干燥, Air radio, AM radio, 30 MPG, Price ...
Classic Yamaha 305 motorcycle. Many new parts,
VGC low, mile carrier, and helmet $265
B East 21st Street, Lawrence, Ks. (NJ)941-3445
Open 10 am to 5pm. Monday thru Saturday
COTTON FUTON PRICES
Computer Sale Apple Glasses $800. IRM Glasses
$200. 20 packs for $15. Call $043-5925
Comic Books 10.5-11 Tue Fri, Sat & Sun 10.5-8.11
Comics Open 11.5-12 Tue, Sat & Sun 10.5-8.11
Fogg Wild Mountain Bike. 1856, like new 19 inch
Male, Royal Blue $290. 801-413-415
Electric Smith Corona typewriter Excellent condition Used very little paper. 843-7972, after 5
For Sale. Weightboard and weights. $75, 249-749
Fiord Bluestone Mountain bike. Like, Newer 19' mei
Furniture, Bedding, Pots and Fans, Decoration
Kitchenware. Serves as a center for
Stores to serve you at 16 E. 9th and 428 Vermont
Great Stereo. 110 Prep Cream, Dynasty 120
amplifier. Herbert turntable. Will sell separately
Honda Elite Seconder 124 ce engine. Call Dan headlights! like new 4800 Firm. Call Dan headlights!
FOR SALE: Six Component Stereo Monitor to hire at $790. Call after 6, 843-4449
For Sale 1981 Mercury Lynx, A/C/Surrood, Good
running condition $1300 Negotiable 749-2693
**Commore Portable Excellent buy**
like new Call after p. 120. $160. Franville Villa.
922-756-1000
Motobone 10 speed with accessories, great condition.
$185. Call 814-7614
For Sale '78 Fonita. New air conditioning and transmission. Need载荷er overload body
PDA System
Offer over $300. Stereo system-
server, 2 decks, turntable, four speakers $299.
Moving. Must sell reliable 1072 Maycarr, 88,000
m.l., 119.75, ACAT, PT, PS, AMF FM4 door.
Excellent condition, with warranty until Dec. 76.
Call 749-3831 or 749-0071
FOR SALE 1980 GS 450L Zukui Runs perfect.
Call Dan and leave a message 814-6494
New Sasian S I 117 Tower Speakers, 100 watts $15 per
each Kenwood EWN300 Integrated Stereo Amplifier,
$400 watts $275 each. Awa top of the line ZX80 Pro
amplifier. Deck message. Leave message.
841-794 $300
Technics Techon, 60% receiver, auto furnishable,
tape deck, loud speakers, 2 years old, rarely used.
Rechargeable speaker.
Sofa, nice. $100 and lounge chair $10 After 4:00 p.m.
p. m35-4274
Oriental print chair 84. Burgundy small print
tooam couch open inside double heater 189, 749, 530
print chair 86. Burgundy small print
PLIUMOE TRIALH SIMO, for use 4D tele-
mobility巾具 MIMO 技术 [8]
Acoustic Speakers. Leave message 841-7614
Yard Sale - Furniture, oak table, oak shelf.
White three drawer dresser with gold antique finish. Price negotiable. 834-4966.
western Civilization Notes. On sale *On Sale*. Makes sense to use them. 1) As study note. 2) For class. 3) For personal study. 4) Analysis of Western Civilization. available now at Town Crier. The Jayhawk Bookstore, and is available online.
Yard Sale *Furniture* antiques, oak table. Also,
men's *wear* and women's clothes (vintage
and modern).
FOR SALE: HP-41CV calculator with math pacc,
manuals and案头. $360, 841, 796.
1968 Volvo wagon, FM-cassette, new Michelin,
no rust, good mgp, 840 841 6636
AUTO SALES
1996 WB Veet 48,000 miles on rebuilt engine.
New interior, very little rust, solid engine lists of
1995-2000.
1971 Plymouth EX motor good tires, all in good condition. $400. 1-243-9601.
1975 BMW 3000 Blue with Perfect Tan Interior.
Fine Carp. Gauk, Call 749-7517
1974 VW SUPER BEETLE. New Tires, brakes.
30,000 m on rebuilt engine. One owner, all receipts, well-maintained and solid. Gels up to 65MPH. Price $1,000-$1,493. 842-713-7 leave name and number.
1977 Monte Carlo, Brown with top vinyl tors
rough but looks good! *Asking* 5000 *Call* 749-8416.
1973 Prima, 63,000 miles, good condition, clean in-
terior. $800 available. 841-6001.
1980 Moped. Honda with haskets. 2p round around
score save. Ask $290.00. 841-6011
1901 Plmouth Champ. 4 cylinders. 4 speed.
1843-630 MPG very clean after
6433-830 MPG
1980 SABA 600 Sunrout, 4 door Hatchback, FWD, WMC,
Windschutz. No. Rusl. N42.3420
1985 Subaru hatchback w/AC, 15,000 highway miles 4995,747-5214 after 6 p.m.
65 VW Bug, runs good, reliable. 842, 3237M
74 Valve Mounts, air conditioner, air MF
74 Volvo 164E. Automatic air, AMF 8 track Stereo. New alternator and battery, $140. 69 LTD. Automatic air, new starter, upd. for $590,814 574
78 Yamaha Fd 400 Excellent shape and dependable transportation. Please call 5 am at pm.
18 Rabbit GTI loaded with after-market accessories. Call 81-9449 Fluor or 2-3 p.m for help.
15) Rabbit GFI loaded with after market acc
credit. Fn 3.5 p.m for exam. See enq. and apprecs $500.
Desperate. I need to sell Honda Civic 74 Best 70.
Desperate. I need to sell Honda Civic 74 Best 70.
Rest the day of the day, color orange Lot X
Rest the day of the day, color orange Lot X
LOST/FOUND
Found-Full brown black lab-nb-i d Call 842.3608
Found Yellow Cat. Small. 1300 block Tennessee.
Aug. 25, Call 841-8783 after 6 p.m
you can rest a coin purse with cash, see Helen at the Information Center, Kansas University, to identify
Found-Women's size 11 Jellies on lawn outside Watson Library. 749-3265
The honest person WHO FOUND $202.50 CASH near Nasmith and University Dr on Thursday evening, 9:28.48 Contact Guy Hupp, 749.1265, for his reward. To claim the reward for your honesty
16 month old active toddler needs sister/companion on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 12-4 p.m. Must be non smoker with transportation. Westchester County requires required. Call 814-0043 morningings after 7 p.m.
HELP WANTED
2 part time positions at Harwood Meats
Apply in person out of 1034 full form n 6 a.m. - 3 p.m.
No phone calls.
3,000 GOVERNMENT JOBS LIST
18520 am 22hr. New Hiring Call 18520 685 6800
EXR JOB
A Korean institute of English Conversation is looking for an instructor who is a native speaker of English. Compensation includes airplane ticket to and from Korea, an apartment fee to and from Europe, and travel expenses.
Dairy Care needs cook to prepare simple meals for 14 pre-schools M F 11-1. Call 845-4147
Ambitious person to call on campus organizations with customized imparted party contacts. Contact
**noun speaker for Kansas Audio Reader Network.**
Must have on air experience, with experience in an audio console and available to work Sundays. Call Janet Campbell, 846-4604
Day Care needs afternoon assistant 3-5
Expert with children and references please. Call
800-741-2999
Neesb, 60 year old
Bachelor's Degree, Resume and Certificates of Bachelor's Degree to Yeon Choi, 12 U.Southern Place, Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Call 842.5891 at 9:00-10:00 p.m
Companion-Cook To assist disabled KU staff member weekdays afternoons. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. $4.5 per hour. Cooking experience and reliable equipment required. KU students reference KU823019.
Bucky's Drive In is now taking applications for part-time employment. Noon hour and weekend openings. Apply between 10 and 5 at Bucky's Drive In. 2120 W. 9th
Corpus Christi Catholic Church needs four teachers on Saturday or Sunday morning time on Saturday evening or Sunday morning eightteenth of age and have own transportation. Early Childhood Education field preferred.
Drivers wanted; must be 18 & over. Must have own car & insurance. $35.00 hr.-commission. Apply in person or call. Checkers Pizza. 2214 Yale, 841-8010
Mature, gentle nonsmoker needed for all day
daycare of one toddler and housekeeping from
sept thru May, excl Christmas holidays. Reply
Box DD Stapler-Flint
Now hiring Mass St. Deli food service employees.
must have 1 year experience and daytime availability
availability paying $3.75 per hr plus up to
$700 a week. Apply at 703 Avery Jaffafta St. Smokehouse.
Job, part time. Kitchen worker, 8 a.m. 2 p.m.
M-F. Bar snack bar worker, 11 a.m. 2 p.m. M-F.
Cashier, 4 p.m. 1-15 a.m. M-F. Cashier, 4 p.m. 1-15 a.m. M-F. Cashier, 4 p.m. 1-15 a.m. M-F. Cashier, 4 p.m. 1-15 a.m. M-F. Cashier, 4 p.m. 1-15 a.m. M-F. Cashier, 4 p.m. 1-15 a.m. M-F. Cashier, 4 p.m. 1-15 a.m. M-F. Cashier, 4 p.m. 7 p.m or
2 p.m. 5p.m. F-M. Pay rate $4.0 per hour. Apply
to Kansas University Union Office, Level 5. EOE.
Help Wanted: Part-time sales representative
Main be able to work 1.5 p.m daily. Apply in per
company location.
Email: HR@salesforce.com
Help Wanted Part time day and evening delivery drivers. Must own car and proof of insurance. Ap for car hire and driving. Local moving company needs drivers, packers & load* Experience preferred $3.50 and up
Hiring both full and part-time pizza delivery drivers. Must be 18 or older with own car and insurance. Apply in person at Pizza Shuttle in the Southern Hills Mall (601) 80 W. 21rd.
Data-entry position, half time requires familiarity with computer entry, proven reliability and competency in data management and with established BASIC program to enter handwritten data. Prefer formal grammar training or equivalent. Provide experience available and resume to Research Assistant, Comp Sci Department, EOE-AA Application Deadline Aug 29; EOE-AA
Now hire. Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse Table service employee Must have Monday through Thursday work hours. Pay $20 per hour plus approximately $7.10 per hour tips. Apply at 193 Mays Avenue, above
Part time housecleaners wanted. You enjoy cleaning and are meticulous. Buckingham Palace is interested in your talents. Call 842 6294. Must be available over breaks.
SOCER REFEREEES. The Kaw Valley Soccer Association is looking for officials to youth teams in the area for eight and eighth nights. Need some extra exercise? Short of cards? Contact Roger Lee 462-8146 Randy Koehler.
Office Assistant, experience in general office work. Ministry Affairs, 324 Wall Hall. Clearing,
PERSONAL CARE ASSISTANT NEEDS MEDIMENT
12 or 4 per week. 11 weeks also No
permission required
Part-time positions for breakfast and dinner shifts on weekdays and weekends at Nausihall Hall Food Service. If interested, fill out an application at the front desk of Nausihall Hall. Be sure to specify food service. EOE/M/F/H/AA. Part-time teacher's aid. Study and or experience with 6-year old children. $3.35 per child. Participate in the Learning Center, 311 Main, Lawrence, KS.
STUDENT ASSISTANT. Operation of blueprint machine, measuring campus facilities, updating of small scale drawings and filing of drawings and related information for the experience. This is a work study funded position and requires pre-qualifications under the work study program. Deadline 8/12B. Call for interviews.
Student Assistant, Work-Study, one person 15 hrs. or two persons 8 hrs., assist office personnel with typing, publicity mail out, assist with reception duties, answer letters, prepare daily mail, and photocopying. Needs to have excellent typing skills. Apply Office of Study Abroad. 263 Lincoln Place
Student hourly position, 15-20 hours per week
Run errands, campus mail, photo copies
Perform various duties in a job. Requires reliable transportation available daily, good communication skills and ability to make decision.
Work in a multi-disciplinary team AX313 Bristol Terrace (Meadowbrook Apartments) 11-4 weeks/day. Application deadline Aug 19.
The Audio-Visual Center is hiring Audio-Visual Assistants on Work Study and regular hourly Experience preferred, but not required. Apply in person at Lippincott Hall. Equal Opportunity.
The Institute for Public Policy and Business Research has telephone interview openings for the months of September and October. Applicants must be willing to accept a demanding and capable of precise, accurate work. A pleasant and clear voice is essential. All information should be provided in an experience in interviewing or working with the general public is desired. Help for morning, after afternoon, before evening, interested applicants should call 843-7201.
The University of Kansas Budget Office has a position open for a continuous half-time time at the university. The position will assist in the preparation of the University's budget, including preparing the spreadsheet preparation, and performing typing spreadsheet preparation, and perfor-
senior or graduate student status and good written and oral communication skills $400 or 540 per month for a half time appointment. Closing date is September 5, 2018. Start date is flexible. For inquiries call Budget Offices at 1-800-739-2400. Applications available at 1-800-739-2400. Strong Hall Equal Opportunity Employer
WE HAVE THE IDEAL JOB FOR THE STU-
dium. You will be available to work Monday through
Friday or Tuesday, Thursday, 9-2 or 11-3 RUNZA.
Come by Crop IQWA needs you. Apply to manage
a lawn or garden.
Wanted Sitter for cat I will pay bills, food extra $ per month, cat declascal, played, all calls, call
Wanted full and part time delivery drivers. Hourly wage, plus commission, must have own transportation. Apply in person Pizza Shoppe 601 Kasdow, Westridge shopping center
Warm, caring people who like children ages 3-5 are needed at Head Start as volunteers for a minimum of 2 hours per day. 1 day per week. But the program is through Friday. For more information call 842-1251.
Registered Nurse Unique opportunity to use your assessment skills to see homebound patients. On call one evening per week and every fifth day. Contact information: Doug County NV 843-7387 EOE
DRIVERS WANTED Dominic's Pizza is now in use delivery drivers. Earn approximately $6hr must be 18, have own car and insurance. Apply in person at 1445 W 21st Street or 820 Iowa HOA.
Dow Jones and the Industrials is searching for a new Lead Guitarist. Must be well versed in all styles of music with particular emphasis on HEM, Productions, Beaters, Police, etc. Ability to important than experience. First class on 30. So Don't Wait! Interest? Call at 842-3892
Half time temporary position to assist with ongoing research involving persons with disabilities. Collect data in Tekapo and provide a mobile to work flexible hours, and have available transportation. Prefer experience in data collection at A1831 Bristol Terrace. Meadowbrook Apts. between 10 and 4 weekdays.
MAKE HUNDREDS WEEKLY MAILING CURSORS, FULL/PART/TIME, RUSHI SELF-ADDRESSED STAMPED ENVELOPE A.1, 4,120 VENTUA SUITE 238 DEPT. Q, STUDIO CITY.
McDONALD'S IS HIRING Quick, clean, quality individuals to work daytime hours, 10 to 30 hours a week. Previous McDonald's employees encouraged to apply. We provide uniforms, half-frozen meals, and flexible scheduling. 300 West 67th Street. No phone calls. please e-mail OAEH.
Wanted maintenance person. Duties include general maintenance of machinery and maintenance of air conditioners; be available 3 a.m., 11 a.m., Mon-Fri and 2 p.m. 4 p.m. wednesday. Apply at 719 Mass, above Buffalo Hills.
BUS. PERSONAL
Add class comfort, & privacy to your car with
discounts through September
Student discounts through September
PART-TIME OFFICE HELP 15:30 hour a week usually late morning and afternoon. Must be available year round. Duties will include typing data entry on microcomputer and reception duties. This is a non-simulating job. Send resumes to Office of Information Inc., 184 W. Worcester Ave., Lawrence, KS 60466
New York Times
to: N.Y. Times
P.O. Box 1721
Lawrence, KS 66044
for Sunday Service or more info call
Daily (Mon.-Fri.)
on Campus Delivery
Sept. 1-Dec.19
Send only
$28.16
841-5073
Driver Education offered through Midway Driving School. Experienced midway, one week Beginner program, two weeks. Driver's license obtainable 841-7749
Rate Adjusted for later orders.
Rent' 19 Color $ T $ 29.89 a month Curtis
Mathes: 14 W 37 d R 824 9757; Man: Sat 9 30
Saturday
Lawrence Community
- Class openings 12:00 - 6:30
* M.W.F.P.M.
* Certified teachers
Nurserv
842-0064 645 Alabama
We've got the best donuts in town. Give us a try Jemmey's Daylight Donuts, 729 Massachusetts
LAWYER
HARPER LAWYER
CAMP-KITCHEN-TRASH RETRO LOUNGE 1022
Massachusetts, Tues. 15, Thurs. 15, Tues. 10.7.30
GREENS
PARTY SUPPLY
808 W. 23rd
Weekly Beer Special
Aug. 25 - Sept. 3
Bud Lt. 12 pk. $5.42
Old Style 12pk. $4.21
Busch 12pk. $3.98
Meister Brau 24pk. $6.95
Weidemann 12pk. $3.75
BLOOM COUNTY
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquarters We're here because we care 841-2345 1419 Mass We're always open
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa & 1d of course, financing.
LAWRENCE AEROBICS M W F. 5:20 a.m.
School of Hallet (bid 9:17 and Vermont); Other days
and times available 841-9264 Caity Thompson
Modeling, theatrical and art profiles. Slides
or prints. High-quality, low-prices. Swelis
749-1611
SAY IT ON A SHIRT! Custom silk-screen printing tapes and caps, SHIRT CAPITRY with a zipper.
Quality furniture does not have to be expensive. Mattresses from $11k student deks from $99, upholstered chairs from $85, chair from $199, bookcases from $29, lamps from $19.90, and much more. Furniture prices range between $300 and $750.
Just back from Los Angeles
NEW Silver Accessories
Belts, Anklekits, Earrings
40 Jackets and Dresses
Barb's Vintage Rose
927 Muscat Rose 814-243)
Thousands of R & R albums - $2 or less. Also losse
ctores items. Sat & Sun only 10 a.m. to 5 a.m.
Quintilis 811 New Hampshire. Buy, Sell, or
Trade all style music
SERVICES OFFERED
The sun is out and the sunglasses are in at the ETC SHOP. 724 Mount Macedon) Mon 11:50:30
SCIENCE FUCTION, Comic book, Simulation & Role Play Games. Kwaiity. 1111
$9.99 SPECIAL-Only length color print film store
$19.99 SPECIAL-Only 35mm size 2 and 3.8 & THE PICTURE WORLD
$24.99 SPECIAL-Only 40mm size 2 and 3.8
*Starting Stress & Stram?* If you haven’t tried massage, you have! REALLY relaxed. Student rates licensed by College, call Bcru or Dayla at 841-6026. Lawrence Massage Therapy
Black and White film processing, contact sheets,
and enlargements. Push and Pill processing also
available. THE PICTURE WORKS 13b and
Haskell. 843-6470
Alternative counseling using archetypal images visualization, dream analysis. West Wurstendam
MATH TUTOR Rates Negotiable Call 749-1651 for help
LLM Tailoring Quality Alterations and Custom
Woodworking clothing Massachusetts Rear Entrance
THE FAR SIDE
Same day Eatachrome E-6 eclipse processing
PUBLIC WORKS - 802-747-3195 and Hassell 843-0470
PICTURE WORKS, LLC
Professional Housecleaning, experienced
references, reasonable rates Call 841-3920
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in
Lawrence 841-5716
Tutoring. Better grades through better comprehension. Get help improving your study skills.
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL, get your driver's license in two weeks without parental testing, upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-2316
Used cameras and photographic equipment
bought and traded THE PICTURES
company.
TYPING
MATH ELTOR since 1976, M.A., 40 minutes-$8,
841.00?
1,100 pages. No job too small or too large.
Affordable and affordable typing. Judy. 842-9458
or www.judy.com
1. plus Typing. Call Terry: 842-4754 or 843-2671
5:30 to 10:30 p.m. Resumes, books, thesis, law reviews papers, letters, term papers. Sharp ZX 96
Memory Electronic Typewriter
24-Hour Film, 12th semester in Lawrence
Resumes, dessert presentation. Close to campus
locations.
A3 professional tying. Tern paper. Theses.
1848 Wheeler's, Readele 842-346
Wheeler's, Readele 842-346
Absolutely Your Type? Word processing, typing and
word processing, IBM/UX106-8, 5: M, F. Same day as
Monday.
DEDENDABLE, professional, experienced
JEANETTE SHAFFER - Typing Service
TRANSCRIPTION also; standard cassette tape
843-8677
Theses, resumes, and papers WRITTING LIFELEVEL, 841-3469
Bv GARY LARSON
P. 20
© M.A. L. Crawford / Prints & Drawings
"Stimulus, response Stimulus, response
Don't you ever think?"
HAPPY BIRTHDAY!
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
DEAR PORTNOY!!
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, August 28, 1986
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NORMAN, Okla. — Armies and lynch mobs, Mark Twain once observed, borrow courage from their mass.
Football teams probably do the same. And that's just one more reason to think Barry Switzer's colorful, free-spirited Oklahoma Sooners can win their second consecutive national championship. With an average weight of 223.87 pounds, the Sooners are by far the heaviest team in the Big Eight, and one of the most massive in the country.
Sooners in position for repeat win
"But you have to be more than big and more than good to win a national championship," says Switzer, who's won three in his 14 years of success as Oklahoma's head coach. "You have to be lucky, too."
The Associated Press
The Sooners begin the season in the same place they ended their 11-1-1995 campaign — No. 1 in the Associated Press Top 20.
The few defensive starters who don't return are prime. They include All-America noseguard Tony Casillas, the Outland Award winner, all conference defensive end Kevin Murphy and defensive tackle Jeff Tupper.
"I don't know if there's ever been one like him," Switzer said. "Dick Buttus didn't have his speed. Every team needs a leader, and he's our leader. He's a violent, smart, emotional football player."
But back for another year is All America linebacker Brian Bosworth, a candidate for every individual award college football offers, including the Heisman Trophy. "Boz," as he has come to be known, was voted the nation's outstanding linebacker the year ago and Switzer says the 6-foot-2, 240-pounder may be the greatest ever at his position.
And why not? Only three starters are missing from the nation's top defense. All but one starter is back on offense. And while nobody can foretell how lucky they're going to be, there is no doubt this zany blend of personalities is replete with gifted football players.
Returning starters on the defensive line are tackle Steve Bryan, 6-3, 260, and Richard Reed, 6-4, 255. Also back is defensive end Darrell Reed, 6-2, 225, who many felt was the equal last year to the more highly publicized Murphy.
The absence of Casillas, who required double- and triple-teaming by most defenses, is certain to put added pressure on Bosworth.
Bosworth is surrounded by quality outside linebackers in junior Dante Jones and senior Paul Migliatto.
"It will be interesting to see what happens," said Boswort, an
"Those three — Bosworth, Jones and Migliazio — are the best we've ever had." Switzer said.
academic All-American with a B plus grade point average. "Tony always kept the center off me because the center and one guard had to block down on him. I'm eager to see how good I can be without Tony in there."
SUA FILMS
The entire defensive secondary returns, including all-Big Eight strong safety Sonny Brown and free safety Ricky Dixon, a 187-pound senior whose style of play is described by Switzerland as like a trained killer.
Every starter is back on the offensive line, too, including all-Big Eight guards Mark Hutson, 6-4, 280, and Anthony Phillips, 6-3, 280.
to be a little better offensive football team," Switzer told Big Eight Skywriters yesterday. "I don't think we will be quite as good a defensive football team. But maybe we will. We'll see."
Pulling the trigger on the wishbone offense will be sophomore Jamelle Holiway, who burst out of obscurity when Troy Aikeman went down with a broken leg in the fourth game and
onlike many of Switzer's past championship teams, the '60 Sooners do not have a superstar running back. What they have is a stable of big, fast runners of unusual ability. Alternating again at fullback will be Lydell Carr and Leon Perry. Halfbags include Anthony Stafford, Spencer Tillman, Patrick Collins and Earl Johnson.
The 5-11, 180 Holleyway runs like a wisp of smoke and operates the wishbone with brilliance. He was named Big Eight offensive player of the year after rushing for 641 yards and setting a team quarterback record with 324 yards of total offense against Missouri.
became one of the most compelling stories of the season.
In junior Keith Jackson, the Sooners have a stallion of a tight end. The 6-3, 245-pounder was named second team All-America despite the fact that he made only 20 receptions.
If the Sooners do win a national championship, they will be the only team ever to produce back-to-back titles on three different occasions. And nobody will say they backed into it. Their non-conference opponents include UCLA and Miami.
"My own feeling is that we're going
"It's the toughest schedule we've had since I've been here," Switzer said.
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Fueled, armed, and ready to go from 0 to 200 in 3 seconds. This cockpit could be your own within one year after graduation from KU. You don't need a specific major nor a spectacular GPA. What do you need?
Simple, join NROTC. If you are a freshman or sophomore you're eligible and there is no military obligation in the first year. You'll get the training and education you need to assume the responsibility of being a naval officer. You can also apply for a scholarship that could pay for all your tuition, books, and $100 a month. Upon graduation, you're ready for flight school. There is no practical limit on the number of graduates that the Kansas NROTC unit can send to flight school.
And then, you're in the cockpit. If you think you have the right stuff, call Lt. Ike Evans, University of Kansas Naval ROTC Unit, 864-3161.
16
Thursday, August 28, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
QUESTION #2.
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1
1
JOHN PARKS
Sweet harmony
A local group that's been blending tones for years is doing more than doo-wop these days. The Harmonic Function is featured in the new pullout Entertainment & Arts section that debuts today.
Story, page A1
Diamond in the rough
Quigley Field, the home of the Jayhawk baseball team, will get it's first face-lift since it was built almost 30 years ago. The project should boost attendance and help recruitment programs, officials say.
Story, page 9
High smileage
Today will bring more of the same mild weather, but temperatures will nudge toward the high 80s. The outlook for the holiday weekend is good as well.
Details, page 3
HAPPY DANCING MAN
Vol. 97, No. 6 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Friday
August 29, 1986
Jesse Jackson to make KU appearance
PETER S. CLEMMON
Jesse Jackson
By ALISON YOUNG Staff writer
The Rev. Jesse Jackson will speak at the University of Kansas before the end of the semester, David Epstein, student body president, said yesterday.
Epstein said that Jackson, a political activist and former presidential candidate, in June had accepted an offer to speak at KU, but that no date for the speech had been set.
Jackson stated in his acceptance letter that the visit would be part of a planned tour of universities across the country in late October and early November.
Jackson and his spokesmen could not be reached for comment.
Student Senate and Student Union Activities are organizing Jackson's visit.
Last spring Epstein and the SUA Forums Committee each invited Jackson to speak at KU. Jackson accepted SUA's offer and declined Student Senate's.
However, after Jackson accepted SUA's invitation, the organization did not have enough money to bring him to KU, said Stephanie Quincy, Student Senate Executive Committee chairman and an organizer of the event.
Quincy said the Senate would use funds from the University Lecture Series to pay Jackson's honorarium, which is between $10,000 and $15,000, plus expenses. This lecture series was established in the spring by an initial $25,000 allocation from the Senate.
The University Lecture Series Board will have to approve expenditures for Jackson's visit before the
money can be committed, but Quincy said she did not anticipate any problems.
quency is working with Victor Osmolak, SUA Forums Committee chairman, to finalize arrangements.
"We are in touch with Jackson's people, but nothing is confirmed," said Quiney.
Osmolak said Jackson had accepted the invitation to speak at KU on the conditions that his speech will be an all-University function and that Lawrence civic and religious leaders be invited to any receptions or events that are planned.
He also specified that the speech needed to be sponsored by a coalition of several student organizations. Epstein said he thought organizations that wanted to sponsor the speech would be easy to find.
day," he said.
Quincy said three organizations already had indicated interest in sponsoring the speech, but she declined to specify which ones.
years, Quincy said. Jackson's appearance would be the first to be sponsored by the University Lecture Series, an organization created, in part, to compete with Kansas State University's well-known Landon Lecture Series, Quincy said.
"The Landon Lecture Series at KState has shown us up for years and years," Quincy said.
"The Senate administration is in contact with a number of other prominent national figures who have expressed interest in speaking at KU," Quincy said.
In addition to Jackson, Quincy said, this lecture series may bring other prominent speakers.
Strike by tin miners in Bolivia prompts state of seige decree
The Associated Press
LA PAZ, Bolivia - President Victor Paz Estenssoro, accusing labor unions of trying to overthrow his government, imposed a state of siege in Bolivia yesterday and sent soldiers to break up a rowdy 125-mile march on the capital by 5,000 striking tin miners.
More than 100 people, including political activists, union leaders and journalists, were reportedly arrested.
Police also took over the nation's airports to halt a plan by workers to disrupt flights in what would have been a simultaneous strike to press for higher wages.
Jet fighters streaked over the capital for an hour beginning at 7 a.m. as radio stations read the decree announcing the state of siege, the second in less than a year.
The government also warned news agencies it can shut down media outlets officials think are "twisting the facts or disseminating information considered alarming."
Bolivia's 20,000 tin miners went on strike Aug. 18 to protest Paz Estenssoro's plan to close down half of Bolivia's state-run tin mines because of dropping prices.
The decree said the clampdown was declared to crush a state of subversion caused by striking workers trying to carry out a violent plan to overthrow the government.
About 5,000 of the miners began a 125-mile march Aug. 21 from Oruro north to La Paz and were scheduled to arrive in La Paz tomorrow.
Soldiers and police circled an encampment of at least 2,000 of the striking miners near the village of Calamaraca, 50 miles south of La Paz, witnesses said, but reporters were banned from approaching. The rest of the marching miners were at nearby encampments.
Soldiers who surrounded the mining encampment near Calamarca began loading women and children onto trucks to return to their homes in Oruro in the heart of Bolivia's mining region, and the miners themselves were to be moved back later. Information Minister Herman Antelo said
journalists from entering (the en-campment) because the zone is an area of military operations," he said.
U. S. Embassy spokesman Mark Jacobs said that about 170 U.S. troops who arrived July 14 for unprecedented joint raids with a Bolivian strike force against cocaine processing facilities played no part in the crackdown.
The troops "do not have anything to do with the internal situation of Bolivia." Jacobs said.
Squads of police arrested at least 50 union members and political leaders in La Paz, Santa Cruz, Cochabamba, Pasos, Potosí and Trinidad, the Roman Catholic-owned Radio Fides reported.
There are strict orders to prevent
Union members said police arrested 55 workers at the private electric utility in La Paz who were on the seventh day of a hunger strike for better wages.
Police also reportedly arrested Gonzalo Quirga, a columnist for the opposition newspaper Hoy, and Andres Soliz, the correspondent for the French news service Agence France Press who also heads a group opposed to the presence of U.S. soldiers in Bolivia.
Family members said police arrested leaders of the powerful Bolivian Workers Central labor coalition and two prominent Communist Party leaders, one of them, Hort Grebe, a former government minister.
The government decree bans public gatherings and marches and prohibits the carrying of weapons. Groups of more than two people are prohibited on city streets between midnight and 6 a.m.
The head of Bolivia's Roman Catholic Church, Monsignor Julio Terrazas, urged the miners to stay calm and return to their jobs in a message broadcast on Radio Fides.
The sudden crackdown was the second time Paz Estenssoro, 78, has used force to smash labor unrest since he came to office almost 13 months ago.
Paz Estenssoro, who heads a centrist political faction, declared a 90-day state of siege Sept. 19, 1985, and sent some 300 labor leaders into temporary exile in two steamy northern jungle towns to end a crippling national strike.
NERDS
PROPS ONLY
John and Lorranne Lindstrand of Raytown, Mo., look through props and other material from the sets of "Nice Girls Don't Explode." Filming of the movie, directed by Chuck Martinez and produced by KU graduate Doug Curtis, ended Wednesday in Lawrence. The items were sold yesterday at 944 Kentucky St.
Fred Sadowski/KANSAN
Accounts without fee to vanish
By BRIAN SNYDER
Staff writer
By the end of next month, students, faculty, administrators and their relatives no longer will be able to receive free checking in Lawrence.
The only financial institution to offer free checking, the Air Defense Center Federal Credit Union, will suspend the service later next month, the branch manager said yesterday.
Earlier this month, the credit union's board of directors decided to charge for checking services because of increasing costs, said Sharon Gauger, the manager.
"The number of checking accounts has been increasing for three years," Gaugel said. "The costs of processing checks and interest payments are too high."
Officials at the credit union said the company now handled 7.200 checking accounts, but they did not know how much the account total had increased during the last three years. Gauger said she could not say how much the processing cost.
The credit union is notifying members of the change by mailing a message with their next bank statements, Gauglier said. She said the credit union had not lost any members because of the change.
The board of directors for the credit union also has considered charging for travelers checks and money orders, but a decision has not been reached. Gauley said.
On checking accounts, the credit union will charge $1 a month if a person's account balance is $300 or more. If a person's balance is from $100 to $300, the charge will be $2. The credit union will charge $3 a month if a balance is $99 or less.
The credit union, which exclusively serves KU students, faculty, administration and their relatives still will be able to compete with other checking services, she said.
The credit union still will not require that members have a minimum balance in their checking accounts, and all accounts will draw interest.
Heather Hiatt, Englewood, Colo., junior and member of the ADC Federal Credit Union, said she was unhappy with the news.
The cheeking service isn't the only change for the ADC Federal Credit Union. The branch at Carnruth-O'Leary Hall was closed Wednesday, leaving the lone branch office at 603 W. 9th St.
"I'm not pleased," Hiatt said, "but it's not that big of a drawback considering it still a better deal than other places in town."
'Nice Girls' explode into garage sale
By BILL RAYNOLDS
Staff writer
For sale: artificial flowers, several cans of paint, stuffed bears, a pink headboard adorned with ducks, a toilet and several ammunition boxes, all strenu across a front lawn.
Two months of filming the movie in Lawrence ended Wednesday, and the
Yesterday, several KU students from Mark Syverson's Introduction to the Film Medium class sold props from the movie "Nice Girls Don't Explode."
It was, as the cardboard sign above the office at 944 Kentucky St. read, a "Nice Girls" sale.
sale was designed to put money back into the movie's $1 million production budget.
Patty Grit, Salina senior and one of the salespeople, said the group's goal was to sell $300 worth of props.
"Some people want to have a prop from a major movie," said Greg Lederer, Chicago senior and one of the prop-sellers.
He said the group had sold a sink for $10 and a dresser for $20.
"We're going to be stars," Lederer said, because he and the other student salesmen will be included in the film credits.
Chuck Martinez directed the movie
and KU graduate Doug Curtis produced it, according to Bob Stein, the film's production manager.
"It's a comedy about an overprotective mom (Mary Flowers) who is trying to insulate her 18-year-old daughter (April Flowers) from the real world, especially with regard to men and sexuality." Stein said.
"Mary tells April that if she hangs around men, her hormones will cause an explosion."
Lederer said, "Every time the daughter goes out with a man, things explode mysteriously."
Stein said about 15 KU students had worked as production assistants with
Tim Rebman, Republican City, Neb. graduate student in theatre and media arts, worked on the set as a lead man for the art department.
Rebman said his job was to obtain props for the set as specified by the art and design directors.
the movie's camera, lighting and sound crews and as production assistants for the prop and art crews.
"The hours were grueling, and I worked 16 hours in the average work day." he said. "I had two days off in eight weeks of work."
Rebman said that most of his previous work had been small-scale video productions.
Misunderstandings sink KU. K-State canoe race
By SALLY STREFF
Some KU residence hall dwellers were looking forward to the renewal of a fall tradition this year — an annual canoe race on the Kaw River from Manhattan to Lawrence.
Raw river rafters. They had thrown down the gauntlet. Their rivals — Kansas State University residence halls.
However, no canoes will hit the water because of what some KU students are calling a misunderstanding.
Staff writer
"We're really disappointed," said Bruce Miller, Fern Creek Ky., senior and treasurer of the Association of University Residence Halls. "It's a great way to get the floor
together, to get to know each other. $ ^{1} $
Miller said KU and K-State students had decided to share the work. Each group was responsible for obtaining landowners' permission to stop at checkpoints along the river. KU was responsible for eight of the checkpoints and K-State for 10.
Miller had suggested in April that the two universities' residence hall organizations plan a canoe race. Since the late 1960s, K-State had organized an annual two-day event but did not organize it last year.
Miller spent about 10 days traveling along the route asking landowners whether canoese could stop on their land.
He also worked with K-State students to
decide on rules and set a date for the race.
However, a "mishandle during" the proposed date of the race stopped it before it
When Miller and Drew Blossom, Topeka senior and AURH president, met with K-State students in April, both groups agreed that the race should take place on a weekend when neither K-State nor KU had a home football game.
Unfortunately, that was easier said than done.
At the meeting, Miller and Blossom did not have a schedule of KU's home football games.
Miller said he had told the K-State students
K-State representatives agreed to the change but told Miller and Blossom at a
During the summer, Siebes said, KU students told her that a KU home game was scheduled that day and asked that the race be moved to Sept. 6 and 7.
over the summer that KU had five home football games on consecutive Saturdays, starting on Sept. 13th. He said he suggested the race should be on the weekend of Sept. 6
Jennifer Siebes, treasurer of K-State's Association of Residence Halls, said that during the April meeting, the two groups had decided on the weekend of Sept. 20 — a date that Blossom said was not decided upon in April.
Siebs added a piece of land owned by a corporation was the main stumbling block.
Kerri Weddle, president of K-State's ARH, said she and three others had worked nights trying to get the race arranged after the date was changed to Sept. 6. She said K-State students decided late Monday morning that they could not get things finished in time.
"We went to a lot of trouble to get this thing off," Weddle said. "We felt really bad it didn't work out."
meeting Sunday that they were having trouble contacting landowners.
---
Deb Stafford, assistant director of residential programs at KU, said she was notified Monday morning.
2
Friday, August 29, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
News Briefs
Captors say U.S. rescue attempt would end in hostages' deaths
BEIRUT, Lebanon — Pro-Iranian Muslim extremists holding U.S. and French hostages in Lebanon warned yesterday that they would kill their captives if the United States tried a rescue mission.
"Let it be known by everybody that we have no mercy ... and the punishment will be hard." warned a statement accompanied by a black-and-white photograph of U.S. hostage David Jacobsen.
In the communiqué sent to a Western news agency in Muslim west Beirut, the Islamic Jihad group, or Holy War, said U.S. schemes to discover the whereabouts of the hostages would fail.
"We warn whoever is tempted to undertake a military or security foolishness to free the hostages that his fate and that of the hostages will be much worse than the fate of the Marines on the outskirts of Islamic Beirut," the statement said.
The remark was a reference to a suicide car bomb attack against the U.S. Marine headquarters near Beirut on Oct 23, 1983, which killed 241 U.S. servicemen. A group calling itself the "Free Islamic Revolutionary Movement," said it was responsible for the suicide mission. It had been opposed to the U.S. intervention in Lebanon after Israel's 1982 invasion.
In California, where President Reagan was vacationing, White House spokesman Larry Speaks said, "We continue to hold the captors fully responsible for the safety of all hostages and call on them again to release the American and other hostages held in Lebanon forthwith."
When asked whether U.S. officials had determined the identities of the captors, Speakes replied, "We certainly have some ideas, yes."
DENVER — People Express filed for reorganization of its subsidiary Frontier Airlines under federal bankruptcy laws yesterday, saying the airline never will resume flights unless a buyer is found.
Frontier files for bankruptcy
A petition for reorganization of Frontier under Chapter 11 bankruptcy laws was filed just before U.S. Bankruptcy Court closed for the day.
"Unless some other entity is willing to acquire Frontier's business, Frontier has no plans to resume service." People Express said in a statement after filing the petition.
People Express grounded Frontier flights Sunday, cutting off its revenue and mounting losses of $1 million a day. A filing for bankruptcy was delayed while efforts to find a buyer continued. On Wednesday night, United Airlines withdrew its July 10 offer to buy Frontier for $146 million and rejected a request from the pilots union to reopen negotiations.
An investment broker worked yesterday to put together a $150 million deal to buy Frontier on behalf of a West Coast trust. But People Express Chairman Donald C. Burr said last night that his company could not find an acceptable buyer.
NASA calls off shuttle search
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — NASA called off the search for shuttle wreckage yesterday, ending the largest ocean search and salvage project in history.
in Port Canaveral, the final three vessels in the search operation tied up at a Navy pier in what amounted to a symbolic conclusion to the aftermath of history's worst space disaster.
Rear Adm. Richard Truly, chief of the shuttle program, said in a statement that the Navy salvage office at the Cape Canavaler Air Force Station would be closed as would a Defense Department support office. At the height of the salvage effort in February, 22 ships were involved.
But Air Force Col. Edward O'Connor, who directed
the massive salvage operation for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, said that some minimal recovery efforts probably would continue indefinitely. He said all key components of Challenger, destroyed Jan. 28, had been recovered.
The salvage operation was thought to have cost about $20 million.
Navy spy sentenced to 365 years
SAN FRANCISCO — Jerry Whitworth was sentenced to 365 years in prison and fined $410,000 yesterday by a judge who said his role in selling Navy communications secrets to the Soviet Union made him "one of the most spectacular spies of this century."
Convicted on seven counts of espionage as part of the Walker family spy ring. Whitworth must serve at least 60 years before he will be eligible for parole.
U. S. District Judge John Vukasin had the option of sentencing Whitworth to the maximum term of life in prison or following a prosecution recommendation of imposing a lengthy period of years that would delay his parole eligibility.
Whitworth, Davis, Calif., was convicted July 24 of selling to the Walkers the secrets of Navy decoding equipment, code keys and communications systems which he gathered and photographed for nearly a decade as a trusted radio operator at ship and shore stations.
He also was convicted of tax evasion on the $332,000 that he was paid by John Walker Jr., former fellow radio instructor and confessed leader of the spy ring.
Dead cattle threaten epidemic
YAOUNDE, Cameroon — Relief workers yesterday completed burying more than 1,500 victims of a volcanic poison cloud in Cameron and concentrated on the disposal of thousands of dead cattle to avert the threat of an epidemic.
A U.S. scientific team began investigating what caused the cloud of toxic gas to bubble out of Lake Nios in northwestern Cameron the night of Aug. 21 and
More international airlifts arrived as part of a $1 million relief effort to aid the 20,000 people displaced by the disaster.
what type of gases came out of the lake.
State-run Radio Cameroon said relief workers completed burying the bodies of the 1,534 victims, having placed many of them in mass graves. The bodies were found in the four villages closest to the lake — Nios, Cha, Sobum and Fang.
But the radio said the threat of an epidemic persisted from the thousands of unburied cattle killed in their grazing fields and littering the countryside. The U.N. relief agency said it planned to appeal for a special chemical to burn them.
Hormel strikers to get jobs back
BLOOMINGTON, Minn. — Union meatpackers and Geo A. Hormel & Co., agreed to a tentative contract that union leaders said yesterday would lead to the rehiring of most workers fired from the company's flagship plant in a bitter, yearlong dispute.
The tentative master contract would raise wages by 70 cents an hour over three years for up to 4,000 Hormel workers at eight plants, including the Austin, Minn., flagship plant, union officials told a news conference in Bloomington.
meanwhile, an arbitrator ordered Hormel to rehire 500 union meatpackers fired in January for refusing to cross packet lines at its Ottumwa, Iowa, plant in support of striking colleagues in Minnesota.
The ruling came less than 12 hours after the United Food and Commercial Workers union and Hormel agreed in Des Moines, Iowa, on the tentative master contract.
Joe Hansen, trustee of Local P-9 and vice president of United Food and Commercial Workers, predicted that all eight locals would approve the agreement, which did not include Ottumwa, and said that he expected most of the 800 Austin, Minn., Local P-9 workers, who have been on strike since Aug. 17, 1985, to return to work.
From Kansan wires.
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3
News Briefs
Student, hit by car now in fair condition
Larry W. Washburn, 20, Wellington sophomore, who was hit by a car late Saturday, was listed in fair condition yesterday at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan.
Washburn suffered a head injury, facial fractures and a fracture of his left leg in the accident. Initially, he was listed in critical condition.
He was hit while walking across McDonald Drive on his way to the Holiday Inn Holidome, 200 McDonald Drive. No date has been set for Washburn's release from the hospital.
Taiwan buvs wheat
TOPEKA — A Taiwanese trade delegation purchased about 3.1 million bushels of wheat, valued at $9.6 million, yesterday during a buying session in the Kansas Senate chambers.
The 21-member delegation, seated at senators' desks, opened bids from American grain firms during the hourlong session. The latest purchase brought the value of grain purchased in Kansas during eight visits since 1978 to about $150.4 million.
The purchase is the largest the group has made on stops in the United States this year.
Festival at Clinton
The Clinton State Park Advisory Board will sponsor a Kansas Silver Centennial Celebration during the three-day Labor Day weekend in honor of the state's 125th anniversary.
The festival will be at Clinton Lake on Campground 2. Scheduled events include skydiving demonstrations, hot air balloon shows, and a Saturday bike parade. A tractor pull will highlight Sunday's activity.
Corporation formed
A variety of displays, including an antique display, will be exhibited throughout the weekend. The celebration is free and open to the public. Profits from concession sales will be used to purchase park playground equipment.
Lynn Anderson, a former Lawrence Chamber of Commerce president, has been elected president of a new corporation formed to direct the marketing and development of a new industrial park east of the city.
The corporation, The Douglas County Development Inc., is a nonprofit organization. The park will be on 300 acres north of Kansas Highway 10.
Corrections
Because of a reporter's error, the date of the Study Abroad Graduate Studies Program informational meeting was incorrectly reported.
The meeting was yesterday. For those who missed the meeting, information still is available in the program's office, 203 Lippincott Hall.
Because of a reporter's error, a story in yesterday's Kansan incorrectly reported that a Student Senate committee voted to give freshmen a seat in the Senate. The committee voted to put a freshman seat on the Student Senate Executive Committee.
Weather
Skies will be cloudy today with a high in the upper 80s and southerly winds from 10 to 20 mph. Skies will be partly cloudy tonight with a low around 60.
From staff and wire reports.
KU faculty may form bargaining group
Rv PAM MILLER
Members of a temporary faculty committee met yesterday in Strong Hall with the University general counsel to discuss the repercussions of organizing into a faculty group similar to a union
Staff writer
Vickie Thomas, University general counsel, explained the Public Employer and Employee Relations Act to the Faculty Executive Committee and its subcommittee appointed to examine the possible move.
With a better understanding of the laws, the nine-member committee plans to investigate the implications of having the faculty form into a collective bargaining unit, which is similar to a union.
Thomas explained the public employees' rights to organize and how the employees may organize into a unit, if they choose to do so.
"We have to be especially careful to find out the facts and cautious in pursuing the facts," Pete Johnson, professor of education, said.
Members of the committee stressed the committee's purpose was not to make a recommendation as to whether faculty should form a collective bargaining unit.
the temporary committee was formed by order of FacEx to look into the situation after several faculty members began expressing interest in forming a unit at the beginning of the year.
Tom Madden, Lawrence representative of the Kansas National Education Association, a statewide teachers union, said that he had talked to about 180 faculty members since February and that most were interested in organizing.
replace tenure positions, he said.
In order to hold an election to pick an organization to represent the employees, Thomas said, at least 30 percent of the members of the bargaining unit must sign a petition to call for an election.
Their primary concerns were salary and benefits, outmoded equipment and failure to
Thomas said that about 1,200 KU faculty members were members of the bargaining unit. About 400 members would have to sign the petition for election.
A secret ballot election would then be held, and the organization with the majority of votes would become the official representation, with the approval of the state public employees relations board.
Thomas said that if the organization were formed, employees and employers would have to meet and discuss in good faith such issues as working conditions.
would differ from a private sector union in several ways.
Madden said a collective bargaining group
First, unlike a private union, any decisions reached by the two parties would not become effective until approved by the Kansas Legislature. Also, under state law, a teaching staff may not go on strike.
Faculty members expressed concerns about the effectiveness of such a bargaining unit.
"I fail to see how you can negotiate if youre negotiating with the Legislature. I don't see that it has any teeth in it," said Thomas Dean, professor of architecture and urban design.
T.P. Srinivasan, professor of math,
disagreed.
"It is after the legislative act that we (as a bargaining unit) can do so many things," he said. "After the Legislature has made its appropriations, then we could decide what comes next."
Jacquelyn Pector, Chicago freshman, will be opening for female pop singer Whitney Houston on Sunday night at the Riviera Club in Chicago.
Singing from Chicago to Houston
By PAMELA SPINGLER
A KU freshman is getting a late birthday present — a chance to live out her dream.
sell a chance to live with a
A few days ago, Jacqulyn Pector turned 18.
This weekend, she will have the break most
young singers only fantasize about.
She will be returning home to Chicago to be a warm-up act in a charity performance for well-known pop singer Whitney Houston.
"This will be the biggest performance I've done," Pector said. "I've sang in many shows, but never one this large." The show, a benefit for the Muscular Dystrophy Association, will be held on Thursday and Friday.
Pector, a theater-voice major, auditioned for
and won a four-year scholarship from the KU School of Fine Arts. She chose KU because she could major in both of her interests, she said.
She had planned to attend the California School of the Arts but found she could major only in voice.
Pector said she was involved in many plays while in high school. Her singing in musicals attracted the interest of Art Therois, the owner of Rise-Up Productions, the agency organizing the concert.
She said she met him one night at dinner, and he said he would like to hear her sing.
Then she got the call two weeks ago about singing this weekend. At first, she didn't believe him, she said.
"But he was serious." she said.
Pector will be opening for Houston at midnight Sunday at the Rivera Club in Chicago.
Houston is scheduled to perform at Poplar Creek, a concert hall in Chicago, Sunday night. After her show there, Houston is scheduled to sing at the Rivera Club for 15 minutes.
Pector will be singing one song, but she hasn't decided which one. She said she would make the decision after she and her accompanist had practiced.
"I'm really excited and kind of nervous." she said.
Pector said her family was pleased
"My mother is shocked, she still can't believe it," she said.
ROTC unit 'activated' at ceremony
Staff writer
By NANCY BARRE
Accompanied by the mild flutter of a few flags and a fuzzy, tupa-recorded version of the "Star Spangled Banner," the largest class of Army ROTC cadets since the Korean War got a promotion yesterday.
In Army terms, the ROTC Jayhawk Cadet Battalion, about 200 members strong, were "activated." The action occurred for ceremonial, not combat purposes, in front of Allen Field House.
of KU's ROTC unit, said the increase was partly because of scholarship and job opportunities the Army offers.
hope to instill a sense of pride for the University of Kansas Army ROTC tradition," said Ted Lockhart, Rapid City, S.D., senior and newly appointed cadet commander.
During the early 1950s, KU's Army ROTC hit its peak enrollment of about 600 cadets. During the late '60s and early '70s, when student opposition to the Vietnam War was heavy, the number dwindled to less than 20. But during the last few years, the number of cadets has been steadily increasing.
The newly formed Jayhawk Cadet Battalion formerly was the KU Army ROTC staff unit, but over the summer, it received the loftier title of "command unit."
"Now that we're a battalion, we
for the first time ever, the Army ROTC program across the nation changed its status from staff unit, to command unit. A staff unit cannot be activated, a command can.
The Army made the change in the
program because the ROTC's overall commander, Maj. Gen. Robert E. Wagner, was promoted from a staff officer to command officer, Laster said. Wagner came to campus this summer to explain the changes to University administrators.
"The major difference between a staff officer and a command officer is that a command officer has more latitude and flexibility — he's the boss." Laster said.
Laster said the change also would give more direct responsibility to the cadets.
Lt. Col. James Laster, commander
TV-30 end puts stop to training
By JANE ZACHMAN
Von Freeman, a video jockey for the station, said word of closing came after a number of mishaps at the station.
"A decision was made not to have V.J.s at the station and just air the music videos," Freeman said.
TV-30 has called it a wrap.
Then, he said, the station antenna was struck by lighting, and video tapes had to be sent through equipment not available in the studio.
The station broadcasts consisted mainly of music videos and hourly newscasts, but the station also aired classic movies and educational programs at night and during the afternoon. In addition, the station gave broadcast journalism students a chance to gain experience working in television.
The low-powered television station that was based in Lawrence closed its studio in May.
Jeff Nighthyrd, president of Low Power Technology Inc., based in Austin, Texas, confirmed that the station was closed. He said the closing was because the saton was losing money but refused further comment. Low Power Technology owned the station
"Then one day all the V.J.s got phone calls telling us that we were tired." Freeman said, "and then the station closed."
The School of Journalism had been using the station as a teaching ground for some students in the broadcast journalism sequence.
During the 1965-86 school year, as many as 50 students worked at the station, said John Katch, radio and television lecturer and first general manager of the station.
Katich said the station seemed to be doomed from the beginning. He said the station was meant to work in connection with two other stations in Topeka and the Kansas City area.
"The three-city format would have been more viable. We would have had a larger market and a wider range of viewers." Katich said.
"Forty percent of our viewers were college students," he said. "Eighteen to 28-year-olds made up 90 percent of the viewers."
Another problem faced by the station was the poor reception of the project by area merchants.
Katich said Lawrence merchants had a negative response to the music video format and that they were reluctant to invest advertising money into the station.
He said the merchants' negative responses to the music video programming had grown out of the hardrock format of stations similar to Music Television.
"The people who worked at the station didn't like the format of the programming either but were willing to go along with it because of the three-city format," Katich said.
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4
Friday, August 29, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Stop, before it's too late
"Here we go again."
President Reagan was so fond of that expression during his 1984 campaign that it became his hallmark. For months he mocked Democratic politicians who compared his policies to others that had failed in the past. They have an obsession with history, he said, an obsession that would leave them unable to solve the problems of the future.
Perhaps Reagan should purchase a recently published history book and open it to the chapter on Vietnam. Then, compare the details of that foreign policy miscarriage with his own plans for Nicaragua.
Here we go again.
Here we go again!
Even if the Reagan-backed $100 million contra aid package passed by the Senate last week were not just plain wrong-headed, there are compelling reasons to oppose this American largess to rebel mercenaries fighting the Sandinista government in Nicaragua.
Perhaps most disturbing is that the New York Times has reported administration sources as saying the newest round of financing will be accompanied by soldiers from the Special Forces, known as the Green Berets, who will begin training the guerillas at secret bases on the Honduras-Nicaragua border.
On the heels of the Eisenhower administration's financial support for the South
Vietnamese government,
President John F. Kennedy
sent a similar detachment to
South Vietnam to help bolster
its allied government forces.
He promised that American
troops would never see combat.
President Reagan and the
Pentagon have made the same
assurances about the GIs
headed for Honduras.
Aside from the military training, the CIA, which has overseen all U.S. contacts with the contrasts, will begin training the rebels in tactics that they hope will change their already tarnished image among the Nicaraguan people. Since the contrasts have been accused of numerous acts of brutality in recent months, such training would seem appropriate.
The Senate's narrow 53-47 vote implies that even in that bastion of Republican conservatism, there is no firm consensus behind Reagan's mistaken Nicaraguan policy. The balance may shift after the November elections, and a more far-sighted policy then may emerge.
It's like a page right out of the CIA's Vietnam manual. Remember their campaign to bolster waning government support among South Vietnamese villagers?
Opinions
His disdain for history does not overshadow the fact that President Reagan is guiding us over the edge, and into an abyss that might, again, consume the lives of thousands of young people.
Simply important
Students need to vote this year more than ever. But, come November, when the polls open, not nearly enough KU students will be doing their part to help Kansas.
That can be remedied. Students — both residents in and out of Kansas — may register to vote in Douglas County.
Rep. Judy Runnels, D-Topeka, the Democratic nominee for secretary of state, stressed the need for student registration in her speech to
The candidates and issues you vote for this year will affect us all for at least the next two or three years. Students should feel obligated to decide who will participate in the government that subsidizes their education.
KU Democrats on Tuesday night. She wants to start a strong voter registration campaign on campus to get as many students as possible registered. She has the right idea.
Issues such as liquor by the drink will directly affect hundreds of students during their tenure at the University. Although the lack of registered voters in Kansas is not limited to college students, the campus is the best place to start The young minds being educated today will be held responsible for the shape of the nation tomorrow.
Registering and voting is simple and painless, but this simple act could have profound results.
As the White House sleeps
South Africa has taken another step toward abolishing freedom.
Last week, four shipments of videotapes belonging to the ABC television network, on their way from Johannesburg to the United States, were tampered with. Often videotapes are sent by jet to the networks if they are not scheduled to be broadcast immediately. Satellite transmission is expensive, so the tapes were being shipped aboard a South African Airways jet.
Pretoria already has imposed rigid press restrictions upon reporters that prohibit them from reporting the news as it
happens. Instead, the government must approve press reports about security forces and reporters are barred from going to many parts of the country and reporting about black opposition.
Again, South Africa's government has gone too far.
According to an ABC spokesman, at least one of the network's tapes has mysteriously disappeared. And television networks in England admitted that their videotapes also had been tampered with.
That's not just suppressing freedom of information; that's stealing.
News staff
News staff
Lauretta McMillen ... Editor
Kady McMaster ... Managing editor
Tad Clarke ... News editor
David Silverman ... Editorial editor
John Hanna ... Campus edu
Frank Hendel ... Sports edu
Jacki Kelly ... Photo editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
David Nixon ... Business manager
Gregory Keul ... Retail sales manager
Daniel Stephens ... Campus sales manager
Sally Depew ... Classified manager
Lisa Weems ... Production manager
Duncan Calhoun ... National sales manager
Beverly Kesten ... Traffic manager
John Oberzan ... Sales and marketing adviser
The first year of college for many students is the hardest, because they dive in as if they were doing a gainer into a champagne-filled swimming pool. They are torn between keeping their heads above the surface and drinking the pool dry.
Of course, going overboard your first year doesn't mean failure. Some of the wildest people I knew graduated. In fact, having a good time was their main academic motivation. As long as they did their work, even if it was just the minimum, they knew they could stay in college and prolong their social life. For some, it was their one concession to reality.
them squinting, unacquainted to the sunlight, as they received their diplomas. They had spent so much time studying while they were in college that few students knew them. And their social skills had atrophied along the way, making them awkward in the presence of other people.
But he wasn't the worst. Another guy I knew took drugs until he thought he was a messenger from God. After his new career was discovered by his professors and friends, he was sent away for awhile.
It also meant stiffly assuming what should have been casual poses. Meanwhile, much of the upperclass establishment was at Lone Star Lake or local taverns soaking up rays and beers.
Some of the library moles sacrificed more than their social life. A guy who lived across the hall from me froze with fear the night before a test. He simply couldn't move. His trip to the hospital was not the way to prepare for an exam.
Library moles and wildmen are a great distance apart, but navigating between them is hard.
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words and should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
Guest shots should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The
But it isn't so easy. Being a freshman is rough stuff.
But the toughest obstacles often are the ones that you create on your own. That's why arriving on campus is easy, and staying here is hard.
It involves four years of overcoming obstacles created by professors, friends, adversaries and people you don't even know.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Staufer-Flint Hall.
On Saturday, it meant playing carnival games behind Tempel Hill and devising ways to buy beer and then sneak it into the residence halls.
The opposite extreme to the wildmen were the library moles. These people made studying an incurable disease. Either out out of shyness or ambition, they buried themselves in books and silently burrowed toward graduation
Last week marked the annual arrival of freshmen to college campuses. Freed from parental restraint, these voyagers set sail in search of academic success and bednism.
Let's put drug tests in their place
If they survive, they become the ones who quote Nietzsche when ask-
On graduation day it was sad to see
Life as a freshman is tough stuff
out lighted cigarettes in the palm of his hand.
I had just finished reading the Kansas City Times story about President Reagan and other White House staffers submitting to urine tests for drugs the other morning. Between sips of my coffee, my mind drifted into one of those fast-paced, caffeine-induced daydreams.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and on Wednesday, Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Lawrence County Library. Ken66044. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $2 a year in County and $18 for six months and $35 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student activity fee.
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or other POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Staufer Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
The stall door locks behind me, a bell starts ringing and a disjointed voice that sounds like the telephone company's information lady begins speaking.
ed about their hangovers. If they fail, they become burnout stories, often as colorful as those who manage to stay in school.
Just a few weeks into my first college year, Charlie, a friend of mine who'd been drinking, tried to throw $v$
I am standing in the rest room in Stauffer-Flint Hall, the building where I teach, and I have just flushed the toilet. As I aip up my pants, I hear a metallic thud not unlike the sound of a cell-block door being slammed shut in one of those old prison films starring James Cagney.
desk out a fourth-floor window. Instead, he fell backward and smashed his hand. Sometimes that's the way things go when you're a freshman, you fail even at the really asinine things.
Gil Chavez
"I knew I shouldn't have gone to that rock concert in Kansas City," I mutter to myself. "There was so much marijuana smoke in that place that you couldn't avoid breathing the stuff."
Columnist
"Instant urinalysis completed. Analysis shows traces of caffeine, cannabis and food preservatives from Hostess Twinkies Remain where you are until KU police arrive to question you about use of a controlled substance."
Charlie never recovered from this disaster and eventually began doing strange things on a regular basis. He started smoking, not because he liked it, but because he enjoyed putting
I am pondering how I can explain
Of course, only the guilty would have anything to worry about in court. But all of us would have already lost something precious by then — the individual freedoms that make this country a unique and wonderful place to live.
the presence of cannabis in my urine when the buzz of my intercom saves me from this daytime nightmare.
Ted Frederickson
Guest Shot
But isn't this vision just a more efficient version of what Ronald
My friend and President Reagan and Mike Hayden are free to urinate in a bottle anytime they like. But the proposal to require drug testing for everyone ought to be quickly filed in the same place this column began.
The contention that mandatory testing will hurt only the guilty ignores the tacky reality of requiring all KU faculty and staff to rinse into a bottle as a condition of employment. The majority are asked to prove their innocence by giving up their privacy, their dignity, their right to refuse to incriminate themselves, so that the minority who abuse drugs can be identified.
Reagan and others are planning for both public and private employees? In Kansas, Republican gubernatorial candidate Mike Hayden has suggested that public employees, including professors at Board of Regents schools, should be tested for drugs.
Drug abuse is a serious social problem, but so are burglary and child
Proponents of testing state their case the same way a colleague did when we discussed the issue recently. "Drugs are a terrible problem in this country," he declared. "And testing can help solve the problem. It's not really a violation of the Fifth Amendment, because tests are voluntary. People may refuse to take the test, but the government or a company may refuse to employ them if they don't. The Constitution doesn't give them the right to work here. Besides, why should you worry about it? You've got nothing to lose. Only the guilty ones have to worry."
My friend is correct in calling drug abuse a problem, but he is wrong in characterizing employee testing as a "voluntary" exercise that only the guilty should worry about. Is it voluntary when one's boss is asking, and when a worker can lose his livelihood for refusing to be tested? Won't those who refuse the test, and those who speak out against testing (as I am), be branded as probable drug users?
Fluuuuuuussssshh.
abuse. Society might have fewer burglaries if we all "consented" to have our homes searched on a random basis by police looking for contraband. We might stop some child abuse if we allowed police to send vans equipped with sophisticated snooing devices (sound and video) into the suburbs in search of crying kids (although I would be in trouble if they ever bugged my house when I was trying to get my 3-year-old son to eat his vegetables.)
The Fifth Amendment was designed to protect individuals from police coercion, including physical abuse used to force a suspect into incriminating himself.
Crimes of all kinds might be avoided if we "volunteered" to let police randomly tap our private telephone conversations or stop and frisk us for no specific reason.
Those of us who value our professions highly would be more intimidated by the loss of our jobs than we would be by a threat to have our fingernails pulled out one by one unless we cooperated.
MAX ELIY
CHICAGO
TIMES
CUTS
Ronald and the Sacred Cows
Trade deficit is new whipping boy
Six years later, the country is grappling with an even bigger deficit, but blaming the budget deficit is old hat. The new whipping boy is the nation's record trade deficit, and it's sure to attract even more attention as the midterm elections draw nearer.
The high interest rates and skyrocketing inflation woes of 1900 are gone, but there are new problems: U.S. industries being wiped out by low-cost imports, lost U.S. jobs, inaccessibility of foreign markets and U.S. trade secrets being copied abroad. Until recently, an inordinately strong dollar compounded the problem, but it has begun to fall back in line with other currencies.
As late as 1981, the United States had a trade surplus exporting more goods than it imported. But today, the United States is the world's largest debtor with a record $148.5 billion trade deficit in 1985.
Angry over plant closings that shut down one company towns in textile, shoe, mining and steel areas, the
Mary Beth Franklin
public communicated its concerns to Congress last year. Since then, hundreds of trade bills have been introduced, but the administration has branded most legislative proposals as "protectionist" and, therefore, bad.
UPI
they needed to deal with unfair trade practices.
President Reagan and his trade advisers argued that protectionist measures would raise consumers' costs and invite retaliation from other nations. Administration officials said they had all the authority
practice.
Congress responded that existing laws were worthless if Reagan refused to use them. Many in Congress suggested the president should be forced to retaliate when unfair trade practices were documented.
When Congress tried to pass legislation to deal with the trade problem, the administration would announce a new trade action, such as investigating charges of Japanese "dumping" of semiconductor computer chips in the United States at below-market prices. Critics called the actions diversionary tactics aimed at preventing Congress from taking more drastic action.
Treasury Secretary James Baker suggested in September that the overvalued dollar, which made U.S. exports more expensive abroad, was largely to blame for the trade deficit. Baker worked with finance ministers
of the other major industrialized nations to bring the dollar into line with their currencies. The dollar came down, but the trade deficit did not
Now, less than three months before the fall elections, Democrats are harping on the trade deficit as the root of the nation's economic problems, almost daring the administration to act.
The administration responds that it is wrong to tie trade negotiators' hands with legislation, and that it is essential that the president retain his discretionary authority.
The administration also hopes the trade deficit will start turning before November. But there is no sign of it, and Senate Republicans, with their narrow 53-47 majority, are getting nervous.
The Democrats are practically licking their chops, hoping to turn the new deficit into political gold.
University Daily Kansan / Friday, August 29, 1986
5
Remakes top charts in Billboard rating
United Press International
LOS ANGELES — "Venus," a remake of the 1968 hit single, orbited back into the top spot on Billboard magazine's "Hot 100" this week, giving the three-girl group Bananarama its first chart-topper.
"Venus" was originally recorded and written by Shocking Blue, a Dutch pop group that quickly faded from view after hitting the charts. Banarana's new version of the hit features a synth-pop beat and female harmonies.
A different song with the same title,
a ballad by Frankie Avalon, hit
No.1 in 1959.
Meanwhile, another remake,
"Walk This Way," strolled into the
top 10 this week. The single by
Run-D.M.C., a black rap duo recently
plagued by violent concert shows,
edged into the No. 10 spot, rising
from No. 15.
"Walk This Way" originally was recorded and written by the heavy metal band Aerosmith in the mid 1970s. Two members of the band, lead singer Steve Tyler and guitarist Joe Perry, helped Run-D.M.C. transform the hard-rock song into a rap song.
Elsewhere on the singles chart, Lionel Richie's "Dancing on the Ceiling continued a slow but steady course toward the top. The single hit No. 4, moving up one notch from last week's No. 5 spot, "Take My Breath Away ( Love Theme From 'Top Gun')" jumped to No. 2, while Steve Winwood's "Higher Love," the No. 1 record last week, dropped to the third position.
Madonna's single, "Papa Don't Preach" plummeted from No. 3 to No. 9, but her album, "True Blue," continued to dominate the LP charts for the third week in a row. It was followed, in order, by the soundtrack from the movie "Top Gun," Winwood's "Back in the High Life," David Lee Roth's "Eat 'Em And Smile" and Run-D.M.C.'s "Raising Hell."
On the "Hot Country" charts,
"Desperado Love" by Conway Twitty took over the No. 1 position, knocking the former title holder, Don William's "Heartbeat in the Darkness," all the way to No. 14.
The rest of the top five, however, remained nearly the same. "Country State of Mind" by Hank Williams Jr. was at No. 2, followed by Eddie Raven's "Sometimes a Lady," Reba McEntire's "Little Rock" and John Conlee's "Got My Heart Set On You."
VIENNA, Austria — A U.S. doctor who treated victims of the Chernobyl nuclear accident said yesterday that the cancer death toll worldwide could in time reach 75,000, but an Argentine expert said many projections of a high death toll were nonsense.
The Associated Press
Chernobyl cancer predictions vary
A Soviet official also told reporters that initial estimates of as many as 25,000 deaths in the European part of the Soviet Union alone had been based on the most pessimistic data available and were 10 times too high.
conference held under the auspices of the International Atomic Energy Agency called to consider ways to improve international cooperation in fighting nuclear accidents.
The nuclear and medical experts spoke at a news conference on the fourth day of a weeklong
An explosion and fire occurred April 26 at the No.4 reactor of the Chernobyl nuclear plant, 80 miles north of Kiev in the Soviet Ukraine, sending a radioactive cloud over much of Europe and other parts of the world. At least 31 people have died from the accident.
75,000 during the next 70 years.
Robert Gale, a Los Angeles bone marrow surgeon who treated some Chernobyl victims, told reporters that health experts think the number of cancer deaths worldwide resulting from the accident could range from 1,000 to
Most conference delegates agree that as many as 25,000 cancer deaths linked to Chernobyl could occur in the European part of the Soviet Union alone, he said.
Gale said that estimates of the Cheronobyl death toll were broad but that health experts thought "the truth will lie between the extremes."
Dan Beninson, an Argentine nuclear safety official, predicted 2,000 cancer deaths in the Soviet Union from Chemobryl. Estimates in the 20,000 range are nonsense, he said.
Second rocket in week explodes in flight
United Press International
VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. — An unarmed Minutean 3 missile was blown up in flight yesterday because of problems that developed after launch — the second rocket failure in less than a week. Air Force officials said.
The launch was the 123rd flight in a series of operational test launches at Vandenberg, Connell said.
The test flight of the missile was aborted shortly after its launch at 7:04 a.m. when computer data from it indicated a malfunction, spokesman Capt. Connell said.
The missile was well into its flight when it was detonated over the Pacific Ocean, Connell said.
A team of Air Force and Defense Department contract engineers were analyzing flight data to isolate the cause of the malfunction. Air Force officials would decide whether any system modifications were needed.
So far, 1986 has been the worst year for U.S. space operations since the space program began with six rocket failures in 14 main launches.
tion, two research rockets carrying scientific payloads were lost. The most recent failure was Saturday.
The Challenger was destroyed Jan. 28, an Air Force Titan 34D rocket was blown up April 1 and a NASA Delta rocket was destroyed May 3. In addi-
The missile failure was the sixth rocket disaster this year. One shuttle flight was successfully completed in January along with an Atlas-E launch in February. Two submarine ballistic missiles were successfully launched off Cape Canaveral, Fla., and eight Pershing 2 medium-range missiles were fired along with two MX missiles.
Also, a weather satellite launch scheduled for Sept. 7 at Vandenberg will apparently be delayed for the 15th time because of potential fuel
leaks in an Atlas rocket.
On Saturday, however, the Air Force successfully completed the 13th test launch of the MX Peacekeeper missile from Vandenberg. It flew 4,200 miles to a target within the KwaJiailee Mission Test Range in the Pacific. It carried nine unarmed re-entry vehicles
The Minuteman is the Strategic Air Command's solid-fuel, intercontinental ballistic missile, which has been in active service in initial and succeeding models since October 1962.
The first Minuteman 3 missiles were installed at Minot Air Force Base, N.D., on June 15, 1970.
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Friday, August 29, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
New firemen to douse cigarettes
By KAREN SAMELSON $ ^{ \circ} $
In Lawrence fire stations, the Marlboro man is now an endangered species.
Starting this fall, all new firefighters will have to sign a contract affirming that they won't smoke on or off the job as long as they are employed. Jim McSain, Lawrence fire chief, said yesterday.
The department is instituting the policy for fitness reasons and because firefighters face many stressful situations, he said.
"For new hires, this will be a long-range goal that will enhance the condition and the fitness of our firefighters," he said.
About 20 percent of the firefighters smoke, he said, but the new rule doesn't apply to current employees, so they won't be forced to kick the habit.
However, the department has planned a fall training session that will include information about the hazards and effects of smoking.
Smokers could puff unnoticed
when the department recently advertised an open position, the ad
By a Kansan reporter
Students must put out their cigarettes before attending lectures, according to regulations printed in the fall Timetable.
The regulations, which were developed by the University Council in 1974, are part of the Handbook for Faculty and Unclassified Staff.
However, the regulations don't include provisions for enforcement.
They state that smoking is permitted only in:
Offices.
Corridors and rest rooms that
- Food service and consumption areas except those designated as nosmoking areas.
- don't have carpeting.
- Seminar rooms if no one objects and if enough ash trays are provided.
included the stipulation that the applicant not smoke.
In May 1985, Student Senate passed a clean air petition that asked for a re-evaluation of the University's policy on smoking in campus buildings.
He said the department had received more than 100 applications but hadn't hired anyone yet.
"No re-evaluation has ever been completed, to my knowledge." Stephanie Quincy, chairman of the Student Senate Executive Committee, said yesterday.
may smoke at the fire stations, he said
McSain said he hadn't gotten any negative responses.
But that may change, because a few weeks ago the Lawrence City Commission decided to consider a policy that would prohibit smoking in city buildings except in designated areas.
give firefighters already employed still
He said the commissioners wanted to cooperate in developing a flexible policy rather than a rigid one.
However, commissioners are
waiting for recommendations from the city's Employee Relations Commission before they write a policy
"I's best if the recommendation comes from the smokers," Commissioner David Longhurst said yesterday.
policy variation. The policy might mean that smoking restrictions would differ between the confines of City Hall and other buildings with better ventilation, he said.
One member of the commission, Sharon Davison, said most people she had talked with seemed willing to go along with whatever decision was made.
Davison said the biggest fear among smokers was that they would not be able to smoke in their own offices.
The proposed policy would only affect city buildings. However, Commissioner Ernest Angino said, "I'm hoping that we can extend it to public places in the near future."
Coverage taxes some
By NICOLE SAUZEK
**Matter of Law:** Kuilulty and staff members who make more than $50,000 a year will have to pay more taxes next year because of recent policy changes made by the federal Internal Revenue Service.
The employees will have to include part of their insurance coverage as income. Employees who have more than $50,000 in life insurance coverage — which is equal to their salaries — must count the coverage in excess of $50,000 as income on their W-2 tax forms.
All full-time University employees, except for students, are covered by the University's group life insurance plan. Under the plan, employees are awarded benefits equal to annual salary or 12 times their present monthly rate of pay.
Employees whose salaries are less than $50,000 are not affected by the provision.
"For example, figures from a recent study showed that three-fourths of our twelve-month unclassified employees earn less than $30,000 annually." Jones said. "There is only going to be a very small proportion included in the provision."
Only a small percentage of top officials and professors should be affected by the new provision, said L. Martin Jones, director of business and fiscal affairs, said yesterday.
About 4,000 campus employees are covered by the group policy, according to Millie Smith, staff benefits official.
The premiums are paid by the state, through the Kansas Public Employees Retirement System and Security Benefit Life Insurance Co., which is linked with KPERS. However, the KU group term life insurance program is not included under the KPERS program.
"KPERS has no bearing on the life insurance policy." Jones said. "Only the group term (policy) is affected by the new tax provision."
By JOHN BENNER
Car music draws thieves
Staff writer
Vehicles parked on campus can be music to a thief's ears.
The thefts of valuables from cars, in particular the theft of car stereos, amounted to reported losses to the tune of about $80,000 in the last two½ years.
According to statistics compiled by KU police, about $57,000 of the losses were classified as stolen property, while the remaining $23,000 was damage done by thieves attempting to enter vehicles.
The reports indicated that several parking lots on campus seem more popular with thieves. The Daisy Field Extension, west of Iowa Street, has recorded the most thefts during the last two $ _{1/2} $ years, 39.
Sgt. John Brothers of KU police said it was difficult to determine why certain lots were more popular with thieves.
"Many environmental factors can make one spot more popular with thieves," Brothers said. "Ad
ditional lighting couldn't hurt,but by itself would not eliminate burglaries.
"The amount of traffic through an area often serves to decrease crime."
"For a thief, a pair of nice speakers in the back dash is a perfect giveaway," Dalquest said. "They know that a guy has put a lot of money into his system."
Sgt. Donald Dalquest of the Lawrence Police Department said that because thieves sometimes saw students as affluent, vehicles parked on campus were prime targets.
Brothers said that, in most cases, a criminal would seek an article that would be easiest to sell, such as a stereo or a radar detector.
Figures for the last 21/2 years indicate that the incidence of theft from vehicles peaks when school is in regular session and drops off during summer months.
The Kansas Bureau of Investigation reported that vehicle thefts also increased in the city of
Lawrence during the school session Dalquest said this suggested that many off-campus car stereo theft victims also were students
Brothers recommended several tips for safeguarding a vehicle from theft:
Lock her car. It deters the opportunist. Reports indicate that of 244 burglaries to vehicles in campus lots, 109 suffered no damage, suggesting the cars were unlocked.
`Put all lose items in the trunk. It's much tougher for a thief to open that than it is to break a window.`
- Park in the most well-lighted and well-traveled areas.
According to KU police records, these are the five campus lots with the highest incidences of reported thefts in the last 2^4 years:
Lot 106 (Daisy Hill Extension) 39
Lot 111 (GSP-Corbin Hall) 27
Lot 114 (Stouffer Place) 24
Lot 90 (Robinson Center) 23
Lot 110 (Jayhawyer Towers) 22
I am sure you will be impressed by this lovely picture of a young woman sitting in a sunlit room, deeply engaged in reading a book. She is wearing a light-colored blazer and a patterned skirt, with her hair styled in soft waves. The background features a brick wall and a window, allowing natural light to illuminate the scene. This image captures a moment of quiet concentration and curiosity, highlighting the woman's focus on the material she is reading.
Mark Porter/KANSAT
Leafing through
Carol Maney, Chicago graduate student, sorts her notes. She took advantage of the cool weather yesterday to work outside, beside Danforth Chapel.
Prison inmates guilty of sending letter bomb
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Two state prison inmates accused of threatening Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole with a makeshift, unworkable letter bomb were convicted on two counts in U.S. District Court yesterday.
The letter mailed to Dole's Washington office from the Kansas State Penitentiary at Lansing in March contained wiring and some ground-up match heads. Officials agreed the letter was not capable of exploding.
Jurors who received the case Wednesday afternoon deliberated
ive hours and returned verdicts yesterday against David J. Leaverton, 29, and David E. Nicholson, 39
The two men were found guilty of using the mail to threaten, to kill, injure, or intimidate someone with an explosive, a felony, and of a misdemeanor offense of illegally sending inflammable material through the mail, without intent to injure.
In their closing arguments, defense attorneys said Nicholson wanted to make Dole aware of poor conditions in the solitary confinement section at the prison and that Leaverburn was hoping for better medical care.
United Press International
U.S. school enrollment up
Education spending also will soar to $278.8 billion — $15.4 billion over 1985-86 — during the coming year, and a record $4,263 a pupil will be spent in public elementary and secondary schools, he said.
WASHINGTON — Enrollment at the nation's schools and colleges will top 57.4 million this fall, with almost one-fourth of all Americans attending classes, Education Secretary William Bennett said yesterday.
The biggest increase in enrollment will come at preschool and elementary schools, reflecting a surge in the birth rate since 1977 that is expected to push elementary and high school rolls even higher in the coming years.
Overall, Education Department statistics indicate that the U.S. student population is almost 100,000
more than a year ago when 57.3 million people enrolled.
"Almost one out of every four Americans is in school," Bennett said. "These Americans are the reason for this nation's drive for education reform. They are the future and the goal for them is excellence."
Thomas Snyder, a specialist in education statistics at the department, said enrollment would continue to rise over the coming years.
But Snyder said there was little chance school rolls would reach the all-time high of 62.8 million in 1975, when college enrollment skyrocketed
The department's new statistics indicated that public and private elementary and secondary school enrollment would total 45.3 million this fall compared with 45.1 million last year.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, August 29, 1986
7
County will provide emergency services
By KIRK KAHLER
Staff writer
BY KIRK STAFF CONTENTS
Emergency medical services at certain KU athletic events will be provided by Douglas County because of an agreement reached yesterday between the county and the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation
The Douglas County Commission unanimously voted to sign the contract that calls for the county to supply ambulances, physicians, nurses and emergency technicians to be stationed at the events.
The events served will be football, men's basketball and the KU Relays. The county also will provide service for the Kansas Shrine Bowl and any state high school playoff game. The Shrine Bowl is an all-star game for high school players.
The county will begin providing the service at KU's first home football game Sept. 13.
Ted McFarlane, director of the county Department of Emergency Services and Emergency Preparedness, said the contract would benefit both the county and the University.
McFarlane said the county would benefit because KU partially would finance the purchase of new emergency equipment, which the county could use in areas other
than KU sporting events, such as disaster readiness.
The University will pay about $18,000 a year for equipment and personnel costs for three years.
Micrariane said the new program would allow the emergency staff to perform their duties better because they would be working with familiar personnel.
In the past, he said, the staff worked with doctors who were attending the events. Many times these people were not familiar with emergency situations, he said.
McFarlane said the new staff would specialize in diagnosing and treating internal injuries using emergency room nurses who were used to working with one another.
Student Health Service at Watkins Memorial Hospital, which formerly provided the service, decided not to because of insurance and personnel shortages, said Gary Hunter, assistant athletic director.
Hunter said he agreed that the University would benefit from the service because the county was in a position to provide comprehensive care for fans.
Included in the list of necessary equipment are two heart monitors and five paramedic kits.
Staff Writer Although students might not notice significant changes in the green and white buses rumbling through campus, the Lawrence Bus Company's office and garages stirred with their usual activity this summer.
By BETH COPELAND
Duane Ogle, president and general manager of the company, 841 Pennsylvania St., said about eight new drivers would be shuttling students and Lawrence residents this fall.
He said the employee turnover rate was routine. "We lose from five to eight employees every year," Ogle said. "With the short work year, drivers find steadier work, and they leave."
FOREIGN LANGUAGE
STUDY SKILLS PROGRAM
Buses change to fulfill new needs
The buses do not run during the summer
Wednesday. September 3
THI STRONG HALL
Finally, although no new routes have been added, an existing route was extended so that students and faculty of Haskell Indian Junior College could have access to bus service.
It was a financial crunch in the late 60s, prompted by student unrest and refusal to ride buses, that threatened the company with bankruptcy. Ogle has been the owner since the company began in 1954.
The University has contracted bus service from the company since the early 1970s. Before that the company served Lawrence and the campus independently.
Last year, about 6,000 students bought bus passes during the fall semester. The cost is deferred by the Student Senate, which allotted $277,980 this year for the service, according to Charles Bryan, KU on Wheels coordinator.
Ogle said that the cost of adding new routes would make bus service unaffordable to most student passengers.
With a $160,000 price tag for a new bus, Ogle said, it pays to keep the existing buses in top condition. He estimated that total maintenance costs averaged $80,000 a year.
A second change may be noticed on the buses themselves. Of the 21 operating buses, most have been painted and have had minor repairs done to them.
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Voices blend in song of sweet success Days of doo-wop ditties end as quartet broadens its style
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Staff writer
By SALLY STREFF
The group Harmonic Function has been around the University of Kansas in one form or another for a long time.
"They were butching Boardwalk," explained Wall, a Parkville, Mo. graduate student, I said. This song was one of my favorite songs. Can I tell you the words?"
Four years ago, a group of Templin Hall residents sat in a room trying to remember the words to "Under the Boardwalk," a song by the Drifters. Marty Wall walked in, and Harmonic Function was born.
The members of Harmonic Function, including Wall, are Lennie Wesley, Wichita senior; Steve Smith, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, and Rich Turner, Kansas City, Kan., senior.
Although members of the group have come and gone since its founding, the group's style of music has stayed the same.
Its popularity also has grown.
Harmonic Function performed as an In-Between-Act at last spring's Rock Chalk Reve and received standing ovations on two nights.
COLLEGE WESTERN
Since then the group has been flooded with requests to perform,
John Allison, executive director of Rock Chalk Revue last year, said that as soon as the group auditioned he knew they would be a hit. Even so, he wasn't prepared for their huge appeal.
Members of Harmonic Function, though they will not label their musical style, do admit that they follow the style of such 1960s harmonizing groups as the Tempations and the Drifters.
"The type of music they sing is not exactly what most college students listen to," he said. "Maybe that kind of music is making a comeback."
The group started as straight doo-wop, but members said their repertoire has increased. They take songs and twist them into their own style.
The original group consisted of 12 Templin residents who banded together to enter the hall's talent show.
"We bend cur voices, putting on a rough, guff edge," Wall said. "You're bending, shaping your voice, and you're a classical musician wouldn't do."
"The name Harmonic Function basically says what we do," Wall said.
"We sounded terrible," Wesley said.
After the contest, the group alternated between four and five members who performed over the next several years at campus functions, such as the annual Ellsworth Soul Food Dinner.
But they won the contest.
The singing group Harmonic Function is comprised of, from left, Steve Smith, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore; Lennie Wesley, Wichita senior; Rich Turner, Kansas City, Kan., senior; and Marty Wall, Parkville, Mo., senior. The group began four years ago. Harmonic Function has performed at various KU functions, but members say they are not concerned with making money.
Then group members decided they
wanted to audition for Rock Chalk.
"We decided it would be a great way to go out," Wesley said.
way to go out. Won't money!
Even before their performance at a Rock Chalk rehearsal enthusiasm for the group was high.
the group applauding. "At a rehearsal they exploded — gave us a standing ovation," Smith said.
Allison said, "These guys got up on stage and started singing. It got dead quiet. Pretty soon people were dine-ing in chair's, swaying. It was really old."
The five-song rotation the group sang at Rock Chalk included "Can't Help Falling in Love," originally recorded by Elvis Presley, "My Girl," a Temptations song, and "I'll Be There." "recorded by the Jackson 5"
"It was a completely, completely unexpected reaction," Wall said. "We never had sung for so many people ever had never sung for a white audience."
The Rock Chalk performance was a turning point for the group.
"The harmony was so sweet that we decided we couldn't drop it." West was.
Since Rock Chalk, Harmonic Function has sung at fraternity and sorority events, including a pre-Big Eight tournament party at Crown Center. It also hosts college reunions and business meetings.
But the Harmonic Function's members say they don't expect to increase either their success or their bank accounts.
Last week, the group performed at the Beach and the Boulevard event.
would show Carson a videotape of the groan
But members are not trying to become stars.
"If you want to be a star, this isn't
the place." Wall said. "I couldn't
They sing together because they enjoy it. When they no longer enjoy singing together, members said, the group will disband.
'The name Harmonic Function basically says what we do. We bend our voices, putting on a rough, graff edge. You're bending, shaping your voice, doing things a classical musician wouldn't do.'
- Marty Wall Parkville, Mo., graduate student
"We decided we weren't going to turn it into a job," Wall said. "I don't feel we ever did a job for the money."
Smith said that the group did not have a bank account, but that they split the performance money when they were paid.
"I've never called home for money since Rock Chalk," he said.
At a party after Rock Chalk, members of the group met an attorney for Johnny Carson who said he
care less about singing on Johnny Carson."
Smith retorted, "You would if they asked you."
asked you.
Turner said, "It's better not to think about it. Then we don't worry about it and we sing better."
Wall said he thought the group was popular because harmony was gaining followers and because audiences felt that the group enjoyed singing
"We say, 'Hey, we're Harmonic Function, we've been doing this for about four years, we really have a good time singing and we hope you
The group practices together about once a week. Sometimes they sing in stairwells and bathrooms because the acoustics there are good, Wesley said. Sometimes they practice in Templin's cafeteria.
Wesley usually sings middle range while Smith handles high harmony and some bass or lead falsetto. Wall sings high harmony and lead falsetto, and Turner sings bass harmony.
"We have good flexibility. You need that to sing harmony." Wesley
Members of the group suggest song possibilities to one another.
Smith sang in church choir from childhood. He and his older brother started a gospel group in high school
"We listen to a tape to get the basic harmony, then throw the tape out and add our own songs." Wall said. "All of us songs we know pretty well anyway."
Harmonic Function members come from different musical backgrounds. Wesley studied voice and classical music while growing up in a town housed to much of gospel. Now he sings with the KU Gospel Choir.
Turner played the piano while
Wall played the tuba on 12 yea-
but never received any voice
growing up. He now plays percussion, and he was a KU drum major in 1984.
Harmonic Function is planning more variety in the future, Wall said. Songs the group is working on include "Since I Don't Have You," a 1988 Skyliners' song, "Daddy's home." Hall and his band have contributed contemporary songs such as "Lost in Love," recorded by the New Edition, and a Beach boys song.
Members said they planned to continue Harmonic Function as long as they stayed at KU, but didn't think that they would revive the group later with other singers.
That doesn't mean the group's harmony will stop.
"Five, ten years from now we'll be able to blow a note and sing it just like we sang it yesterday," Wall said.
A new look
This is the first edition of the Entertainment & arts pull-out section.
Look for this section each week in the Friday Kansan.
Entertainment & arts will feature stories about music, drama and other forms of entertainment to be found on campus and in the Lawrence area.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, August 29, 1986
7
County will provide emergency services
By KIRK KAHLER
Staff writer
Emergency medical services at certain KU athletic events will be provided by Douglas County because of an agreement reached yesterday between the county and the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation.
The Douglas County Commission unanimously voted to sign the contract that calls for the county to supply ambulances, physicians, nurses and emergency technicians to be stationed at the events.
The events served will be football, men's basketball and the KU Relays. The county also will provide service for the Kansas Shrine Bowl and any state high school playoff game. The Shrine Bowl is an all-star game for high school players.
The county will begin providing the service at KU's first home football game Sept. 13.
Ted McFarlane, director of the county Department of Emergency Services and Emergency Preparedness, said the contract would benefit both the county and the University.
McFarlane said the county would benefit because KU partially would finance the purchase of new emergency equipment, which the county could use in areas other
than KU sporting events, such as disaster readiness.
The University will pay about $18,000 a year for equipment and personnel costs for three years.
McFarlane said the new program would allow the emergency staff to perform their duties better because they would be working with familiar personnel.
In the past, he said, the staff worked with doctors who were attending the events. Many times these people were not familiar with emergency situations, he said.
Mefarlane said the new staff would specialize in diagnosing and treating internal injuries using emergency room nurses who were used to working with one another.
Student Health Service at Watkins Memorial Hospital, which formerly provided the service, decided not to because of insurance and personnel shortages, said Gary Hunter, assistant athletic director.
Hunter said he agreed that the University would benefit from the service because the county was in a position to provide comprehensive care for fans.
Included in the list of necessary equipment are two heart monitors and five paramedic kits.
Staff Writer Although students might not notice significant changes in the green and white buses rumbling through campus, the Lawrence Bus Company's office and garages stirred with their usual activity this summer.
Duane Ogle, president and general manager of the company, 841 Pennsylvania St., said about eight new drivers would be shuttling students and Lawrence residents this fall.
He said the employee turnover rate was routine. "We lose from five to eight employees every year," Ogle said. "With the short work year, drivers find steadier work, and they leave."
The buses do not run during the summer.
Buses change to fulfill new needs
A second change may be noticed on the buses themselves. Of the 21 operating buses, most have been painted and have had minor repairs done to them.
Finally, although no new routes have been added, an existing route was extended so that students and faculty of Haskell Indian Junior College could have access to bus service.
With a $160,000 price tag for a new bus, Ogle said, it pays to keep the existing buses in top condition. He estimated that total maintenance costs averaged $80,000 a year.
Ogle said that the cost of adding new routes would make bus service unaffordable to most student passengers.
STRONG HA
By BETH COPELAND
"our ridership is about 93 percent students and
faculty, and they can't afford to spend $60 for a bus pass," he said.
FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY SKILLS PROGRAM
Last year, about 6,000 students bought bus passes during the fall semester. The cost is deferred by the Student Senate, which allotted $277,980 this year for the service, according to Charles Bryan, KU on Wheels coordinator.
The University has contracted bus service from the company since the early 1970s. Before that the company served Lawrence and the campus independently.
It was a financial crunch in the late '60s, prompted by student unrest and refusal to ride buses, that threatened the company with bankruptcy. Ogle has been the owner since the company began in 1954.
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Dave Taylor and Jeffrey Drake performed at Cogburn's on Aug. 22. The Answer is a Lawrence band that has toured in the United States and Canada.
High energy, originality is the Answer
Fred Sadowski/KANSAN
By TONY BALANDRAN
Staff writer
As the hum transformed into "A Hard Day's Night," people began to surround the stage.
A heavy fog and hundreds of bubbles flowed over the darkened stage. Through the sounds of conversations could be heard, a humming could be heard.
The band members, all of Lawrence, are mark Trail, Jeffrey Drake and Dave Taylor. They began working together in January, and
High energy and motivation are the ingredients a band should use to gain exposure and a career from its endeavors — at least that's the Answer's answer to the question of success.
'They are ready to devote their whole lives to this band. They have as good a shot as anybody. If their success relies on their aggressiveness, they are going to be around for a while.'
— John Triggs Answer's agent
already their work has taken them to Canada, Texas, Florida and Indiana.
"Right now, we try to play as much as we can until we get a break," she said last week between the games of Cogburn's, 737 New Hampshire St.
The band played at Cogburn's on
appropriate nights for nights about
300 people each night.
"We're getting some of our demos together. And with luck, we'll get some record companies attracted to us," he said.
Getting attraction is the key to success, said Taylor, the band's lead vocalist and guitarist. But the key to attraction is not only the right type of songs but also the right amount of original material.
Although the Answer does perform their own material, Taylor said, they enjoy playing other performers' music. Their song list is composed of about 70 to 80 percent cover tunes and 20 to 30 percent original pieces.
"We play anything that we feel will get a large crowd together." he said.
In one of their Friday night sets, the band emphasized fast-paced dance music.
"What we play are high energy tunes," said Trail, the band's drummer.
"For a band playing full time, it's best to play popular material as well as original tunes."
Taylor added that a pop emphasis and high energy were especially important for bands in the Midwest market.
Although the band has been playing together for a short time, the members have had prior musical experience.
Taylor said his musical career began at the age of four, when his mother, a classical pianist, persuaded him to take violin lessons. Eventually he switched from the viola to the piano and took up the piano and then the guitar.
"Mark has been playing for about 12 years," Taylor said. "He was in another local band when we met."
playing as And/Or, another local trio act, when Drake, the vocalist and bass player for the band, went out to see them play in November, said Wade Paschall, a readie for the Answer.
Paschall said the band's sound was different from what could be heard on the radio.
Both Trail and Taylor had been
"What they play is not typically top 40, not Bryan Adams or ZZ Top," he said. "It's new, and it's fresh. It's not something you hear a lot."
Tammy Hill. East junior, said she enjoyed the Answer's sound.
"It's not like rock and roll. It has more use of the synthesizer," she said. "I think they play real well. It's real danceable music."
The Answer now is recording a demo tape of four of its 18 original pieces. The tape will be distributed next month to several record companies for a possible label contract, said John Triggs, the band's agent.
"They are ready to devote their whole lives to this band. They have as many friends and colleagues as they can, cost relies on their aggressiveness, they are going to be around for a
while," Triggs said.
Taylor said the band had the motivation to become successful with its recordings.
"It's like any other job, you have to put out all the time to make it," he said.
Recently, the Answer concluded a two-month tour of Canada, which included dates in Ontario and Quebec.
"We really love doing what we're doing. It's fun because you're your own boss. You make or break your happenings in this business," said Taylor.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, August 29, 1986
7
County will provide emergency services
By KIRK KAHLER
Staff writer
Emergency medical services at certain KU athletic events will be provided by Douglas County because of an agreement reached yesterday between the county and the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation.
The Douglas County Commission unanimously voted to sign the contract that calls for the county to supply ambulances, physicians, nurses and emergency technicians to be stationed at the events.
The events served will be football, men's basketball and the KU Relays. The county also will provide service for the Kansas Shrine Bowl and any state high school playoff game. The Shrine Bowl is an all-star game for high school players.
The county will begin providing the service at KU's first home football game Sept. 13.
Ted McFarlane, director of the county Department of Emergency Services and Emergency Preparedness, said the contract would benefit both the county and the University.
McFarlane said the county would benefit because KU partially would finance the purchase of new emergency equipment, which the county could use in areas other
than KU sporting events, such as disaster readiness.
The University will pay about $18,000 a year for equipment and personnel costs for three years.
McFarlane said the new program would allow the emergency staff to perform their duties better because they would be working with familiar personnel.
In the past, he said, the staff worked with doctors who were attending the events. Many times these people were not familiar with emergency situations, he said.
McFarlane said the new staff would specialize in diagnosing and treating internal injuries using emergency room nurses who were used to working with one another.
Student Health Service at Watkins Memorial Hospital, which formerly provided the service, decided not to because of insurance and personnel shortages, said Gary Hunter, assistant athletic director.
Hunter said he agreed that the University would benefit from the service because the county was in a position to provide comprehensive care for fans.
Included in the list of necessary equipment are two heart monitors and five paramedic kits.
Star Writer Although students might not notice significant changes in the green and white buses rumbling through campus, the Lawrence Bus Company's office and garages stirred with their usual activity this summer.
By BETH COPELAND Staff writer
Duane Ogle, president and general manager of the company, 841 Pennsylvania St., said about eight new drivers would be shuttling students and Lawrence residents this fall.
Buses change to fulfill new needs
He said the employee turnover rate was routine. "We lose from five to eight employees every year," Ogle said. "With the short work year, drivers find steadier work, and they leave."
ZHI STRONG HALL
Wers indlæst worfelse
The buses do not run during the summer
A second change may be noticed on the buses themselves. Of the 21 operating buses, most have been painted and have had minor repairs done to them,
With a $160,000 price tag for a new bus, Ogle said, it pays to keep the existing buses in top condition. He estimated that total maintenance costs averaged $80,000 a year.
Finally, although no new routes have been added, an existing route was extended so that students and faculty of Haskell Indian Junior College could have access to bus service.
Ogle said that the cost of adding new routes would make bus service unaffordable to most student passengers.
our ridership is about 93 percent students and
FOREIGN LANGUAGE
STUDY SKILLS PROGRAM
faculty, and they can't afford to spend $60 for a bus pass," he said.
Last year, about 6,000 students bought bus pass during the fall semester. The cost is deferred by the Student Senate, which allotted $277,980 this year for the service, according to Charles Bran, KU on Wheels coordinator.
Wednesday. September 3
The University has contracted bus service from the company since the early 1970s. Before that the company served Lawrence and the campus independently.
It was a financial crunch in the late '60s, prompted by student unrest and refusal to ride buses, that threatened the company with bankruptcy. Ogle has been the owner since the company began in 1954.
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Cut up Picasso print sign of exploitation
Although the original work of art, which was valued at $10,000, would be destroyed by a fire, he said that the print pieces would then become new prints of art.
Two owners of an Australian mail-order company announced in May that they planned to cut a signed print by Pablo Picasso into 500 1-inch squares and sell them for $135 apiece.
David Robertson, who co-owns Subdivision Art with Stefan Panyk, said that by cutting the print, ordinary people would be given the opportunity to own some of the work of the century's greatest artist.
Owners and admirers of Piccaso's art might be appalled at such exploitation, but they should not stand alone in their disgust.
Art, in all its forms, faces the growing threat of being molded by financial sharks into a whorish device for getting the big bucks.
5 p.m.
ALL M
600 Lawre
PO
The statement that the chipping up of a work of art is for the benefit of the public or a creation of new art is a thin disguise for the financial motive. If all 500 of the $135 pieces of the book would be sold, the printer will make $67,500 — a net gain of $57,500 over the print's original value.
The public and the world of art will end up the losers if the print is cut up. A 1-inch square cannot capture the color and depth of the entire work.
Picasso's work is the product of years of stylistic growth. His brushstrokes and color combinations were not overnight developments. They deserve better than fly-by-night butchery.
Copland labored over every bar of his music, making sure the harmonies and themes tied the work together. He deserves better than to be whipped down to fit nicely next to a Whitney Houston ballad.
During one of the concerts honoring the statue, the massive "Lincoln Portrait," composed by Aaron Copland, fell victim to the ax. Only the final three or four minutes of the 15-minute-plus work were performed. All of the work's tension and power were eliminated to allow more time for advertisements.
A painting should be admired not just for the 1-inch square section, but for the whole. A statue should be admired for its contours and beauty, not for any glitzy brouhaha associated with it.
The arts should be admired in their original state, not in shortened or bastardized versions.
The musical phrases and the poetry of the masters should not have to undergo the degradation of being converted into soup company jingles and potato chip slogans.
During the garish celebration of Liberty Weekend last month, it became difficult to admire the beauty of the Statue of Liberty with all the distractions of pop performers and Elvis impersonators.
Liberty Weekend producer David Wolper saw the multiple events as a tribute to the meaning behind the
But works that have stood the test of time and are the product of years of style development and thought do deserve a forum for their preservation. They shouldn't be altered to satisfy the whims of current opportunity seekers.
Grant W. Butler
Arts Editor
Other artworks were sacrificed during the Liberty Weekend celebrations to make way for commercialism and pop-culture.
statue. But unless the statue stands for materialism and sleazy entertainment, the glitzy pomp of all the eventscheaped the statue.
In a time when the scantily clad crooning of Madonna and the slice-and-dice butchery of mass murder movies are considered artistic, the works of history's master artists should be revered and preserved, not degraded or destroyed.
Brassy beguine
Granted, the arts could never grab the attention of the American public as much as Joan Collins' bustline or a celebrity water-balloon toss during prime time television. Perhaps prime time television is not the place for great art.
The glistening bell of a brass trombone echoes out 'Begine for Band' during Monday's Opening Convocation at Hoch Auditorium. 'The Crimson and the Blue' also was featured in the ceremony.
Network television is the home of programming which is completely dependent on the advertising dollar, not content.
BEGUINE FOR BAND
刚柔流
KU KARATE CLUB OKINAWAN GOJU RYU
FREE demonstration and opening meeting Tuesday, September 2,7 p.m. Room 130 Robinson Gym
KARATE
Classes will meet on Tuesdays and Thursdays Beginners: 5:30 p.m. Advanced: 6:30 p.m.
Robinson Gymnasium Room 130 The KU KARATE CLUB studies a traditional style of karate known as: Okinawan Goju Ryu
Karate teaches:
-Self Defense
-Self Confidence
-Self Awareness
For more information contact Bruce Thatcher 542-2268
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, August 29, 1986
7
County will provide emergency services
By KIRK KAHLER
Staff writer
Emergency medical services at certain KU athletic events will be provided by Douglas County because of an agreement reached yesterday between the county and the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation.
The Douglas County Commission unanimously voted to sign the contract that calls for the county to supply ambulances, physicians, nurses and emergency technicians to be stationed at the events.
The events served will be football, men's basketball and the KU Relays. The county also will provide service for the Kansas Shrine Bowl and any state high school playoff game. The Shrine Bowl is an all-star game for high school players.
The county will begin providing the service at KU's first home football game Sept. 13.
Ted McFarlane, director of the county Department of Emergency Services and Emergency Preparedness, said the contract would benefit both the county and the University.
McFarlane said the county would benefit because KU partially would finance the purchase of new emergency equipment, which the county could use in areas other
than KU sporting events, such as disaster readiness.
The University will pay about $18,000 a year for equipment and personnel costs for three years.
McFarlane said the new program would allow the emergency staff to perform their duties better because they would be working with familiar personnel.
In the past, he said, the staff worked with doctors who were attending the events. Many times these people were not familiar with emergency situations, he said.
McFarlane said the new staff would specialize in diagnosing and treating internal injuries using emergency room nurses who were used to working with one another.
Student Health Service at Watkins Memorial Hospital, which formerly provided the service, decided not to because of insurance and personnel shortages, said Gary Hunter, assistant athletic director.
Hunter said he agreed that the University would benefit from the service because the county was in a position to provide comprehensive care for fans.
Included in the list of necessary equipment are two heart monitors and five paramedic kits.
Although students might not notice significant changes in the green and white buses rumbling through campus, the Lawrence Bus Company's office and garages stirred with their usual activity this summer.
By BETH COPELAND Staff writer
Buses change to fulfill new needs
Duane Ogle, president and general manager of the company, 841 Pennsylvania St., said about eight new drivers would be shuttling students and Lawrence residents this fall.
He said the employee turnover rate was routine. "We lose from five to eight employees every year," Ogle said. "With the short work year, drivers find steadier work, and they leave."
The buses do not run during the summer.
FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY SKILLS PROGRAM
A second change may be noticed on the buses themselves. Of the 21 operating buses, most have been painted and have had minor repairs done to them.
With a $160,000 price tag for a new bus, Ogle said, it pays to keep the existing buses in top condition. He estimated that total maintenance costs averaged $80,000 a year.
Finally, although no new routes have been added, an existing route was extended so that students and faculty of Haskell Indian Junior College could have access to bus service.
Ogle said that the cost of adding new routes would make bus service unaffordable to most student passengers.
"our ridership is about 93 percent students and
faculty, and they can't afford to spend $60 for a bus pass." he said.
Last year, about 6,000 students bought bus passes during the fall semester. The cost is deferred by the Student Senate, which allotted $277,960 this year for the service, according to Charles Bryan, KU on Wheels coordinator.
The University has contracted bus service from the company since the early 1970s. Before that the company served Lawrence and the campus independently.
It was a financial crunch in the late '60s, prompted by student unrest and refusal to ride buses, that threatened the company with bankruptcy. Ogle has been the owner since the company began in 1954.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, August 29, 1986
7
County will provide emergency services
By KIRK KAHLER
Emergency medical services at certain KU athletic events will be provided by Douglas County because of an agreement reached yesterday between the county and the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation
The Douglas County Commission unanimously voted to sign the contract that calls for the county to supply ambulances, physicians, nurses and emergency technicians to be stationed at the events.
The events served will be football, men's basketball and the KU Relays. The county also will provide service for the Kansas Shrine Bowl and any state high school playoff game. The Shrine Bowl is an all-star game for high school players.
The county will begin providing the service at KU's first home football game Sept. 13.
Ted McFarlane, director of the county Department of Emergency Services and Emergency Preparedness, said the contract would benefit both the county and the University.
McFarlane said the county would benefit because KU partially would finance the purchase of new emergency equipment, which the county could use in areas other
than KU sporting events, such as disaster readiness.
The University will pay about $18,000 a year for equipment and personnel costs for three years.
McFarlane said the new program would allow the emergency staff to perform their duties better because they would be working with familiar personnel.
In the past, he said, the staff worked with doctors who were attending the events. Many times these people were not familiar with emergency situations, he said.
McFarlane said the new staff would specialize in diagnosing and treating internal injuries using emergency room nurses who were used to working with one another.
Student Health Service at Watkins Memorial Hospital, which formerly provided the service, decided not to because of insurance and personnel shortages, said Gary Hunter, assistant athletic director.
Hunter said he agreed that the University would benefit from the service because the county was in a position to provide comprehensive care for fans.
FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY SKILLS PROGRAM
Wednesday, September 3
FREE! 7:30 to 9:00 p.m.
300 Strong Hall
THIS STRONG LABEL
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Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
KU Tae-Kwon-Do Club
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• Self-Defense • Physical Conditioning
• Self-Confidence • Male and Female
• Self-Discipline everyone welcome
(Laurence Tae-Kwon Do School)
Chief Instructor: Master Choon Lee
Assoc. Instructor: Master Ki-June Park
Assist. Instructor: Ed Brunt
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Robinson Gym Room 102
Mon. & Wed. 6:30p.m.-8p.m.
Beginning Sept. 3, 1986
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Buses change to fulfill new needs
By BETH COPELAND Staff writer
Staff writer Although students might not notice significant changes in the green and white buses rumbling through campus, the Lawrence Bus Company's office and garages stirred with their usual activity this summer.
A second change may be noticed on the buses themselves. Of the 21 operating buses, most have been painted and have had minor repairs done to them.
Diane Ogle, president and general manager of the company, 841 Pennsylvania St., said about eight new drivers would be shuttling students and Lawrence residents this fall.
He said the employee turnover rate was routine. "We lose from five to eight employees every year," Ogle said. "With the short work year, drivers need steadier work, and they leave."
The buses do not run during the summer.
With a $160,000 price tag for a new bus, Ogle said, it pays to keep the existing buses in top condition. He estimated that total maintenance costs averaged $80,000 a year.
Finally, although no new routes have been added, an existing route was extended so that students and faculty of Haskell Indian Junior College could have access to bus service.
Ogle said that the cost of adding new routes would make bus service unaffordable to most student passengers.
faculty, and they can't afford to spend $60 for a bus pass," he said.
"our ridership is about 93 percent students and
Last year, about 6,000 students bought bus passes during the fall semester. The cost is deferred by the Student Senate, which allotted $277,980 this year for the service, according to Charles Brvan, KU on Wheels coordinator.
The University has contracted bus service from the company since the early 1970s. Before that the company served Lawrence and the campus independently.
It was a financial crunch in the late '60s, prompted by student unrest and refusal to ride buses, that threatened the company with bankruptcy. Ogle has been the owner since the company began in 1954.
SAVE
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Friday, August 29, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
County keeps track of diversion terms
By CRAIG HERRMANN
Staff writer
Criminal offenders who enter into diversion agreements in Douglas County are not slipping through the legal system, the county district attorney said yesterday.
A legislative report filed in Topeka on Tuesday said that of 266 diversion agreements filed in Kansas' five most populous counties, about 25 percent intentionally might be dismissed by local officials.
"I see no problem with unintentional dismissal in Douglas County," said Jim Flory, Douglas County district attorney.
Douglas County is the fifth most populous county, behind Sedgwick, Johnson, Wyandotte and Shawnee counties.
Diversion is an alternative to criminal proceedings that allows an offender to receive punishment by paying fees, attending therapy sessions or performing community service work.
service work. Flory said his office and the community work service coor
dinator kept strict records of all diversion cases in Douglas County, including the requirement of an afidavit that must be filed upon completion of the diversion assignment.
assigned.
The legislative report said that in 25 percent of cases surveyed, a lack of documentation could allow officials to unintentionally dismiss charges even though the diversion agreement had not been completed.
In another 25 percent of the cases, the diversion requirements were not fulfilled, or not fulfilled until local prosecutors took action.
The remaining cases were carried out properly, according to the report.
If an offender fails to complete his diversion assignment, his case may be taken back to court, where legal proceedings would resume.
In a response to the charge that some cases slip through because of a lack of documentation, Flory said he was confident that none of the cases were from Douglas County.
United Press International
Farm issues unify debaters
MANHATTAN — Kansas governor candidates Mike Hayden and Tom Docking exhibited more differences in style than in the substance of their pronouncements yesterday at a joint forum on farm issues.
In their second joint appearance since the Aug. 5, primary, Docking, the Democratic lieutenant governor, and Hayden, the Republican House speaker, answered questions from agriculture reporters at a meeting sponsored by the Kansas Farm Bureau.
The tone of Hayden's presentation was set by his opening statement, listing his familiar pedigree as the son of a western Kansas farm family who attended Kansas State University, served in the Army in Vietnam and rose through the legislative ranks to become speaker.
On the other hand, Docking, a Wichita lawyer, talked about problems in the farm economy, saying the state could do little to help, other than to help hold down the cost of production and interest rates.
The candidates agreed there was little that could be done by the state to improve farm prices. Both endorsed the interest write down law as an
Hayden reiterated his opposition to Carlin's plan and also criticized Carlin for proposing to eliminate the state meat inspection program.
the Carlin proposal was that there was no adequate way to set agriculture policy under the current board, appointed by the state's farm groups. He said a policymaking function could be assigned to the board if it were reorganized, or it could be delegated to one of the centers within the state, such as K-State.
A hammer drill, valued at $160,
was stolen between Aug. 14 and Aug.
19 from a truck parked in the
300 block of Indiana Street.
When they were asked whether the secretary of agriculture should be appointed by the governor rather than the Board of Agriculture. Docking appeared to retreat from Gov. John Carlin's stance. Carlin proposed stripping the board of its authority and bringing the agriculture department under a gubernatorial appointee, a move opposed by Hayden and other Republicans.
The candidates were asked whether they would support sales of wheat to South Africa during a time when public and private interests are being urged to stop doing business with the racially divided country.
*Carpet remnants, valued at $443, were stolen between Aug. 11 and Aug. 27 from the storeroom of a building in the 1600 block of W. 15th Street.
On the Record
A black 1983 Ford Mustang GT, valued at $8,000, was stolen Tuesday between 10:15 p.m. and 11:55 p.m. from a parking lot in the 700 block of New Hampshire Street.
The tailgate of a 1977 Dodge pickup truck, valued at $150, was stolen between 7 p.m. Tuesday and 10 a.m. Wednesday from a residence in the 1800 block of W 6th Street.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday. August 29, 1986
Sports
9
Renovation could help baseball recruiting
BLOOMSBURG ATHLETIC CENTER
By RIC ANDERSON
Sports writer
Quigley Field, the home of the Jayhawk baseball team, is being changed.
But according to the Athletic Department, baseball coaches and players, the changes don't stop at the boundaries of the field.
For the first time since its construction in 1958, Quigley Field will be undergoing significant renovations, including new bleachers, a press box, concession stands and rest rooms.
Kansas head coach Marty Pattin said recently that the renovation would benefit the Jayhawk recruiting program.
The cost of this first phase has been budgeted at $115,000. These funds have been provided by a former Jayhawk baseball player who wishes to remain anonymous.
John Sanders, Nebraska baseball head coach, said, "No question about it, it'll help Marty.
Other Big Eight Conference coaches agree
"Obviously that's going to be attractive to new athletes," Pattin said.
"When you display any capital improvement, you can demonstrate to a recruit the university's commitment to the program."
"I think it's great that the University of Kansas has shown interest in baseball," Sanders said. "I'm always for the general up-building of programs across the country. To succeed, college baseball must be a collective effort."
After the renovations, Quigley Field will be similar to Nebraska's home stadium, Buck Beltzer Field, which seats 1,500 people.
But that isn't the only reason he is excited about Quigley Field.
"It'll be in play there," he said.
"There'll be more student interest."
phase project is completed. Funds for the project were donated by a former Kansas baseball great who wishes to remain anonymous
Sanders said the field would be quite a place to play if more students who were enthusiastic sports fans attended games.
"I remember a game in 1979," Sanders said. "It was one of those hot, muggy days and the spirits were really flowing. The fans got pretty wild and crazy, but it was fun. It was
good for the team."
Pattin said the new stadium also should boost attendance, which was about 200 fans a game last season, and that would have a positive effect on his team.
"We'll have a facility that will be attractive for people who want to come out and watch KU baseball," Pattin said. "And that's only going to help our kids inspired."
Scott Taylor, Arkansas City sophomore pitcher, said he thought the new stadium would bring out more people to games. And more people means more excitement.
"It if was filled, for baseball that'd be like play in Allen Field House." Taylor said. "One time we played Wichita State they had 2,300 people. They got rowdy, really making a lot of noise. It was great."
Improved stadiums have had an impact on attendances.
impact Gary Ward. Oklahoma State baseball head coach, said that although attendance figures didn't improve in 1981, the first year the Cowbies played on Allie P. Reynolds Stadium, they quickly picked up the next season. Ward said attendance had risen steadily ever since. The stadium seats 3,000 people in its two
tiers of bleachers.
Oklahoma State charges $25 for student season tickets, and with the new stadium, Jayhawk fans may face a similar situation.
The bleachers, which will be built by Southern Bleachers Inc. of Graham, Texas, will consist of a center seating section of 22 rows and two side sections of 14 rows each. These will run from dugout to dugout, with access ramps for the handicapped on each end.
The first phase of the renovation began the first week of August and should be completed by the time the Jayhawks play their first regular season game in the spring. This phase includes the building of new aluminum bleachers, which will raise the seating capacity at Quigley Field from 800 to 1,500.
Floyd Temple, assistant athletic director, said he thought the Jayhawks would soon become the last team in the Big Eight to start charging fans to come to games. If imposed, he said there would be a nominal fee charged and revenue would be used to balance the expenses of the program.
For the second phase of renovation, Walter J. Hicks Associates Architects & Planners, 2320 Mesa Way, will design rest rooms and concession stands to be placed under the bleachers. Funds for this phase of construction will come from the department. Hicks, a former Jayhawk baseball player, is acting as a liaison between the department and Southern Bleacher Inc. during the first phase.
A 32-foot long press box, a 30-foot high chain link backstop and a new sound system will also be constructed by Southern Bleachers Inc. during this phase.
Toronto within five games of Boston
Blue Jays climb closer to top
United Press International
CLEVELAND — Jim Clancy sur-
rendered nine hits, and Tony Fernandez and George Bell each had four hits last night to spark the surger-
tion Toronto Blue Jays to a 9-1 victory over the Cleveland Indians.
Toronto, the defending American League East champion, extended its winning streak to five games and the Blue Jays moved to within 4½ games of Boston in the AL East. Toronto has won eight of its last 10 games.
Clancy, 14-7, struck out five and walked none in pitching his fourth complete game. He lost his shutout bid in the sixth when Andre Thornton belted his 17th home run of the year.
The Blue Jays made it 2-0 in the third. Fernandez led off with a triple and scored on Willis Upshaw's single.
Fernandez led off the game with a single, took second on an infield out and scored on Bell's single to right.
Chicago 6. Texas 2
Doubles by Rick Leach and Fernandez gave Toronto another run in the fourth.
The Blue Jays chased starter Ken Schrom, 11-6, in a two-run fifth. Lloyd Moseby scored with a single, stole second and scored on Bell's double to rich. Rich Yett replaced Schrom and Bell scored on Leach's double to give Toronto a 5-1 lead.
CHICAGO — Ron Hassey hit a two-run double in the first inning and Steve Carlton and two relievers combined on a seven-hitter last night to lead the Chicago White Sox to their first victory this season against Texas, a 6-2 decision over the Rangers.
Carlton raised his American League record to 2-2 and 5-1 overall. The 41-year-old left-hander allowed six hits, walked four and struck out four in 6-13 innings. Bobby Thigpen pitched $2\frac{1}{2}$ innings for his second foul. Texas starter Jose Guzman, who gave up six runs in $5\frac{1}{2}$ innings fell to 9-12.
The Rangers had won the first nine meetings with the White Sox this season.
Oakland 5, Baltimore 4
OAKLAND, Calif. — In the first game of a double-header, Dave Kingman hit a two-run homer with two out in the ninth inning yesterday to give the Oakland A's a 5-4 victory over the Baltimore Orioles.
Dave Leiper, 2-2, pitched one inning for the victory.
Alfredo Griffin led off with a single off of reliever Don Aase, 5-5. Aase then struck out Carney Lansford and Jose Canseco before Kingman hit an 0-1 pitch over the left-field fence for bis 30th home run.
Oakland had scored two runs in the eighth to come within 4-3. With two out, Kingman singled to knock out Baltimore starter Mike Flanagan. Ase walked Dusty Baker and surrendered Donnie Hill's single to load the bases. Pinch hitter Bruce Bochter singled in two runs before Ase walked Dwayne Murphy and struck out Mike Davis to end the surge.
Minnesota 6, Milwaukee 2
MILWAUKEE — Gary Gaetti had four hits, including his 27th homer, and drove in four runs yesterday to help lead the Minnesota Twins to a 6-2 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers.
Friday's Games (All Times EDT)
Ballimore (Davis 9.11 and Halaban 6.0) at Oakland Plank 3.7 and Stewart 7.1, 2.4.
p m
Minnesota (Smithson 9-12) at Toronto / Stieb
Nevada
12:35 p.m.
Cheverly Drive, Condett 12-9) at Boston (Seattle
7-10), 7:35 p.m.
7. 101, 7. 35 p.m.
Texas (Hough 11-8) at Chicago (Cowley 8-8).
8 p.m.
Langston (11: 0 1), 10: 35 p.m.
Detroit (Tanana 10: 6) at California (Mc Caskill 14: 7), 10: 35 p.m.
8 p.m.
Milwaukee (Higuera 16.8) at Kansas City
(Leonard 6-10), 8:35 p.m.
(Leonard 6:10) 8:35 p.m.
New York (Gudryd 6:10) at Seattle
London 10:35 p.m.
Saturday's Games Cleveland at Boston
Minneapolis at tucked
Texas at Chicago, night
New York at Seattle, 2 night
Detroit at city, night
Detroit at California, night
Saturday's Games
Wildcats set to open season
Kansas State's new head coach says first game is critical
United Press International
MANHATTAN - The Kansas State Wildcats already have a must game.
"Our game against Western Illinois is going to be the biggest game we will play all year because this program and this community needs one coach and that is a win," said head coach Stan Parrish.
"There may never be a bigger game for us. We must get off to a good start. It will give our program credibility with our players. We've got to win on Aug. 30, period."
Tomorrow, Parrish will lead the Wildcats onto the field for the first time as K-State's head coach. The Western Illinois Leathernecks will help K-State celebrate its earliest football game on record.
Parrish mincews no words on the importance of beating the Division 1-AA Leathernecks and Western Illinois head coach Bruce Craddock knows there's a change in the K-State air.
The Wildcats went through two coaches last season — Jim Dickey and Lee Moon — and won just one of 11 games. K-State has had only one winning season since 1970.
Parrish was hired to turn that
around. He has pushed team concept with strict discipline and military-like practices.
"With the great enthusiasm that has been generated by coach Parrish and his staff and the winning tradition that has been brought to (Kansas State)," Craddock said, "I'm sure the players, students, administration and townpeople are excited about this season.
"I don't think for a moment they won't be ready to play the Leathercunks."
While there is no doubt the Wildcats will be fired up, how well they have adapted to Parrish's passing offense will be the key.
Randy Williams, a junior from Jacksonville, Fla., has hit just 87-of 202 passes in his previous two seasons at KState, but he will guide the Wildcats' pass offense. The K-State receivers will feature a lot of new faces including transfers Todd Cowings, Clark Brown and John Williams.
Running the ball probably will be an offghtguard for Parrish.
The offense is untested and will be going against a defense that has seen more passes than it probably would like to admit.
that the Leathernecks also run a wide open offense.
would like to thank The reason the Western Illinois defense is familiar with the pass is
Crickdock, whose team passed for 229 8 yards a game in 1985 and finished 5-5, will look to sophomore quarterback Paul Singer as a leader. Singer hit 115 of 208 passes for 1,601 years last year and was the top freshman quarterback in Division I-AA.
In addition, Craddock said, "We have excellent receivers who possess big league speed and ability."
It's a chance for Craddock's Leatherns to teach a Division One opponent the passing game, but it is also a chance to see just how well Parrish has ingrained his system.
"I think it is very important when you take over a program that has not been successful, and ours to say the least has not been successful, and establish good working habits with your players and establish what you consider is a winning effort," Parrish said.
"The attitude of the football team is very good. I think they think they have a chance," he said. "Our goal is to win the football games that we have a chance to win. I think we can win."
Field house gets facelift, map for floor
By a Kansan sports writer
When basketball fans in Allen Field House look down at the court this season, they will see something different.
The field house floor recently underwent a facelift and the design was changed.
A map of Kansas will replace the large Jayhawk at the center of the court, and the lettering was moved from the sidelines, where it was often covered by press tables, to the playing surface.
Lankford Enterprises of Stillwell completed the $8,500 two-week project Wednesday. The court will be ready Monday after a three-day setting period.
The floor is resurfaced every eight to 10 years, Floyd Temple, assistant athletic director, said yesterday. This is the first time the floor design has been changed.
Temple said he had thought of a map for the center of the court after he saw North Carolina's floor. Men's basketball head coach Larry Brown liked Temple's idea, and it was started about three months ago.
"I think it's a good that the whole state gets a little publicity," Temple said referring to the Kansas map. "It really looks nice."
P
Roanna Brazier, KU women's softball pitcher, slides into third base. Brazier, who played for the St Louis Express this summer, is one of several players who play softball all year. The KU women's softball team practiced yesterday at Javawk Field.
Mark Porter/KANSAN
Year-round softball appeals to players
By ANNE LUSCOMBE
Sports writer
For the Kansas women's team, playing softball is like a job.
From the middle of August to the middle of May, the players show up for practices and games. Some are paid in the form of scholarships.
Then comes summer and a three-month vacation. But for some team members, the summer is spent playing more softball.
Off season play is not required, nor is it particularly encouraged by softball head coach Bob Stanclift. He said he would prefer his players to come back mentally fresh for the fall season rather than burned out from summer games.
Since the addition of the fall season, Stanclift said he had seen more players take advantage of summers off.
"I leave it up to them because we train for nine months and it's such a long season," Stancliff said yesterday. "It's good for a lot of them to get away. I see nothing wrong with that."
He doesn't discourage them either. Many of his players enjoy the game so much they wouldn't think of not playing during the summer, he said.
Treating softball like a job is a built-in response for sophomore pitcher, Reenie Powell. She played on a
Senior pitcher Sherri Mach, whose summer team, the Houston Comets, made it to the women's open division nationals, said she thought that by laying off even for a week during the summer she would be out of touch and out of practice.
"My life has always revolved around softball," Powell said. "You have to look at it as a job in college, but in the summers you can have more fun."
Having fun while playing softball during the school year is a plus, but it doesn't happen all the time, said freshman pitcher Genny Honea. The players have to work hard to earn their scholarships, she said.
North Kansas City team, &T Express, during the summer with sophomore outfielder Lori Hannah and former Kansas players Tracy Bunge and Jill Larson. Larson was the first Jayhawk to be named to an All-America softball team.
Collegiate players join summer teams for the same reasons as professional baseball players play winter ball, to improve their game, said Gary Taylor, a women's open division coach. Taylor, L&T Express head coach, has had several Kansas players on his team in past seasons in addition to the three he coached this year.
He said he has seen a lot of improvement by Kansas players during the summers. Freshmen can improve their playing abilities by taking advantage of summer teams.
Senior outfitter Jill Williams, who during her college career has played every summer, said some players were just out to have fun.
With summer play completed, the Jayhawks will have nine months before they play just for fun.
10
Friday, August 29, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
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VOLUNTEERS Headquarters, Lawrence's Crisis Counseling Center, need a few volunteer hours to help with the preparations for formal meetings August 27 (Wednesday) or September 1 (Monday) # p. 1418
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COMMUTERS. Sell Service Car Pool Exchange Main Lobby, Kansas Union
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FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY SKILLS PROGRAM: Topics include overcoming mental blocks of preparing for exams and improving skills in language. For the presentation, prebition. Wednesday, September 3, 7-9 p.m. p.m. 300 Strong Hall FIRE! Presented by the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall.
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IMPROVE YOUR READING COMPREHENSION AND SPEED! Three class sessions: six
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IMPROVE YOUR READING COMPREHENSION AND SPEED! Read three classes, six hours of instruction. Tuesdays, September 2, 9 and 16, 7:30 - 9:30 p.m. Materials费 of $1 to pay in the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall, by 5:00 p.m. on September 2. Class size
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The Office of Academic Affairs is now accepting applications and nominations for the University Scholars Program. The program is designed to recognize and encourage academically talented students early in their undergraduate careers. First semester, the program's goal is that either a father or mother are encouraged to apply.
GPAs of 3.8 or higher are encouraged to apply. Applications may be picked up in the Office of Legal Affairs, and should be directed to Carol Prentice at 864-4455. The deadline for applications is September 24th.
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121
Bring the Music of the Mad Hatter to your next party $100 gets you the Best mix of music in town, from the Beaches to the Bar-Kays. Call Mickey at 842-2990.
Wanted: Band for Blues Based singer. Interested call (81) 902-6531, after 6 p.m.
Gutter trick to form: join rock band. Will play about anything except H.M. Steve. 843; 8419 Have a Beach Party in your own back Yard? René a Hot Tub! Cab-Tu-to B4- 861 2018 evening and winter.
DOUBLE DV-DUMP FEATURE 2 pages
8.15x9.35 $49.95,压痕表,144 LIP,FAILURE,4-10
pages
Freshmen/Sophomores - The quick route to a naval flying career is through Naval JOB. Join us at 10am on Saturday, February 25th.
Fing: A lota songs. Need to get some more together. If you wanna help with this thing and these dropped names appeal to you, Velvetts, Chilton, Dylan, Furie, These, souls, Psalms, Tension, on and on... give me will talk about making some noise. I'm mute. I am at 824-1544 or 749-2028
Freshman/Sophomores Learn about the Naval office and career opportunities Join Naval Mistress
**DIARY DXVS-XTRA VMCR VMCR 4-armes 3 days**
*$14.99* videspentes, 1447 WKT d'idé 10 e imprimés
ENTERTAINMENT
SONIC SOUND MOND Disc Jockeys. The best and first DJ's in Lawrence use compact discs. When you want quality at a tradeable price, call us. Don't think you talk is worth the money.
FOR RENT
1 brm Furnished Air conditioning One block from Union Uniq Water Paid Sublease 298-358
FREE RENTAL ASSISTANCE. Kaw Valley Mgt has one of Lawrence's largest selection of up to 3 bedroom apartments, 3 bedroom apartments, duplexes and townhouses open houses. Contact 841-6004 to solve your house
from campus. Call Duck 843-100-6434.
Now taking applications for 86-47 school year students, visit our website www.pauls.org or visit our new meal, free laundry and kitchen available for members use, equal sharing of housework, democratic participatory House government. Sandhurst School Coop House.
HILLVIEW APTS
1745 W. 24th
841-5797
NO LEASING FOR FALU
$250
1 & 2 BR units
* Furnished & unfurnished
* New carriage-diapers
* New laundry-rooms
* On bus route near shopping
* Ample off-street parking
Professional managed by
their company
Room for Rent $150 plus utilities 3 bedroom, next to Stadium 749-267
Serious female student share house private room central air, TV kitchen equipped Dishwasher, microwave, walk to campus, call Monroe at 841-4478
Two blocks from Univ. furnished two bedm apt.
W off st. parking, no pets. 841-5500
Vacancy for a position in Kominna Christian Living Community and Ecumenical Christian Ministries
MASTER CHAFT offers completely furnished 1 and 3 bedroom buildings all near campus (Call
FOR SALE
Classified Ads
16 catamaran sailboat with trailer Will carry
1-4 adults. Will sell for $290 per moo
3-5 adults. Will sell for $475 per moo
1973 Honda 350. 16K miles, Great transportation.
Best offer, B41 9652
1985 Honda Spree, red, low mileage, like new. $390 or
offer. #421/7329
contact Aster, 4 speed, Low mileage, Sonma
Contact Aster, Call 844-2267, after 3
weekday
Walt Pioneer Receiver, 150 Watt Speakers,
Complete System. Must Heat to $750
$390
**asisö "odasam"** Eidibirc "piloo",
quilting frame, fishing equip. no 40. Stainless
plaque, Toys, Chain Link locker. Small appliances.
of Miscellaneous Sat., Aug. 30 a.m to 4 p.m.
**mouseraster-Kommerce Portable Excellent buy**
Call after p. 196 $160 Friville Vatican
625 796
75 Plymouth Horizon For Sale 4 cylinders, 4
doors, Air conditioner, AM radio, 30 MPG, Price
until
Antique aka partners desk with glass top Ex-
cellent condition $259.943727
100
The Perfect Bed.
Computer Sale Apple Clones $800, IRM Clones
Disk for calls $19 Call Demo. 843-5925
These nurses first become career with
administration departments in New York and
California. After receiving a bachelor's
in Comp Sci, and now the faculty for perfect
bird - so in downtown Lawrence!
Blue Heron
NATURAL FIBER HEEDING
Cet $800 (W/footman) $120
Town 103
Foll 127
King 190
King 190
King 190
B.East 10th Street, Lawrence, Ac. #29043-894
Den. 10am in晨. Monday thru Saturday
HMX Racing SKY WAY T.A., 20 inch, sealed Z-Rings. New Custom paint, one of a kind, must see, competition ready, ask about parts-After 6, 749-198. Ask for Todd
COMIC BOOKS. Science Fiction, Games at Kwality Coals. 1111 MASS. 843-7239
Comic Books, Playbooks, Penalties, etc. Max's
Comics. Open 11 a.m. Playtbr. Sat & Sun 10-8 Saturdays.
425 West 39th Street, New York, NY 10024
Electric Sunriza Corona typewriter Excellent
computer used. Very clean. In good
condition. 1654 42d, Suzuki. Perfect
perfect condition.
Classic Vanilla 305 motorcycle. Many new parts,
new miles carrier and helmet $265
144-8496
Appleton 1801 Mercury Layton A/C, SunRoll. Good running condition. 1900 Negotiable 744-2893
FOR SALE .. 1800 GS 4540,Szuku) Kursel perfect
Dan Call and Leave a message 841-6494
100. 200. 300. new air conditioning, and
transmission. Needers needrater overheat. Body
Excellent. Offer over $90. Stereo system.
200. 200. 200. desk, turntables, four speakers, $290
841. 574
FORSALE: SX, Component Stone Must hear to
acknowledge. $790 Call after 6.834-4449
For Sale. Two Whitney Houston tickets.
Tuesday, Sep 1, 2018. Sandstone, Call 749-7549
Far Sale, Weightmenh and weights. $75, 149-249.
Fowl Bvd Mountain like 19k, like 19m 19ch
Bvd Mountain like 20k, like 20m 19ch
Furniture bookshelves, desks, chairs Open
House of Joy's Boyd's Office and Antiques
212 New Hampshire
212 New York
Bathroom, Bedding, Foats and Pans. Decorations.
Take one of our apartment. Two Thirtieth
Stores to serve you at a time.
Great Stereo: 110 Preamp, Dynasco 120
amplifier. Torch turntable. Will split secre-
tion.
KLIPIC LASCALA SPEAKERS 92.12.406
Motocable to sport with accessories, great con-
trol and easy operation
Honda Elite Seconder, 124 cc engine, lip-up board, HONDA 600F-9800 Firm Call. CD work #7876
work #7876
Moving. Must sell reliable 1972 Mayerick, 68,000户
at $1,730. ATC, ATP, PB, AMF radio, 4 door,
Excellent condition, with warranty until Dec. 76.
Call 749-5831 or 749-0671
PLYMOUTH THIRTH SHOP for used clothing,
housewares, costume慕斯. Tuesday 9-4. Thursday 10-8.
NIGON, Large format, and other camer equipment in the week's weekend. **Quantify Flow** Plot files.
New Sansui S I 117 Tower Speakers. 160 watts $155
each. Kenwood REMOTE Stereo Amplifier. Watts $275 each. Ava top of the X280 Properly mounted tape deck. Leave message 481 7041 $390
Soda, nice. $100 and lounge chair $10. After 4:90 p.m. i-343 4274
Technics Sirer, 60 @twelve, auto turbillative,
50 @twelve, auto turbillative, 82 @nought,
$Engo伍night, 74 @harmonics, 82 @636
White three drawer dresser with gold antique finish. Price negotiable 849-496.
WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOWS: NEW INFO. SEARCHES to use them in: 1) exam study guide; 2) For class presentation; 3) exam preparation. *New Analysis of Western Civilization* available now at Town Crier, The Jayhawk Bookstore, and Oread Bookstore.
Will buy one or two (400 or 200 model) Boston Acoustic Speakers. Leave message 841 761 64
Yard Sale. Furniture. antiques, table, fabrics. Bookstore. foreign books, records, stores. kitchen stuff.
FOR SALE HP-4CV calculator with math pre-
calc 97815072698
AUTO SALES
foreign, books, records, stereo, kitchen stuff
1205 New York, 8 a.m. - ip.m., Saturday
1968 Volvo wagon FM-cassette, new Michelin,
no rust, good motq 301, 811-6688.
New interim, very little rent, solid engine, lots of
" $75, negotiable. Call Arm at 864 1230
condition $460 | 1324921\
1933 Dodge Dart 4 door good condition One
seat available.
19 WU VSUP BEETLE. New Tires, brakes,
30 000 m on rebuilt engine. One owner all
receipts, well-maintained and $1Gs up
Oread without fail every winter $1,000
1975 BMW 320i. Blue with Perfect Tan Interior.
Fine Car. B4 8,000. Call 749-7517.
1927 Monte Carlo, Brown with one eye. Kane
Wilson, 58, died in Palm Beach, FL on
1973. Prato, C. 63,000 miles, good condition, clean in
the house.
1900 Mopeds Honda with haskets. Zip around car-
paps, save gas. Ask $290.00 841-6011
1. 4-pound Champ 4 cylinders 4 speed.
2. 30 mpg, very clean after 5kmp.
3. 60 mpg.
1909 SAAR 900 Sunrurst, 4 door Hatchback, FWD,
Michelin, No Fault. Nust 823-3420
1985 Subaru hatchback w/ AC, 15,000 highway
里程 $860,750,728 near $A, 1985 highway
miles. $4959 749-5741 after 6 p.m.
65 WK VW runs, good良, regood. $499 842-3378
83 Rabbit GTI loaded with after-market access. Call 811-497-0000 or Dr. 2.5-p.m. for information.
Y8 Yamaha Rd 400 Excellent shape and deep
air transportation. Please call 5 am at
pm or 6am to reserve a seat.
Jay Care needs afternoon assistant 3-5. Ex.
Ellen with children and references please
24 Volt tote-toe: Automatic air MFM/Twist rack
24 Volt tote-toe: Automatic air MFM/Twist rack
24 Volt tote-toe: LTD automatic air new starter, lifted up, for
automatic air new starter
183 Rabbit GTI, loaded with after market accessories. Call 610-7448 thursday or Fr. 2.5 p.m. for delivery.
Lost: Keychain, gold and green. If found, please call 841-1092. Reward Offered.
Drivers wanted, must be 18 & over. Must have own car or insurance $250-hr. commission. Apply in person or call. Checkers Pizza. 2214 Yale. 411-8016
also hold a location in the building
and notify the newfound bag, box of Bounce,
and a Black address and note call. PQ# 9422 and ask
for assistance.
Found Women's size 11, Jellies on lawn outside Watson Library 749-3265
LOST/FOUND
The honest person WHO FOUND $290.00 CASH near Nissanmil and University Dr. on Thursday evening, 8:32, 81 Care. Use Gau Rupp. 749.126, 1655 University Dr. to claim the reward for your work.
If you ifest a coin purse with cash, see Heaton at the information Center, Kansas Union, to identify
Found Yellow Cat. Small 1300 block Tennessee.
Aug. 25, Call 841 8873 after 6 p.m.
Corpus Christi Catholic Church needs four nursery workers. Nursery time is limited, and there are Sunday school classes eighteen years of age and have own transportation. Early Childhood Education field preferred.
Found-Full grown black lab-no i d. Call 842-3608
2 part-time positions at Harwood Meats
Apply in person only at 1309 loss from m. 3.30
m. 3.30
HELP WANTED
16 month old active toddler needs sister/someone on Tundras and Thursdays from 12-4 p.m. Must be non-smoker with transportation. West side of town may require required. Call 843 0443 morters or after 7 m.
7,000 GOVERNMENT JOB LISTs
1,400 new Yr Wowing Call 81-630-6900
Est. Rating 8.10
EXTRA INCOME! Fantastic Home Mailaging
Dublin, Ireland on SAKS M-17, LTD. Box
Dublin 2, Ireland. Tel: +33 (0) 22
541 8699. Fax: +33 (0) 22
541 8699.
A Korean Institute of English Conversation is looking for an instructor who is a native speaker and to be based in or from Korea, an apartment and $7/hour. Need one, one year contract, qualification in English, and Bachelor's degree to Yeon Chu, 26-12 Stouffler Place, Lawrence, Kansas 6044. Kameh 642-8391 at bachlear.org
Graduate Assistant, knowledge of computer operations, communication skills and experience with minority groups preferred. Minority Affairs, 324 Strong Hall, Close Date Sep. 5.
Help Wanted. Part-time day and evening delivery drivers. Must own car and proof of insurance. Apply in person only at Border Bandito, 1528 W. 23rd. Help Wanted. Part-time sales representative. Must be able to work 1 p.m. daily. Apply in person only at 1528 W. 23rd. Ask for John.
Jobs, part time. Kitchen worker, 8 a.m. 2 p.m.
M-F: Mackhur bur worker, 11 a.m. 2 p.m. M-F:
Cashier, 2 p.m. 4-15 p.m. M-F plus some Satur-
days. Cleaner, 2 p.m. 6-10 p.m. Some saturday,
Kitchen cleaner, 2 p.m. 7-9 p.m. or 2 p.m. 5 pm.
M-F: M Pay rate $4.5 per hour. Apply
to KU, Kansas Union Service Office. Level.
E.OE
Data-entry position, half time requires familiarity with computer entry, proven reliability and consistency. Must be current enrolled. Use IBM XT8050 or IBM PC9410. Write written data. Prefer formal grammar training. Send letter of application, including hours worked, salary, contact information. AA3131 Brister塔, Lawrence, K6044
Companion Cook To assist disabled KU staff member weekday afternoons 10-15 hours a day, $4.5 per hour Cooking experience and reliable transportation required, KU students preferred
MALE MODEL WANTED. MALE model wanted to model swimwear and casualwear. Must be able to size 28-32 swimsuits $7.00 per hour (4-in-1 swimwear or 5-in-1 GATHERER) 275, Tappe K, K6601
Local moving company needs drivers, packers & loaders. Experience preferred $250 and up.
Hiring both full and part-time pizza delivery drivers. Must be 18 or older with own car and insurance. Apply in person at Pizza Shuttle in the Southern Hills Mall 1601 W. 23rd.
Mature, gentle nonsmoker need for all day careday of one toddler and housekeeping from Sept. 1st may, exe! Christmas holidays. Reply RD Dj Stuffer Flint
Bucky's Drive In is now taking applications for sart-time employment. Noon hour and weekend bluff openings. Apply between 10 and 5 at Bucky's drive In, 2120 W. 9th.
Ambitions you call on campus organizations with customized imprinted party favors. Contact us at ambitions@campus.edu
Newsletter Editor. Academic Computing Services. Application Institute. September 10, 1986 at 10:48 a.m.
Mailback to: Application Institute, Salary $400-$600 monthly. Dates include all those associated with publishing a monthly newsletter.
Day Care needs to cook prepare simple meals for 14 pre-scholers M-F 11:11. Call 843-4147
2) fall 1986 enrollment at the University of Kansas.
3) ability to write clear English proof, course
deadlines. Desired qualifications: 1) an undergraduate degree; 2) photographs, booklets, or other materials.
writing (in a newsletter context, if possible) to Gail Brewer, Manager Systems Testing, University of Kansas, Computer Center, Lawrence,KS 64055. EO/A Employer
Now hiring Mass St. Deli food service employees.
Have must 1 yr experience and daytime availability.
Started pay $3.75 per hr plus approximately $25 per hour.
Apply at www.deliverystores.com or Smokin' Street.
Now hire, Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse Table service employees. Must have June 1st or Thursday, June 3rd or Monday, June 4th. Base pay $2.00 per hour plus approximately $7.10 per hour tips. Apply at 291 Massachusetts, above 6th Avenue.
Office Assistant, experience in general office work. Affirmacy, 324 Sturgeon Close. Cox, 165-759-3000.
PERSONAL CARE ASSISTANT NEEDS MEDICATED
12 or 12 weeks; 9-10 weeks. Weekends also No.
Medication.
Part time housecleaners wanted. You enjoy cleaning and are meticulous. Buckingham Palace is interested in your talents. Call 842-6284. Must be available over breaks.
Part-time positions available for breakfast and dinner shifts on weekdays and weekends at Naisht Hall Food Service. If interested, fill out an application at the front desk of Naisht Hall. Be sure to contact Rachel Moyer (Moyer JR) at KidsPlace with her aides. Study and/or participate with 6 or younger children. $3.50 per hour At Children's Learning Center, 331 Maine, Lawrence, KS
SOCER REFIEERS The Kaw Valley Soccer Association is looking for officials for their four teams. Call 917-345-0800 or visit eight saturdays. Need some extra exercise? Short of eads? Contact Roger Lee 842 8146 or Barely
STUDENT ASSISTANT. Operation of blueprint machine, measuring campus facilities, updating of small scale drawings and filing of drawings and images in the library. Experience this is a work study funded position and requires pre-qualifications under the work study program. Deadline: 12/26. Call for interview
Student Assistant, Work Study, one person 15 hrs. or two persons 8 hrs., assist office personnel with typing, publicity mail-outs, assist with receptionist duties, answer letters, prepare daily mail. Provide training have excellent aptitude and organizational skills. Apply Office of Study Abroad. 203 Lippincott.
Student hourly position, 15-20 hours per week
Run errands, campus map, photo copying, a
documentation folder. Requires reliable transportation available daily, good com-
munication skills and ability to make decision.
MA131 Bristol Terrace. (Meadowbrook Apartments)
10:4 weekdays. Application deadline Aug.
The Audio Visual Center is hiring Audio-Visual Assistants on Work Study and regular hourly. Experience preferred, but not required. Apply in person at a Lippmann exit. Good Opportunity.
The Institute for Public Policy and Business Research has telephone interviewer openings for the months of September and October. Applicants must have a Bachelor's degree in computer science and capable of precise, accurate work. A pleasant and clear voice is essential. All interviews are confidential and require experience in interviewing or working with the general public is desired. Help for morning, afternoon and evening shifts is now needed. Interested applicants should contact us.
The University of Kansas Budget Office has a position opening for a continuous half-time student assistant. The person in the position will work with the university's budgets and other financial reports, do ward processing, tying spreadsheet preparation, and perforation of budget reports. You must be senior or graduate student status and good written and oral communication skills. $400 to $480 per week. Start date is September 5, 1986. Start date is flexible. For information call Jane Hinn, budget office 843-316. Application form: 210 Strong Hall. Equal opportunity Employer
WE HAVE THE IDEAL JOB FOR THE STU-
RECORDS. You are required to attend the
are available to work Monday, Wednesday,
Friday or Tuesday/Thursday, 9-2 or 11-RUNA
ZONE. 200 WAE needs you. Apply to
manage IT.
Wanted Sitter for cat I will pay bills, food, extra $6 per month, cat declawed, all kitten, all toys. Mail to: PetSitter.com
Wanted maintenance person. Duties include:
- Prepare meals for restaurant staff.
- Mist hot dishes.
* 7 a.m.-11 a.m. Mon-Pri and 2 p.m. 4 p.m.
- Wear business. Applies at f18 Mass. above Buffalo
Warm, caring people who like children ages 3-5 are needed at Head Start as volunteers for a minimum of 2 hours per day, 1 day per week. Better information is available through Friday. For more information call 842-1251.
Wanted full and part time driver delivery drivers. Hourly wage plus commission, must have own transportation. Apply in person Pizza Shoppie Kasidell. Wasted shopping center
DRIVERS WANTED. Dominion's Pizza is now offering driver deliveries. Earn approximately $6hr. Must be 18, have own car and insurance. Apply in person at 1445 W. 32rd Street or RISE Iowa 804.
Work-study position. Office Assistant in Photography Dept. General office skills required $3.40 an hour, 10.15 hours per week EO/AW employer. Applies to Bob Loomas Kunr, University of Alabama.
Dow Jones and the Industrials is searching for a new Lead guitarist. Must be well versed in all styles of music with particular emphasis on REM, Productors, Batteries, Police, etc. Aimity is more than experience. First choice is So Do Walt. Interested? Contact Eat at 426-5982 after 5.
Helip Smiling套件 and energetic personalities needed to work 11:30 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. shifts Monday through Sunday. Some weekend work required. Apply 2 p.m. p. daily at Wendy's. $32
half time temporary position to assist with ongoing research involving persons with disabilities. Participate in daily activities currently enrolled, able to work flexible hours, and have available transportation. Prefer enrolment. Apply online at AAI31 Brittle Terrace Midwife Brooklyn Apk on www.midwifebrooklyn.com #E9-28. August 29 @ E9/AA
MAKE HUNDREDS WEEKLY MAILING CULARS! FULL/PART TIMELY, RUSH SELF ADDRESSED STAMPED ENVELOPE A. N. I. 1208
CULARS SUITE 286 DEPOT Q, STDID CITY,
A. P. 7498
PART-Time, OFFICE. Job 15-30 hours a week usually late morning and afternoon. Must be available year round. Duties will include typing data entry on microcomputer and receptionist duties. This is a non-smoking office. Send resume to Essa Investment Inc., 1814 W. 2nd, Lawrence,
McDONALD'S IS HIRING Quick, clean, quality individuals to work daytime hours, 10 to 30 hours a week. Previous McDonald's employees encouraged to apply. We provide uniforms, half-prepared meals, and flexible scheduling. 300 West Street, North St. No phone please. COME/EA
Registered Nurse Unique opportunity to use your assessment skills to see homebound patients. On call one evening per week and every fifth weekend. For more information call Douglas
PERSONAL
If you are a SWF, 25,35 or a little bit adventurer, a little bit old fashioned, a little bit domestic, and more than a little bit sincerely, then you have a choice. You can come from you! Looking for those who don't care to waste their precious free moments amlessly wandering the bars when they would rather be sitting at home with their companionship and meaningful conversation. Interested? Then make up your mind to send a no-risk, no obligation letter telling me about yourself and your friends. KsA, 60025. All serious answered questions.
BUS: PERSONAL
Add class comfort & privacy to your car with timed breaks. Add phone call 841 787. Student information through SES app.
CHIMSUW SUN is looking for young women looking to develop a modeling portfolio. Call 841-898-3600 or visit chimsuw.sun.edu. Experience School. Experienced program, one week Beginner program, two week Driver's license program.
Rent.19' Color Y T $29.80 a month Curtis Matsu
147 W 21f W 424/72571 Min. Sat 9/30
Immigrant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, vina L1.1 and of course, time card.
CAMP-KITSCH TRASH RETRO LOUNGE 1023
Massachusetts, Tuesday 15:30, Sat 1:15, Tue 10:30
Jump back from Los Angeles
NEW Silver Accessories
Belts, Anklets, Earrings
10 Jackets and Dresses
Barb's Vintage Rose
THE FAR SIDE
Modeling, theatrical and portfolio styles or print, high-quality, low-prices. Swell
LAWRENCE AEROFILMS M-W F 5:30 Lawrence School of Balllet (8th and Vermont) Other days and times available 641.628 Causee Thompson Low Mileage Mattresses and Box Springs Modeling, theatrical and art portfolios Modeling, theatrical and art portfolios or prints, High quality, low prices. Swells
Board Sailors!
THIS IS NOT A SAILING GAME
B.I.G. Certified School
★All harnesses now on sale★
10% OFF!
BLOOM COUNTY
Learn beach starts,
water starts, jibing,
freestyle and
use of harness.
Sunflower's Intermediate Windsurfing lessons start soon...
SCIENCE FICTION, *Gamebook*, Simulation &
MASSAGE, *Game*; Kwality Comics, 1131
MASSAGE
SUNFLOWER
BCA4 MASSACHUSETTS
DOWNON LAWRENCE
*Starting Stress & Strain*? If you haven't tried massage, you have! REALLY relaxed. Student rates licensed by appt. Call Bruce or Dayla at 841-9662. Lawrence Education Therapy
The sun is out and the sunlamps are in at the
722 Mass 843 (641) Mon 11:30-3
10pm Thurs.
SAY IT ON A SHIRT Custom silk-screen print
prints apparel and caps and SHIRTPAINT
740-1011 740-1012
Thousands of & R albums - 92 or less. Also use
collectors items, Sat & Sun only, 10 a.m. to 5 a.m.
Quintailts 811 New Hampshire Buy, Sell,
Or trade all music styles
Leaving Town?
Airline Counter Prices!
We Sell Airline Tickets at or Price
NO SERVICE CHARGE!
ON-CAMPUS LOCATION!
Maupintour travel service 749-0700
KU Union 831 Massachusetts
Quality furniture does not have to be expensive. Mattresses from $138 student dues from $99. Chair from $250, chair from $199, bookcases from $39, lamps from $199 and much, much more. Furniture from $199 and much, much more.
By GARY LARSON
© 1984 Illustrated by Eric Frydman
B-23
"For the love of — ... Sethinh's been messin' with these chickens!"
OLD
I'M FEELING
OLD OLD OLD
OLD OLD OLD
PORTNTOY.
I GAVE YOU
A PERSONAL
PRESENT.
TRYIN' TO CHEEK ME
UP, EH?
WELL, I THought
YOU'D LIKE
THIS.
RIP! RIP! RIP! RIP!
TEAR
RIP!
RIP!
RIP!
UH
WELL IT JUST BETTER NOT MAKE ME FEEL OLD!
1
"ENGELBERT
HUMMER-PINCK'S
ALL-TIME SMASH
HITS TO HUM"
LEMME TRADGE
IT FOR
"NOTLEY
CRUE..."
1
University Daily Kansan / Friday, August 29, 1986
11
HOME
- Licensed coop pre-school
* Class openings T,TH A.M.
& M.W.F.P.M.
* Certified teachers
* Parent participation
Lawrence Community
842-0064 645 Alabama
New York Times
Daily (Mon.-Fri.)
on Campus Delivery
Sept. 1-Dec.19
Send only
$28.16
to: N.Y. Times
P.O. Box 1721
Lawrence, KS 66044
for Sunday Service
or more info call
841-5073
Rate Adjusted for
later orders.
SERVICES OFFERED
- A wide range of color print films; save
109, 128, 158,
September and December PICTURE WIDTHS.
• Available from:
Tutoring Better grades through better com
prenunciation Help get help improving your study skills
bought cameras and photographic equipment bought sold, and traded THE PICTURE BANK
MATH TUTOR since 1926, M.A., 40 minutes,84-
843-902-93
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in I. morgue, MA726.
GRANADA
DOWNTOWN
TEL/FAX 555-2748
Sean Penn Madonna
SHANGHAI SURPRISE
VARSITY DOWNTOWN WEST 2004
TEXAS
CHAINSAW
MASSACRE
PART 2
ARMED AND DANGEROUS
Johnson
Court
Sat, Sun, Mon, Tue, Wed,
Fri, Sat
801-425-3915
CINEMA 1
3157 AND IOWA
TELEPHONE 842-6400
conservative counseling using archetypal images,
designation, dream analysis. West Wind,
New York.
Black and White film processing, contact sheets,
and enlargements. Push and Pull processing also available THE PICTURE WORKS 183 and Haskell. 841-0470
A L I N E S
There Are Some Places
In The Universe
CLM Tailoring 1007 Alterations and Customized Clothing 607 Massachusetts, Rear Entrance
MATH TCUOR Rates Negotiable Call 749-1051 for help
CINEMA 2
WEST FIELD IOWA
TELFONE 614-6400
do step
international Housecleaning, experienced,
references, reasonable rates. Call 841-3920
NOTHING
IN COMMON
1952
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL get your driver's license in two weeks without patrol testing, upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841.236
TYPING
Same day Ekstrachores/E/6.4 file processing
PCI-IDE Image Processing and Haskell 803-879
PICI-IDE WORKS with Haskell 803-879
TUTORING SERVICES. Tutoring and counseling services for KU undergraduate. Emphasis upon college-level tutoring. Application required. Supportive Educational Services. Supportive Educational Services Building.
1,100 pages. No job too small or too large.
Affordable and affordable type. Judy, 842 9758 or
1-800-232-3860.
1 plan, Typing. Call Terry. 842-7544 or 843-2671
5:00 - 10:30 p.m. Resumes, books, thesis, law
review papers, letters, term papers. Sharp ZX 365
Memory Electronic Typewriter
24-Hour Typing, 12th semester in Lawrence
Resumes, dissertations, papers. Check to campus
website for latest job postings.
*a professional typing. Term papers. Thesis.
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DISSERTATIONS . THESES . LAW PAPERS/
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available on student paper units (up to 30
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before 9 m. Please
Theses, resumes, and papers. WRITING
DLFINE LIN, 811,349
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WANTED
o M, law student, seeks studious M or F roommate for large two bedroom apartment in the city. Job requires financial responsibility, 1/2 of month-to-month rent and utilities. Availances Sept. 1st. Contact p.o. B308 1169.
DISSTASSED WITH YOUR PRESENT HOUSING? You could be living at 1653 University Dr, just 2 blocks off campus. Call Guy or Jim at 748-1236.
Female Christian roommate share nice 2 bedroom apartment. Prefer grad or mature
daily *5:00 7:10 9:20 Sat.. Sun.. Mon..*2:30
Female Roommate needs: 128 to attractive 2 bedroom apartment $43.90 plus 1/2 utilities Call
I WANT AN ALL-SPORTS TICKET NOW. Call
840-7900 for Albert.
Male roommate needed to share a 3 bedroom apartment. $161/month. Call Bob or Steve
Male roommate wanted share condo. Over room & furniture. W/D, B., completely furnished. 845 9071.
I would like to buy an All-Sports Ticket. Kristen
864-6439
Non smoking, responsible senior or graduate student to share two bedroom furnished house. Walk to campus; $100/month plus 1/2 utilities. Belgrade, Belgrade Laptop Lab, car pool, pool area, outdoor washers, Weardash airport of Torkea at 7 a.m and KU camps at 5 p.m. Monday thru Friday. Call Ted Frederickson at (866) 254-3222.
Male Boostmate to share half of费用的 for 2 HR. Age 2 lbs from campus: $112.90 rent includes (luxury) plus phone, furniture, etc. Call 854.737.619 n.m. or住 by 1423 Ohui, B3.
Roommate to share 1 bedroom apt in house 424
Apartment. own room $800 plus 1-6 usites
Included: Kitchen, laundry room, balcony, garden
WANTED All Sports Season Ticket Call Don.
843.5925
WANTED Hommatem $142.50 Short Walk to Cappuccino, 341-8473, after 6 p.m.
Wanted: Non-smoking roommate to share
ig, furnished 2 IDbm. Apt 2 Rkts from campus.
Off-street parking $159.50 plus 1/2 low heat
(80°F).
---
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Young's Auto & Mower Repair
• Import • Domestic Transmission, carburetor & brake repair
sporting goods inc.
843-4191 713 Massachusetts
Lawrence, Kansas 60644
ST
STADIUM RARBER SHOP
1209 E. 23rd 749-2401
AND
Quality Haircuts at Reasonable Prices
appt. necessary. Closed on Mon.
--francis
Every Thursday
Hamburger 50¢
---
34 oz. $1
After 10 p.m.
Take TIME OUT
ALL HAIRCUTS $6
"Sporty things for sporty people since 1947"
EASTPAK leader of the packs*
WITH
Monday—Saturday 9—5:30
Thursday 'till 8:30
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Mon.- Sat. 9:30-5:30
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THE PICTURE WORKS Sept. 2,3,4
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READING FOR COMPREHENSION AND SPEED
Tuesdays, September 2, 9, and 16
7:30 to 9:30 p.m.
6th & Kasold
Westridge Mall
13th & Haskell
Register and pay $15 materials fee
at the Student Assistance Center,
121 Stupe Hall
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Downtown Lawrence
IBM* is a registered trademark of International Business Machines
COMPUTER OUTLET
- Less than 10 lbs.
KING SIZE PIZZA
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DINE-IN • CARRYOUT • DRIVE-THRU
PIZZA Shoppe pub
601 KASOLD
PIZZA Shoppe and pull
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601 KASOLD
WESTRIDGE CENTER
842-0600
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watchers menu
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12
Friday, August 29, 1986 / University Daily Kansan
7
Dan Ruettimann/KANSAN
Hands-on training
Mike Fisher, KU cornerback, puts defensive pressure on Sal Lewis, second string wide receiver. The football team practiced for two hours in shorts and pads yesterday behind Anschutz Sports Pavilion. Head coach Bob Valesente said the Jayhawks needed to work on their execution.
Vincent Askew, a starting forward for last year's Memphis State basketball team, who said this summer that he was transferring to Kansas, has returned to Memphis State, said MSU Sports Information Director Mike Finn.
Sports Briefs Askew changes mind again, heads back to Memphis State
Finn said yesterday that Askew had enrolled at Memphis State and would be eligible to play this season for the Tigers.
Askew, a junior, would have had to sit out a season and would not have been eligible to play for the Jayhawks until the 1987-88 season.
Askew, who left Lawrence without notifying the Athletic Department, was unavailable for comment.
Advisers watch team practice
Kansas football head coach Bob Valesente continued his quest to unite athletics and academics yesterday.
his quest to unite athletics and academies yesterday. At Valesente's request, faculty advisers watched part of the Jayhawks practice and afterwards we met at a private gathering of the advisers met with Valesente and other athletic officials to review National Collegiate Athletic Association's academic guidelines.
"We're meeting with the advisers to update them on NCAA changes and regulations," Valesente said yesterday, "so we can continue the academic side of our program."
On the athletic side, Valesente put the Jayhawks through a two-hour practice in shorts and pads.
"We needed to lighten up in terms of equipment and work on our execution," Valesente said. "It really paid off today."
the injury situation remained the same. Junior tackle
Jim Davis with a pinched nerve; senior fullback David Cohn, bruised shoulder; junior defensive end Jon Stewart, back spasms; and junior wide receiver Murphy Ray, bruised shoulder, did not practice.
Oklahoma picked to win title
KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Defending national champion Oklahoma is a near-unanimous choice to repeat as Big Eight Conference football champions, according to a poll of sportswriters and sportscasters.
The Big Eight said the Oklahoma Sooners were picked by 25 of the 27 reporters on the conference's Skywriters Tour that ended Wednesday. The two remaining ballots were cast for Nebraska, who was picked to finish second in the conference.
Oklahoma finished with 214 total points in the poll, followed by Nebraska with 188, Colorado 155, Oklahoma State 138, Iowa State 100, Kansas 75, Missouri 69 and Kansas State 30.
The reporters projected Oklahoma quarterback Jamelle Holloway as the Big Eight Offensive Player of the Year and Oklahoma linebacker Brian Bosworth as the Defensive Player of the Year. Holloway edged out Nebraska running back Thurman Thomas of Oklahoma State, 13-12, in the vote, while Bosworth was a unanimous pick.
Freshman running back Terry Rodgers of Nebraska and freshman linebacker Sim Drain III of Oklahoma State were projected as the Big Eight newcomers of the year.
Houston police lead Mets, 4-0
From staff and wire reports
United Press International
HOUSTON — A city police officer is boasting of brisk sales of T-shirts that commemorate the arrests of four New Yorkers Mets players outside a Houston nightclub last month.
to a July 20 incident outside Cooter's nightclub that resulted in the arrests of second baseman Tim Tuefel and pitchers Ron Darling, Bob Ojeda and Rick Aujulera.
Officer Al Skoczen said Wednesday that more than 400 of the shirts which say, "Houston Police 4, New York Mets 0," were sold within the first two days they were offered for sale earlier this week at two area stores. Skoczen designed the shirts.
But attorney Dick DeGuerin, who represents the four Mets players, said the 4-0 print on the shirts was only the first-inning score.
Tuefel and Darling are charged with aggravated assault of a police officer, a third-degree felony, for reportedly fighting with two off-duty Houston police officers who were working as security guards at the club. The incident started when one
The slogan on the $9 gray shirts with blue and white lettering refers
of the officers told Tueefl he could not take his beer outside the nightclub
The two players are scheduled to be arraigned today.
Ojeda and Aguilera were arrested on misdemeanor charges of hindering the arrest of Tuefel. Their trials are scheduled for November, DeGuerin said.
Skooster said he and partner Joel De Plantis would donate 10 percent of the shirt sales to the Leukemia Society of America.
Lendl, Navratilova advance in tourney
United Press International
Still a teen-ager, but with a history of injuries, Krickstein pulled out a 4-6, 4-6, 6-3, 6-4, 7-6 victory over Paul Annacone, the man who upset John McEnroe in the first round. Krickstein won the tie-break, 7-4, sweeping the final four points.
NEW YORK — Aaron Krickstein, who thrives on five-set matches in the U.S. Open, produced another gem yesterday to advance to the third round along with top seeds Ivan Lendl and Martina Navratilova.
While Krickstein struggled for 3 hours and 9 minutes on a cold, windy afternoon, Lendl and Navratilva followed an easier path to victory.
Lendl, the defending men's champion, captured 10 consecutive games in defeating Robert Seguso, 6-3, 6-1, 6-2, in a night match. Navratilova required 61 minutes to win her second-round contest from Betsy Nagelsen, 6-2, 7-5.
Oddly, Seguso's downfall started immediately after his best effort of the night when he broke Lendl to open the second set in a game that went to deuce five times. At that point, Lendl went on his 10-game streak, carrying him to 4-0 in the third set.
"It was extremely difficult in the first set." Lendl said. "Robert played very well. Then I started returning a little better and I got him off his timing."
Nagelsen managed to break Navratilova's serve in the fourth game of the second set and put up a worthy struggle before the top seed gained the decisive break from deuce in the 11th game.
Krickstein double faulted and fell behind 4-3 in the tie-break, with Annacone getting the next two serves. Krickstein, though, produced a pair of winners to take the lead
Third seed Steffi Graf continued along an easy route, sweeping the final 11 games to rout Andrea Temesvari, 6-1, 6-0 in 39 minutes.
Fifth seed Yannick Noah, No. 8 Henri Leconte, and No. 15 Brad Gilbert gained the third round. Leconte crushing Horacio de la Pena, 6-1, 6-2, 6-0. Noah defeating Marcelo Ibarrama, 6-4, 6-1, 6-2, and Gilbert beating Nduka Odizor, 5-7, 6-2, 6-4, 6-2.
Second-round winners among the women included No. 5 Pam Shriver, No. 8 Bonnie Gadusek, No. 13 Stephanie Rehe and No. 15 Kathy Jordan.
WITHOUT THE RIGHT GLASSES YOU MAY BE MISSING MORE THAN YOU THINK
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COMPUTER OUTLET
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804 New Hampshire
Downtown Lawrence
B is an integratedATFORM of Intersentail Biomedical Machine
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YOU BUY—WE FLY
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DELIVERS
ORDER A LARGE PIZZA PAY FOR A MEDIUM
With this coupon, order any LARGE pizza and pay the price of an identical medium pizza.
Eat-in, carry-out, and delivery
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MILLIAN
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Natural fiber fashions with rugged good looks, functional design and quality construction. Woolrich for Men and Women. Shirts - Sweaters and more.
the New Litwin's
Now Lawrence has a store of its own
830 Mass • 843-6155
1
1
1
University Daily Kansan / Friday. August 29, 1986
11
花屋
- Licensed coop pre-school
* Class openings T, TH A.M.
& M, W. F, P. M.
* Certified teachers
* Parent participation
Lawrence Community Nursery
842-0064 645 Alabama
Lawrence Community
New York Times
Daily (Mon-Fri) on Campus Delivery Sept. 1-Dec.19 Send only $28.16
to: N.Y. Times
P.O. Box 1721
Lawrence, KS 66044
for Sunday Service
or more info call
841-5073
Rate Adjusted for
later orders
SERVICES OFFERED
$90 - $180 Any length printer print film arc
$180 - $250 Sepia/color 36 x 48
Satellite/color 36 x 48 WOLK
Satellite/color 36 x 48 WOLK & KERAMIC
& KERAMIC
Tutoring Better grades through better com-
puting Improving your improvement skills
hk$ hr Call 842-809-1
Used cameras and photographic equipment
PICTURE WORKS 19th and Hankel, 43-9705
MISSING CARDS
MATH TUTOR since 1967, M.A., 40 minutes$8,
843-9623
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence, B41-3716
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA
DOWNTOWN
TELEPHONE 843-5780
SHANGHAI SURPRISE
Starring
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Madonna
Dall' 's 15 7:30 8:30 Sat.
VARSITY DOWNTOWN TEL: 516-849-1044
AMENED AND DANGEROUS
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Sat. Sun. Mon. 13:00
Daily 5:00-11:55
TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE
2
Daily 9:15
CINEMA 1
2187 AND IOWA
TELEPHONE: 842-5000
ARMED
AND
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Black and White film processing, contact sheets,
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SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL get New
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TYPING
13,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate or affordable typing, Judy. 824,7945 or
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1 plus Typing, Cary Terry 842-7454 or 843-0671
5:30 to 10 p.m. Resumes, books, thesis,
revises papers, letters, term papers. Sharp ZX 955
Memory Electronic Typewriter
24-Hour Typing, 12th semester in Lawrence
Resumes,档案, paper to go to campus
Typing on computer, internet
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A3 professional typing. Term papers, Thesis.
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Theses, resumes, and papers: WRITING LIFELINE. 841-3409
DISSERTATIONS / TIESSES / HAWY PAPERS/
Typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE-DAY Service available on shorter student papers up to 30 ppm.
Mommy's Mummy's 843-3787
*or 9 p.m. on please.*
EXPERIENCED TYPINT Term papers, theses
IBM Correction Subscript. I will correct spelling
of words in my papers.
HAKENSON'S TYPING. IBM word processing
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition,
editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses,
disserations, papers, letters, applications.
resumes Have M.S. Degree 841-6254
WANTED
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Term papers, theses, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter quality
writing, spelling corrected. 842-724-274
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing, manuscript resumes, letters, letterheads
GWM, law student, seeks studious M or from
renewed graduate degree in business or
south of campus. Must be quiet and financially
responsible: 1/2 of month-to-month rent and
utilities. Available at St. John's t. contact P.包3188
DISSATISFATED WITH YOUR PRESENT HOUSING? You could be living at 655 University Dr. just 2 shocks off campus. Call Guy or Jim at 749 1236.
Female Christian roommate share nice 2 bedroom apartment. Prefer grad or mature
Female Roommate needs: to share attractive 2 bedroom apartment #415 $30 plus 17/8 units. Call
I WANT ALL SPORTS TICKET NOW, Call 847-7690 for Albert.
I would like to buy an All-Sports Ticket, Kristen
1944-623
Male roommate needed to share a 3 bedroom apartment. $163/month. Call Bell or Steve
Roommate welcome share condo (over room & bath. Pair, Air W, D) Bus, completely furnished.
Non-smoking, responsible senior or graduate student to share two bedroom furnished house. Walk upstairs from the kitchen to a Reliable Topeka Lawrence Topeka car pool needs new members. We depart Washburn area of Topeka at 7 a.m. and KU campus at 5 p.m. On Friday, we call Ted Frederickson at 643-875 during day
Roommate to share 3 bedroom apt in house 824
Arkansas, room: $100 per room + 1/6优惠
Roommate to share 3 bedroom apt in house 824
Arkansas, room: $100 per room + 1/6优惠
Male Roommate to share half of expenses for 2 BR Ap1 2 bibs from campus: $12.50 rent (includes utilities) plus phone furniture, etc. Call 842 5500 p.12 p.m. or by住到 8123 OH3, B3
WANTED All Sports Season Ticket. Call Don.
843-9625
WANTED Roommate $142.30 Short Walk to Campus, 641-8873 after 6 p.m.
Wanted: Non smoking roommate to share
19. furnished 2 Bdfrm. Apt. 20kms. from campus
8. Parking for bus. 25 min. from campus.
FREE
---
plant with this coupon when you
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Young's
Auto & Mower Repair
* Import
* Domestic
Transmission, carburier
& brake repair
* Tune-up
//
AND
BEFORE YOU BUY,
Check the KANSAN.
Every Thursday
Hamburger 50¢
K. U.'s Biggest Beer
WITH
Our advertisers might save you money.
STADIUM BARBER SHOP
francis
After 10 p.m.
--leader of the packs $ ^{\mathrm{TM}} $
K. U.'s Best Burger
Quality Haircuts at Reasonable Prices
Do not necessary - Closed on Men's
1209 E. 23rd 749-2401
ALL HAIRCUTS $6
---
GUESS?
francis
sporting goods, inc.
843-191-733 Massachusetts
Lawrence, Kansas 60044
Monday----Saturday 9-5.30
Thursday 'till 8.30
Mon.- Sat. 9:30-5:30
Thurs. 'til 8:30
Sun. 12:30-5:00
"Sporty things for sporty people
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Book bags,
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JEWELERS, IN
809 Massachusetts
99¢
GRAND OPENING SPECIAL
(Six hours of instruction.)
Develop & print any length roll of color print film. No Limit.
Size 110, 126, 135(35mm), disc
THE PICTURE WORKS *New Location*
Sept. 2, 3, 4
6th & Kasold
Westridge Mall
13th & Haskell
READING FOR COMPREHENSION AND SPEED
Tuesdays, September 2, 9, and 16 7:30 to 9:30 p.m.
Register and pay $15 materials fee
on September 2 by 5 p.m.
at the Student Assistance Center,
STRONG HILLS
A 446-1024
SUNDAY
SUNDAY
1.75 Super Schooner
1.00 cover
LAP IT UP!
THE WESTERN STATE PARK HERITAGE SERVICE
PROGRAMMING CONVERTER TO A
COMPUTER
TOSHIBA
T1100 Plus
the Sanctuary 17th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 843-0540
- Full IBM $ ^{TM} $ Compatible
- 2—720K Diskette Drives
- 640K RAM, RGB Plug
Small is Practical. Imagine a fully IBM-compatible under 10 lbs.—including case. That’s the new Toshiba T1100 Plus. Reviews put it at the top of the laptops. Its keyboard is useable. Its screen is readable. Its speed is impressive. Its battery charge is durable (up to 8 hours). And best of all, it’s affordable, at . . .
- Speeds of 4.77 or 7.16 MHz
- RS 232 & Parallel Ports
* Less than 10 lbs.
843-7584
804 New Hampshire
Downtown Lawrence
COMPUTER OUTLET
IBM™ is a registered trademark of International Business Machines
KING SIZE PIZZA
Single topping
32 oz. Pepsi—
Extra toppings only 95¢
$795
plus tax
Meal for 4-
KING SIZE PIZZA
Single topping. 4
Dinner salads and
Pitcher of Pepsi
$1250 plus tax
601 KASOLD
PIZZA Shoppe
KING SIZE PIZZA
842-0600
OPEN TIL M. DAILY!
PIZZA Shoppe and pub
PEPSI
601 KASOLD
WESTRIDGE CENTER
- 13 Varieties of Submarine Sandwiches
• Grilled Philadelphia Steak Sandwiches
1618 W. 23rd • Lawrence
DINE-IN • CARRYOUT • DRIVE-THRU
Sub&Stuff Sandwich Shop
DELIVERED! DINE-IN SPECIAL
PIZZA
THE BEST KEPT SECRET
IN LAWRENCE
Exquisite Chinese
CATHAY
- a delicious weight watchers menu
- Exquisite Chinese
- a vegetarian menu
service
842-4976
Hours:
Lunch 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
Dinner 4:30 p.m to 10 p.m. (Sun, ti 9 p.m.)
Sebastian Products Now Available at Joda & Friends
PETER BROWN
Shpritz your hair into shape
SAVE 20%
Two great finishing sprays to keep your hair in shape. Shpritz and Shpritz Forte (for extra power). Never sticky or tacky, both let you comb through.
this coupon.
745 New Hampshire exp. sept. 15
SAVE
1
841-0337
1