Worlds of sun
sunny day
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details, page 2
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Wednesday
April 1, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 123
(USPS 650-640)
By CHRISTOPHER HINES
Staff writer
TOPEKA - The Kansas Legislature is expected to reorganize a state work-study program because of shortcomings in the way some universities, including KU, have carried out the program, some lawmakers said yesterday.
The state created the program to give students work experience in their field of study and help them make money while in school. The state program, which is different from the federal work-study program, pays half the cost of each student's salary to encourage private employers to hire qualified students.
The program began in 1983, but some lawmakers said that although some state universities had successfully developed the
program, others had not developed it adequately enough to spend the money allocated to it.
"Some of the programs at the universities are exceptional, but some are not," said State Rep. Denise Apt, R-Iola, chairman of the House Education Committee.
"We felt that the money wasn't being well spent," she said. "I think under the new program the money will go where it's most peeled."
Keith Nitcher, KU's director of business affairs, said the administrative costs of the work-study program were high compared to other student assistance programs, which had caused KU's difficulties with using all the money.
The University of Kansas program received $154,210 in fiscal year 1987. The University returned $28,000 of that to comply with Gov Mike Hayden's budget cuts, and the House Appropriations Committee earlier this spring cut an additional $30,000.
Apt said that Wichita State University had developed one of the best work-study programs and that KU's program was weaker than most.
The chairman of the appropriations committee, State Rep. Bill Bunten, R-Topека, said that if KU couldn't find use for the money, his committee could.
"It's not just having the money," Nilcher said. "It involves going out and getting
"I'm not saying they should spend it just because they've got it," he said. "But in light
of the precarious financial situation the state is in, we'll pick it up from here and put it there whenever we can."
Nitcher said the University had written a proposal to show the Legislature that KU had started or would start enough programs to spend all the program's allocated money in fiscal year 1988, which starts July 1. Hayden recommended that KU receive $150.05 in the program, but neither the House nor the Senate had voted on the recommendation.
Under the reorganization plan, which the House has approved, the Board of Regents would set up more specific guidelines to better develop the programs at state universities. The Senate is expected to approve the bill today, and Hayden is expected to sign it into law.
Up to now, universities received a lump sum from the state and then developed their own work-study programs. The Regents would be responsible under the bill for evaluating all state programs and determining where the money is needed most.
private contracts in the Lawrence area. The state has already cut back on administrative services."
"It's not our aim to set up strict guidelines for the universities." Apl said. "But we want to provide a better exchange of ideas between universities on how to develop the best program."
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, said he wondered why KU had not created a work-study program adequate enough to use all the allocated money.
Winter said some lawmakers would question KU's need for money if it had not effectively used its money this year.
BUTTON METAL WINDOWS
Surf's up
Alex Hergibo, Besançon, France, junior, rides the surf on the lawn east of Wescoe Hall. Hergibo was promoting the KU Sailing Club yesterday. The club will have an introductory meeting April 8.
Tests show victims weren't legally drunk
The Associated Press
Four KU students who were killed Friday night in a car-train accident north of Lawrence had been drinking alcohol but were not legally drunk, officials said.
Alan Sanders, director of pathology at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, said yesterday that blood samples showed alcohol in all four victims but that the concentrations were below 0.1 percent.
Under state law, if the concentration of alcohol in the blood is 0.1 percent or more, a person is presumed to be under the influence of alcohol and incapable of driving safely.
Killed were Elizabeth "Betsy"
Dunlap, 21, Salina junior; Joel Grantham, 20, Overland Park sophomore;
Jenifer Jones, 19, St. Louis freshman; and Daniel McDevitt, 19, Salina sophomore.
The four students had left a Phi
Gamma Delta fraternity party and
were heading for a Chi Omega sorority barn party north of Lawrence when their car was struck by a northbound Union Pacific freight train.
Kansas highway patrolman J.D. Hall said authorities found several beer cans in a ditch near the four bodies and a punctured leather wine glove that did not determine whether the cans were in the ditch before the accident.
Investigators still do not know who was driving the car.
William Klassen, chief of the National Transportation and Safety Board field office in Kansas City, said an investigator from Denver flew to the accident site to interview railroad employees and law enforcement officers and to reconstruct the accident.
Despite Sanders' findings, Hall said he would wait for test results of other blood samples for yesterday to the Kansas Bureau of Investigation laboratory in Topeka.
Student fasts to urge KU divestment
By BENJAMIN HALL
Staff writer
A KU student says he won't eat until at least 50 alumni write letters asking the Kansas University Endowment Association to divest from companies that do business in South Africa.
Michael Maher, Roeland Park senior, began a hunger strike at 5 p.m. yesterday in the Strong Hall rotunda.
Maher sat on the floor beneath a sign that said, "Hunger strike for divestment — I need 50 letters from alumni."
Alumni often contribute money to the University, so their opinions may be more persuasive. Maher said.
"The Endowment Association doesn't seem to take undergraduate concerns very seriously." he said.
Maher said that the letters, which should be sent to 2129 Ohio St., would be presented to the Endowment Association when all 50 had arrived.
Mahar said that he and others had been planning the hunger strike since
"Because of a number of personal traitors, it's been postponed until May."
November.
Maher said that he would sit in the Strong Hall rotunda between 4:30 and 6 p.m. most school days.
"Other than that, I'll be going about my regular student duties," he said.
On Nov. 4, 1985, Maher and four other students were arrested by KU police on charges of criminal trespassing when they refused to leave Chancellor Gene A. Budig's office after he asked them to leave. The court prosecuted the Endowment Association's investment in South Africa.
Maher also was one of a group of students who camped outside Youngberg Hall, the Endowment Association, leading on West Campus, in April 1986.
The Endowment Association responded by announcing that it would divest from companies that did not adhere to the Sullivan principles.
The Sullivan principles are a set of standards used to guide U.S. companies' investment in South Africa. The principles require that companies receiving investments agree to integrate their own workforce and equal employment practices and increase the number of non-whites in supervisory positions.
Maher said that companies used the Sullivan principles as an excuse to keep doing business in South Africa.
"They've been described as a license to kill, and I think that's accurate," he said.
Black employees in South Africa still live in segregated neighborhoods, and they don't have the right vote or to travel freely. Maher said.
"It's a surface improvement," he said.
The KU Alumni Association will not take a stand on whether the Endowment Association should divest, Fred B. Williams, executive
director and secretary, said yesterday.
"Our association does not address political, religious or other types of issues," he said. "We don't take responsibility. We simply report information."
"We have 37,000 plus members. We can't take a stand because ultimately we wouldn't be representing all of our members' interests."
The Endowment Association doesn't know how much it has invested in companies that do business with John Scarff, the director of John Scarff said yesterday.
"Our portfolio is in the hands of an outside agency, and it changes quick."
The Endowment Association may decide not to comment, he said.
"He's thinking about it," Scarfie said. "We're working on a statement."
Searffe said that Endowment Association president Todd Seymour wouldn't comment on Maher's hunger strike yesterday.
Crimson Girls' dancing attire offends some
Staff writer
By LAURA BOSTROM
As the music started during halftime of the KU-Notre Dame basketball game, 10 Crimson Girls shimmied out from gray trenchcoats, wearing electric red unitards with blue trunks and blue sequins sewn on the shoulders.
The Feb. 8 game was their last performance in the one-piece, full-length leotards. KU's athletic department told the squad they no longer could wear the unitids, Elaine Brady, spirit squad coordinator, said last week.
Gary Hunter, associate athletic director, said he had received several calls and letters questioning the performance and choice of attire
The University of Kansas Athletic Corporation board will evaluate the performances and attests to my appointing a review committee.
Barb Heck, Lawrence resident and KU alumna, was one of those people.
Heck said she reviewed the Notre Dame tape with Brady. She said the Crimson Girls' type of performance was more suited for
Three KU Crismon Girls show the electric red unititards that raised controversy. After several people questioned the squat's attire during performances, KU's Athletic Department asked the squat to stop wearing the unititards.
He said some people were concerned that some of the dance moves were in questionable taste and that the uniforms were "not very flattering to the young ladies."
Alan Hagman/KANSAN
a dance performance at Murphy Hall than a KU basketball game.
"I feel they are fine athletes and very talented young women, but I'm really opposed to their uniforms — and the bump-and-grind," she said, referring to a particular movement.
"I think she means hip movements," said Dana Smith, a Crimson Girl.
The Crimson Girls say that they are dancers and that people need to understand their function.
See CRIMSON, p. 6, col. 3
INSIDE
INSIDE
The men's and women's track coaches and athletes, who recently kicked off their outdoor seasons, prefer outdoor track to indoor track. See story page 13.
.ow salaries contribute to high faculty turnover at KU
Outdoor fun
Many Eastern families choose Midwesterners to be their nammies because morals and discipline are important to Midwestern girls. See story page 8.
Nanny mania
Rv TIM HAMILTON
Staff writer
It's not news that faculty salaries at the University of Kansas are low when compared with other large universities, but recent studies indicate just how low.
A study conducted by the office of institutional research and planning showed that in 1965-66 the average faculty salary was below the average of KU's six peer institutions. The average faculty salary is the Board of Regents, are the universities of Oklahoma, Iowa, North Carolina, Oregon and Colorado.
Robert Hohn, president of the American Association of University Professors and professor of education psychology, said last week that 80 percent of large universities in the country provided better compensation for their faculty than KU.
Marvin Burris, associate budget director for the Regents, said that in
fiscal year 1985-86 the average KU faculty salary was 91 percent of the average salary at KU's peer institutions, $34,917. KU's budget for other operating expenses, such as teaching supplies and equipment, was 65 percent of the average operating expense budget of its peers.
One result of the higher salaries, better fringe benefits and larger operating expense budgets available at other universities and private companies has been an increase in faculty turnover at KU.
Martine Hammond, director of Regents academic affairs, said the faculty turnover rate at Regents universities had jumped from an average of 5 percent to 7.2 percent in the last three years.
Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said the turnover rate at KU also was on an upward trend.
Carolyn Kelly, assistant to the vice
'Salaries are a significant factor in the turnover rates at KU.'
Robert Lineberry dean of liberal arts and science
chancellor for academic affairs, said that in fiscal year 1984-85, of the 53 faculty members retired, died or left KU, 14 left for higher salaries or professional advancement. In fiscal year 1985-86, 17 of KU's 56 departing faculty left for higher salaries.
"Low salaries, combined with high inflation and underfunded operating expense budgets, will continue to cause the University problems in
Deans of schools within the University agree that salaries influence faculty performance.
recruitment and retainment of faculty," Kelly said.
"Salaries are a significant factor in the turnover rates at KU," said Robert Lineberry, dean of liberal arts and sciences. "But I think very few people leave only for a salary increase."
Lineberry said faculty turnover might be increasing because now KU also had to compete with private industry.
John Tolletson, dean of business,
said the school's accounting department had a 75 percent turnover rate between 1982 and this year. He said the high turnover had cost the school a lot of money in salary increases.
"During the same time period we increased the salary of assistant professors by 40 percent and the salary of associate professors by 45
Often, the state also loses research grant money when faculty leave KU.
.
percent so we could attract people to KU and keep people here," he said.
According to the Regents, KU lost more than $7.5 million in grants since 1982 when departing faculty took grant money with them. More than $4.5 million was lost in 1984-85 when KU lost 87 research projects belonging to 11 exiting faculty members.
Hohn said the workload of departing faculty was divided among the four.
"The thing that most of us on campus are concerned with isn't the people who leave," he said, "but those who stay.
"So the individuals who stay find themselves with not only a low salary but also more work to do. Our concern is with the morale of the individuals who stay. Most of the people here are very dedicated, but there is a level of frustration."
2
Wednesday, April 1, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Across the Country
44 dead after leftist rebel attack on military base in El Salvador
EL PARAISO. El Salvador — Leftist rebels attacked a strategic army base yesterday, killing 43 soldiers and a U.S. military adviser, the first U.S. advisor to die in fighting in El Salvador's 7-year-old civil war.
The military sent U.S. supplied helicopters and attack planes to fight the rebels who bombed the El Paraiso military base 28 miles north of San Salvador with grenades and mortars.
"There were 250 soldiers inside El Paraiso at the time of the attack, 43 were killed, although the number could rise, and 35 were wounded," said Gen. Adolfo Blandon, chief of the armed forces.
Blandon said an unknown num
ber of insurgents attacked the heavily fortified base about 2 a.m. in fighting that lasted four hours.
Normally 2,000 troops are stationed at the base that protects the Cerron Grande reservoir dam and electrical facilities. At the time of the attack, three groups of 500 soldiers were on patrol and could not return to reinforce the base, Blandon said.
Thatcher opposes Soviet arms proposal
A spokesman for the U.S. Embassy in San Salvador identified the officer as Staff Sgt. Gregory A. Fronius, who arrived Jan. 6 and belonged to the 3rd Battalion, 7th Special Forces, U.S. Southern Command based in Panama.
MOSCOW — British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher yesterday praised Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev's moves to move his society but said she opposed his terms for a treaty banning intermediate-range missiles from Europe.
"I am very well satisfied indeed with my visit so far," said Thatcher, who met with Gorbache for nine hours in the trip that began Saturday. "Mr. Gorbache and I have achieved a very good relationship and been able to continue the same frank dialogue that we began two years ago."
Thatcher said her trust was not yet great enough to agree to Gorbache's proposal for eliminating U.S. nuclear missile mediatorate-missile missiles in Europe.
Gorbachev has dropped his demand that an intermediate-range missile accord be linked to limits on development of the Strategic Defense Initiative. But he is resisting Western demands for elimination of the Soviet advantage in short-range missiles.
Third Marine arrested in embassy scandal
Around the World
WASHINGTON — The former deputy commander of the Marine Corps guards at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow was arrested yesterday as the third suspect in the widening sex-for-secrets scandal that has prompted top-level investigations, the administration said yesterday.
Bracy, including one of espionage. Conviction could mean a death sentence.
At the same time, the Marine Corps said that eight charges had been filed against another Marine arrested last week. Clr. Arnold
Staff Sgt. Robert Stanley Stufflebeam, 24, of Bloomington, Ill., was arrested as a "possible suspect" in the operation because he had "associations with Soviet women on several occasions" while serving as deputy commander of the Marine Corps guards at the embassy, the Pentagon said.
Reagan and Chirac discuss missiles, AIDS
protectionism.
Reagan assured Chirac during an hour-long Oval Office meeting that the United States did not want "to go down that road" of trade
WASHINGTON — French Premier Jacques Chirac told President Reagan yesterday that "we have confidence" that the United States will not leave Western Europe vulnerable to Soviet short-range missiles if the superpowers agree to remove bigger missiles from Europe.
A senior U.S. official said East-West issues, including arms control, trade and agriculture, dominated the morning session. The session ended with the two leaders announcing the end to a dispute between scientists in each country about patent rights to AIDS testing kits and formation of a joint foundation to research the epidemic disease.
Getting out of bed was the first mistake
MIDLAND, Mich. — Aubura Hudson no doubt wishes he had stayed in bed.
Hudson, 39, said he stopped the car to release the bird. Not wearing a seatbelt, Hudson fell out of the car. The vehicle continued
When he left home Monday morning, he picked up a newspaper from his lawn, hopped into his car and headed for work. The trouble started when he realized that a live bird was inside the newspaper.
down the road without him, finally crashing into a neighbor's house. Bad, but not exactly the whole story.
While Hudson was chasing his car down the road, his pants fell down. If any neighbors had been peering out their windows, they would have seen Hudson hobbling down the road with one leg in his pants and the other out.
Hudson was treated for minor injuries at Midland Hospital Center and released.
From Kansan wires
Weather
LAWRENCE FORECAST
From the KANSAN Weather Service
SUN
Today will be warmer with mostly sunny skies and a high of 60 degrees. Tonight's overnight low will be near 37 degrees with 5-10 mph north-northwestley winds. Tomorrow, skies will remain mostly sunny th in the upper 50s.
WEATHER FACT: Although snow is not likely now, in 1975 it fell as late as May 10th.
DES MOINES
52 / 29
OMAHA
54 / 29
LINCOLN
55 / 30
CONCORDIA
61 / 33
TOPEKA
61 / 36
KANSAS CITY
59 / 36
COLUMBIA
58 / 36
ST. LOUIS
57 / 37
SALINA
62 / 37
WICHITA
66 / 37
CHANUTE
64 / 38
SPRINGFIELD
62 / 39
TULSA
68 / 45
2 for 1
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Sri Gopalacharya
His Holiness Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, Founder of the Transcendental Meditation Program
Dear Student.
There's something you can do for a short time each day that will improve
every aspect of your life—your grades, your future career, your relationships, everything all at the same time. What's more, it's that our students have experienced the benefits. And you can too.
You'll learn about it soon at a special free lecture on the Transcendental Meditation technique, and regardless of what you've already heard about TM, this entertaining talk will surprise and enlighten you. More than that, it may well change your life.
My name is Kevin Blair. I'm president of the student government at Maharishi International University, where students, faculty and staff work on my MTECH technique. I want to tell you three things about the upcoming lecture:
2 You'll also learn about the vast amount of scientific research that's been done on tmR (more than 350 studies years)
At the lecture, you'll learn how the simple, natural TM technique, which is practiced for a day, brings profound benefit to a day, brings profound benefit to a body, and how these benefits automatically improve one's social behavior, school and job performance, and much more.
1 At the lecture, you'll learn how the simple, natural TM
"Experiencing the unified field through the TM technique really gives me more support of nature. As soon as I began TM, everything became earlier, and my grade-point was on a whole point!" --Sam Boothy
Ph.D., candidate
Education
Harvard University
841-5212
If you really want to know how to improve your grades, your career,and your life, there's an upcoming lecture you shouldn't miss.
And you'll learn that a lot of the research findings are directly relevant to your personal and academic development as a student. Here, for example, is a partial list of results in the field of education:
- increased intelligence
- improved comprehension
increased intelligence
improved comprehension, concentration, and memory
improved comprehension,
- increased speed in solving problems
- increased learning ability
- broader comprehension and ability to focus attention
worldwide over the past 15 years)
increased creativity
- reduced stress and anxiety
- increased happiness
- improved relationships be
- improved academic performance
decreased use of drugs, alcohol, and cigarettes
improved relationships between students and teachers
improved mind-body coordination
- decreased use of drugs,
alcohol, and cigarettes
- increased happiness
- improved athletic performance
Now, I'm sure you'd like to have some of those qualities growing in your life. Well you can.
And the beautiful thing is that these qualities grow naturally,
simply as a result of practicing the TM technique.
2
improved relationships be
World Peace
Finally, if you are concerned not just with your own future, but also the future of our nation and the world, there's even more reason to attend the lecture.
This is because the TM technique doesn't just help the individual. The coherence generated when people practice TM extends to those who don't. It has been shown that when as little as the square root of one percent of a
population practices the TM program and its advanced aspects, the entire population becomes more orderly, peaceful, and progressive.
"TM is the best antidote to stress I know of.
When individuals are free of stress, they behave more harmoniously. I'm convinced that if people practiced TM, world
peace would be a reality
-Kurleigh D. King
Director, Institute for World Leadership
Leadership
Former Director-General,
Farner Director-General Caribbean Community and Common Market
This "Super Radiance Effect" has been demonstrated in communities, cities—even entire nations. This brings great hope for the future of our planet and the age-old problems of world peace may at last have a solution.
If you're wondering how one simple technique can bring so many benefits to mind, body, behavior, and even the world as a whole, I urge you to attend the free lecture. The explanation you'll hear is at once simple, scientific, and profound.
It Works!
"TM is the single most important part of
being a peak performer. It gives you the ability to excel in an environment of stress, to make rapid decisions based on rapid changes, and to do so functioning very well."
Christopher Hegarty, President Hegarty and Associates San Francisco, CA
You'll hear, for example, about the unified field of all the laws of nature as described by modern physics and by ancient Vedic science. And about how the TM technique lets you experience the unified field within your own experience. And because that experience, gained regularly, brings you the support of all the laws of nature.
When you practice TM.
"you can experience the full range of teaching just gaining classroom knowledge, but developing the knower, and that's yourself!"
Karen Blassell
Ph.D. candidate
Neurocience
International
University
The main thing, however, is that TM works. I know from my own experience I've been practicing the technique for 6 years, and its made me more relaxed, yet more dynamic and productive. As a result of enjoying greater success—both in and out of the classroom!
Of course, whether you start the TM technique or not is up to you. But doesn't it make sense to at least attend the lecture? If even ten percent of what I've said about this book, it could mean for your achievement and happiness for the rest of your life.
Free Lecture
The date and time of the lecture is given below. I
hope you'll be there, and don't hesitate to bring your friends; you'll be doing a great thing for them as well!
Wishing you success in all that you do,
Kevin Blain
Kevin Blair
President, Student
Government
Maharishi International
University
Transcendental Meditation
Free
Lecture
This Week Only
Thursday, April 2, 7:30 p.m.
Transcendental Mentorship is a service mark of the World Plan Executive Council-United States, a non-profit educational organization.
Eldridge Hotel. 710 Massachusetts (corner of 7th & Mass.)
Campus and Area
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 1, 1987
3
Local Briefs
Hart to return for speeches in Ottawa
Former U.S. Sen. Gary Hart, D-Colorado, will return to his home-town of Ottawa today to speak at Ottawa University.
Hart will speak at 7 p.m. at the Ottawa University chapel, a spokesman for the university said. He also is scheduled to speak at Ottawa High School tomorrow morning.
Last day to drop for manv schools
Hart is considered the front-runner for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1988, although he hasn't formally announced his candidacy yet.
Today is the last day to drop regular, 16-week classes offered by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and some schools at the University of Kansas.
Students in those classes may drop today and still receive a withdraw notice on their transcripts. The college and some schools require a petition to drop a class after today.
Services tomorrow for KU librarian
Memorial services for Kermit Seewell, a KU librarian for more than 30 years, are scheduled for 11 a.m. tomorrow in Danforth Chapel. Mr. Seewell, 61, died March 11 after a long illness.
Mr. Sewell began working in the KU library system as a student in the early 1950s before joining the library staff full time in 1957. For the last 20 years, he worked as a cataloger and Slavic exchanges librarian in the Watson Library Slavic department.
"Although handicapped by deafness and shyness, Kermit will long be remembered by all who came in contact with him," said Gordon Anderson, director of the library's Slavic department.
Library staff members will conduct a memorial tribute at the service.
Mr. Sewell earned bachelor's degrees in history and German literature at KU in 1953 and a master's degree in library science at the University of Wisconsin in 1966.
Central America talk rescheduled
Elliott Abrams, U.S. assistant secretary of state for inter-America affairs, has changed the date of his appearance at the University of Kansas from April 8 to April 2) because of scheduling conflicts.
Abrams will speak at 1 p.m. April 21 in the Ballroom of the Kansas University on "Central America: What Are the Alternatives?"
Corrections
Because of a reporter's error, Gordon Woods was identified incorrectly in yesterday's Kansan. Woods is vice chairman of the University Senate Executive Committee.
Because of a reporter's error, the name of Frank Hempen, Douglass County public works director, is dispelled in yesterday's Kansan.
Because of a reporter's error, the name of convicted murderer Arnold Ruebke was misspelled in Monday's Kansan. Ruebke is in prison for the murders of three people in 1984 near Arlington, Kan.
From staff and wire reports.
House override is no kiss for Agnes
By TODD COHEN
Staff writer
The U.S. House of Representatives yesterday easily overrode, 350-73, President Reagan's veto of an $88 billion highway bill that would allocate $7.2 million for the construction of a south Lawrence trafficway.
The vote came the same day that Agnes The Frog, last year's symbolic anti-trafficway candidate for Douglas County commission, emerged from hibernation and publicly thanked Reagan for vetoring the bill.
Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole said the Senate would vote Wednesday to either sustain or override Reagan's veto. Lawrence and Doug Emhoff officials are relying on federal money to help finance the roadway.
Rene Wessels, press secretary to U.S. Rep Jim Slattery, D-Kan., who voted to override, said Slattery thought it would be disastrous for Kansas if the Senate upheld Reagan's veto, thereby killing the bill.
An alternative highway bill, offered by Reagan, would delete $42 million allocated for Kansas highway maintenance and projects, including the Lawrence trafficway, Wessels said.
U.S. Rep. Pat Roberts, R-Kan,
was the only Kansas representative
to vote to sustain the veto. Democrat Dan Glickman and Republicans Jan Meyers and Bob Whittaker voted to override.
However, Kansas' senators, Dole and Nancy Kassbaum, have said that the president is not aware.
Opponents to the trafficway, or bypass, ran Agnes The Frog as a write-in candidate against County Commissioner Nancy Hiebert, a trafficway supporter, in November. The fictitious frog won 1,850 votes, or 28 percent of the vote.
Agnes' supporters, the Committee to Elect A True Amphibian, charged that the roadway would damage the Baker Wetlands south of Lawrence. The area is the home of the endangered Northern Crawfish frog.
In the letter, Simmons told the president, "You were absolutely right in calling the highway bill a *pork barrel* politics at work."
Yesterday, John Simmons, committee treasurer, sent a letter to Reagan on Agnes' behalf.
"No doubt local pork-barrelers are disappointed with your veto, but taxpayers and people who care about the environment are appauling."
United Press international supplied some information for this story.
SEARS TOWER
DANGER
PEN RAISE
Dannv Rav/KANSAN
A yarn decoration hangs near the ceiling in an architectural studio in Marvin Hall. Because of fire hazards, the dean of architecture recently formed a committee to redefine regulations governing how students can decorate their work areas. See story page 12.
Legal Aid clinic assists residents; students receive credit for work
By CAROLINE REDDICK
Staff writer
Mary Bennett panicked when her landlord called her at 9 a.m. one day to tell her she had to move out of her apartment by 5 p.m.
"I was hysterical," said Bennett, a Lawrence resident who was a week late with her rent. "I have a 15-month-old baby and I didn't have a vehicle. There was no way for me to move my things."
Bennett said that she called the Salvation Army and was referred to the Douglas County Legal Aid Society, Inc. A Legal Aid lawyer told her that she didn't have to move out until three days after being served a formal eviction notice by someone in the sheriff's office.
"They really took care of me," she said. "I was really panicky when I called, and he reassured me. He said, 'They can't do that, they're using scare tactics. They can't throw you out on the street.'"
"So after that I calmed down. Even just three days would give me time to pack and find a place to go," she said.
KU's School of Law. It provides legal services to Douglas County residents who meet financial guidelines. It also provides services to non-Douglas County residents who are being tried in the county and qualify financially.
Legal Aid is a clinical program in
Third-year law students certified by the Kansas Supreme Court handle the program's cases, said Jan Henry. Legal Aid office manager
Dennis Prater, associate professor of law and director of Legal Aid, said that the financial guidelines were based on government statistics.
"All our clients meet the test for very low income under federal poverty guidelines," Prater said. "As a general rule, University students don't qualify because we attribute their parents' income to them."
Prater said that about 15 percent of Legal Aid's clients were students, but the majority of those were Haskell Indian Junior College students.
He said that Legal Aid lawyers did not work on felonies, for business interests or for fee-generating personal injury cases.
Legal Aid handles about 1,000 cases a year, Prater said. He said about a third of the cases involved domestic
relations, a third involved criminal defense and a third involved a mixture of cases, such as landlord/tenant disputes.
"We get a lot of referrals from the court system," Prater said. "We serve basically as the public defender's office for the municipal court. Some district court cases are handled by social services refer clients."
Law students who work in Legal Aid receive three credit hours a semester for a minimum of 10 hours of work a week, Prater said. Usually 25 law students are in the program, and most carry eight to 10 cases at a time. He said that most students involved thought the work was well worth the experience.
Michael Waddell, third-year law student who works in legal Aid, said that it provided a practical application of his legal education.
"And of course it helps us in one area we're never taught in law school and that's how to deal with people," Waddell said.
Ccyndi Hurst, Lawrence resident went to Legal Aid recently for help in a domestic relations case.
City will help studio
By TODD COHEN
Staff writer
The cameras will return to Lawrence this summer to film a movie, a man who already has produced one movie in Lawrence announced last night.
The producer, Doug Curtis, made the surprise announcement at a Lawrence City Commission meeting after commissioners agreed to pass a resolution of intent to issue industrial revenue bonds for the construction of a movie studio in Lawrence.
Curtis said filming of "Spring Chicken" would start in July under the direction of Hoyt Caston, a KU graduate.
The movie Curtis filmed in Lawrence last year. "Nice Girls Don't Explode," will have its premiere at 8 ontuned at the Granada Theater, 1020 Massachusetts St.
Curtis, a KU graduate, wants to build Oread Studios in the University Corporate Research Park, 15th Street and Wakarusa Drive.
The resolution he requested would help his company, Oread Entertainment Group, get the Internal Revenue Service's approval to make industrial revenue bonds tax-exempt. Curtis said. IRS approval could be granted within 90 days, he said.
Commissioners passed the resolution after presentations by Curtis; Jerry Jones, coordinator of the Kansas Film Commission; Bobby Patton, chairman of the KU theater and media arts department; and Ray Barmby, vice president of Blunt Ellis & Loewi, a Kansas City, Kan., brokerage firm.
Actress Marj Dusay, a Kansas native who starred in the CBS-TV soap opera "Capitol" also spoke.
Barmby, who has agreed to sell the bonds for Curtis, said that tax-exempt status helped attract investors. Without the exemption, investors are taxed for interest earned on the bonds, he said.
Curtis has a 50 percent chance of winning IRS approval, Barmby said. If the IRS does approve, Curtis will be eligible to receive bond values worth $3.5 million, he said.
The project would proceed even if IRS rejects Curtis' application, Barmby said, but construction would be delayed and costs could double.
"Tax-exempt bonds are special incentives to cause things to happen now rather than later." Curtis said.
If all goes well, construction of the 28,000 square-foot studio could begin in August and be completed next April. Curtis said.
GLSOK hopes to reduce prejudice through awareness
Staff writer
Rv PAUL SCHRAG
Events such as Gay and Lesbian Awareness Week are necessary because prejudice against homosexuals is rampant in the United States. KU gay rights advocates said this week.
KU'S Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas, the third-oldest university gay organization in the country, has faced opposition in the past. But by focusing attention on homosexuality one week each year, GLSOK supporters say they hope to work toward ending prejudice based on sexual orientation.
GLSOK officials said GALA week, which continues through Saturday, had been sponsored annually at KU for about 10 years.
"The fact that it's controversial and that some people are bothered by it shows the extent to which homophobia exists in our society," said Todd Rowlett, GLOSK secretary.
The fight against what many people have termed homophobia, fear or prejudice toward homosexuals, is progressing but has a long way to go. GLSOK supporters said.
"Obviously, we haven't been totally successful because we are still here," said Craig Miller, former GLSOK president. "A clause in our bylaws calls for us to disband when gay and lesbian people are accepted as productive members of society and when people aren't judged by their sexual orientation.
"Unfortunately, that goal is still a long way off."
GLSOK officers said the group existed to provide a support system for gay students, to educate the public about homosexuality and to promote gay rights.
GLSOK traces its roots to the founding in 1969 of the KU Gay Liberation Front. This year, typical attendance at GLSOK's biweekly meetings has been about 20.
GALA week events continue today with a speech on developing a healthy gay/lesbian identity by Elizabeth Gowdy, Lawrence graduate student and social welfare research assistant, at 6:30 p.m. in the West Gallery of the Kansas Union.
Tomorrow will be the annual "Wear Blue Jeans If You're Gay Day," which GLSOK officials say is intended to show that a person's
sexual orientation shouldn't be an issue of concern to others.
Also tomorrow, Jack Bremer, director of Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave., will speak on "Christianity and Alternative Sexual Orientations" at 7:30 p.m. in the West Gallery of the Union.
GLSOK faced controversy most recently in fall 1984 when more than 2,500 people signed a petition requesting a campus vote on Student Senate financing for GLSOK. But Miller said she was unsure whether she was ties with financing after that. He said the group had won acceptance as an organization with a right to exist.
Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare and GLOSK faculty adviser, said that GLSOK had made an impact at KU but that society's
prejudices required many years to change.
"Homophobia hasn't changed hardly at all," he said. "It might even be a little worse with the connection people make with AIDS."
Dailey said identifying AIDS as a homosexual disease was narrow-minded and inaccurate. It was only an accident, he said, that AIDS first appeared in the United States primarily in the homosexual population. The disease originated in Africa among heterosexuals and is affecting an increasing number of heterosexuals in the United States.
statutes of the percentage of homosexuals in the population range from 5 percent to 10 percent, Dailey said.
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Wednesday, April 1, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
No-nonsense approach
City Commissioner Ernest Angino gets straight to the point.
Angino, a KU professor of geology and civil engineering, is not afraid to speak out honestly on issues that face the Lawrence City Commission. He has made knowledgeable decisions and has been vocal during his years on the commission, which began in 1983. Angino, who served as mayor from April 1984 to April 1985, is seeking his second term.
Angino works for the residents of Lawrence. For example, he supports the proposed downtown mall because he
doesn't want to see the downtown area suffer from the development of a suburban mall.
However, Angino has said that the public's views on the proposed mall are most important and that he will abide by the voters' decisions on the three-question mall referendum.
A sincere wish to lead Lawrence in the right direction exudes from Angino's style and manner. If reeled, Angino will continue to use his no-nonsense approach to get the job done right.
Simple and to the point
He may not be the most eloquent of candidates running for Lawrence City Commission, but Ellis Hayden offers the voters his non-verbose viewpoint and his unquestionable sincerity in representing Lawrence residents.
In the political quagmire surrounding this election, Hayden is a welcome alternative. Lawrence politics have been dominated by the city's most powerful private interests. As much as candidates would like to submerge these interests at election time, their strategy often backfires. And rightfully
so. Lawrence voters should not be asked to sort through paragraphs of political jargon and rapidly alternating stands in order to uncover a candidate's motives. Ellis Hayden comes to the commission with no strings attached.
He also comes as the only candidate capable of ensuring democratic representation in the commission. Deriving most of his support from the East Lawrence area and from small businesses, he offers a vital link to these often overlooked sectors of the community.
A fresh perspective
"Lawrence is home to its citizens before it's a retail center." This has been the theme of Dennis Constance in this year's city commission election.
At a time when Lawrence must make some tough decisions about the direction and nature of commercial growth, the city commission needs to always keep the concerns of neighborhoods in mind. Constance, a past president of the Old West Lawrence Association, is in a position to vocalize these concerns if elected.
An example of this commun-
iy concern is his opposition to plans for a downtown mall in the 600 block of Massachusetts Street because of the effect traffic might have on the surrounding neighborhood.
In addition, as housing manager of Joseph R. Pearson Hall for the past eight years and a member of the KU Classified Senate, Constance is in tune with the needs of the University of Kansas.
In making decisions that affect all of the people of Lawrence, voters can look to Dennis Constance to have a citywide perspective.
Affirming a mall
The proposed downtown mall has created a significant stir in the upcoming city election. And while there are other issues to be considered, perhaps there are none with the impact of the mall.
Voters will be asked three questions about the mall: 1) Should Massachusetts and Vermont streets be closed for the mall? 2) Should public funds be used for the mall? 3) Should any other streets be closed for a mall?
If Lawrence is going to grow and keep up with the times, voters should show their support for the mall on these questions. Doing so would send a message to the new City Commission that the people of Lawrence want to progress, not regress.
Students also should take an
interest. After all, we are Lawrence residents for at least nine months out of the year, and a mall not only would produce more retail jobs, but also provide more shopping opportunities.
One of the trademarks of Lawrence is the downtown area. It has survived when other downtowns haven't.
Some mall opponents have suggested getting a free-standing department store. This would be an unacceptable option because department store owners have said a mall would promote support stores to surround them.
Yes, a mail will change the look of downtown, but it will be a change for the better because it will preserve downtown Lawrence in the long run.
News staff
News staff
Frank Hansel Editor
Jennifer Benjamin Managing editor
Juli Warren News editor
Brian Kabeline Editorial editor
Sandra Engelland Campus editor
Mark Siebert Sports editor
Diane Dulmeir Photo editor
Bill Skeet Graphics editor
Tom Eblen General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Lisa Weems Business manager
Bonnie Hardy Ad director
Denise Stephens Retail sales manager
Kelly Scherer Campus sales manager
Duncan Calhoun Marketing manager
Lori Coppel Classified manager
Jennifer Lumianski Production manager
David Nixon National sales manager
Jeanne Hines 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
Opinions
Guest shots should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansan reserves the right reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Fint Hall.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stairwater Fitt, Hall Law, Kanon, 60045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and on Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage paid in US dollars for submissions by mail are $40 per year in Douglas County and $50 per 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-Fint Hall, Lawrence, KA 66045
In 1969, the current governance system at this University was implemented. The system was designed to give students direct and necessary inputs to the decision-making process.
Hoping for Synchronicity in Senate
Phil Duff
Glenn Shirtliffe
Guest Shot
Guest Shot
ses of the University. What a shame that all these years later, your Student Senate is on the verge of becoming totally irrelevant.
Student representatives regularly fail to attend meetings of many of the most important committees and councils on campus. Decisions that directly affect the future of the University are made with little or no student involvement. The positions of responsibility that student representatives fought so long and hard to obtain are now regularly defaulted upon.
Mailbox
Second alternative
Paul Campbell, in a column that appeared March 27, apparently has been duped by years of educational mindwashing. He believes there is no viable alternative to capitalism. But I say, rather "the myth of equality under socialism" than the reality of inequality under capitalism. Whether he wants to believe it or not, the dream of socialism is coming true in Nicaragua. Not in a hollowed utopian sense, but in a real, historical sense. Of course the Sandinistas have had to "militarize Nicaraguan society," simply because they must defend their bodies and their means of production from capitalist contra attacks.
Ironically, Campbell tries to create in his column the impression that the Sandistas are "evil incarnate." For example, he refers to the Sandistas as the "ruling elite." This ruling elite, however, is an honorably elected government, as objective observers have testified to. (Probably more objective than the State Department.)
And then, ignorantly, he maintains that U.S. citizens are flocking to Managua as if it were a political Mecca. All the people I know who have been to Nicaragua went out of curiosity and solidarity with peasants and workers and came back with the knowledge that these people do not want war and do (oh, horrors of truth) support the government! And most of the U.S. citizens I know who went to Nicaragua, strangely enough, ended up in places remote from Managua, such as the Honduran war zone or the coffee-laden rural areas. Perhaps Campbell should, once and for all, make a "fact finding" mission to Nicaragua himself, then come back and write another column.
If I may quote someone who Campbell will no doubt, with blinders on and balderdash swinging, feel the need to stigmatize: "I can assure you that the main obstacle to a negotiated political solution lies in the stubbornness of the United States and its belief that the situation can be solved by force. It's as if the Reagan Administration wants to teach an unfortunate lesson, so that nobody in Central or Latin America will ever again think of rebelling against the tyrannies which serve U.S. interests, or against hunger and exploitation. They want to teach a lesson so that nobody really fights for independence and social justice." (Fidel Castro: "Fidel Castro: Nothing Can Stop the Course of History," p. 135.)
Meg Polz-Mears Lawrence resident
Because of an editor's error, an editorial in yesterday's Kansan incorrectly stated the source of a proposal to cut a salary increase for KU faculty. The proposal originated in the Kansas Legislature.
Correction
The legacy of student activism has been lost over the years. Rather than fighting the injustices inherent in the Senate, it fight the inherent within the Senate.
Instead of acting as a unified student body to affect real change within the University, state and nation, we often act against fellow students, quarrelling over issues such as the number of pucks the Hockey Club should get.
Instead of fighting the institutional racism that is pervasive on campus, minority student groups now find it necessary to quarrel with fellow students about their statutory revenue designation within the Senate Rules and Regulations.
As decisions are made in Washington and Topeka that drastically reduce the quality and accessibility of higher education, the Student Senate argues about whether the KU Debate team should get free lunches.
In short, Senate fiddles while Rome burns.
The next year in the life of the University may be the most important year yet. Decisions affecting the basic structure of the University are being made almost daily. Will we retain open admissions? Will we maintain remedial courses? Will we maintain other special attributes that have made the University of Kansas one of the finest public institutions in the land; or through neglect and inaction, will we permit this school to become an elitist diploma factory?
the most important issues ever to face University students. We feel that we possess the attributes necessary to lead you through the difficult year ahead.
In the next year, whoever is elected to Student Senate most certainly will be required to address racism, intolerance and the spread of sexually transmitted diseases. Students' lives and futures are at stake. The next leadership of your student government must possess the foresight and the courage to deal with some of
Intolerance and ignorance are alive and well on campus. Through inaction, will Senate permit the quality of life to deteriorate on campus?
Distributed by King Features Syndicate
We seek to replace Senate's aura of myopic jocularity and self-service with a legacy of social responsibility and political awareness. As your student leaders, we will not play party politics with your future. Instead, we will give you the student government that you need to guarantee yourself a future.
On April 8 and 9, you must make several important decisions. First, you must decide whether or not to vote. The way we see it, with your future at stake, you can't afford not to vote! Second, you must decide for yourself. Somewhere, among the hordes of student politicians out there, there are responsible student leaders. We hope you'll agree with us that Synchronicity stands for student government, not student politics.
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SUPREME COURT RULES AFFIRMATIVE ACTION ALSO EXTENDS TO WOMEN
Affirmative action status unclear
Confusion about affirmative action has been the rule ever since Lyndon Johnson's 1965 executive order designed to ensure that firms doing business with the U.S. government hire and promote women and members of minority groups.
This confusion has been worsened by recent U.S. Supreme Court rulings on affirmative action.
John Benner Columnist
Despite Reagan's appointment of two justices, the Supreme Court recently has handed down several decisions that thwart the efforts of Edwin Meese to do away with affirmative action.
The Justice Department, ironically, has used title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, the section dealing with discrimination in hiring, as its argument when describing affirmative action as "reverse discrimination." It also cites the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment in its argument against affirmative action
The recent decisions have been decided narrowly and the Court continues to avoid ruling on the constitution as it has in the past, instead to case-by-case decide*
In 1979, the Court ruled against Brian Weber, a white unskilled steelworker who was refused admission to a training program at the Kaiser Aluminum plant in Grammercy, Louisiana, despite the fact that he had higher seniority than some minority workers admitted to the training program.
The United Steelworkers of America, AFL-CIO, previously had agreed.
in a 1974 collective bargaining agreement, to admit one minority worker to the plant's training program for every white man admitted until the percentage of skilled workers at the plant mirrored the distribution of available workers in the Grammercy area.
Weber sued the United Steelworkers and won in the Federal District Court and in the U.S. Court of Appeals before the Supreme Court overturned the decision of the lower courts.
Section 703(d) of the Civil Rights Act states: "It shall be an unlawful employment practice for any employer, labor organization ... to discriminate against any individual because of his race, color, religion, sex or national origin in admission to, or employment in, any program established to provide apprenticeship or other training."
Justice William Brennan's majority opinion thereby rejected "a literal interpretation" of this section, opting what he called the "spirit" of the act.
It hardly seems likely that the act was written to favor one group over another.
It is possible that Brennan was simply rejecting the notion that seniority is not a vested right, but instead may be a method to maintain discriminatory job patterns. That is, seniority allows white men to hold a disproportionate number of certain jobs while shutting out minority workers.
Brennan said the "voluntary" nature of the steel union's affirmative action plan eliminated the question of whether the Civil Rights Act required quotas, reducing the issue to whether it permitted quotas.
Last May, in Wygant v. Jackson (Michigan) Board of Education, the
Court again was asked to decide the legality of a collective bargaining agreement. This 1972 agreement exempted minority teachers from a seniority-based layoff procedure.
Ten white teachers who had been laid off brought suit, charging that the procedure violated the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment.
This time the court ruled 5-4 against the affirmative action plan and stated: "This Court never has held that societal discrimination alone is sufficient to justify a racial classification."
Last July, the court issued two other splintered affirmative action rulings. In a 6-3 vote, the court upheld a promotion scheme, contested by the Cleveland firefighters union, that called for the advancement of minorities on a one-to-one ratio with whites.
In a 5-4 decision, the justices approved a court-imposed goal that would force a New York sheet metal union to have a 29 percent "non-white" membership by August 1987.
Last week, the court approved a Santa Clara County, Calif., plan under which a woman was promoted instead of a man with a slightly higher test score in order to remedy a "statistical imbalance."
Obviously, instead of considering the strictest letter of the law, the court will continue to determine the "spirit" of each affirmative action plan. It will avoid ruling on the constitutionality of thinly disguised quotas or on societal discrimination as a basis for affirmative action.
BLOOM COUNTY
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 1, 1987
5
Latin American studies shows enrollment gain
By ROGER COREY Staff writer
Staff writer
The political turmoil in Central America and the United States' involvement in that region has had at least one effect on the University of Kansas.
Charles Stansifer, director of the Latin American studies program, said enrollment in the program had increased significantly because of public concern about Central America.
Between the fall 1985 and spring 1987 semesters, enrollment in the Latin American studies program increased by 23 percent. Stansifer said. Enrollment in the program was 1,981 in the fall of 1985 and is 2,313 this semester.
"We have classes that have doubled in size and others that were tripled."
"Students who are interested in Central America come to KU because the University has given Latin American studies a high priority," he said.
KU's program is one of 10 federally designated national resource centers in the United States for the study of Latin America. The University's exchange program with Costa Rica is the oldest program between the United States and Latin America.
"All the other exchange programs have failed." Stanser said of Latin America exchange programs at universities. "This one is flourishing."
He said an exchange program between the universities of California and Chile had been disrupted by political upheaval. Another program between the universities of Indiana and Lima ended because of political
Enrollment of KU students in the Costa Rica program increased from 16 in 1986 to 30 this year, Stansifer said.
strife in Peru.
"Costa Rica is the most stable country in Latin American," Stansifer said. "Politically, it's one of the more democratic nations in the hemisphere."
He said the Latin American studies program could handle more students, even though the University recently suffered budget cuts and officials were considering tightening enrollment.
"The increased interest in Latin America has also increased grants and money for the program." Stanley said. The amount raised $2 million in grants since 1979.
If the increased enrollment trend continues for three or four years more years, the Latin American students will be staffing problems, Stansfer said.
"We had to close out 200 students from Spanish 104," said Andrew Debicki, acting chairman and University distinguished professor of Spanish and Portuguese. "People are more interested now."
Student interest has also increased in the department of Spanish and Portuguese.
He said enrollment in the department had doubled since fall 1983.
More students are taking two years of language instead of one, and some schools in the University now require language training, Debicki said.
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HACKENSACK, N.J. — A judge awarded custody of Baby M to her father yesterday, stripped surrogate mother Mary Beth Whitehead of all parental rights and uphold the $10,000 contract under which she agreed to give up the child.
In the nation's first judicial ruling on a disputed裁判 contract, Bergen County Superior Court Judge Harvey R. Sorkaw said the contract
Father receives custody of Baby M
Immediately after William Stern won custody in the landmark case, his wife, Elizabeth, adopted the year-old baby, whom they call Melissa. The child has been in their care while the case was argued.
was valid because just as men have a constitutional right to sell their sperm, women can decide what to do with their wombs.
The Associated Press
Whitehead, who had vowed to appeal, was at home when the ruling came. Earlier, she had visited with
the baby and then stopped at a church to light a devotional candle.
She made no statement after the ruling was announced, but her attorneys filed for a stay of the decision pending an appeal to the state Supreme Court and for an order continuing her visitation rights.
"If the courts are going to uphold those kinds of contracts, they are basically degrading our society," said Whitehead's attorney, Randolph Wolf.
"I have a tingling feeling in my elbows, I'm so happy," William Stern said as he embraced his tearful wife after they listened to the judge read his decision.
Elizabeth Stern said she had empathy for Whitehead.
"Despite all the bad feelings that have gone on, on both sides, she gave us a beautiful daughter," she said. "If she wants to be with Mary Beth, we'll do everything to help her be with Mary Beth."
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6
Wednesday, April 1, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
THE CABBAGE MAN.
Early piñatas
Crimson
"I danced all my life," said Smith, Kansas City, Kan., senior. "I get frustrated by people who don't understand dance.
Continued from p. 1
"We're not cheerleaders, that's not our role."
The Crimson Girls began in the 1985-86 school year. They cheer at basketball and football games and perform dance routines at halftime.
Members say that many squads wear unitards and that they adopted their movements and ideas from a national cheerleading competition where the Crimson Girls placed fifth of 75 squads.
Lance Wagers, executive director of collegiate programs for the National Cheerleading Association in Dallas, Texas, said unitards were common in dance and aerobics, and that many high school and college squads wore unitards in their performances.
"We don't teach the bump-and-grind." Wagers said of the NCA's cheerleading camps.
If the squad is doing those moves, they may want to re-evaluate what they are doing. he said
The Crimson Girls have two colors of the controversial unitards. Each member purchased a blue pair for about $35, Smith said, and the squid borrowed red unitards from a Kansas City high school.
"Everybody is wearing them," Smith said. "People jogging down the street wear them."
Ann Pinkerton, Leawood senior and founder, coach and choreographer for the squad, said most
competitive squads, such as the University of Oklahoma, Oklahoma State and Southwest Missouri State. wear the unitards.
But Heck doesn't feel that "everybody's-doing-it" is enough reason.
"Just because OU cheerleaders look like barmaila does not mean that KU has to," she said.
"When men in the stands are barking at the floor, that's offensive. It shows how they feel about the women on the floor." she said.
Heck was concerned about certain dance movements that caused audience members to react rudely.
"If I had my choice, I wouldn't have any Crimson Girls," Heck said.
On Campus
- "Recent Economic Developments and Problems in Brazil," a University Forum, is scheduled for 11:40 a.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
- "The Day of the Land," a silent demonstration march from the Kansas Union to Strong Hall and back is
The KU Dr. Who Appreciation Society is scheduled to meet at 7 p.m. today in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union.
part of a faculty development seminar,
is scheduled for 3 p.m. today in
the Pine Room of the Kansas Union.
■ A Campus Christians fellowship
meeting is scheduled for 6:30 p.m.
today in the Northeast Conference
Room at the Burge Union.
scheduled for 1:30 p.m. today. The march is sponsored by the General Union of Palestinian Students.
Heiress asks group to return donations
Doydenas, 34. wants the money refunded that she gave to The Bible Speaks, a church based in Lenox, Mass. The heirs to the Minneapolis-based Dayton-Hudson Corp., a retail empire founded by her father and uncles, made most of the donations in 1984 and 1985.
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"Photographers of the American Frontier," a film, is scheduled to be shown at 2:30 p.m. today in the Spencer Museum of Art auditorium.
Wallace Dayton, father of Elizabeth Dayton Doydenes, said that she was acting differently and seemed in a daze in spring 1985 when the family gathered for a weekend at their summer home in Florida.
- "The History of Childhood in Brazil" and "The Management of Children and Youth in Upper-Class Households in Late Imperial China."
"Her body was there, but she wasn't there mentally," Dayton testified before U.S Bankruptcy Judge James F. Queenen Jr.
United Press International
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- To end presidential salaries and
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 1, 1987
7
Senate bill would give in-state tuition to more students
By CHRISTOPHER HINES
Staff writer
TOPEKA — The Kansas Senate gave tentative approval yesterday to a bill that would lower the tuition rate for some state university students.
Under the bill, Kansas high school students whose parents move out of state would have 12 months to enroll in a state university, community college or technical institute and pay
the resident tuition rate instead of the higher non-resident rate.
This year's undergraduate resident tuition and fees for those enrolled in six hours or more at the University of Kansas was $645, compared with $1,600 for non-residents. This information is provided to give the
The Senate is expected to give the bill final approval today.
The bill also would allow employees and their families who transfer to Kansas from out of state to be eligible immediately for the resident tuition rate. Under current law, people who attend a state institute of higher education must live and pay taxes in Kansas for one year before being eligible for resident tuition.
opened up too many loopholes that could deprive the state of muchneeded revenue.
Some lawmakers said the bill opened up a number of opportunities for education and economic development in Kansas, but others said it
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, the bill made common sense and would make admissions to universities fairer and more flexible.
"If someone has spent all their school years in Kansas, and then their parents move, it's not fair that
they be deprived the education their parents have already paid for in state taxes." Winter said.
But State Sen. Nancy Parrish, D-Topeka, said the wording of the bill was so unclear that anybody could escape the out-of-state tuition rate.
"It's not fair that someone who gets transferred here for a promotion pays lower tuition," Parrish said. "And that someone with a part-time
job in Kansas, from out of state, is struggling and paying the higher tuition."
The bill would allow the Board of Regents to create more specific guidelines for universities and decide some questionable cases itself.
The bill has no retroactive clause allowing people already in Kansas who fall under the guidelines to pay the resident tuition rate.
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ANNOUNCING:
KU ON WHEELS
SPRING 1987
ROUTE HEARINGS
Thursday, April 2
FOR the 87-88 Academic Year
The Student Senate Transportation Board is holding its annual route hearings to discuss possible changes in the bus routes for the next academic year. We will be hearing requests and recommendations on Thursday evening April 2, 7:00-9:00.Call 864-3710 for an appointment. Remember to gather as much information as possible as well as composing a realistic impact statement on the KU student body.
Call 864-4644 (Mornings) 3710 for more information.
Hearings will be held in the Northeast (upper level) Conference Room of the Burge Union.
K
---
8
Wednesday, April 1, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Midwestern nannies popular in East
By LAURA BOSTROM
Staff writer
One Boston resident asked nanny Lisa Shanley whether her McPheron, Kan., home had an outhouse.
Shanley, a live-in nanny for a family in Marblehead, Mass, denied having any outhouses, but said she often answered such uninformed questions about her home state.
"One person asked me if we had McDonald's." she said.
Although they may have limited knowledge of the Midwest, many Eastern families choose Midwesterners as nannies. The nannies provide
To insure a good match between nanny and family, both parties go through lengthy interviews and applications.
live-in child care for their employers and, in turn, receive a salary and free room and board.
The demand for nannies is growing, said Allene Fisch, founder of Child Care Placement Service, a Brookline, Mass., company that has placed more than 600 nannies in homes since it started five years ago.
Representatives from Child Placement Service and Helping Hands of Wilton, Conn., recruit most of their nannies from the Midwest.
Many families come to her agency because of a shortage of local help and more women working outside the home, Fisch said.
The nanny often becomes a part of the family. Fisch said, but a paid part, who makes $140 to $225 a week.
"Most of our nannies are in the middle of college. They're burned out and need a break." Fisch said. "Boston is an appealing place for them."
earns two weeks of paid vacation and often travels with the family.
The Midwest provides a more wholesome background, Mary Brugeman of Helping Hands said.
"Morals are more important to girls in the Midwest," she said.
Shanley said that discipline also was part of the Midwestern differenc
But the agencies also gave other reasons for Midwesterners' appeal.
"As children we're brought up differently, more discipline. Shannon."
She said the discipline she had seen on the East Coast was more lax than that of her Kansas background. The two children she cares for throw food at the table.
Court says public employers can search desks
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court ruled yesterday that government employees have limited privacy rights at work, and that employers may search file cabinets or even desks when there is reason to suspect misconduct.
United Press International
In an opinion by Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, the court said, "Individuals do not lose Fourth Amendment rights merely because they work for the government instead of a private employer.
The operational realities of the
But Robert Tobias, head of the National Treasury Employees Union, which has filed suit to stop such testing programs, said that the court's language indicated it would not look favorably on random testing of workers.
O'Connor's opinion drew votes from only three justices, less than a majority, so the ruling's legal effect hinged on a separate opinion concurring in the judgment by Justice Antonin Scalia.
workplace, however, may make some employees' expectations of privacy unreasonable when an intrusion is by a supervisor rather than a law enforcement official."
The decision, which for the first time sets a standard for public employer searches, could influence the debate about drug testing of public employees, which opponents have charged violates the Fourth Amendment bar against unreasonable searches and seizures.
Under the standards announced by the court, an employer need not have a specific name.
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duct a search as is required of police officers looking for criminal evidence but merely "reasonable grounds for suspecting that the search will turn up evidence that the employee is guilty of misconduct."
Searches also are appropriate, the court said, "for non-investigatory work-related purposes such as to retrieve a needed file." The court limited its ruling to such things as file drawers and made clear that investigators not only cannot through purses or workers' other personal effects.
In a footnote, O'Connor said the
ruled did not address the proper Fourth Amendment analysis for drug courts.
We wish to invite all Hispanic students at KU to our cultural retreat, to be held from 10 p.m., April 10 until 7 a.m., April 11. The location is the Ecumenical Center, 1204 Oread. Please contact the Hispanic-American Leadership Organization to RSVP and or for more information, 864-7977
CULTURAL RETREAT APRIL 10, 1987
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Independent Study is flexible, convenient,and personalized. You can enroll at any time, set your own pace, and study at home. Independent Study offers more than 100 approved college courses similar to those taught in-residence. These include:
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NOTICE TO ALL PERSONS HAVING AN INTEREST IN THE REGULATIONS GOVERNING TRAFFIC AND PARKING ON THE ROADS, STREETS, DRIVEWAYS, AND PARKING FACILITIES AT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS.
1. GENERAL REGULATIONS. The current regulations specify who is subject to these rules and regulations, that all vehicles must have a valid parking permit, and hours of access to the central campus. The proposed amendment changes hours of access to the central campus to 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Notice is hereby given to all interested parties that on April 15, 1987 at 3:00 p.m., C.S.T. in the Kansas Union Building, Walnut Room, Level 6, University of Kansas, Lawrence, a public hearing will be held concerning the adoption by the Board of Regents of regulations governing traffic and parking on the roads, streets, driveways, and parking facilities at the University of Kansas. The following is a summary of the substance of the rules and proposed changes; while certain sections of the regulations have been remembered and reorganized, the only substantive changes in the regulations are noted as follows:
2. DEFINITIONS. The current regulations specify, for the purpose of these regulations, the definitions of student, faculty, staff, visitors, dormitory visitor, medical parking needs, handicap parking, moped parking and motorcycle. The proposed amendment will change the procedure for acquiring a permit due to medical conditions and makes that permit available for a maximum of one year.
makes that permit available for a maximum of one year.
3. VISITOR PARKING. The current regulations specify conditions under which visitors may legally park at the University of Kansas. The proposed amendment eliminates the toll lot and converts it to half meters.
4. PARKING PERMITS. The current regulations establish procedures pertaining to parking permits and the types of permits available. The proposed amendment clarifies the use of the departmental pass, and allows up to 3 hours overnight parking, eliminates the loading pass and changes the temporary to a 6 week minimum.
5. STUDENT, FACULTY, AND STAFF PARKING. The current regulations establish procedures by which parking permits for vehicles may be obtained and appealed, and procedures for new employees. The proposed amendment adds a clause about disabled vehicles and specifies that new employees must have valid staff LD., to purchase a permit.
6. PERMIT FEES. The current regulations specify the fees charged for parking permits. The proposed amendment raises blue to $70, red to $55, yellow to $40 dorm and housing to $23. Red Motorcycles are $25, blue cycles are $10, service permits are $100. Campus pass passed to $30, lot 115 to $70.
7. CONTROL OF PARKING LOTS AND ZONES. The current regulations specify times and locations for parking restrictions at the University of Kansas. The proposed amendment allows for issuance of multiple tickets at meters. Meter will cost $2.50 per hour, or at loading zones. $2.50 for 20 or 40 minutes.
meters. Meters will cost $ .25 per hour, or at loading zones, $ .25 for 20 or 40 minutes.
8. VIOLATIONS. The current regulations specify the penalties for misuse of parking areas. The proposed amendment will remove the reference to loading zones since these will be covered with the meter violation. Group I & II violations will go to & $10.00.
9. PAYMENT OF FEES FOR VIOLATIONS. The current regulations specify the method and procedure for payment of violation notices, late payment, what constitutes excessive violations & consequences of excessive viola tions & imprisonment procedures. No amendments are proposed.
Rows or MALLETS OF VIOLATION NOTICES. The current regulations establish the procedure for appeals from a charge of violation of ordering area. No amendments are proposed.
mitigate of parking area. No amendments are proposed.
11. STATUTORY AUTHORIZATION. The current regulations establish the authorization of the Board of Regents to promulgate regulations for the control of parking and traffic on the University of Kansas campus and to establish misuse fees for violations of the regulations. No amendments are proposed.
interterested persons will be given a reasonable opportunity at the hearing to present their views concerning the adoption of the proposed amendments to the existing regulations. Written comments may also be submitted prior to the hearing. Written comments or a request for a copy of the proposed regulations and a copy of the financial impact statement of such changes should be submitted to Edwyna Gilbert, Associate Dean, College Office, University of Kansas, Strong Hall, Room 206, Lawrence, Kansas 66045.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 1, 1987
9
Council wants dry parties for fraternity rush in the fall
By JOSEPH REBELLO
Staff writer
An Interfraternity Council proposal to ban alcohol from rush parties next fall may take the zing out of rush revelries, but it will reduce the risk of expensive liability suits, council members said yesterday.
The proposal, which was presented to members last week, would forbid fraternities to serve alcohol at any organized rushing event while rushes are on fraternity premises.
Violations of the rule would be punished by a fine of $500 or 10 percent of the fraternity's rush budget, whichever is greater. Fraternities also would face the possibility of being suspended from the council.
"I expected to have people really vell about it." he said.
In an informal vote at the meeting last week, council members voted unanimously to adopt it. Members will formally vote on the proposal at the council's next General Assembly meeting April 22.
Charles Wheeler, council president, said he was pleasantly surprised by the success of the program.
10m Sheehan, council vice-president for membership, said that the measure reflected a nationwide trend among fraternities not to serve alcohol at rush events.
The cost of liability insurance for
"All it would take would be for a russet to get hurt and sue the chapter."
Wheeler said that damages awarded in successful liability suits were so high that a single suit could cause a fraternity to close down.
alcohol-related accidents has become so high that most fraternities have initiated dry rush programs and stopped buying insurance, he said.
"We figured if we didn't do it ourselves, the University or the alcohol and beverages board would do it for us sooner or later. This way we get to make the rules the way we want it." he said.
Darren Black, rush chairman of Delta Chi fraternity, said that since the drinking age had been raised to 21, fraternities risked getting caught violating state law when they served alcohol to high school seniors attending rush events.
That makes dry rush not only healthy, but necessary for fraternities he said.
The measure also would help improve the image of the fraternities and their rush programs. Wheeler said.
"I think this will help show that we do other things besides drinking and partying." he said.
Sheehan said that dry rush would
help attract a better type of student
"We'd get the people that are really interested in your house and not the guys who are just coming for the beer," he said.
to rush events.
Danny Kaizer, assistant director of organizations and activities and coordinator for greek programs, said that dry rush programs would encourage prospective fraternity members to make informed decisions about houses.
It also would help fraternities make rational decisions about what students they offer membership to, he said.
"When people are sober, they are able to make clear, informed decisions about their membership," he said.
But, Sheehan said, some fraternity members probably would have a hard time getting used to the idea.
"There'll be a bit of a shock because it's like we're taking a 360-degree turn. Chapters will now have to incorporate ideas to motivate people." be said.
John Creighton, president of Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity, said, "The rush parties won't be as much fun in some ways, but fraternity representatives realize that this is the only way to do it. It doesn't do any good to oppose it because it's just a fact of life now."
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Election heats up at debate
Staff writer
By LISA A. MALONEY Staff writer
Polite campaign rhetoric gave way to heated arguments last night at a Student Senate election debate, as candidates from the First Class, Bottom Line and Synchronicity coalitions attacked each other's policies and platforms.
The debate, in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union, was sponsored by the Associated Students of Kansas.
One of the criticized proposals was First Class plan to open more classes for students. Jeff Mullins, First Class presidential candidate, said the coalition would finance with Senate money some academic groups, such as KU Forensics, that now receive some financing from academic departments.
If Senate adequately finances these clubs, Mullins said, they would not have to seek additional financing from departments, whose money then could be used to open classes.
And in some departments, Mullins said, extra teaching assistants can be hired for as little as a $500 fee reduction.
Mullins said that he and Brian Kramer, First Class vice president candidate, also would turn over the Senate to the Senate to use to open classes.
But Stephanie Quincy, Bottom Line vice-presidential candidate, said that in addition to fee reductions, most TAs received a monthly stipend of about $500. The cost of opening an extra class also would include money for supplies, she said.
Phillip Duff, Synchronicity presidential candidate, said it would cost about $6,000 to open one 18-bus class in the school of Architecture and Urban Design.
"So we could spend the entire Senate unallocated account and help pile up our budgets."
Duff stressed the importance of lobbying state legislators to help improve education at KU.
"Faculty salaries here are just enough to make KU a hiring ground for other universities," he said. "A professor will take a sabbatical, get a better offer from another university, and never come back to KU."
Glenn Shirtliffe, Synchronicity vice presidential candidate, said other educational issues, such as waiving 100 percent of graduate students' fees and ensuring that money from tuition increases goes directly to KU, were also priorities.
The First Class coalition criticized several Bottom Line proposals, including a plan to extend Watson Library's hours.
It costs $9 million a year to operate the library, Mullins said, and it would cost an additional $1 million to extend library hours by 10 percent.
But Mullins and Kramer said students were most concerned with getting the classes they needed.
Quincy said she and Krakow would not seek a 24-hour library at first. Under their proposal, the library would have certain study areas sectioned off, including the first-floor lounge, so students could study there after regular hours.
"Student Senate doesn't have the money to do that," Mullins said. "It would become student library, not Student Senate."
In addition, the library updates its main-frame computer during its closed hours. he said.
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Wednesday, April 1, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Tactic averts amendments as death penalty bill moves
United Press International
TOPEKA — Using a parliamentary tactic that cut off any attempts at amendment, a Senate committee yesterday sent a death penalty bill to the Senate floor.
On a 6-5 vote, the Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee sent the bill to the full Senate without a recommendation.
Although the bill was amended in discussion Monday, no further amendments were allowed yesterday because of a tactic directed by Chairman Edward Reilly Jr., R-Leaventworth, and State Sense. Bill Morris, R-Wichita, and Ben Vidricksen, R-Salina.
As soon as Reilly opened discussion on the bill, he recognized Morris, who moved that the bill be sent to the
Senate without recommendation. Immediately, Vidricksen made a substitute motion that the bill be sent to the Senate with a favorable recommendation.
The motion-substitute motion combination prevented any attempt at a substitute motion to amend the bill.
State Sen. Phil Martin, D-Pittsburgh, bitterly criticized the action, contending that the question of the cost of the death penalty needed to be further explored. Reilly countered these arguments, saying the committee had addressed that issue and further argument would be fruitless.
for another reason. Vidricksen's motion failed on a 5-6 vote. Then Morris' passed on a 6-5 vote.
State Sen. Richard Bond, R-Overland Park, was the swing vote who
"Our chairman orchestrates things well." Morris said when questioned about the parliamentary tactic after the meeting. "He encouraged me that I might like to do that (make the motion) and I did it."
changed his vote to move the bill to the Senate without recommendation. Bond said he would vote against the bill on the Senate floor.
"It's naive to assume that it won't get to the Senate floor." Bond explained. "It will by floor amendment or if the leadership has to send it through the Agriculture Committee."
Reilly, the Senate's top death penalty supporter, said he thought the full Senate might debate the bill before the end of the week.
Berkley wins in KC by landslide, looks ahead to city's challenges
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Mayor Richard L. Berkley defeated Councilman Jim Heefer in the city's non-partisan election yesterday, winning a third four-year term.
The Associated Press
Unofficial results with all precincts reporting showed Berkley defeating Heeter 50,992 to 30,841, a margin of about 62 percent to 38 percent.
porters at a Kansas City hotel.
"We can't afford to look back on successes," he said. "We must look ahead to our future and to the challenges of our city. The challenges of education, crime reduction, capital improvements, new safety measures, revitalization are just a few of the issues we must address."
The victory the largest in mayoral races since the 1967 general election, when former Mayor Ilius W. Davis captured 66 percent
"The votes are counted and the victory is ours." Berkley told sup-
of the votes against the late Rex Bone.
"I'm proud of you, and I'm proud of our campaign." Heeter told supporters last night. "You believe in a cause, and I'm proud of you for that. You gave Kansas City a mayor's race it'll never forget. Nobody will ever call the 1987 mayor's race boring."
Berkley, 56, a Republican, was a councilman for almost eight years before becoming mayor in 1979.
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1987 KANSAS RELAYS BUTTONS HAVE ARRIVED!!
If you purchased an All-Sports Ticket you may stop by the ticket office in Allen Field House and pick up your Relays button
If you didn't purchase an All-Sports Ticket,you can still get a button for only $2.00 until April 17.
This years Highlights include:
- Al Oerter, 4 time Olympic gold medalist
- Over 250 high school, college and university teams from over 20 states compete for Kansas Relays championships.
- Over 250 high school, college and university teams
- Over 1,000 runners to compete in Kansas Relays marathon and 10,000 meter town and campus road race.
Stop By:
Stop By: Athletic Ticket Office Allen Field House Lawrence Kansas, 66045 more info call 864-3141
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 1, 1987
11
Women scientists still face obstacles
By PEGGY O'BRIEN
Staff writer
Women astronomers have made significant achievements although the status of women scientists still is unclear, a prominent woman astronomer said yesterday.
Sidney Wolff, director of the Kitt Peak National Observatory in Arizona, is the first woman director of a major observatory. She spoke to about 20 people yesterday in the Watkins Room of the Kansas Union about women in astronomy and the issues facing women scientists.
Her visit, which was sponsored by the departments of women's studies, physics and astronomy, and chemie, has been co-organized colloquium Monday on star formation.
Barbara Anthony-Twarog, assistant professor of physics and astronomy, the only female professor in the department, introduced Wolff at yesterday's Drinks and Dialogues.
Wolff gave her audience a history of women in the field of astronomy, answered questions and led discussion concerning the status of professional women.
Throughout history, men directed astronomical research and women were called upon to carry out the routine work.
"My experience is that people still make blanket statements about women scientists, but that the ones they know are OK. Women are treated as individuals," Wolff said.
Because astronomy is a small discipline, with about 2,000 practicing astronomers in the United States, most astronomers are familiar with each other, at least by reputation, Wolff said.
Wolff said she didn't see any barriers to women wanting to enter astronomy but that they might experience obstacles further along in their careers.
Legal Services for Students
Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE!
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The Student Senate Finance Committee approved budgets for 15 student senate members.
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Steve Gilchrist, committee cochairman, said, "We're attempting to come up with a physically responsible budget close to the money we have."
By a Kansan reporter
Followed by a question/answer period
The student organizations and the amounts granted by the committee were: KU Hockey Club, $9,650. Environs, $360. Free China Club, $486. Latin American Solidarity, $240. Gary and Lesbian Students of Kansas, $355. International Club, $2,339. Ku Coalition for Peace and Justice, $171. Ku Amateur Radio Club, $1,342. Rocky and Bullwinkle Fan Club, $617. Ku Cricket Club, $952. Slightly Older Americans for Freedom, $195. Men's Soccer Club, $2,375. Women's Soccer Club, $1,071. Sci Fi 2, $271; and the Society of Women Engineers of KU, $210.
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Tom Woods, Senate treasurer, said that the Senate had $65,000 allocated to finance all 43 student organizations but that an extra $20,000 could be added to that amount from the Senate's unallocated fund.
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12
Wednesday, April 1. 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Some studios violate fire codes; committee to revise regulations
By TIM HAMILTON
Staff writer
The dean of the School of Architecture has appointed a committee to redefine regulations guiding students' use of studies in Marvin Hall and Lindley Annex.
W. Max Lucas, dean of the school, said he had formed the committee this semester to address concerns of students and facilities and operations employees about fire code violations in students' studios.
Fire marshals recently visited the studios and determined that some visual effects were needed.
The committee will establish guidelines to limit what students may do to personalize or enhance the work spaces in their studios, he said.
"We have to provide the students with a place to work, but we also have to maintain the facilities of the University," Lucas said.
The committee includes chairman Barry Newton, associate professor of architecture; Dennis Domer, associate dean of the school; Tom Anderle, associate dean of the collections; and Jeff Royer, Columbia. Me, junior an architecture student.
Newton said that a first copy of the studio policy had been drafted but
that it wouldn't be finished this week.
it wouldn't be insisted this week.
He said the studio problem caused recurring tension between the students and facilities and operations.
Anderson said that six years ago, after Marvin and Lindley Annex were renovated because of damage caused by students, school policy on the studios was strict. In the past few years the policy has been relaxed, and he said he didn't want similar damage to occur.
"I wouldn't call it a problem with a capital 'P,' " he said. "It's just that not enough of the people involved with the situation are satisfied."
About a month ago, city and state fire marshals inspected studios in Marvin and Lindley Ann and deter- ments that had been violated, Anderson said.
"They pointed out extension cords, overloading outlets, flammable materials hanging from ceilings and furniture clogging aisles to the door," he said.
"Any of the professors who were here then remember it and don't want that to happen again," he said.
"Now, I understand that a small group of undergraduates wants to do some different things."
"The students are frustrated because they couldn't see a clear written policy," he said.
Chris Theis, associate professor and acting chairman of architecture, said that maintenance was a problem that school policy was unclear.
have no problem with the students' studios, he said, if the students would clean up after themselves and not violate fire and safety codes.
Royer agreed with Theis and said, "It had reached the point that the administration was enforcing policies that the students really didn't understand. The facilities and operations people didn't really understand how we felt."
Royer said students worked in the studios up to 18 hours a day and wanted to make their spaces more comfortable.
"We simply had a desire to work and create our spaces like we wanted to," he said. "It kind of goes hand and hand with what we're studying."
Facilities and operations would
Royer said the committee had successfully established communications between students and the University.
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Drug paraphernalia were found in the cafeteria at Joseph P. Pearson Hall on March 25, KU police said.
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the camera at Joseph K. Pearson Hall on March 25, KU police said.
■ A jeep and metal trailer, valued at $19,25$, were taken Saturday or Sunday from the Kansas Army National Guard, 200 Iowa St., Lawrence police said. Heavy-duty bolt cutters were used to lock off the lock of the guard's front gate.
A stereo equalizer, valued at $300, was taken this weekend from a room at Jayhawker Towers, KU police said.
- A walkman radio, speakers and a microassette recorder, valued at about $200, were taken this weekend from an unlocked apartment at Jayhawker Towers, KU police reported.
- Two carbon dioxide bottles, valued at $217, were taken this weekend from Anschutz Sports Pavilion, KU police said.
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Hawning Harrington, Violin
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A Mid-America Arts Alliance Program
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8:00 p.m. Sunday
April 12, 1987
Church of St. Peter
Program
Sring Quarter No.8 Peter Scourthorpe
String Quarter No. 3
String Quartet No. 3 Aulis Salinen
Quarter (1955) Philip Glass
Spatial (1989) Phi Class
Critical Mass View Theorem
Stabat Mater Virgil Thomson
String Quartet No. 6 Bela Bartok
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 1, 1987
Sports
13
Indiana, Syracuse return home to cheering fans
12,000 greet Hoosiers at Assembly Hall
United Press International
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. — Indiana All-American senior guard Steve Alford still cannot believe that he is part of an NCAA championship basketball team.
"I'm still stunned." Alford said yesterday at a rally honoring the team.
"It hasn't sunk in yet. It's a dream come true and a great way to end some business."
More than 12,000 people cheered in Assembly Hall as the Hoosiers returned home after defeating Syracuse. They also won to win the school's fifth A.C. crown.
Rolls of toilet paper went flying and a loud cheer filled the basketball arena as the team walked into view, led by seniors Alford, Daryl Thomas and Todd Meier carrying the championship trophy.
After helping present the trophy to outgoing Indiana President John Ryan, Thomas said, "This (moment) makes me carry with me. It's unbelievable."
IU
Indiana
Indiana
"Remember us being down by eight points. As you go through your life, I want you to remember last night, and if ever in your life you are down, I want you to remember this occasion and remember you can succeed." Knight said.
Coach Bob Knight, recalling when his team trailed Syracuse by eight points late in the second half, told the crowd to use the Hosiers' triumph as personal inspiration.
Keith Smart, who hit the winning basket in the final seconds and was voted the game's Most Valuable Player, said that he would work hard
to bring next year's championship to Indiana as well. Back-to-back championships have not been accomplished in college basketball since 1973 when UCLA won its seventh trophy in a row.
Allard, who will not return next season, was more attuned to the team.
“At the beginning of the season, I didn't think this team could do it. But this is a team that kept working and kept trying, and they did it.” he said.
"We did our best to bring this trophy home," he said. "Let's just cherish this moment as long as we can."
In addition to the celebration at Assembly Hall, more than 100 fans team the team at Monroe County Airport in New Hampshire when the Hoosiers' plane landed
Knight said his team came together as the season wore on, menacing him.
While the team was being hailed at home, the U.S. Senate passed a proclamation congratulating Indiana's accomplishment.
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Syracuse basketball coach Jim Boeheim praised the team's fans at a campus rally yesterday, saying their support would help the squad recover from its loss in the NCAA championship game.
United Press International
Orangemen thank 3,000 for their support
Boeheim, center Rony Seikaly, and co-captains Greg Monroe and Howard Triche briefly spoke to about 3,000 fans who waited more than two hours in Manley Field House for the team's return from New Orleans, where the Orangemen lost to Indiana 74-73 Monday night.
"When you go through what we did, when you look at a basketball game, it always comes down to winning and losing." Boeheim said. "But you don't really have a loser in that kind of game. Right now, this reception does an awful lot for us, because no one great you feel about how well you played, it takes an awful long time to recover from a loss like that."
Seikaly, whose play in early tournament rounds fueled the team's trip to New Orleans, said he could see Keith Smart's last-second jump shot that gave the Hosiers the victory "over and over in my sleep . . . but in your hearts I know we're No. 1."
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However, the calm reception that greeted the team was different from the reaction Monday night after the team's loss.
About 70 police officers in the Marshall Street area adjoining campus arrested 29 people, 15 of them students, after the game for offenses ranging from fighting to throwing a full beer can that injured a police
Dan Forbush, a spokesman for Syracuse University, said students who have been arrested would go before a university hearing board fc; possible disciplinary action.
"This kind of activity is absolutely unacceptable to us," he said.
horse.
"What would have happened in the team had won? Would the walls have come down too?" asked store owner Vincent Fitzgerald.
Police spokesman Rod Carr said eight police officers and 40 partygoers suffered minor injuries during the mob scene, which erupted at 11:30 p.m. Monday.
The confrontation began when police moved to break up the crowd and a fan began throwing bricks, shattering a plate-glass window at an ice cream shop.
For fans, the loss ended a golden season for the 31-7 Orangemen, whose trip to the Final Four tournament was a surprise for what had "en billed as a rebuilding year.
MARKET CATHOLIC KANSAS 746
Jayhawks prefer to compete outdoors
By DIANE FILIPOWSKI
An unusually cold or hot, rainy or windy day in the spring is not enough to make the Kansas men's and women's track coaches or athletes prefer the indoor season to the outdoor season.
Steve Heffernan, left, and Gerald Harder warm up with a jog. The two were working out at Memorial Stadium last week in preparation for the outdoor track season.
To Bob Timmons, men's coach, outdoor track is just more exciting.
Fred Sadowski/KANSAN
"Everybody perks up when it is
spring, just like the students on
campus. Timmons says, 'It's
the athletics that just and the
athletes just feel better.'
The women's track team opened its outdoor season March 21 at the Southern Westfield RELays in Lafayette, La. The men opened their season Saturday at Memorial Stadium where the team's first ever alumni meet.
Both teams will finish their seasons with the Big Eight Conference Outdoor Championships May 14-16 in Lawrence and the NCAA Outdoor Championships June 3-6 in Baton Rouge, La.
Cliff Rovelo, assistant women's coach, said many athletes preferred outdoor track because it was more prestigious.
"Outdoor" is more important than indoor because indoor does not have an Olympics, "Roverte" means that there was a world indoor resort."
In outdoor track, the athletes performed better, and their national qualifying marks and times outdoors were more competitive, said Carla Coffey, women's coach. "I think it is just a psychological advantage for the athletes," Coffey said. "They know that they will have that good performance outdoors."
Outdoor-track has fewer sprint events, more field and distance events, and a greater variety of middle-distance events. But the biggest difference, Rovelo said, is the size of the track.
Rovello said outdoor tracks were 400 meters, and indoor tracks, such as Anschutz Sports Pavilion, were 252 yards but vary from track to track.
Steve Kueffer, men's assistant coach, compared the size difference to car racing; the longer the car is, the more speed an athlete could gain.
Timmons said, "Anyone who circles the track has to relearn pace and strategy of a race because the track is twice as big."
For men and women, the 60-yard dash indoors is replaced by the 100 and 200-meter dashes outdoors. The 60-yard dash is replaced by the 400 and 500-meter dashes, and the 1,000-yard run is replaced by the 800, 1,000 and the 1,500-meter runs.
Outdoors, the 3,000, 5,000 and 10,000-meter are run compared to the 1 and 2-mile runs indoor. The nine-sephelease is also an outdoor event.
Coffey said the variety in the running events allowed the ath-
leters to shift over and run different events, depending on their level of conditioning. She said it also allowed variety in the line-up.
At the conference meet, the mile and distance medley relays are run compared to the 4X100 and the 4X400 relays outdoors.
Two hurdle events are run outdoors, the 100 and 400-meter hurdles for the women and the 110-meter high hurdles and 400-meter intermediate hurdles for the men. Indoors, the men and women compete only in the 60-vard hurdles.
All of the coaches agreed that outdoor track's biggest advantage was wind, but they also said it could be a disadvantage.
Rovetto said the athletes usually ran, jumped, vaulted or threw with the wind at their backs, which could help their performances tremendously.
Outdoor track includes more field events, including the javelin and discus for men and women and the hammer for the men, which Timmons said was an advantage because it allowed the whole team to compete.
Coffey said that some athletes liked having the controlled atmosphere of an indoor track, but that most preferred the better performances outdoors and the warm spring days.
However, If the wind velocity is faster than 2 meters a second, then an athlete's performance is not official and cannot be used to qualify for the NCAA championships.
JACKSON
Mike Tribolet practices jumping over a steeplechase pit, which usually is full of water. Tribolet worked on his form last week at Memorial Stadium.
Kansas pitchers having to adjust to new distance
By ROB KNAPP
Staff writer
Sherri Mach is on the losing end of a numbers game.
Three, as in 3 feet, is the number that's giving Mach A and a lot of other collegiate softball pitchers problems this season. The pitching rubber, 40 feet from the plate last season, has been moved back 3 feet this year.
The 3 feet gives batters an extra split-second to swing at each pitch, and the new rule has produced more hits and more runs.
But for Mach, a senior who was 22-6 with a 0.55 ERA last season, the numbers do not look good. She is 1-4 this season with a 3.33 ERA.
"I've had a hard time adjusting to this mess," I'm still having a hard time adjusting.
The extra distance has left only the fastest throwers unaffected, she said. Mach and the other Jayhawk pitchers are working hard to overcome a rule that has caused change in the game.
The NCAA passed the rule in hopes of getting more offense into the game and making it more exciting for fans, Kansas coach Bock Stancill said.
"The end result is that more balls are hit into play, and more are hit back home."
The Jayhawks are 13-13 this season after finishing 2-3 in San Jose, Calif., last weekend. Their next game is against Missouri in Columbia.
Pitching coach Gary Hines said the new distance put more pressure on the pitchers.
"Mentally, they've almost never been in the position where they can go into the bottom of the seventh with a kick on one swing of the bat." Hoe's said.
Hines said the Kansas pitchers were working on keeping their pitches down so that any balls hit hard would be ground balls.
Three feet may not seem like a very big change, but the pitchers and the hitters both are noticing the difference.
The end result is that more balls are hit into play, and more are hit harder.'
Bob Stanclift softball coach
"I don't think you realize it when you're in the box," catcher Kelly Downs said earlier in the season, "but if they moved it back to 40 feet again you'd be able to tell the difference."
Downs and a couple of other Jayhawk hitters are taking advantage of the change and fattening up their offensive statistics.
Downs, the Big Eight Player of the Week last week, leads the team with three home runs and 20 RBIs and is hitting .361.
But aside from senior first baseman Laura Cramer, who suffered a hand injury at the San Jose tournament, no other Kansas player is hitting above.240.
Meanwhile, Mach continues to hope that she will make up some ground on the numbers she posted last year.
"At first it was really frustrating,
said him, but everybody has had
to death with it."
"Each tournament we go to,we learn something new we can do to get better."
Vaughn will return to KU football team
By a Kansan reporter
The Kansas football team has regained the services of wide receiver Willie Vaughn, who announced yesterday that he wanted to return to the squad and represent the Jayhawks in the fall.
Vaughn, the team's only first-team All-Big Eight Conference selection and honorable mention All-American last season for Kansas, announced March 25 that he was leaving the team because of personal reasons.
Coach Bob Valesente said yesterday that Vaughn had worked out his problems, and that the team was happy to have him back.
Vaughn, a 6-foot, 185-pounder,
started in 10 games last year and
caught 41 passes for 341 yards, the
saison's Kansas performance in a
season single.
Vaughn, who ranks eighth on the Kansas all-time reception list with 69 catches for 782 yards, scored twice last season.
Vaughn, who missed three practices before returning, announced last week that he had considered transferring to San Diego State.
"I just don't like it here anymore." Vaughn said last week. "It's nothing against KU, but I want to go and try my luck elsewhere."
KU competes with Louisiana Tech and Tennessee for recruits
By DAVID BOYCE
Staff writer
Louisiana Tech and Tennessee battled in the women's NCAA Basketball Championship game Sunday, and now Kansas will battle both teams in recruiting.
"I was hoping that those two teams would not make it to the championship because two players we want also have indicated that they are interested in those schools," Coach Marian Washington said yesterday.
Women's Basketball
She said the two players she was recruiting had the height the team needed at 6-foot-5 and 6-foot-4. But Kansas will be competing against the national champion and the runner up for recruits.
Washington said she was not able to give the names of the recruits who have from April 8 to 15 to decide what school they will sign with.
Kansas has already signed 5 foot-8 shooting guard Cheron Wells during the early signing period last semester.
Wells played at Patterson Cooperative High School in Ohio and averaged 25 points during her senior season.
"I knew who she was," assistant coach Kevin Cook said. "She played in a program that I started six years ago."
Both Cook and Washington became
interested in her last summer when she was playing on a summer league team.
Wells considered Old Dominion, Purdue and Ohio State. She received letters from every top 20 school before choosing Kansas.
One player the Jayhawks are recruiting may be leaning toward Tennessee. Washington said it might
One reason she picked Kansas was its tradition and because Lynette woods
Washington thinks the Jayhawks have the inside track on the other prospect, who is also being recruited by Louisiana Tech.
be difficult to get her because Tennessee won the national championship.
"We are working very hard," she said. "The past few years we have been able to attract the blue chipper."
Both Washington and Cook spent part of last week recruiting.
From Wednesday through noon Monday, women coaches were not allowed to recruit because of the NCAA tournament.
"But once the dead period ended, we were back working hard, trying to get these recruits," Cook said.
The women's team needs height, Washington said. Only one player, Lynn Page, stands above 6-feet.
14
Wednesday, April 1, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Sports Briefs
Injury keeps Schriner from field next season
The Kansas Jayhawks, who as a team gained only 806 yards rushing last season, have lost running back Scott Schriner for the upcoming season.
Shriner, who had arthropodic surgery performed on his right knee March 18, is recovering from the operation and will not play football with him. The director of sports medicine, said yesterday.
Bott said that Shriner tie ligatures in his right knee in a scrimmage game March 14, but the injury was not caused by contact with another player.
"He is definitely out for the spring and fall seasons," Bott said. "It will be six weeks before he even walks again."
Schriner, a 5-foot-10, 195-pound junior from Lenexa, was the Jayhawks' leader in kickoff returns with 15 for 282 yards. His top return of 40 yards came against Oklahoma State.
Schriner, who played in 11 games last season
and started in one, came to Kansas from Butler County Community College where he scored 19 touchdowns and ran for 1,420 yards in 1985.
During that year, Schriner was a first team NJCAA selection, named a Gridline All-American, a first team all-Jayhawk conference selection and was named Back-of-the-Year.
KU softball player injured
Laura Cramer, starting first baseman for the Kansas softball team, is expected be out 10 days to two weeks after suffering a hand injury last weekend, softball coach Bob Stancliff said.
Cramer was injured when her hand was stepped on in a game against Pacific University in the San Jose Invitational.
A preliminary examination revealed no ligament or tendon damage. Stancill said yesterday. Team physician Ken Wertzberger will examine Cramer today.
Cramer's .324 batting average ranks third on the team. She bats in the lineup in front of catcher Kelly Downs, the team's leading home run hitter.
With Cramer out of the lineup, Downs twice was walked intentionally with runners in scoring position in the tournament. Kansas did not score in the three games in which Cramer did not play.
Clemens' contract rejected
WINTER HAVEN, Fla. — The Boston Red Sox yesterday rebuffed the latest contract proposal by the agent for holdout pitcher Roger Clemens.
"I'm just going to tell him we're rejecting it. We just don't think it's equitable, but we appreciate their calling and we want to keep the dialogue open," said Red Sox general manager Lou Gorman, before calling Clemens' agent Randy Hendricks in Houston.
Gorman had tried to reach Hendricks late Monday after the agent and Clemens had called with a new proposal. Clemens has been in Texas making out of the club's training camp March 6.
The 1986 American League Most Valuable Player and Cy Young Award winner is baseball's only contract holdout.
From staff and wire reports.
NATURAL WAY Natural Fiber Clothing 820 Mass. 841-0100
JASON KRAKOW PRESIDENT
STEPHANIE QUINCY VICE PRESIDENT
STUDENT SENATE ELECTIONS
APRIL 8 & 9
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Paid for by Treasurer: David Epstein
Bottom Line Spencer Calvin
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The apartment complex built with the STUDENT in mind!
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Gauze Skirt reg $63 $51 NOW $40.80
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RAISINS SWIMWEAR & COORDINATES
1-Piece reg $42.00 NOW $33.60
Shorts reg $26.00 NOW $20.80
Tops reg $30.00 NOW $24.00
Bikinis reg $36.00 NOW $28.80
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HANES HOSIERY
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Monday
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Wednesday
Thursday
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Sunday
Sale ends April 7th!
Teams continue to cut; Braves release Motley
Outfielders Mickey Hatcher, Steve Henderson, Darryll Motley and Mike Brown, pitcher Pete Ladd and infielder Dave Stapleton were among the veterans released yesterday as baseball teams continued to cut down toward the regular season roster limit of 24.
The Associated Press
But Craig Nettles, the oldest of all at 42, was guaranteed a spot on the Atlanta Braves roster.
It was a particularly significant day for veterans — the last on which a team can release a veteran without owing him his salary for the
full season. The 32-year-old Hatcher, a seven-year major league veteran, was released by Minnesota, with whom he had played since 1981 when the Twins sent Ken Landreaux to the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Motley, a former Kansas City Royal, was released by the Braves. Atlanta also announced that Nettles, released after last season by San Diego, had made the team. He climbed his spot with five homers last weekend — two against his former team, the New York Yankees, on Friday and three more in a 12-1 win over Baltimore on Sunday.
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
- chili conqueso
Are you baseball fanatic? If so, then Rottieise
League Baseball is for you. If more informe-
ment is needed, call us.
Announcing: KU ON WHEELS! Spring 1877 Route Hearings. Thursday, April 2, for the 878 University Board. Friday, April 3, for the 878 University Board is holding our main route hearings to discuss possible changes in the Bus Routes for the next academic year. We will be hearing requests and suggestions from our students on April 2, 7 p.m. call 684-7310 or an appointment Remember to gather as much information as possible as well as composing a realistic impact assessment. Requests may be sent by morning(s) or 684-7310 for more information. Hearings will be held in Northeast (Upper level)
EVERYONE IS PSYCHIC TO SOME DEGREE.
A Tarot Reading can help you channel that power,
make decisions, and heal the spirit Tarot Therapy.
843-4235
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Computerized Scholarship Search. We scan thousands of financial aid sources and find those you personally qualify for. For more information send $1 (refundable to the Scholarship Center, Box 306).
Folk Legend rambinb | Jack Ellott who has shared stages with such stars as Bob Dylan and Woody Allen. *Balllet*, 81& 84 & Vermont. With special guest Melvin Lumpkin l上诉 on p. 5. Advance tickets tickets to the show.
International Film Festival sponsored by the International Club In McCollum Hall at 7:00 p.m.
free admission
Thursday 2
free admission Wednesday 1
Fabulous Temples of Thailand
Wednesday 1
Brazil: People of Highlands
Discovering the Music of Latin
Only 2 days left to submit nomination for Women's Recognition
Friday 3
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Australia
Malaysia: Building a Nation
JASON KRAKOW PRESIDENT
Resort Hotels, Cruiseshelps, Airlines, Amusement Parks, NOW accepting applications. For more information and an application write: National Insurance Service, P.O. Box 704, Hillen Head, C.S. 29680
STEPHANIE QUINCY VICE PRESIDENT
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APRIL 8 & 9
Paid for by Treasurer: David Epstein Bottom Line Spencer Calvin
BOTTOM LINE
LEARN TO FLY. Introductory lesson $15. Our rates are always 15, 30% lower than our company rate.
GALA WEEK 1982: Wednesday, April 1. "Developing a healthy Lesbian/Gay identity." A lecture by Liz Gowdy, Gallery West in the Union. 6:30 p.m.
Modern users: Lonely? Bored? Want a new use for that modern dugout dust next to your computer? Meet new people on the K.U. Connection. 842-3122
Events of the Week Wednesday, April 1
Executive Board Meeting
6:45 p.m.
General Board Meeting
7:30 p.m.
Shabbat Dinner and Services with Hillel Alumni Members
Friday, April 3
Dinner—6:00 p.m.
Services—7:30 p.m.
940 Mississippi
R.S.V.P. by Thursday,
April 2
For more information call Hillel, 749-4242.
Student Union Activities is accepting applications for the Indoor Recreation Board Member position. Applications will be accepted at SUA, fourth floor of the Kansas University, beginning Monday, March 30. Deadline to apply is 5 p.m.
Student Government, not Student Politics.
Synchronicity
Paid for by Synchronicity.
VOTE JON GREGOR FOR RESIDENCE HALL
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ENTERTAINMENT
At Your Request is Lawrence's Best and Most Afrordable D J. Bound and Lights for Any (Occasion)
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ANIMATION
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Metropolis Mobile Sound. Number 1 with a baitel!
DJ Extracurricular Weddings, Dances, Parties,
Prams. Before graduation parties now Hot
Spins for Maximum Party Thrust! 841-7083
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 1, 1987
15
APRIL FOOLS
DAY
WITH
DOW JONES
and
the industrials
Come Early to
Get a Seat
It Could Only Happen at:
THE HAWK
1340 OHIO
FOR RENT
1 bbm furnished & 2 bbm unfurnished with cabiows available now at Southbridge Plaza Apts. 8901 Parkway N, No. 105. Call 641-8160; 2 Bedroom Apartment Call 641-8160; 3 Bedroom Apartment June-July with option to leave in Fall. Note that you can camp in 315 month & utilities. Call 641-1290; 3 Bedrooms; Adjacent to campus.
Apartment for Sublet: Spacies 2 bedroom, 2 bathroom, pool and tennis court. Call 841-7896.
Apartments for summer and fall at University of Miami. June, July and August only $190 unfurnished. Summer, June and July only $190 unfurnished. June plus all utilities. 2 Bedroom for furnished $250, plus all utilities. 1 Bedroom for furnished $250, plus all utilities. 1 Bedroom for furnished $250, plus all utilities. 2 Bedroom for furnished $250, plus all utilities. 1 Bedroom for furnished $250, plus all utilities. 2 Bedroom for furnished $250, plus all utilities.
Apartment for Fall: August 1. Jumbo 1. Jumbo
Aspen West now leasing for Summer. Energy efficient 1 and 2 bedrooms. 3 Blocks west of Iowa on 15th. Private patio desks, ceiling fans, no pets. $890-$434 month. 749-1288
Have the Hottest Party in Town: Rent A Hot Tub
Experience Student Cooperative Living at
Sunflower House
1406 Tenn.
Private rooms with shared housework and meals
749-0871
Available for sublease Brand new MasterCraft
apartment 2 bedroom & 2 bath furnished (193) &
2 bedrooms (185) in the city center.
Inquire Now For Summer and Fall Spaces
843-2116
11th & Mississippi
Berkley FLATS
LEASING NOW & FOR FALL
- Laundry facilities
- Over 40 New Units
* Great location
walk anywhere
Available
Laundry facilities
* Furnished Units
- Furnished Units
- On KU Bus Route
SHORT LEASES AVAILABLE
1123 Indiana Furnished by Thompson-Crawley
DON'T DELAY! Sublease. 3 story. 3 BR. Glenhaven Apartm. Campus 1 block. MicroFireplace, wafer/dryer, more Great opportunity. Will negotiate. 841-7597
Excellent location; 2 bedroom apartments in
a quiet, suburban neighborhood. Rates are
low and low rented. Available June 14th AT 1190
AM at Hometown Homes.
Female. Non smoker needed to share co ed house
for summer. Call 9646023 or 948-0727
Female roommate needed to share fully turbo-
bed 3 bedroom apartment. Has A C. A. (fireplace,
dishwasher, microwave. Facilities include swim-
room. Call Kelley 841-6543, Lori 848-4709.
PINECREST
Under New Ownership & Management
Several 2 BR s.
If new carpeting, cabinets,
and windows
Houses, Bedroom Apartments, Sleeping Rooms.
Available June 11; 2-bedroom apartments, 1.2 and
3-bedroom apartments; and, sleeping rooms.
Near campus. No pets. Call 892-8871.
and windows
Cable TV
blocks to bus route
Laundry facilities
Gas heat, very energy efficient
Heating systems
...oW FOR FALL. FALL 2 BR apt; bap! go!
Lease & lease, roomy, laundry No pets.
lease & lease, roomy, laundry No pets.
must sublease for Summer. Short walk to campus 2 bldm. townhouse {B41 8438}
block E. of Iowa on 2b...
Furniture by Thompson Crawler
2563 Redbud Lane
Reserve your apartment now! Just 2 short blocks from university, 1, 2 and 4 bedroom apartments. Furnished with some utilities and off street parking. No pets. 811-5500.
Reserve your apartment now! Just 2 short blocks from university, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. Furnished with some utilities paid and off street parking. No pets. 841-5500
Reserve your room now! For summer and/or fall,
Furnished with most utilities paid. Shared cook-
ing facilities. Just 2 short blocks from
University with of street parking. No pets.
*41-500
Room for rent in nix house near KU. Four month
*avail available.* 1833-4718
Room for rent for $110/mo. plus 1/4 utilities 7
— routes from Frazier. Call 841-8819
Mastercraft Offers...
Completely
Completely Furnished studios, 1, 2, 3, & 4 bdrm apartments—all close to Campus!
- HANOVER PLACE
- 14th & Mass. • 841-1212
- TANGLEWOOD
- 10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
- SUNDANCE
7th & Florida • 841-5255
1145 Louisianna * 841-1429
Make the right choice Live in a
Available mid May for summer sublease. Studio hen campus Water paid. Unique design. Call
Roominettes desired for nice house 2/1/25
south of Wichita. 81-190 room; evening 842-319 (d)
south of Wichita. 81-190 room; evening 842-319 (d)
Roommate Wanted for Summer Sublease.
Mastercraft Apt. 3, Bedroom, 2 Bath. Fully
furnished. Close to downtown & bus route. $165
per call. Call 749-2897
HEATHERWOOD
VALLEY
NOW LEASING
FOR FALL
- Short term leases
- accepted
- Lowest utility bills
- in town
- Gas heat, C-A, D-W
- FF retrig, Disposa
- Quiet location
For more info. call between 9-6, Mon.-Fri., 843-4754
--pool
Roommate desired: three bedroom Townhouse
adjacent to pool and tennis court on KU bus route.
$155 plus 1/3 utilities. Available April first. Call
841-8019.
Rooms available for summer and the 1987-88 academic year in the Christian living community "Kronomia" at Ecumenical Christian Ministries. Information come to 1204 Orad or call 443-4933.
Rooms for Rent in Big House. Close to Campus
$125 plus us. 841-4902, ask for KJ
Studio available for summer in super apt. comp.
large, great maintenance, recreation facilities and
laundry available. I will assume part of expenses.
Call 842 9699 after 6:30 p.m.
SUBLEASE. Furnished 2 BR apt 11/2 bath, Bathroom. Free parking. May 15 free days 15 free days 483 /706 or 843 /706.
SUBLEASE. BEAUTIFUL 2 bedroom Pin Oak Townhome! GREAT kitchen w/ microwave, dishwasher. Good for 2, 3, or 4 people $410 841-9629 keep trying!
SUMMER SUBLEASE: Spacious 3 bedroom
Meadowbrook apartment furnished, A.C. swimming pools, basketball and tennis courts.
300.00/month, 842.262
Female roommate wanted for this summer and next year to share a 6 bedroom apartment at the Glenmore Village.
southridge
university campus living
1704 West 24th
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
842-1140
Sublease for summer, studio at Hanover Place
Call 749-5340
Southridge Plaza Apts
Shelter for Summer. Brand new 3 bedroom one-bedroom very large with deck. Swimming microwave, dishwasher, fireplace, WD hookup, laundry machine, management charge $800. We rent for $550 and management charge $600.
Soumridge Plaza Apts.
LEASING for fall
1 & 2 bedroom apartments
10 month leases
water & cable paid
842-1160
Sublease bedroom in townhouse for summer
Available May 18th, free may Stay Call Laura.
**Sublease for Summer.** Furnished one BR with hibit used as second HR, 835 plus electric, close to house.
Susanlea. Mid May; 2 bedroom. Large bathroom, balcony, low water, unfair water免 AC.
EDDINGHAM
Sublease for summer, Tanglewood, 2 bedroom apartment, three to campus, 2 level Low utilitarian unit. $590/month.
PLACE
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
24th & Eddingham (next to Gammons)
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
- 10 or 12 month
- Free Showtime Satellite T.V.
- Fire place
2 BR APARTMENTS
- Exercise Weightroom
- Swimming pool
- Energy efficient
- On-Site Management
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Professionally managed by
Raw Valley Management, Inc.
Subbase: Trailrail one bedroom apartment.
Fuel: gas, water. Available. mid-May
749-928-1122
Sublease Available mid-May: 1 block from cam-
sels in summer; 2 blocks apart from
close to open in summer. 280 sq. ft.
--summer sublease 3 bedrooms in 4 bedroom
apartment on the hill. 843-1999
Appears on top of the hill. 843-1999
Summer Submit, 2 Bedroom Townhouse, Pool,
Kitchen, 4 earlyfall, 814-1297 (inquire 5) : afternoon
Summer Sublime. Campus Place next to Rock
Walk 1415 Louisiana, Furnished, 3 Bedroom,
2 Bath. $790. Call (212) 864-8350.
SubLEASE. 3 bedroom Apartment with 2 oaths, a c., d.w. Pool. Close to Campus: 841-5697 Summer Sub: room in apartment on bus route featuring priv. bath, decklet, cable pool, fun area. Near grocery pizza. pizza shopping center. Costs me $137 plus, but it's talk. RAD 749 7439
Summer Sublease: 3 Bdr. Apt. Rent May to August. Please call 749-369. Ap
Summer sublease for on campus 2 bdrm. apartment Balcony, wtr. pr., low utilities. 843/724-9278.
Located among 70 acres of rolling hills and trees, you'll enjoy the convenience of being close to campus and area shopping.
Summer sublease 3 bedrooms in new 4 bedroom
suite in Boca Raton, Florida
Utilities Available 19th May 19th, San Francisco Terrace
Location
Meadowbrook offers a selection of spacious and comfortable studios, 1,2, or 3 bedroom apartments, and townhouses to fit your lifestyle
Lifestyle
RESERVE YOUR
UNIT NOW...
meadowbrook
Very nice two bedroom apartments available summer/fall, Low utilities, fully carpeted, air conditioning, and washer/dryer included. $50 a month. Call 749-2189.
FOR SALE
15th & Crestline 842-4200
Blue Muskhii 12 Speed Touring Bike: new tikes,
excellent condition. Ask $170 negotiation, 1976
condition. Ask $170, 3,000 miles. new tires;
excellent condition. Ask $350,
negotiable). 843-4500 or 843-2490.
184/172 KU GPZ 270 4,900 1,800 all,
184/172 KU GPZ 270 4,900 1,800 all,
helmet/Cover. 2,200.00 fm 843.03 lbs.
helmet/Cover. 2,200.00 fm 843.03 lbs.
1982 Honda Moped Express SR Excellent condition. 600 miles; $300, but willing to negotiate Call
Commodore 64 computer. Includes keyboard, disk drive, printer, software, and accessories.
JVC integrated amplifier. 50 watt at a channel. Excellent price, condition. Call 684-6263, evenses.
MAX'S COMICS Comic Books, Playbys, Penhence, etc. 811 New Hampshire.
For sale: six PATRICK NAGEL "PLAYBAY"
PRINTS price from $7-895.00 Glass clipped
on hard or hard to prune brushes which are no longer in practice. Call 814-628-2298 Leave Message
50-70% Off Coach Airline Ticket Credit cards only. Ask for the Midnight Express. 728-3515.
For Sale: 72 Red Cutlass Convertible great for spring & summer or 79 Old Toms silver with leather interior. Both cars in excellent shape. Ask $500 for either one Call 842-9383 evenings
Apple II plus with 2 disk drives, so column card,
keyboard, mouse and keyboard. Apple II/PORI language system games; audios; and PORI language system software.
MOPED 1981 Mototecane. 140 miles. Excellent gas mileage. Asking $200. Call Vince.644-7050.
Men's 12 Speed racing style bike. Excellent condition. 75. Duane. 843-8663
NEN SPEED BIKE FOR SALE; Vista Carrera,
Canyon, and quit cheap. Contact
Davey, 844-6000.
schwin Mountain Bike: 18 speed and Schwin
travel Bike: 12 speed. like Brand New. Low
price. Good Condition.
www.schwin.com
ICA 25% Color TV $200 contact Mike Reynolds
843-4060
New Silicon-Carona XD-4000 Memory Typewriter,
Stain Box Loaded with features. $450.00
$179.99
Drafting stools and deck chairs. Cheap and ugly
“everything but Ice.” 8th & Vermont.
Tuxedo they last lest $3.00 each. Includes jacket, skelts, vest, and tie, Maury. 842-8334.
AUTO SALES
108 Volkswagen GTL Alpine System, Pirelli
manufacture great, excellent condition. Call 841-5990.
841-5990
FOR SALE-CHarming older room. Roomy,
clean, 3 bd. 1307 Connecticut 842 1693.
www.roomsofcharm.com
1977 Dodge Colt -4 speed, air. Dependable, $600.
841-81425 after 6.
Must sale: B2 Pontiac Firebird, 70,000 l.goal
Must sell: Cadillac equiseri. 13,700 negotiation
B2-642 4456 8469
B2-642 4456 8469
HELP WANTED
Eric M. I have your KU ID 841-6005
Lent Perspectives glasses in brown case. Please
contact us at kuj.com.
Must be a licensed optician.
LOST—FOUND
AIRLINEs CRUISELINES HIRING; Summer Career; Good Pay. Travel. Call For Guide Cassette, Newsserve! (1916) 944-4447 153. Are you good with children? Would you like to
Idrm Townhouse for summer special rate.
Swimming tennis, swimming tennis, U. Bus-
call 843 097 1260
Call 843 097 1260
Are you good with children. Would you like to be
with children? HELP 1 PARENTS: 729 Menin Ave, 218
304-562-2181
CAMP COUNSELORS Wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach: swimming, waterskiing, gymnastics, rifley, archery, campers, patting, crafts, dramas; OR riding. Also kitchen office, maintenance. Salary $70 or less. Job location: Seeker, 716 Nighthawk Mile, NH 41003. 612-344-2444.
Children's Counselors, Activate Instructors, WSI
Bus Driver, Cook, Kitchen Manager, Kitchen
Manager, Maintenance, Nanny for
(ee) ceiling Mounting, P.O. Box 711,
Boulder, CO 80036 (800) 424-5577
Cocktail Waitresses Wanted for Spring and Summer employment. Must be 18 or older and energetic, will train. Apply in person: Alvamar Country Club, 1899 Crossgate.
Computer Graphics Consultants need office manager! Must have bookkeeping and computer skills. Please self-identify and take a joke we want you to define. Available design jobs, B41-1501, 1414 W 6th Street GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16,040 $25,250 yr. Now Hiring Call 867-650-4600 Ext. R 1974 for current needs.
in our "Nanny Network" of over 500 placed by us in CT, NY, NJ, and Boston. One year commitment, including salary, benefits, room and board, airfare. All family fun. Our satisfaction. Many families for you to choose. Contact Helping Hands. inc at 203-843-1742 or ibc.com/bcshow. Visit ibc.com/bcShow & Hour Magazine.
NANNY POSITIONS. Care for children in one of our children's hospitals. Board, $20-$50 per week. Attend school board. One year commitment. Non-smothers preferred. Call for interview. LA PETITE MERE
Nanny Finders, Inc. looking for nannies Position available nationwide. Good salary, great benefits. Must make 1 year commitment P.O. Box 4033 Chapel Hill, NC 27515
NO FOOLIN'
Paid Summer Internships (any major)
— must be hard working
£400 per week
For interview call 749-7377
National Company seeking instructor for L.S.A.T. review *Part-time* weekdays *Weekend kings*. Position offered by National Company degree required, L.S.A.T. score 42 Call 842-5442. Paid summer internship K.C. Jewish Chronicle Any major college or university. Requires good knowledge of English, Knowledge of layout and newspaper procedures. Full time June & July, part-time in August. Conferencing Placement Center, 116 Burge Union, 864-8248
Part-time Catering Prep. with water_waitress $3.45 per hour. Varied hours from 10:26 Food service experience performed. Apply in person. Kan-on Intern Personnel Office, 5th level, Kansai Union
Part-time help wanted cleaning a large church.
General clean dining rooms. Monday Friday beginning
a 10 a.m. above minimum wage. A permanent
work position requiring 648 between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. only.
Personal care assists new *summer* Mornings
Personal care assists new *summer* Mornings
York, we’re ready to welcome you!
www.yorkcareers.com
STUDENT WORK-STUDY POSITION - on-campus publisher seeks help to 15 hours/week to open and distribute daily mail, answer phones, use computers and distribute materials eligible for work-study. $ 30.57/hr. hour required no experience. To start immediately. Come to 328 crush to complete application by 4/8/87.
Student Draftsman Needed. Architectural detailing on campus projects including preparation of current construction and fire safety codes. Proof testing feasibility studies, cost estimates, and detailed drawings on campus site planning projects. Requires at least 6 months of drafting experience with an experienced project manager.
engineering or architectural office. That
is a 12 FOE interview for an interview. Deadline Friday, April
4th at 6:30 p.m.
Summer Employment Lawns care, wood
apprentices and students. Send applications to Hox
female apprentices welcome. Send inquiries to Hox
Summer Job. To assist disabled KU staff member as personal care attendant. Morning, evenings. 7-12 hrs per week. $4.5 per hr. Reliable. Requires no background to continue after preference. 842-1601.
PERSONAL
Jay. Want to try again? I want another chance at the Marian Broo, and at pool! L.
Forced to have sex on a date or while parting? RHSV helps sex cope with sexual assault. Conduct the HEAD QUARTERS at 841-2345 or through KU HOP, 718-693-0288, Hey G.P. I see you at the "New Club in Town!" It'll be a "big" Wednesday but you won't "The Answer" till the Weekend. Choose a Brew Drinking establishment-T H
Springbreakers. Bronco pays, Magna Carta, Spin the Bottle, Sophonizes in high school? Yo baby! French connection, The Bet, Handilebars, Tree got air! Bedlone Snowball, Mennah! Both! Two both! What's in the soap dish? Who's Megan Bob & Hoy! Love, Roadside Lover
He creates in gift gifting. Fulfilled funnels with
portraits. Portraits for all occasions. Call
*Greer or Grace*
**Email:** greers@barnesandnorth.com
Celebrate with a song 'Send an' $a! Jm a Jayakwaw- $a!
Celebrate with a song 'Send an' $a! Jm a Jayakwaw- $a!
Vermont 798- 7140 Southern Halls Mall
Maryland 765- 7120
Use It or Lose It Money Saver
Congratulations to the New Rock Chall IBA Director - Suzanne Cole. We Love You Your Alpha Chi Omega sisters
BUS. PERSONAL
Dan: The Navy AE. Did you roll me off in
something so sweet at Charlotte. I would
be able to get together with her.
Unlimited Use
$2 per session/enrollment $10 a mo.
or
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
25th & Iowa • 841-6232
John? Hey Blondie! Have seen you on campus
creative party Valentine's Dying to meet you
REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquarters.
We're here to we care.
8a 74 69 Class
We're always open.
GLEASYHANIS" Write for KS/MO into PER-
KUS/GLEASYHANIS" Mailed discreetly (confidentially)
9406-9128 Mailed discreetly (confidentially)
$$$$$$$$ Extra Income Opportunity - spare time in
writing. Write New Directories Association P.O. Box 3655
212-789-4020.
HACHEC, BAKCHAC, ARM FAIN, LEG PAIN Student and most insurance accepted For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark Johnson 843-3979
Most reasonable rates in town for all your photo needs especially graduation, resumes, and portfolios.
Rare and Used Records. Buy, Sell, or Trade
Records UUW, LLC Unique. Unworn.
SERVICES OFFERED
AEROHOS AEROHOS AEROHOS
AEROHOS Th 19th Edition of Ballet
& Bellorina & 82.90 Lawson 841-609
www.aerohos.com
CHIMSO SU SHPOTTO is looking for young
players. We will accept 10% of the
150% offer direct cost on fees. Call
Natalie at (804) 673-3292 or email
natalieschimso@chimso.com
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7739
*Graduates and undergraduates, money for college is available. Contact College Scholarship Sources. (913) 764-0299 or 1-800-USA-1221 Ext. 7079*
MALE TRATS EXPLAINED-Learn hundreds of reasons why men do unusual things every day. $1. TRAIT EXPLANATIONS, Box 48432, Wichita, KS
MATH TUOR since 1976, M.A. $/chr. (courses
above) 199, $/cr. 843-9032
MUSIC**H**
Red House Audio 8 track studio, P.A. and Lights,
Mobile Party Music, Maximum Audio Wizardry
Cad. Brod 749-1275.
Need money for college? Let us match you with
Scholarship and grant money for which you can
quality. For more information write Student
Work. 414.01 SW Cheshire Drive,
Topeka, KS 66644
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park 913-459-6787
Nearafrasite. All indies dresses can be made here.
Embellishments are available, styles from the latest fashion magazines. I will wear a designer jacket and jeans.
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your
driver's license, complete Transportation,
provided.
TUTORING MATH STAT. $8.00/HR CALL
$91 STAT
FOR WOMEN ONLY $37.50
total membership through 5-31-87
- 5 Levels Aerobics
* Body Toning Classes
* Tanning
* Weight Equipment
* Whirlpool
* Sauna
Body Shapes
M: 8:30-8:30
Sat: 9:00-4:00
Sun: 10:00-4:00
501 Kasidol Westridge Shopping Ct. 843-4040
Hours:
M-F 8:30-10:30
Sat. 9:00-4:00
Sun. 1:00-4:00
ino Ctr. 8414A40
TYPING
Best quality and fastest service 841-5069
A-1) professional typing. Term papers, Theses.
Dissertations, Resumes, etc. Reasonable IBM
Electronic Typewriter 842-3246
1-1000 pages. No job too small or too large. Affordable and affordable typing and wordprocessing systems.
Accurate affordable typing by former Harvard
student. Experience using LaTeX,
Dependable, professional experienced
Dona's Quality Typing and Ward Processing.
Term papers, termes, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter quality
printing, spelling corrected. 842-2744.
1-1-1 TRIO Word processing. Responsible
Conscientious. Reliable. B4 823 311 for service
dependable professional experienced
JEANETTE SHAFFER Typing
TRANSCRIPTION also, standard tape 848.8677
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAWS
PAPERS. Mommy's typing is in Australia but
will return KEWATCHING THIS AD.
1100 pages. Typewriter with built in dictionary for automatic spelling check. same day service available. Call Mindy 749-0425, evenings/wEEKends
AAA TYPING! Great typing, low prices! 8421942
after 4 p.m. a day, any timeweeks.
Experienced typist (typist), dissertations, term paper 482210 after 6:15 p.m. M F or Sat/Sun 482210 after 6:15 p.m. M F or Sat/Sun
GOOD IMPRESSIONS Typing Word Processing
Typing/Typewriting Papers Thesis Typeset
Texting Typing Words
For professional typing/word processing call Myrna 841- 1000. Special spring special 12/page, double pages.
KU SECRETARY will do your typing and word processing. Fast, accurate, quick turnaround. Instructions 8258 after 4 p.m. on Resume. Service-laser writing to copies ONLY 80-799-1294 after 5 p.m.
Smart Word Processing includes editing and spelling
requirements, reasonable rate, Foster, 49-27-10
8 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Theses, resumes, and papers 841-3469
WRITING LIFEELINE.
THE WORDOCTORS: Why pay for typing? Word processingeling transcription 943.1417
TOP-NOPT SERVICES professional word processing manuscript, recourses, letters, letter writing
WANTED
Typing: very reasonable rates and will also assist with spelling punctuation and form. Call 862 26298
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications resumes HAVE M.S. Degree 814-6254
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WANTED: Intelligent, responsible,
well-mannered coalition seeks
midwestern student body
for mutual fulfillment and fun times!
Synchronicity
- Policy
Rooommate wanted to share 2 bedroom Apartment Quotient - non-smoker $150 and hall utilities
Paid for by Synchronicity.
Two Female roommates for next fall to share three bedroom townhouse Call Laura. 842-3255
WANTED: Roommate Close to campus $142.40 plus 1/2 units. Call James. Callages 842.357 after 6 p.m.
Classified Information Mail-In Form
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
Words set in Bold Face count as 3 words
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words. Classified rates are based on consecutive day insertions only. No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising.
Blind box ads-please add $4.00 service charge.
Tear sheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements.
Found ads are free for three days, no more than 15 words.
Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansan.
Deadlines
Deadline is 4 p.m. two days prior to publication.
Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. two days prior
Classified Rates
Words 1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 2 Weeks 3 Weeks 1 Month
0-15 2.70 4.00 5.70 9.50 14.25 18.00
16-20 3.20 4.75 6.70 10.75 15.75 19.75
21-25 3.70 5.50 7.70 12.00 17.25 21.50
26-30 4.20 6.25 8.70 13.25 18.75 23.25
31-35 4.70 7.00 9.70 14.50 20.25 25.00
Classifications
001 announcements 300 for sale 500 help us wanted 800 services offered
001 entertainment 310 auto sales 700 personal 900 tipping
001 travel 600 holiday trips 700 travel tips
Classified Mail Order Form
(phone number published only if included below)
Please print your ad one word per box:
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Make checks payable to:
Date ad begins ___
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119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
---
16
Wednesday, April 1, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Double Coupons
Dillons FOOD STORES
Ohse
OHSE
BOLDEVA
MADE IN ITALY
Double Your Savings On All Manufacturer's "Cents Off" Coupons Up To And Including 50¢ In Value!
—Bonus Special—
Ohse
Beef or Meat
Bologna
Additional Purchases 99¢ Pkg.
K.U.
Gala
Bonus Special—
Gala
Paper
Towels
Additional Purchases ... 69¢
Super Coupon!
16 oz. Meat or Beef
Ohse Bolgona
69¢
Limit One With Coupon
White or Colors - 1 Roll
Gala Towels
39¢
Limit One With Coupon
Super Coupon!
Limit One Roll With Coupon
Limit One Coupon Per Customer.
Coupon Good April 1-7, 1987.
Super Coupons Not Included In Double Coupon Program.
—Bonus Special—
Light
Wheat Bread
Additional Purchases
49¢ Loaf
KU
Bonus Special—
Jackson's Chilled
Orange Juice
Additional Purchases
$1.09 Half Gallon
Super Coupon!
Limit One Loaf With Coupon.
Limit One Coupon Per Customer.
Coupon Good April 1-7, 1987.
Super Coupons Not Included In Double Coupon Program.
Light Wheat Bread
29¢
Limit One With Coupon.
Prices Effective
April 1-7, 1987.
(Ad Not Effective in Pittsburg, Ks.)
Limit Rights Reserved
½ Gallon
Jackson's Chilled 100%
Orange Juice
79¢
Limit One With Coupon.
K.U.
Gala
Gala
home you need a paper towel
PSA Café There
0 41260 09848 2
LIGHT
WHEAT
Rollbys
1947-1956
0 41260 09920
412A0100082
Limit One With Coupon
ORANGO CIDRAS
MILK LOTION
CONDENDED IN ORGANIC MILK
FOR HYDRATION AND SUPPORT OF SKIN
AND FOOT
NON GMO
100% ORGANIC
48 FL OZ (145 ML)
Wettbus
41260 09033
Dellbus
4126019033
Limit One With Coupon
For A Breath of Spring it's
"April in Paris" on our Deli
e
Deli & Cheese
"The Choice Of The Most Discriminating Diner!
Fanestil
Shop
Party Time Ham Lb. $419
Let Dillons
Deli Prepare
Your Dinner
Tonight!
Gerelaine Cheese Dutch Garden. Lb. $399
Dijon Mustard Dutch Garden. 79¢ 4 oz. Jar
Cream Cheeses Lb. $459
French Brie Cheese Lb. $499
Deli Items Available Only In Stores With Delis. Not Available In These Towns: Pratt, Arkansas City, Greensburg, El Dorado, Winnfield, Larned, Derby, Mulvane, St. John or Sterling.
Ready-To-Eat Fully Cooked
Ready-To-Eat Fully Cooked Hot Dogs, Polish Sausage or Hot Links Ea. 35¢ or 3/$1
C
Seafood Shopee
Fresh Cod Fillets West Coast Lb. $309
Clam Chowder New England Made fresh daily & served piping hot Lb. $179
Shell-On Shrimp Peel & Eat Cooked 71-90 ct Lb. $559
Fresh Silver Salmon Farm Raised 4-6 Lb. Avg Lb. $479
Look For Our Recipes At Our Seafood Counter. Lobster And Shrimp Siped And Steamed Free.
No Seafood Shoppes In These Towns: McPherson, Wellington, Augusta, Pratt, Arkansas City, Greensburg, El Dorado, Winfield, Larned, Derby, Mulvane, St. John or Sterling. Some Seafood Items Available In Dodge City, Hays, Great Bend, Junction City or Emporia.
Floral Deliveries Twice Daily Morning &
Afternoon. Sunday Afternoon Only.
Soup & Salad Bar...
SALAD BAR
HOURS
Salad Bar
799
Take home a fresh salad tonight! Make it right in the store at our new service Salad Bar. We have over 40 ingredients to choose from, including 5 Marie's Salad Dressings. Take the chill off a cold day & warm yourself & your family with some of our fresh hot soup from the Salad Bar.
( Available only in stores with saled bars. Salad bars not in these towns. Salina, Dodge City, Emporia, Wellington,
Augusta, Pratt, Arkansas City, Greenburg, Elizabethtown, Warnerd, Derby, Munday, St. John or Sterling.)
Flower Shop...
Cash & Carry
April Fool's Day Arrangement Candy or Green Plant
No Floral Shops In These Towns: Hays, Augusta, Pratt, Arkansas City, Greensburg, El Dorado, Winfield, Larned, Derby, Mulvane, St. John or Sterling.
$799
Plant
8" Hanging Basket
Ivy Geranium, Rose Moss, Charm Begonia or Fuchsia
Ea.
$849
- (Available In All Dillon Stores.)
I
Wizard of blahs
P
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Thursday
Gareth Waltrin/KANSAN
Details, page 2
April 2,1987
Vol. 97,No.124
(USPS 650-640)
Former senator Gary Hart of Colorado hands out an autograph to a young Ottawa resident after a speech in his hometown. Hart spoke to a receptive crowd last night at the Ottawa University chapel.
Education is top priority, Hart says
By JOHN BUZBEE
Staff writer
OTTWA — The federal government should repair the Reagan administration's damage to higher education and go on to make the country's universities the best in the world, former U.S. Sen. Gary Hart said in a speech last night.
Hart, speaking about ethics and priorities in government during a visit to his hometown, said Reagan's cutting Fell Grants, Guaranteed Student Loans and other student financial aid hurt higher education.
The government should increase scholarships in core academic areas such as science, math and language, he said.
"I fought hard against those cuts," said the former Colorado senator, who many people expect will announce his campaign for the Democratic nomination for president April 13 in Denver.
Hart said he would pay for increased education, health and welfare spending through luxury, excise and oil import taxes. But he said he would not raise income taxes, other than a temporary tax hike for top income brackets. He also would cut defense and some domestic spending.
"I learned all my early lessons in this community." he said.
Hart's speech at the Ottawa University chapel drew about 800 people, many of whom were family and old friends. He grew up in Ottawa and attended Ottawa High School. Distant relatives, former classmates and former teachers greeted him as he left the chapel.
Hart criticized the Reagan administration's negotiating to reduce nuclear weapons. He recently returned from the Soviet Union, where he met Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev.
Reagan made a mistake when he
Harry Shaffer, professor of economics and adviser for the KU Democrats, said Hart's chances improved when New York Gov. Mario Cuomo said he would not seek the nomination.
rejected Gorbachev's offer to drastically reduce nuclear arms in exchange for a Strategic Defense Initiative testing ban. Hart said.
"He is genuinely attempting to reform his own society," Hart said of Gorbachev. "He has decided in his government's and nation's best interest that we have to have reductions in nuclear weapons."
Hart's high school English and
journism teacher, Florence Robinson, said after the speech that Hart was a fine student.
Hart, who lost the 1984 Democratic bid, said, "I do have one announcement to make. I intend to run for the United States, April Fools."
"I think that with Cuomo out of the field that he has a very good chance," he said. "He has charisma. His ideas are liberal, but not so liberal as to be unacceptable."
But his campaign is no joke to other Democratic contenders because Hart is considered the front-runner for the nomination.
Evangelist scandals arm religious cynics and hurt church name
By JOSEPH REBELLO
"Most people who are not Christian tend to view these people as representatives of Christianity, and it is what they've always believed."
staff writer
Paul Hahn, Lawrence senior and president of Campus Advance, a campus Christian group, said, "It's too bad. What I see on campus is that it's creating a negative attitude toward organized religion."
The recent actions of television evangelists Jim Bakker, Oral Roberts and Jerry Fallwell have given skeptics of organized religion the ammunition they've been looking for, some campus Christian leaders say.
Roberts "your-money-or-my-life" fund-raising tactics, and the news of Bakker's sexual encounter with a church secretary that resulted in Falwell's takeover of Bakker's Pentecostal PTL Club, have blackened the name of Christian groups, the leaders sav.
"We're embarrassed by what's going on," the Rev. Jimmy Cobb, pastor of the First Southern Baptist Church, 1917 Naismith Drive, said Monday. "We do not support those kinds of groups."
Jim Musser, a minister for Campus Christians, said, "I think there's a consensus that we are saddened by the way these events have been handled.
Hahn, who lives in a residence hall, said he frequently heard cafeteria conversation turn to the subject of the Bakker scandal. What followed almost invariably were disparaging remarks about Christianity, he said.
'These college years are years when people make decisions that
affect them the rest of their lives." Hahn said, "Anything like this is going to leave people with a negative impression of religion."
David Pierson, Hays junior and president of Ecumenical Christian Ministries' Student Programs Council, said that television evangelists went to publicity when something went wrong, the effect was enormous.
"People who want to become closer with Christianity say, 'If that's what it about, then I don't want to be affiliated with it,'" he said.
Other campus leaders said that the media had blown the controversy out of shape.
"The media is trying to make a big deal of it," said Larry Havlicek, faculty adviser to the campus chapel of the Maranatha Christian Ministries.
Bob Minor, associate professor of religious studies, said. "Most campus Christian groups do not sympazize with television evangelism and so will not identify with its troubles now."
Despite the magnitude of the controversy, some good might come from it, said Brook Manees, Prairie Village sophomore and member of Campus Crusade for Christ.
"People in our group see themselves working for a good cause, and this might make them work harder," he said.
Med Center tests tumor cure
"People are becoming less vulnerable to being led along by personality types." Cobb said.
Cobb said that the controversy had dealt a blow to people's faith in television evangelism TV ratings for the programs have dropped, he said.
Staff writer
By JENNIFER WYRICK
The University of Kansas Medical Center and the Brain Tumor Institute in Kansas City, Mo., along with Yale University, are taking part in a pilot investigation to test an alternative cure for malignant brain tumors.
The study, which began in late February, involves administering Flusosol, a synthetic, miky substance that can carry oxygen to cancerous cells, said Richard Evans, chairman of the radiation oncology department at the Med Center and the project's principal investigator.
Evans' patients were recommended by doctors at the Brain Tumor Institute because they suffered from grade-four tumors, which are the most severe. The patients were removed and then withdrawn to remove their brain tumors before joining with Evans to take part in the test cure.
Fluosol, an emulsion that trans
Theoretically, if malignant cancerous brain tissue is removed, they less resistant to regulation.
ports oxygen efficiently, was developed in the 1970s. It was used primarily as a blood substitute for people such as Jehovah's Witnesses, whose faith does not allow them to receive blood transfusions, Evans said.
Evans said that cells were three times more sensitive to radiation therapy when subjected to high oxygen levels.
Normally, brain tumor patients do not survive a year after surgery. But reports from the United States and other countries indicate Flussoal may extend patients' lives.
tumors contain less oxygen than healthy cells," he wrote. "By using Fluosol, we may be able to reach into these cells and feed them with oxygen so they become less resistant and the radiation therapy has more chance of destroying the cancer.
"Flusos hold out tremendous hope for those people suffering from severe brain tumors." Thomas Delaney, a researcher at the National Cancer Institute in Bethesda, Md., wrote in a report
"The problem can be compared to an onion in that the outside layers of an onion receive a great amount of oxygen, but the inside layers of the onion are more and more poorly oxygenated. The same is true of brain tumors, which makes them quite resistant to radiation."
Evans said he suspected low oxygen intake caused some brain tumors to reappear in places from which they had been removed surgically.
"Cancerous cells in severe brain
See CANCER, p. 6, co. 3
“That’s precisely why we’re hoping that the Flossoil will carry as much oxygen as it can. Evans said. “I don’t think it would be a 40th the size of normal red blood cells.”
INSIDE
Baseball blues
The Kansas baseball team continued to struggle. The Jayhawks lost the first game of a double header to Missouri Western 7-1 and the second game ended in a 9-9 tie. The second game was called because of darkness. See story page 11.
"On the Line," a color photojournalism exhibit featuring the work of 12 notable photojournalists will be on display at Spencer Museum of Art for the next six weeks. See story page 8.
Fine photos
Bypass gets new vote; should pass Senate
The southern Lawrence trafficway almost hit a roadblock yesterday when the U.S. Senate tentatively voted to sustain President Reagan's veto of an $88 billion highway bill that included money for the project.
Byrd changes mind, forces second vote
But it now appears that the trafficway project will get the $7.2 million allocated to help finance its construction when the Senate votes again today.
An override appeared certain after Sen. Terry Sanford, D-S.C., announced that he had changed his position to would vote today to override the veto.
The Senate fell two votes short, 65-35, of the two-thirds needed to override a veto. But moments later, Senate Majority Leader Robert C. Byrd changed his vote to uphold the Senate rules to demand a second veto.
Lawrence and Douglas County officials have been counting on the federal money to help finance the $38 million trafficway that would follow a southern route around Lawrence to
The House voted Tuesday to override the veto, 350-73. The Kansas delegation voted 4-1 to override with Roberts, R-Kan., voting against
Chris McKenzie, county administrator, said yesterday that if no federal money was allocated this year, the trafficway would not die, and county might choose to slow the process until financing was ensured.
Lawrence Mayor Sandra Praeger said she hoped the veto would be overridden. But she said that even if the veto is upheld, she was confident that money for the trafficway could be added to a new highway bill Reagan introduced this week.
The city and county planned to contribute $4 million each to the project. The Kansas Turnpike Authority would invest $2 million.
ink Kansas Highway 10 and Interstate 70.
Trafficway opponents thanked Reagan on Tuesday for vetoing the bill. Environmentalists have charged that the trafficway would harm the Baker Wetlands, a wildlife refuge south of Lawrence that is home to the endangered Northern Crawfish frog.
Reagan vetoed Congress' bill Friday, calling it "budget-busting." Reagan deleted in his bill, among other items, the money for the trafficway.
From staff and wire reports.
Movie's premiere canceled
By PAUL BELDEN
Doug Curtis, immaculate in a black tuxedo, could only wait, wipe sweat and watch as the veteran mechanic in a rumpled work shirt with Band-Aids on his fingers worked frantically to give Curtis' movie life.
Staff writer
When the mechanic, George Wells, told one of his young assistants to do something, they did it running. About 500 important and influential people in Lawrence waited in the packed Granada Theatre, 1020 Massachusetts St.
It was hopeless.
Those who attended put on their best faces, but their disappointment showed.
The drive motor for the sequencer wouldn't shut off, Wells said, and he couldn't bypass it after trying for an hour. The world premiere of "Nice Girls Don't Explode" was canceled.
"Bad karma in Kansas," Barbara Harris, who plays "Mom" in the show, said afterward.
She said she had never been to a world premiere before, despite her screen credits, which included "Penguin Sue Got Married."
Frank Wright, vice president in charge of publicity for New World Pictures, was in charge of the premiere. Waiting for the mechanic to show up, he stood outside the theater and kicked a garbage can.
"This is the reason why, I guess." she said.
Almost any regular movie-goer has, though. It was a typical breakdown. The movie began without sound, shadows of theater employees' hands soon appeared on the screen as they struggled to fix the projector, the show stopped, and the crowd waited.
"I've been in charge of at least a 100, maybe a 150, movie premiers, and I've never seen anything like this." he said.
All appeared well when Curtis, a KU graduate and co-producer of the film, stepped in front of the crowd and said, "April Fools."
But as the seconds ticked off, the joke lost its humor.
Everyone laughed with relief, and a few people applauded.
Wright said the movie would be
WORLD FI
NICE GIRL
EXP
WITH BAR
Chuck Martinez, left, director of the movie "Nice Girls Don't Explode," and Paul Harris, writer for the movie, stand in front of the Granada Theater, 1020 Massachusetts St. The projector malfunctioned last night at what was to be the movie's world premiere. The premiere has been rescheduled for 8 p.m. tonight at the Granada.
Jeff Wells, co-producer of the movie, said he didn't hold a grudge
shown at 8 p.m. today at the Granada.
against the city of Lawrence, but,
"I just hope the projector works
tomorrow night."
See EXPLODE, p. 6, col. 1
2
Thursday, April 2, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Around the World
U.S. deaths in Salvadoran war will continue, leftist rebels warn
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador -
El salvador's leftist rebels warned yesterday that the two U.S. citizens killed during the past week in the nation's civil war "will not be the last" to die.
In a broadcast over rebel Radio Vencerose, the insurgents said they "will continue to annihilate command posts across the country" in a new offensive launched Tuesday with an attack on an army camp in north central Chalatenango province.
The death toll of 64 soldiers killed and 60 wounded was the highest officially recognized by the military since rebels overran the
same garrison in 1984, killing 100 soldiers.
Also slain was a U.S. military adviser, the first killed in combat since the United States sent the advisers to El Salvador in 1981. Tuesday, the State Department said another U.S. citizen, a CIA agent, died March 26 when a Salvadoran military helicopter crashed in eastern San Miguel province.
U. S. and Salvadoran officials attributed the crash to mechanical problems, but civilians in the region said the helicopter exploded in flight after shots were fired by leftist rebels.
John Paul II arrives in Chile for six-day visit
SANTIAGO, Chile — Pope John Paul II arrived yesterday in Chile for a six-day visit to the military-ruled nation where the pontifix plans to meet with government officials and leftist opposition leaders.
The pope arrived in Santiago from Montevideo, Uruguay, on the first papal visit to the predominantly Roman Catholic country. The pope was met by Chile's military ruler, President Augusto Pinochet.
On Friday, church and opposition sources said the Polish-born pontiff will receive moderate and left-wing opponents of Pinochet's government, which came to power in 1973.
In a climate of increasing political agitation, homeless families invaded wasteland on the outskirts of Santiago for a third day in an attempt to establish squatter settlements under the protection of the pope's visit.
East. West Germanv exchange agents
BONN, West Germany — West Germany exchanged three East German espionage agents at a border crossing point yesterday for four West German agents imprisoned for espionage in East Germany, news reports said.
Among the agents exchanged was Lothar Erwin Lutz, who was described as a "super spy" for East Germany in the West German Defense Ministry, the newspaper Die Welt reported.
In addition to Lutz, who was serving a 12-year jail term in West Germany, Die Welt identified Otto-Friedrich Schweikhardt and
Alois Tomaschek as two other East German agents involved in the swap at a crossing point on the border of East Germany and West Germany in the West German state of Hesse.
The West German agents, who had been jailed in East Germany, included two who worked for West Germany's federal intelligence service and two employed by its counterintelligence service, the Office for the Protection of the Constitution, the West German newspaper Bild said. They were not identified.
Across the Country
Babv M ruling has states facing new laws
The human tragedy of the Baby M custody case has state legislatures across the country scrambling for ways to deal with the largely unregulated practice of surrogate motherhood, lawmakers and experts said yesterday.
outright are pending in four other states.
Bills to limit hiring surrogates have been introduced and are under consideration in six states. Proposals to ban the technique
Superior Court Judge Harvey Sorkow in Hackensack, N.J., rulled Tuesday that surrogate contracts are legal under New Jersey law and rejected surrogate mother Mary Beth Whitehead's efforts to reclaim her daughter, now named Mlaers Stern.
Roberts 'spared' after receiving $8 million
TULSA, Okla. — Evangelist Oral Roberts told his flock yesterday that God spared him because his followers contributed more than $8 million, but he also said he would need that amount every year until the second coming of Christ.
"It's April and I'm alive. And I'm on fire," the 69-year-old evangelist told a television audience yesterday.
end of March, ended a 10-day vigil Tuesday night when he came down from his prayer tower at Oral Roberts University.
Roberts, who has drawn international attention since saying Jan. 4 that God would "call him home" if he didn't raise $8 million by the
He also said his vigil had rejuvenated his healing power.
"I went up there to rekindle the healing gifts in my life. And I want to tell you that hand's on fire," he said.
Roberts said the money would allow Oral Roberts University medical school students to graduate debt-free and become missionaries in Africa.
From Kansan wires
Weather
From the KANSAN Weather Service
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avg lo 38.5° norm lo 32.6° lowest temp 20° on 30th
snow 0 in.
avg. 3.5 in.
Rain 5.78 inches
avg. 2.5 inches
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35 / 22
OMAHA
37 / 23
LINCOLN
38 / 24
CONCORDIA
41 / 23
TOPEKA
42 / 25
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COLUMBIA
40 / 24
ST. LOUIS
41 / 23
SALINA
48 / 36
WICHITA
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CHANUTE
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TULSA
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norm hi 54.8°
norm lo 32.6°
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Campus and Area
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 2, 1987
3
Local Briefs
Alcohol was not cause of wreck, trooper says
Alcohol probably played a role but did not cause a car-train wreck that killed four University of Kansas students en route to a sorority barn party, the investigating trooper said yesterday.
Kansas Highway Patrol Trooper J.D. Hall said blood-alcohol tests conducted by Dr. Alan Sanders, pathology director at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, revealed that the students had been drinking, but the concentration of alcohol in their blood was less than 0.1 percent. Courts can presume a person is under the influence of alcohol if their blood-alcohol level is 0.1 percent or greater.
"None of them were over the legal limit." Hall said. "A couple of them were close enough that alcohol may have been a factor as far as reflexes, but it wouldn't have been a cause of the accident."
Two final debates planned for tonight
Lawrence city commission candidates will debate for the last time before Tuesday's election at two forums tonight.
Student Senate is sponsoring a debate at 6 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. The other debate, sponsored by a coalition of Lawrence neighborhood associations, is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in the Community Building, 115 W. 11th St.
City invites public to mall meeting
Anyone with suggestions and opinions about how the exterior design of the proposed downtown Lawrence mall should look is invited to attend a town meeting tonight. The Urban Renewal Agency's design subcommittee will preside at the meeting.
The meeting is scheduled to start at 7 p.m. in the Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St.
KU student wins award for paper
Patricia Karlin, Grinnell graduate student, won an award last weekend in Emporia for best graduate paper at the Kansas district meeting of Phi Alpha Theta, the history honor society.
For the first time, the Phi Alpha Theta meeting was held jointly with the Kansas History Teachers Association annual meeting.
Other KU students who presented papers at the Phi Alpha Theta meeting were Virgil Dean, Emporia graduate student; Margaret Palmer, Independence senior; and Randy Sowell, Wichita graduate student.
Presenting papers at the KHTA meeting were Robert Bader, research associate in history; Marilyn Brady, lecturer in women's studies and assistant reference librarian of the Kansas Collection at Spencer Library; Nancy Garner, Overland Park graduate student; and Donald R. McCoy, University distinguished professor of history.
Homemaker class will meet tonight
Cooking tips, recipe ideas and a petpourri of helpful household hints will be available at Homemakers School 87 at 7 p.m. today in the Lawrence High School auditorium. 2017 Louisiana.
From staff and wire reports
Seesaw, balloons at Wescoe mark start of Wellness Week
TIM HENRY
By JOSEPH REBELLO Staff writer
For a moment, it looked as if the circus had come to town.
Staff writer
For about three hours yesterday, a handful of students and members of the office of residential programs stood outside Wescoe Hall distributing several hundred blue and orange balloons and about 600 oranges to surprised passers-by.
"Squeeze a little wellness out of your life," read a banner placed in front of the building. Directly in front of it, two students sat on a bright orange seasah. Others distressed pamphlets on safe sex and health.
The colorful display kicked off the office of residential programs' Wellness Week, a week devoted to promoting physical and intellectual well-being among students.
One student, Chris Ashner, Prairie Village junior, was so delighted by the scene outside Wescoe Hall, that he unslung the camera he'd been carrying and began to take pictures.
"This is pretty festive," Ashner said. "When you walk by Wescoe, you don't usually see this kind of thing going on."
Deb Stafford, assistant director of residential programs and Wellness Week coordinator, said the display was designed to make students think seriously about their health and have fun doing it.
David Innes, Harper sophomore, foreground, and Mark von Schlemmer, Leavenworth graduate student, toss oranges to one another as they teeter on a seasaw. The two were a featured attraction on Wesco Beach during the office of residential programs' Wellness Week.
"We really wanted to hit on the lighter side," she said. "Instead of telling people 'Do this' or 'Do that,' we wanted to show you can have a good attitude and knowing. You can have a good time just exercising with your friends."
"Wellness and healthy lifestyles don't just mean being thin. We're talking about helix in the overall sense. We're just saying, 'Look at your overall lifestyle. It'll make you feel better.' "
Some students, however, were a little squeamish about some of the information they were offered.
At a stall dealing with information on safe sex, several kinds of contraceptive devices were displayed, in addition to about a dozen different namphells on sex.
Many students stopped to ask questions, but few took any of the pamphlets, said Lynn Heller, coordinator of health education at
"I think the problem is a lot of people don't want to be identified with this kind of information," she said.
Watkins Hospital. Heller was one of two volunteers answering students' questions at the stall.
House delays bills that effect tuition enrollment at KU
By CHRISTOPHER HINES Staff writer
Staff writer
TOPEKA — The state House yesterday put off a decision to change the open enrollment policy at state universities and threw back to committee a bill allowing the Board of Regents to fix different tuition rates.
"It's too big of a change for us to walk in here and approve these bills just like that," said State Rep. Elizabeth Baker, R-Derby." It不是 a wrong idea. It just not an appropriator to jump into without further study."
The first bill would have changed the state's tradition of letting Kansas high school graduates attend the state university of their choice by requiring them to pass a specific curriculum of courses before enrolling.
The other bill would have allowed the Regents to fix different tuition rates at each state university and ties for different levels of cours work.
Supporters said the bills would improve the quality of higher education and reduce costs. Opponents said the bills were a cheap way for the state to escape its responsibility to higher education.
"It would prevent some kids who are unprepared for college-level courses from wasting their time," said State Rep. Robert Vancrum, R-Overland Park, who drafted the bills. KU's peer institutions have entrance requirements, he said.
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said he was not surprised that both bills were sent back to committee. He said he considered the bills a threat to the number of educational opportunities Kansians would have.
"It is a significant policy change," he said. "Yes, it does provide some redundancies in opportunity, but it helps keep people in Kansas."
tee
"If those who support the bills want to improve higher education, they should quit voting for the large budget cuts we've seen come through here recently," she said. "Their primary concern was fiscal, not education."
The first bill would have allowed the Regents to require high school students to complete several courses in English, history, science and a foreign language before enrolling in a state university. Students now are required only to have a diploma from an accredited Kansas high school
The other bill would have let the Regents set the tuition at each university based on the school's quality. Students also would have been charged varying hourly rates for different levels of course work.
The University of Kansas, Kansas State University and Wichita State University now charge the same fees as students to enroll in 20 hours a semester.
Under the bill, students would pay for courses by the hour and could pay a higher price for a course at KU than for the same course at K-State. The Regents would be allowed to cost of each course at each university.
"It's a way to make it fairer for each student," Vancrum said. "Some courses cost more, and the quality of courses depends on the quality of the university."
The high turnover rate among college freshmen is reason enough to push for a standard high school curriculum, Vancrum said.
"It provides an incentive," he said.
They better get serious if they want to
be in the game.
Solbach said that KU had the best freshman return rate of the state universities and that Vancurum's bill would not solve the problem.
"People develop and mature at different rates," Solbach said. "People should be given the right, in a free society, to return to school and make something of themselves."
Senate gets request for $2 transcript fee
Special to the Kansan
By MICHAEL MERSCHEL
A $2 fee for transcripts is needed because the transcript office can't keep up with student demand, the assistant to the dean of educational services said at last night's Student Senate meeting.
The assistant, Sally Bryant, said the office of student records sought Senate approval for the increase because it was a student issue. A motion to endorse the fee was expected, but none was made.
The fee would be charged for every transcript except for the first one requested. Money from the fees would be used for a computer system that would provide transcripts faster.
Senate took no action on the fee, but Brady Stanton, student body president, said he would give his recommendation for approval.
Bryant said students needing transcripts for scholarships still would be able to get them through professional training, still could request them for students.
The fee would especially affect alumni, who make a majority of the office's 70,000 transcript requests each year, she said.
"We're not out to make $140,000," she said. "We're looking to reduce the number of transcripts issued."
Bryant said exempting enrollee students from the fee but charging alumni would lead to a nightmare in trying to determine if re-admitted students were alumni.
She said the University of Kansas was the only Board of Regents school that provided free transcripts.
Senate also voted down an unex pected resolution to rescind revenue code status for the Black Student Union.
Stacey Walsh, social welfare senator, said she made the motion to take back BSU's status because when she voted to give BSU status at the last meeting she misunderstood why the group needed it.
The motion will be reintroduced next week, when a majority vote would rescind the status. A two thirds vote is required to pass such a motion, unless a one-week notice is given.
Senate took away its recommendation for a $3.50 Student Activity Fee increase for women's and nonrevenue sports.
Liberal arts degrees prove more useful in recent years
That view has changed. A liberal arts degree has become a high-demand commodity in the job market, opening doors to a wide range of careers.
"A few years ago, we had a more simplistic view of the world," said Robert Lineberry, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. "If you wanted a job, you majored in some technical area.
"Now, students are becoming more careful in selecting colleges and majors. They're making decisions that aren't the best for them." 'han short-run, first job decisions,'
Frequently, these decisions include majoring in the liberal arts.
"The college is bursting at the seams with people who understand the importance of liberal arts for careers." Lineberry said.
To help students take advantage of the increasing marketability of a liberal arts degree, each department
The trend toward a preference for liberal arts graduates began 10 to 15 years ago. Genova said.
James Henry, assistant director to the placement center, who works with liberal arts undergraduates, said job prospects for arts and sciences students have been the best in several years.
"A lot of the large companies prefer to hire a bright liberal arts major, regardless of their field," he said. "They have found that those who work out better than those who have been trained specifically in business."
Staff writer
"Some companies say directly, we want liberal arts," he said.
By PAUL SCHRAG
Broad background valuable in service-based economy
Not long ago, most college students thought that studying liberal arts was an impractical way to prepare for the real world.
The U.S. economy is shifting from
Anthony Genova, chairman of philosophy, who serves as contact person for his department, said a wide range of jobs were hiring liberal arts students.
"People who are broadly educated are able better to adapt to the rapidly changing economic system we have today, and it's going to change even more rapidly in the 21st century than it does now," he said.
Lineberry cited a recent study by two sociologists who polled liberal arts majors who graduated from the University of Virginia between 1971 and 1983.
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Of the nearly 1,800 graduates who responded to the survey, 35 percent said a liberal arts graduate would have an edge over someone with a technical or professional degree applying for a job in their field, and 33 percent said both would have an equal chance.
an emphasis on manufacturing to an emphasis on services. Consequently, job opportunities in some technical fields, such as computer science, are decreasing, while jobs that require skill in verbal and written communication are opening up more. Henry said.
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Lineberry said liberal arts graduates' abilities to adjust to new challenges was attractive to businesses
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Thursday, April 2, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A fashion statement
It started this morning. It might not have been much, just a slight hesitation for some. But for others it was a big decision. Whether to risk social branding, either as a bigot or a queer.
That's right. Today is "Wear Blue Jeans if you're Gay Day." The event is sponsored by Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas as part of Gay and Lesbian Awareness Week. Each year, Blue Jean Day offers the students and staff of the University of Kansas a valuable lesson — that prejudice against homosexuals is every bit as senseless as prejudice against women or minorities.
What was the decision that troubled these people? Whether to wear blue jeans.
But instead of thinking about the real meaning of the day, many will spend the day complaining about people trying to
tell them what to wear. Others will sit around and wonder about passessy (are they or aren't they?).
But the big question of the day should be, "Does it really matter?" The answer is a resounding NO.
"Can you really tell if someone is gay just because they wear jeans?" Certainly not. "Can you tell if someone is prejudiced against someone because they aren't wearing jeans?" Possibly.
GLSOK hit upon a great idea with Blue Jean Day. Those who make a big deal of the day are the ones who are most in need of the lesson it offers. It is not publicity from the day that organizers are after, actually it is a feeling of anathy.
So if you feel guilty and self-conscious because the only pants you had to wear were jeans, good. Maybe you will learn from it.
In Johnson's footsteps
Monte Johnson's resignation as athletic director last week may have come as a surprise to some, but it shouldn't have.
When Johnson took the job in 1982 he said it wasn't a career move. He came to do a job, and what a job he did.
Contributions to the Williams Fund have doubled to $2.5 million since the year prior to Johnson's appointment. When Johnson arrived, he fired basketball coach Ted Owens and football coach Don Fambrough and replaced them with Larry Brown and Mike Gottfried. Johnson later hired Bong Valesente when Gottfried resigned to take the football coaching job at the University of Pittsburgh.
Johnson was behind the construction of Anschutz Sports Pavilion. Improvements also have been made at Memorial Stadium, a new locker room for the men's basketball team has been added, a $115,000
renovation project at Quigley Field is nearing completion and new seats in Allen Field House have been installed.
Johnson made quite an impact on the Athletic Department in a short time. His biggest strides were made with the men's basketball team.
The football program needs someone to have the same effect on it as Johnson had on the basketball program. Nonrevenue programs also are in need of some attention.
With Brown and the success of the basketball team, that program will be able to sustain itself. The search committee for a new athletic director now needs to concern itself with other problems that face the department.
These problems won't go away immediately, but the University of Kansas now needs someone to make them a top priority.
It's a rah deal
Yes, there is a problem with the tight uniforms and dance
It's a battle of morals. One group is offended by uniforms they think aren't becoming of young ladies. The other says the uniforms are perfectly acceptable and appropriate.
What it boils down to is this: The Crisom Girls have been told by the KU Athletic Department that they no longer can perform in unitard outfits because a group of people wishes to impose their warped morals on the rest of us.
Apparently, the one-piece leotards are acceptable for exercise and for dancing, but not if that dancing takes place at a sporting event. Also, modern dance moves are art if done on stage, but when a spirit squad performs them, they're transformed into a lewd "bump-and-grind."
moves. But the problem is in the minds of these self-made cheerleading critics.
The unitards and movements are common to cheerleading squads at many other colleges and universities. Ann Pinkerton, coach and founder of the Crimson Girls squad, said most squads that were competitive in cheering wore unitards.
If we ban the unitaris because they are too revealing for the squad, must we ban the use of similar tights by the track team? Should we ask the other cheerleaders to wear long skirts that aren't as prone to fly up during routines?
Maybe the solution to the problem would be for these people to spend a little time watching the cheering next time the cheerleaders perform.
News staff
News staff
Frank Hansel ... Editor
Jennifer Benjamin ... Managing editor
Juli Warren ... News editor
Brian Kaberline ... Editorial editor
Sandra Engelland ... Campus editor
Mark Siebert ... Sports editor
Diane Dulmeither ... Photo editor
Bill Skeet ... Graphics editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Lisa Weems ... Business manager
Bonnie Hardy ... Ad director
Denise Stephens ... Retail sales manager
Kelly Scherter ... Campus sales manager
Duncan Calhoun ... Marketing manager
Lori Copple ... Classified manager
Jennifer Lumianski ... Production manager
David Nixon ... National sales manager
Jeanne Hines ... Sales and marketing adviser
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Opinions
A different view on the death penalty
It wasn't easy coming to this decision. It took me many years to realize that the death penalty is a merciful punishment.
David Nicholson Guest shot
Before I entered a maximum-security penitentiary at the ripe age of 20, I would have denied vehemently that some day I could support the legalized taking of another man's life. It seemed preposterous to me then that a nation, which claimed to be civilized, could support the termination of a human life in the name of justice.
It is a fact that if a man is caged long enough and he ceases to be a man, you've created a monster. Ask the scores of guards and inmates who have fallen victim to some knife-wielding madman if this is not true. Ask the large number of death-row inmates who have parlayed a sentence with a release date into a death sentence if this is not so.
This is not another in the long list of "bleeding heart" essays on why society is responsible for the poor stiffs who are waiting to be strapped into an electric chair, or strapped down on a gurney or into a chair to await lethal injection. Rather, this is a plan to solve the problem and not merely treat the symptom.
However, wiser men than I have already discovered that capital punishment not only was justifiable, but was merciful in most cases.
While the controversy continues over rehabilitation versus punishment, one important point is being overlooked: If a man is judged to be so dangerous that he must be locked up for the rest of his life, do him a favor and destroy him. Without question it is cheaper, more practical and far less cruel than long years of incarceration.
Society's moral principles and practices shouldn't be questioned when a clearly incorrigible murderer's warped life is terminated. Capital punishment also should be applied in a few cases other than murder.
But let's be firm enough in our convictions to take an active part in the entire process of eliminating these individuals. Let's look them in the eye as they go out, so to speak. Years ago, public executions were commonplace. They took on an almost carnival atmosphere, attended by the young and old alike. It wasn't uncommon to hear a parent say to their child, "See, that's what
happens when you break the law!"
I think you will agree that the thought of watching a man flop at the end of a rope is chilling. Seeing a lethal substance pass through a needle and into a man's arm while he is strapped onto a gurney might be easier to witness, but the lesson learned is the same. There are crimes that you should forfeit your life for committing.
With the aid of television, such lessons could reach the ever-growing number of potential offenders on a mass scale. And with the number of death row inmates pushing 2,000 nationwide, it would be possible to "teach a lesson" every day for years. Just think, somewhere a "teacher" could hold his first and only class if we will pull out all of the restrictions on carrying out "the will of the people."
While doing time in three different penitentiaries, I have seen dozens of men for whom capital punishment would be a blessing. I'm not at all unsure that I shouldn't include myself in this legion. However, I still harbor some faint hope of "hitting the streets" some day.
They trudge blankly from cellhouse to chow hall and back day after day, month after month and year after year. Their sentence is a weight that crushes the life out of them.
reducing them to a suking lump of hatred that's seeking an outlet. The bottom line is this: Too many years down makes Johnny a sick boy.
As I have said, when I was younger I questioned the concept of capital punishment, but years of living behind bars have answered all my questions. "The old sage Zapata said it was better to live in prison still be appreciated than endure the sor-corrowing existence of long-term incarceration."
Many death row inmates undoubtedly will have a different view on this subject. But even their outlook is changing. In recent years, more and more of those sentenced to death seem to be waking up. They are stopping their appeal processes and asking to be relieved permanently of their endless boredom and uncertainty. To be released from the relentless rage that roars and tears at the foundation of their souls, making every day a year, every month a lifetime. Lifetime after lifetime for eternity.
Please keep in mind that this is one person's opinion and thank you for your indulgence.
David Nicholson is in sonatory confinement at the Kansas State Penitentiary in Lansing.
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Black dropout rate has many causes
The March 25 issue of the Kansan featured a story titled, "High black drop-out rate concerns KU officials." The front page story began by addressing the problem of black students leaving the University of Kansas and deteriorated into a collection of outrageous innuendoes and vicious, unsubstantiated statements.
As a black freshman, I was appalled at the statements made by faculty members in the story. They claimed that black students were leaving the University because of cultural insurrection, and here, the country would be run by "a group of functional illiterates," referring to blacks.
No University officials were mentioned in the story, but the headline stated that it was KU officials who were concerned about the problem. Also, black students, who supposedly had the problem, were not interviewed. Instead, two associate professors of African studies were asked to explain the reasons that a high number of black students had left the University.
summed up the problem of blacks leaving the University by saying, "Black students aren't familiar with the keys to success." Then she said that the black attrition rate was caused by a cultural problem, and that black students had a "different" mentality toward education. She did not bother to elaborate on her theories, and readers were left to fill in the blanks about what this "different mentality" was.
One of the associate professors
The two associate professors may be authorities on African cultures, but I fail to see how this qualifies them to make such broad generalizations about the problems of black students at a university in the heart of the United States.
Later in the story, the professors said that black parents were too unintelligent to understand the importance of an education for their children. They said that black households didn't contain sets of encyclopedias or dictionaries. They said that minorities were functional illiterates who were a threat to national security. They said that minorities would one day take over the country, establish communism and destroy the institutions upon which this country was built.
I was angered and hurt by what the people interviewed in the story implied. First, their comments were made with total disregard to the feelings of black students, and the harm it might do to black-white relations on campus.
Second, to say that all minorities are functional illiterates is the most unjust and outrageous thing I have ever heard.
Third, the article was an insult to the parents of black students who are paying for their children to attend a good university. My parents began saving money to pay for my college education the day I was born. There were many colleges and numerous dictionaries in the small library in our home.
And finally, in response to the statement that the white population will be substantially reduced, I would ask, where are they going to RR?
Statements made in the story also implied that black students were not in the mainstream of life at the University and had separated themselves from the rest of the University population.
Blacks are highly visible on campus. We are represented in athletics
and on the cheerleading squad. Black students march not only in the marching band, but also for the causes that they believe in. They also participate in the Greek system, give and attend parties, and conduct service projects.
I think the Kansan was irresponsible because it did nothing to clarify the reasons that blacks are leaving the University.
The story didn't say that some black students who left the University didn't permanently drop out. Many students leave to transfer to other universities. I am considering leaving KU. And if I decide to leave, it will be because of stories that discourage black students, reinforce negative stereotypes and promote apathy toward other human beings. These were the most frightening aspects of the story.
I hope that in the future, common decency will prevent other such stories from being published in the Kansan, which serves ALL students.
Lynda Bassa Raytown, Mo., freshman
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 2, 1987
Criticism over work-study program concerns some KU administrators
By ROGER COREY
Staff writer
KU administrators are concerned about the state Legislature's disapproval of the way finances in the University of Kansas' work-study program are being handled.
The Legislature said Tuesday that several universities in the state, including KU, had not used effective technology to their state work-study programs.
For fiscal year 1987, the University received $154,210 and returned $28,000 of that to comply with Gov. Mike Hayden's budget cuts. The House Appropriations Committee cut an additional $30,000 earlier this spring.
Those cuts left the University with $96,210 of the original sum for the work-study program.
"I don't understand where they get those statistics," said Jerry Rogers, director of financial aid. "We have a large number of local employers who would join the program if we had money for them."
Rogers said the University still had money from the 1986 work-study program because under the original plan it was to be distributed on a need basis.
He said that money was still on the books for fiscal year 1987 but that the money had been planned for upcoming projects.
Because of the shortcomings, the Legislature has proposed a bill that would change the way state work-study programs are financed.
"Some of the other universities
have been giving the money out on a no-need basis." Rogers said.
State universities currently receive money from the state and are responsible for dispersing those funds in work-study programs. Under the reorganization plan, the representatives would be responsible for evaluating state programs and determining where the money was needed most.
Ted Ayers, Regents general counsel, said the intent of the bill was to give uniformity to the state work-study program.
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On the Record
- Someone pried open a vending machine sometime Monday or Tuesday in a women's bathroom at Robinson Center and took 10 feminine napkins valued at 50 cents and about 30 nickels, KU police said. The vending machine sustained $25 in damage.
A KU student's purse was taken at 3:50 p.m. Tuesday from a classroom in Fraser Hall, KU police said. The student told police that she had left her purse in the classroom. The purse and its contents, including a wallet, checkbook and cash, are valued at $410.50.
A black wool coat and a black leather satchel, valued at $75 and belonging to a KU professor, were taken between 3:45 p.m. and 4:15 p.m. Tuesday from the professor's car in the 2700 block of Iowa Street, Lawrence police said.
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EXHIBITS 12:00-5:00 p.m., McCollum Hall Lobby Display of artifacts and slide shows from several countries.
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6
Thursday, April 2, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE FAR SIDE
Bv GARY LARSON
Jason
"Well, Frank's hoping for a male and I'd like a little female. . . . But, really, we'll both be content if it just has six eyes and eight legs."
Cancer
During the past two weeks, two of
evans, patients have received doses
of oral steroids.
and can diffuse deeply into cell clusters.
Continued from p. 1
Every Monday morning for the next five weeks, these patients will receive about one quart of Fluosol during a 90-minute period. Afterward, the patients will undergo radiation therapy every other day while breathing pure oxygen.
The patients will be monitored for several months and checked for any side effects, Evans said. If no complications develop during the study, three more patients will undergo the treatment with the highest dosage of Flusolol allowed by the Food and Drug Administration.
These patients will be monitored for two years. The research is being monitored by the National Cancer Institute and the FDA.
Evans said his patients were tolerating the treatments and radiation therapy well.
At the end of the seven-week study period, Evans' patients will undergo a neurological exam and CAT scan to detect whether the tumors have shrunk. The patients also will be tested to determine whether the Fluosol has created high levels of toxicity or liver damage.
If the treatment is successful, the substance will be made available to other medical centers. Evans said. The substance already has shown promise in other cancer treatments.
Studies using Flusosol with 30 New Jersey patients suffering from head and neck cancers showed that the substance supplied oxygen to the cancer cells and made the cells less resistant to radiation treatment.
Seventy percent of the patients were shown to be free of the tumors after treatment, Evans said.
Angel Gonzales, a Spanish poet, is scheduled to give a Spanish poetry reading at 4 p.m. today in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union.
On Campus
A lecture and film on the Middle East crisis is scheduled to be presented at 7 p.m. today in the Smith Hall auditorium. The presentation is sponsored by the General Union of Palestinian Students.
■ "Electronic Atlas of Arkansas," a lecture by Richard M. Smith, is scheduled to be presented at 4 p.m. today in 412 Lindley Hall. The lecture is sponsored by the geography department.
- "The Ansel Adams Archive," an art lecture by James Enyeart, is scheduled for 7 p.m. today at the Spencer Museum of Art auditorium.
- "Workshop on Terrorism" is scheduled for 7 p.m. today at McCollum Hall.
Explode
■ "Scientific Evidence for the Existence of God," a lecture, is scheduled for 7 p.m. today in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
"The Cultural Ferment in the U.S.S.R." a lecture by Edvard Radzinsky, Soviet writer-in-residence, is scheduled for 7 p.m. in Aldershot Auditorium at the Kansas Union.
"Architecture in the High Atlas Mountains," a lecture by David Hicks of the University of Manchester, England, is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. today at 216 Marvin Hall.
Continued from p. 1
"Archaeological Discoveries in Contemporary China," a lecture by Lian Shaoming of the Chinese Ministry of Culture, is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. today at 211 Spencer Museum of Art.
"Toni Morrison's Use of Folk Motifs," a Women's Studies drinks and dialogue meeting with Trudier Harris of the University of North Carolina, is scheduled for 8 p.m. today in the English Room of the Kansas Union.
arts, Curtis said. The Kansas Film Foundation holds an annual film festival in Lawrence.
The money from the premiere's ticket sales will go to the Kansas Film Foundation and the KU department of theatre and media
A student recital with Michael Moreland, composition, is scheduled for 8 p.m. today in Swarthownt Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
He said that by filming the movie in Kansas, the producers spent about one-third of what they would have spent in California.
Jerry Wells, coordinator for the Kansas Film Commission, said several Lawrence locations were used in the movie. Chuck Martinez, the movie's director, used a
house in the 2000 block of Vermont Street for some of the exterior shots, and Twente Hall for a psychiatrist scene, Wells said.
For example, a union garner in California would earn about $25 or $30 an hour, he said. But because Kansas has right-to-work laws, local non-union people could work on the movie for at least $10 or $15 an hour less, he said.
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Free and open to the public
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A RESPONSE TO CHRISTINE TYLER
The University Daily Kansan's (UDK) March 6th issue contains an arresting letter from a Kansas University senior by the name of Christine Tyler who thinks "A few sore thumbs stuck out" in my March 2nd UDK advertorial about capital punishment.
After agreeing with "Dann's point about the economic system putting blacks at a disadvantage," Miss Tyler then says: "Although the notion of society turning out an abundance of 'black sociopaths' is a bit ridiculous, it does recognize the problem at its roots." Miss Tyler understandably doesn't attempt to explain how a theory can be both "ridiculous" and a recognition of "the problem at its roots."
In the following sentence Miss Tyler claims "this discrimination does not stop at the point of justice administration as Dann imagines." Miss Tyler evidently doesn't understand the following excerpt from my advertorial. After noting that a disproportionate number of blacks are slated for execution I said:
"However, these riveting figures result from racial discrimination which is societal rather than judicial. For as long as our economic system both indiscriminately rewards activity in the private sector and superficially responds to the high rates of unemployment, poverty, illiteracy, infant mortality, illegitimacy and violence suffered by blacks, it (our economic system) will continue to create black sociopaths whose pursuits earn for them a place on death row."
If, in Miss Tyler's words, "The black impoverished murderer is indeed much more likely to find himself on death row than the white affluent murderer," then our legal system should continue striving to punish equally and justly. The notion that all brutal killers should be forever fed, clothed and entertained because some members of this infamous group do not receive their just desserts is simply illogical.
After describing my "comments about abortion... (as) at best irrelevant, and at worst a contradiction," Miss Tyler then asks: "How can one be so empathetic to the 'brutality' of abortion without sensing the very same atrocities inherent in the passing of judgement upon and eventual taking of an adult human life?" Even while dismissing my opposition to abortion, Miss Tyler concedes each abortion is an atrocity.
Because Miss Tyler thinks "human life is a precious thing, not to be arbitrarily tossed aside at the emotional whim of a person no more perfect than the next," perhaps she'll stop objecting to both the practice of eliminating from the populace those who are demonstrably dangerous and the idea of protecting from capital punishment those who are indisputably innocent.
William Dann
2702 W. 24th Street Terrace
PAID ADVERTISEMENT
7
Pink satin shoes hide bloody, bruised feet
In comfy, stuffed chairs, the audience watches the ethereal dancer float across the stage on two pink satin hooves.
Jerri Niebaum
First Person
Miraculously, she hop-hop hops on the burlap and glue-hardened stumps. Then, she pirouettes on a single stump, the other stump street ched and held in a "four" at her knee
Inside the filmy satin are bloody blisters, bruised toes, torn toenails, bunyuns and inflamed tendons.
The audience never knows it hurts.
Two weathered feet scream for a bucket of ice-cold water as the balerina glides on stage for a final dance. Her gracious smile disguises the pain.
The audience never knows it hurts.
Paper towels, toilet paper, old
nylon hose, sweat socks, cotton,
lambwool, foam. Athletic tape,
Band-Aids, corn pads, toe pads,
New Skin. All have been used by dancers
who try to pad and heal their pinched,
ground-hamburger toes.
Each dancer has her own combination of padding and taping. I choose the athletic tape and nylon hose option. The tape and hose provide a slightly springy filler for the shoes that fit like a second skin. And the big toe on my left foot gets an extra pad of foam rubber.
Cadid in its little foam cap, my left big toe doesn't fight as hard to move around in its pink squished world. If the toe moves, it will rub against the inside of the shoe. If it rubs, it will blister.
Getting a blister can be traumatic
Twirling and hopping, I can feel it beginning, a small spot of soreness filling with fluid. As I continue dancing, the small spot spreads. Then the magic moment. The blister pops, and the pain is no longer dull.
The challenge is to continue dancing as if my feet are still part of my body. They feel like separate entities, screaming to be removed at the
Inside the filmy satin are bloody blisters, bruised toes, torn toenails, bunyons and inflamed tendons.'
Jerri Niebaum
ankle. They don't want to point and bourse (small running steps on pointe) anymore, and they barely obey the mind that does.
Later, with my foot over the sink, I pour alcohol over the wound. It's not as painful if I bite on a towel while I pour. The blister will heal in a few days if I keep it dry and tape it for rehearsal.
Hopping on pointe, I can feel the bruise begin. I tighten my abdomen
and back and stretch the long muscles in my legs to pull the weight off of my 10 little digits. It doesn't always work.
The bruise feels like a lever pulling my toenail away from my toe. Later, the sheets of my bed will touch the toe and make me wince. The toe will be tender for about 12 hours, then slightly sore, but bearable, for several more days. The toenail will probably fall off in the next few months, but it won't hurt them.
The lost toenail will provide a topic for dressing room chatter as we tape and wrap our abused feet. Dancers love to brag about their aches and pains, moaning as they belly up to the barre.
My feet offer a particularly popular topic for dancers with feet-fetishes — tendinitis. My Achilles' tendon has ended at my heel with an oddly shaped bump for the last seven years. I'm told it's a pretty common ailment for a dancer.
The doctor says it might heal if I quit dancing and get it shot up with cortisone. I laugh and leave with an overstuffed dance bag thrown over my shoulder. It doesn't hurt that badly!
I'm not a professional. My feet don't pay the bills. I will quit when the pleasure of the curtain call and the joy of movement stop being worth the pain in my feet.
The prima balerina can't quit. Ballet is her life, and her feet are part of her ballet. Next time you watch her glide across the stage, think about the blister and the bruise and the inflammation. Then forget about it and enjoy the magic of dance. She will.
A
"The audience doesn't know it hurts," Niebaum said. "When the dance is over and the shoes come off it's a great relief, but not a pretty sight."
1985
Jerri Niebaum, Lawrence junior, practices her art at the Lawrence School of Ballet, 2051 St. W Eighth St. She has been dancing for 16 years and says her feet have had near-daily contact. It
Documentary chronicles Kerouac's decay
"What Happened to Kerouac?" is an interesting documentary that might have been better titled "Who Was Jack Kerouac?"
John Benner
Columnist
The 96-minute film combines interviews with Kerouac's friends and lovers with a string of cityscapes and nature, backed by jazz and several of Kerouac's readings of his work.
The film quickly spells out Kerouac's formative years as a boy in the French Canadian industrial town of Lowell, Mass., and on to the relationships he had with fellow Beat Generation writers William S. Burroughs, Allen Ginsberg, and Michael McClure.
Interviews with these men and
with other Kerenouac contemporaries, including ex-lovers and wives, portray him as a man unable to cope with life after the success and the adventure of his most popular novel "On The Road."
Little tidbits of his life are revealed, such as Burroughs confiding in the interviewer that Kerouac came up with the title for "Naked Lunch."
In chronicleing the decay of Kerouac, director Richard Lerner and Lewis MacAdams use footage from interviews filmed nine years apart.
The first clip is from the "Steve Allen Show" in 1959 and contains a reading by Kerouac from "On The Road." The reading is fascinating because it shows the emphasis and intonation that he intended and that the reader might omit when sampling Kerouac's stream-of-consciousness style.
"On The Road" was published in 1957, and the Kerouac on the "Allen Show" clip is young and energetic, still in love with the road.
In this interview, he defines "beat" to tell him by saying that it means "symphony."
The second interview with Kerouac is from a 1968 edition of William F. Buckley's "Firing Line." On this program, we can see an alcoholic but still provocative Kerouac taking some last swipes at the beatnips and hippies who found their genesis in his writings.
Ginberg's interpretation of Kerouac supports this notion. "To Jack joy and suffering were one taste. Tears were a celebration of existence."
On this television program, Kerouac denies that his aim was to criticize. Instead, he says, he "wrote about the beauty and about the ugliness."
Kerouac died the year after the Buckley interview and was reported to have said, "I'm a Catholic, so I want to go. I plan to drink myself to death."
"What Happened to Keronaac" probably is a film for his followers and is too sad for a light evening's entertainment. However, it is a haunting study of one man's inability to cope with success and with those who couldn't understand him.
"Kerouac" will play at Liberty Hall, Seventh and Massachusetts streets, at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. Sunday through April 9 and at 5:30 and 7:30 p.m. April 11.
Oscars are cheapest publicity
United Press International
"Platoon," a brutal depiction of the Vietnam War, already has earned 621 million making it one of the greatest successes among Oscar winners.
"Platoon," chosen best picture of 1986 and winner of three other Academy Awards, is sure to add at least $10 million to its gross in the months ahead, but even the losers are laughing all the way to the bank.
LOS ANGELES — Hollywood cleaned up after the Oscars Tuesday, in more ways than one.
Director Frank Capra noted in 1935 that "the Oscar is the most valuable but least expensive item of worldwide publicity ever invented by any industry," and nothing has changed in the years since then.
A pleased director Oliver Stone, who spent 10 years pleading with producers to finance his gritty grunt's eye view of war, speculated that in addition to increasing "Pla-
"A Room with a View" and "Hanah and Her Sisters," which each took three Oscars at the $9th annual film festival night, also will profit by their wins.
"I'm delighted that 'Platoon' won four awards," said Stone. "More important than any feelings of personal triumph, I am happy the academy recognized the picture because the truth about the war has been buried for 18 years.
toon's" earnings, his win also might help his critically acclaimed "Salvador," which sagged at the box office but won a best actor nomination for actor James Woods.
Stone said he hoped that "Salva-
郎" would be re-released because of his
work.
Winners, their Oscar statuettes prominently displayed at their tables, included Marlee Matlin, winner for best actress for her performance as the embellished deaf girl in "Children of a Lesser God."
Using sign language, the deaf 21-year-old access called the affair "The Sick Girl."
Most of the winners and many of the losers attended the academy ball at the Beverly Hilton Hotel after the 3-hour-22-minute telecast, dancing, wining and dining until well after midnight.
Sitting with Matlin was William
Of his own loss to "The Color of Money" best actor Paul Newman, a winner on his sevent try, Hurt said, "I looked for some kind of spiritual support before I left for the awards. I opened the good book and read, 'Judge not, lest you be judged.' That was good enough for me."
Hurt, the actor she fell in love with both in the film and in real life.
Hurt, winner of the best actor award last year for "Kiss of the Spider Woman," made the presentation to Matlin, with whom he has lived for the past year. He gave her a kiss as he handed her the statue.
Hurt broke off to chat with Woods,
another Oscar nominee. Woods said
he was gratified that the absent
Newman finally had won an Oscar.
One of the low points of the ceremonies and the party afterward was the truancy of both Newman, who wanted to break his Oscar jinx by staying away, and Michael Caine, who wanted to support actor award for "Hamish and Her Sisters," who was working on "Jaws IV" in the Bahamas.
"I'm surprised and delighted to have won," he said. "Do you think I'm on a roll? Maybe I can find a job now."
monies on television with his wife, Joanne Woodward, and their children, commented by telephone from his New York apartment.
Dennis Hopper, who had been a favorite for best supporting actor for his role in "Hoosiers," grinned and shook hands with his fellow stars.
"I thought Michael Caine would win all along," he said. "So I'm really not disappointed. It was an honor just to be nominated."
Newman, who watched the cere-
Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio, a nominee for best supporting actress, said of winner Dianne Wiest, "She was perfectly wonderful in 'Hannah and Her Sisters.' I believed she would win.
"I am one of Dianne's biggest admirers. I love to see her work, especially on the New York stage."
Tess Harper, also a nominee for best supporting actress for "Crimes of the Heart," smiled bravely and said, "There's always next year and the year after."
Kaw Valley retires tutus and toe shoes after eight-year run
In 1979, a ballerina from New York started a dance company in Lawrence.
It was the first dance company to perform at Lansing State Prison.
Patricia Feenv
This was a that dared to break traditions, surprising and delighting audiences when it donned pointed shoes and danced to Irish and Jazz bands.
"The Nutcracker" ballet became the company's trademark after a while, people grew accustomed to it and the appearance of Santa Claus.
Arts editor
This weekend, the Kaw Valley Dance Theater will take its final bow with "Pops on Pointe."
As her only child approaches his first birthday, company founder and artistic director Kristin Benjamin said she was looking forward to her first leisure weekend in eight years.
Benjamin said she wanted to do more for her school, her family and herself. She plans to do freelance dancing in the Kansas City area.
Looking back on the years with Kaw Valley, Benjamin said she grew up with the company. She said she learned a lot and felt like she was a better manager and more diplomatic.
Benjamin ran her company on instincts. She had danced since childhood but had no management training when she formed Kaw Valley.
Benjamin took on the full-time job as artistic director while she was running the Lawrence School of Ballet, 205 $\frac{1}{2}$ W. Eighth St. She taught 13 classes a week and commuted to Lawrence from Kansas City for classes, rehearsals and performances.
She said that the decision to close the company was painful, but that she knew from her gut that the time was now.
Benjamin said she would miss working with musicians and the kind of program Kaw Valley had. She said she would miss working with her company that has become her family.
But more than anything else, she will miss watching a young dancer grow before her eyes into a solid performer. She describes the transformation as "a rite of passage."
But if Benjamin is strained at all from the challenge of juggling the roles of mom, artistic director and teacher, she doesn't show it.
At 38, she looks more like the 17-year-old school girl she will replace on stage this weekend. The dancer suffered an injury so Benjamin is filling in.
She will miss the face of the little child who came backstage lit up like Christmas after seeing his first ballet.
Kaw Valley's farewell performance will feature the 20 company dancers in six dances. On Monday, Benjamin spent part of her afternoon shopping for rocket launcher props for one of this weekend's props.
She has choreographed a dance called "Juliana in Ragtime" that features an old-fashioned camera complete with gun powder and sparks. It's a comic ballet set to ragtime tunes by local composer Ron Rarick.
Kaw Valley has run its course.
But as Benjamin and her dancers,
musicians, choreographers and technicians take their last bow,
Benjamin will go on knowing that she too has made "a rite of passage."
8
Thursday, April 2, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Photojournalism exhibit is dramatic and diverse
By JENNIFER FORKER
Staff writer
A dramatic and enthralling color photojournalism exhibit opened Saturday at the Spencer Museum of Art. The exhibit, "On the Line: The New Color Photojournalism," features photographs from 12 notable photojournalists.
Each photojournalist supplied 10 prints for the exhibit. Subjects range from Alex Webb's Mexican urban landscapes to Susan Meiselas' depictions of the horrors of war-torn Nicaragua, Alfred Yaghobadeh's moving images of the Lebanese war contrast with photographs by Jeff Jacobson, which depict conventions and political rallies.
The other photographs on display are by David Burnett, Michel Folco, Harry Gruyaert, Mary Ellen Marx, Jan Moran, Gilles Peress, Rio
Branco, and Jean-Marie Simon.
Tom Southall, curator of photography, said diversity and contrast made the exhibit appear as if it were 12, small portfolios.
"Some of these photographers are much more event-oriented, especially the war photographers. They add a specific quality of time and newsworthiness to their photographs," Southall said.
Other photographs in the exhibit are about the pictorial subject matter and the feeling of a place. In these prints, the photographers were more concerned with U.S. social customs than with events. Examples in the exhibit are Burnett's minor league baseball prints and Mary Ellen Mark's photographs of U.S. retirement communities.
bid but was handled well and in good taste.
Gary Mason, associate professor of journalism, said the show was mor-
"You feel drained after seeing it," he said. "It's a show that has to be presented. All of the images are extremely strong."
He said people should see it more than once because first impressions weren't always correct.
"If you look at one photograph for a fleeting moment, you might come out of that gallery with a wrong impression." Mason said.
Adam Weinberg, curator of the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, organized the exhibit because he had seen color photojournalism that struck him as being influenced by art photography.
"It seemed different from the photojournalists who are more interested about getting a message across," he said.
The exhibition opened at the Walker Art Center in March 1986, and since has traveled to Portland, Oregon, Maine and Chapel Hill, N.C. After six weeks at the Spencer Museum of Art, it will travel to Austin, Texas, Pittsburgh, and Aspen, Colo. The exhibit then will close and the prints will be returned to the photographers, Weinberg said.
He looked at thousands of photographs made by hundreds of photographers to find the 120 prints for the exhibit. Weinberg said he was looking for interesting and diverse subjects.
"It was not an exhibition about war, revolution or civil wars. It was an exhibition about color journalism. I wanted to represent different styles and different subjects," he said.
Weinberg said photography was as subjective as any other art form
I
"Everyone is subjective. It's coming out of your hand or your eye. No one tool is more subjective.
'Photography transcribes information more effectively, but it's not really more objective. The biases are shown in different ways.'
Gilles Peres ' photograph,"The Eve of the Passion Play," was taken in 1977 in Zunil, Quetzaltenango, Guatemala.
It was not an exhibition about war, revolution or civil wars. It was an exhibition about color journalism. I wanted to represent different styles and different subjects.'
Adam Weinberg Walker Art Center curator
"Using color was an intrusion into the awkward privacy of war. War was such hell, and the added realism color was an intrusion." Southall said.
Weinberg said that only during the last 10 to 12 years had color photography been used regularly. Black and white photography took precedence over color because it was considered more serious and abstract.
Southall said color in photojournalism was avoided for a long time because certain subjects, like war, were considered to be produced better in black and white.
He said that people thought that color photography was too real, and that they preferred the abstract qualities in black and white prints.
The title of the exhibit refers to more than the fact that photographers must put their lives "on the line" when covering dangerous events like wars, Southall said.
"It also refers to photographers who straddle the line between the world of photojournalism and the art world," he said.
"Color is as abstract as black and white, but in a different way," Weinberg said.
Photojournalists are increasingly displaying their work in museums and galleries.
"These photographers, whose work is frequently seen in magazines and new papers, are taking them out
of that photojournalism world and firmly putting them in the art photography world," Southall said.
show that rivalry shouldn't exist between photojournalists and art photographers and that putting photographers into catagories was useful.
Weinberg said the two terms arose largely for convenience and were dangerous if strictly relied upon. Petitioners don't fall into either category.
"An awful lot of people cross the boundaries," he said.
The Ansel Adams exhibit, which also is on display at the museum, contrasts the color photojournalism exhibit. Adams' photographs of magnetic mountains and serene streams are in stark contrast to the horrific war photographs displayed in the "On the Line" exhibit.
The rivalry, if one exists, is how individuals approach their work. South Korea's
"The contrast is between photographers who want their work to be very much about the outside world, and photographers, in contrast, who want their work to be primarily about their own emotions and personal feelings," Southall said.
Adams photographed his emotional responses to the landscape and wanted to depict beauty, Southall said. But others, like Alex Webb, were concerned with what was going on in the world, both positive and negative.
Alex Webb said, in the book that described the exhibit, "I'm first and foremost a photographer. I care more about seeing than anything else. I'm bored by pictures that don't, on some level, make you think about the world. I don't want to just be able to see my navel in fascinating ways."
Photographers choose what to photograph and editors choose which photographs to print. But photojournalism is less subjective than art photography.
"Art photography can be seen as a more personal, more expressive. more openly subjective way of using photography," Southall said.
Mary Ellen Mark, whose work is featured in the exhibit, said, in the exhibit book, "I think you're always subjective. You have opinions about things and you shoot them. You try and be fair, but it's basically your opinion . . . it's your truth and you believe it's true. Someone else may think you're a liar."
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 2, 1987
9
Lottery tickets may be sold at the Union, director says
By KJERSTI MOEN
Staff writer
KU students may be able to gamble on campus next semester.
Gov. Mike Hayden signed a bill into law on March 12 that gave Kansas a state lottery, and retailers across the state are considering selling lottery tickets. The Kansas Union is one of them.
"Right now, we're looking at the advisability and feasibility of selling the tickets," said Jim Long, director of the Union. "If it could be a service to our University community, we would certainly take a look at it."
Dan Walstrom, the lottery project coordinator, said about 2,000 Kansas retailers would be selling instant-win game tickets, which would be the first part of the lottery to open, probably in September or October.
So far, the lottery administration has not determined specifically how the instant-win game will be played.
such as the number and size of the prizes, how many tickets will be sold and how large the retailers' profits will be. Walstrom expected to have those details worked out by June or July.
In most states that conduct a lottery, instant-win tickets sell for about $1. The buyer, who must be 18 or older, scratches off a rubber substance from the ticket to reveal three dollar figures. If they match, the buyer wins that prize or may go on to draw for a higher prize, he said.
Earlier this month, Hayden estimated that the lottery would make $75 million.
Walstrom said the money would promote economic development in the state. Profits would not support higher education, except to finance university research projects on developing the state's economy.
The lottery project administration is conducting a research of which
retailers would be best suited to sell lottery tickets. So far, no restrictions apply to who may sell them. Walstrom said. But he thought well-respected retailers would be best suited to handle ticket sales and suggested convenience stores and grocery stores as probable ticket handlers.
"We're not necessarily encouraging universities to sell the tickets, but some have asked to be placed on a mail list." Walstrom said.
Potential retailers will receive information about selling tickets once the sales regulations have been worked out. Retailers should have that information within two months, he said.
until the Union administrators receive such information, they are weighing only the possibility of selling lottery tickets on campus, Long said.
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The Kronos Quartet in Concert
1:30 p.m.
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Cratton-Preezer Theatre Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall
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10
Thursday, April 2, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Plant's fuel causes odor, bluish smoke
By a Kansan reporter
The University of Kansas' power plant has been emitting a blush, soul-smelling smoke since December due to a change in the plant's fuel.
The smoke began in December after the University changed from natural gas to fuel oil as an energy source in the power plant's boilers, said Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations.
The smell comes from sulfur and the smoke from burning oil.
Facilities operations switched when oil became cheaper than natural gas, saving the University about $150,000 in the first half of 1987. Anderson said.
Normally, people don't notice the smell, except when the wind blows the smoke down to street level. Anderson said.
To prevent the downdraft of
smoke, facilities operations may extend the smokestacks on the power plant's roof. Anderson said that facilities operations workers were conducting a study to deter fires by making the smokestacks on the roof higher. The power plant is behind Stauffer-Flint Hall.
G. Paul Willhite, professor of chemical and petroleum engineering, said burning oil produced carbon, nitrogen and sulfur oxides. The sulfur gases cause odes. The higher the sulfur content in the fuel stream, the lower the sulfur oxides are released, and the more the smoke smells, he said.
Sulfur in the atmosphere is not directly hazardous to human beings, but it can cause acid rain in high concentrations, Willhite said.
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KU Palestinian group stages march
By LAURA BOSTROM
Staff writer
The General Union of Palestinian Students, a KU student organization, sponsored the demonstration. The students marched from the Kansas Union to Strong Hall, paused for about five minutes, and marched back.
About 25 Palestinian students and supporters marched silently down Jayhawk Boulevard yesterday afternoon, carrying a Palestinian flag and anti-Zionist signs.
Zionism and Apartheid."
One of the signs said. "Down with
Mahmoud Abuali, Jordan junior and president of the Palestinian student organization, said that the march took place to honor Palestinian Land Day.
The day, which was started in 1976, is an annual commemoration of the Palestinian people's loss of the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, which now are part of Israel. The day also protests the Israeli government's treatment of Palestinians.
"We want to get to the people, let the people know about it," said Sadeq
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Masoud, who was born in Jordan, said that he had family living in Israel. He said survival was hard for Palestinians because of the Jewish control in Israel and the Jewish control in the United States.
Masoud said the Jewish people controlled everything in the United States, including the media, which he said were owned by Jews.
"I'm not sure what point they're trying to make," she said. "The Jews do not seek to destroy Palestinians."
Daveen Litwin, director of Hilille, said that the "international Jewish banker" was a common stereotype of the Jewish people.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 2, 1987
Sports
11
Gooden requests drug counseling; will miss opener
United Press International
NEW YORK — The New York Mets Cy Young Award winner Dwight Gooden will enter a medical counseling program to evaluate drug abuse problems, the club announced yesterday.
A Mets spokesman said the disclosure of Gooden's problem resulted from a drg test Gooden himself requested.
"We became aware of the problem earlier this week." Mets spokesman Jay Horwitz said. Asked if the club learned about Gooden's drug problem after a test had been administered, Horwitz replied. "Yes. If you remember, he volunteered to be tested."
Gooden repeatedly said he would voluntarily undergo drug testing to quiet rumors and speculation about his worsening performance as a plaver.
In a brief statement, the Mets said Gooden had conferred with Frank Cashen, club executive vice president and general manager, and Joe McLlvaine, vice president of baseball operations about counseling.
"There is some indication of past usage," Cashen said. "But the extent is uncertain and that will be up to company medical people to ascertain. Gooden will be evaluated and admitted on future remedial action."
Cashen said he discussed the situation with Baseball Commissioner Peter Ueberroth and National League President A. Bartlett Giannatto earlier this week.
Ueberroth told the club he was prepared to suspend Gooden immediately, but would withhold disciplinary action if Gooden fully cooperated in an appropriate treatment program and aftercare.
"We're disappointed," said Ed Durso, spokesman for the commissioner's office. "We're disappointed from two perspectives. One that we have an obviously gifted athlete who will now have a difficult process of
effecting a recovery from a drug use problem. And we're disappointed that, from our perspective, we do not yet have in baseball the most effective program we could have to avoid that kind of thing in the future — that being a proper (mandatory) testing program."
Gooden, 22, was still considered the pride of New York's outstanding pitching staff, though he had slipped from his 1985 form. He had won the National League's Cy Young Award with a 24-4 record.
Controversy has followed him for 15 months, since he mysteriously sprained his ankle while negotiating a contract with the Mets. Since then, he has pitched inconsistently and suffered a series of well-publicized personal problems
Although he probably would have pitched New York's Opening Day game Tuesday, Gooden has shown little of his former stature. As recently as last week, Gooden had failed to deliver his trademark hard fastball and was experiencing difficulty throwing his curve.
Gooden failed to win a single game in the postseason, prompting speculation over the health of his arm. After the Series, he missed a tickertape parade for the champions.
Before Christmas, in his hometown of Tampa, Fla., Gooden and four companions were arrested for brawling with police who had stopped their car. Police said blood tests had shown that Gooden, who was driving his Mercede, had been drinking.
On Jan. 23, a judge placed Gooden on three years' probation and ordered him to perform 160 hours of community service after the pitcher no contest to charges that could have landed him in jail for up to 10 years.
After the negative publicity, Gooden settled contract negotiations with the club, agreeing to a one-year contract for $1.5 million rather than going through salary arbitration.
Ionians
23
Team without a win in over two weeks
By DAVID BOYCE
Paul Henry, KU pitcher, winds up for a pitch that became a Missouri Western home run in the first inning of a double-header at Quigley Field. KU lost the first game 7-1 and tied the second 9-9.
The Kansas baseball team is still searching for its first victory in over two weeks. The last Jayhawk victory came against Pan American on March 20.
Staff writer
Yesterday, Kansas lost its first game of a double-header 7-1 to the Missouri Western Griffons and played to a 9-9 tie in the second game, which was halted after seven innings because of darkness.
The Jayhawks will try to pick up a victory when they play Wichita State 3 p.m. today at Quigley Field.
Missouri Western, the NAIA team, had been unsuccessful against previous NCAA teams. The Griffons dropped two games against Kansas State on March 1 and came into yesterday's game with a 6-12 record. Griffons coach Dennis Minnis said he was pleased with the two games.
"Tuesday we played some of the worst ball I've seen played against Central Missouri State, but today I made a few changes on the infield and we won." he said.
Minnis started a sophomore at third base and freshmen at shortstop and catcher for the first time this year.
Coach Marty Pattin would not comment on the two games that dropped Kansas' record to 8-12-1 overall. The Jayhawks had lost six games in a row before playing to a tie.
In the first game, starter Paul Henry was still unable to find last year's form, which gave him a 9-6
Henry gave up a home run to the first batter of the game, Darren Lewis, and was never able to get on the bases in innings and gave up four earned runs.
record. He dropped his fourth straight game.
Kansas came out strong in the second game, taking a 4-1 lead after
four innings of play
Hugh Stanfield hit his sixth home run of the season in the fourth and had four RBI in the game.
"When I worked with a guy who worked with Jose Canseco (American League Rooke of the Year), he told me to close my stance." Stanfield said.
Stanfield also said that going to a 35-ounce bat gave him more meat at the end of the bat. Stanfield used a 44-ounce last year.
Despite the three-run lead entering the fifth, Kansas fell into its same pattern of being outscored in the later innings.
The Griffons scored three runs in both the fifth and sixth innings and in the seventh.
Kansas battled back and scored four runs in the bottom of the sixth and took a one-run lead into the last inning.
Designated hitter John Byrn had three hits while Stanfield, Smith and Darrel Matthews each had two hits
"I am feeling pretty good at the piano, but I wouldgladly trade my two pieces."
The Griffons, though, scored twice, which gave them a one-run lead. Kansas added its final run on an infield single by Stanfield that scored David Smith and ended the game in a 9-9 tie.
Although Kansas increased its hit total from two in the first game to 15 in the second game, some of the hits were made that they could not get the victory.
Kansas has outscored its opponent 42-35 in the first two innings in all games combined. But they have been outscored 117-59 in the last five innings combined.
"Coach knows we can play better," Matthews said.
Smith said Pattin was fairly angry with the team and had a few choice words for them in a closed-door team meeting after the game.
Pattin to finish out season,official says
By DAVID BOYCE
Staff writer
Marty Pattin will not return next year as Kansas' baseball coach but will finish out the season, Gary Hunter, associate athletic director officially announced yesterday.
Pattin said that he would leave Kansas with good memories about his experience as head coach, and that he had no regrets about his performance.
"Marty is one of the nicest guys
around, but we felt the baseball program was not progressing like we wanted it to," said Monte Johnson, athletic director.
"I'm proud of the fact that the program has been run honestly." Pattin said. "I think we've laid the groundwork. We'll come in and continue to improve."
Pattin's career coaching record is 116-144-1 in $ _{5}^{2} $ years of coaching. Pattin came to Kansas in 1982.
Pattin experienced his best season
as a coach in 1983, his second year at Kansas, when the team finished third in the Big Eight Conference with a 17-17 overall record.
This year the team is moved in a six-game losing streak. It is 8-12-1 overall and 0-4 and last in the Big Eight.
Pattin praised several groups for supporting him during his tenure at the university.
He said, 'People such as the Trombold family, Steve Renko, Jim
Shanks, Barry Robertson, Floyd Temple and many others have provided tremendous support.
"I've also worked with a great bunch of players along the way who've really helped make this job enjoyable."
Before becoming KU's head baseball coach, Pattin spent 13 seasons in the major leagues, including pitching for the Kansas City Royals. Series for the Kansas City Royals.
Johnson seeking quiet job that won't put him in 'a fishbowl'
KU
Alan Hagman/KANSAM
Monte Johnson will leave the Jayhawks behind when he steps down from his position as KU athletic director. Johnson plans to return to private business.
By LAURA BOSTROM Staff writer
Athletic Director Monte Johnson sat at a desk neatly covered with files, papers and family photos. At 8 a.m. he was dressed as usual in shirtleeves and was chewing gum.
Though the quiet inner office hides the constant ringing of a phone, a stack of messages sits on his desk.
Johnson's recent decision to resign as athletic director has put him where he likes to be least — in a fishbow.
Johnson said he spoke of his resignation in November, but told Chancellor Gene A. Budig that he would wait until after the basketball season to resign.
"One of the most difficult things about the job of athletic director is the visibility," he said yesterday. "I don't like being in a fishbowl."
Johnson had a long history with the University before becoming athletic director four and a half
years ago. He received a bachelor's and master's degree from KU, played on the basketball team and worked for nine years in various athletic department positions.
Johnson intends to return to private business where he was before accepting his job as athletic director.
Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said Johnson had brought stability to the athletic department, had improved facilities and increased private donations.
"He didn't have to have this job." Brinkman said.
Johnson said he turned down two other opportunities to be athletic director. He finally accepted a position at the University and was appointed to help the school a little bit.
The slow pace of a bureaucratic organization, such as the University, was very frustrating to him. He said decisions took many steps of approval before something could
hadden.
"In private business you make a decision, and you move on it," he said. "I'm too impatient."
Johnson said he had been working too hard, beginning each workday at about 6 a.m. and from working to 80 hours a week.
Another frustration was football
"Most all of his activities, work and social, were tied to the University." Brinkman said.
Another frustration was football.
"I want football to be a little stronger," he said. But he insists that students need to be more involved before it will get stronger.
"Students are the catalyst," he said.
He said developing student support for football is essential for the next director.
But now Johnson will leave the frustrations and the pressure. He will leave his fishbowl and return to the anonymity of a supportive alumnus and former player.
By ROB KNAPP
Staff writer
The national signing day for basketball recruits is less than a week away, but Kansas coaches are still unsure which current junior college players and high school seniors will be Jayhawks next season.
“it's kind of tough to tell right now.” Kansas assistant coach Alvin Gentry said yesterday. “After next week we'll know a lot more.”
Gentry said he expected several players to commit to Kansas on
Gentry left yesterday morning for Paducah, Ky., to pay a recruiting visit to Paducah Community College player Howard Chambers.
Chambers, a 5-foot-10 sophomore point guard, averaged 26.6 and 10.9 assists a game for Paducah this season. He was the National Junior College Athletic Association Region 7 nominee for All-America honors and led his team to a 24-11 record and the Region 7 finals.
Chambers is one of several guards the Jayhawks are trying to sign, after speculation that early signee Antoine Lewis of Brooklyn, N.Y., may not meet NCAA proposition 48 requirements.
Wednesday, the first day that recruits can sign national letters of intent.
Last week, Gentry and members of the Kansas coaching staff visited Daron "Mookie" Blaylock and Lincoln Minor, a pair of guards at Midland Junior College in Midland, Texas.
Minor averaged 16.1 points a game and was a member of the Region 5 all-region and all-tournament teams.
Region 5 tournament Most Valuable Player and was named to the NJCAA all-tournament team.
Blaylock is 6-1 and led the Midland team with a 19.6 scoring average and 71 three-point baskets. He was the
While in Texas, Gentry also visited Mike Bell, a 6-7 forward at Lon Morris Community College in Jacksonville, Texas.
NCAA OKs movement of three-point line
NEW ORLEANS - College basketball conferences can experiment with a longer three-point field goal next season, and stiffer penalties will be levied for intentional fouls, the NCAA rules committee announced yesterday.
The 12-member committee approved an experiment with a 21-foot 9-inch line for a three-point shot, said Ed Steitz, secretary-of the committee. Currently, the line is 19 feet 9 inches long.
Keith Jackson, Southern Idaho's point guard, is also being recruited by
United Press International
The three point shot in actuality, though, will remain at its present distance in the NCAA for at least
another year. Conferences are being allowed to experiment with the distance if they wish to.
The longer distance would be the same used in Olympic competition, but it was not.
"I think you're going to find more and more outside shooting coming back into the game." Steitz said. "I think when the coaches learn how to offense this for 40 minutes . . . and they learn how to defense it, you'll find greater shooting percentages."
Conferences must petition the rules committee by Aug. 15 to be allowed to use the longer three-point distance, Steitz said.
The penalty for intentionally fouling, currently two free throws, next season will include giving the fouled team possession of the ball after the foul.
Until this year, teams trailing near the end of the game could intentionally fail in hopes a player would miss one or both of the free throws, enabling the trailing team to have a chance at grabbing the rebound. The new rule eliminates the chance for the rebound.
Other rule changes instituted by the committee included:
— A technical foul will be assessed against a coach of a team whose
bench players enter the court to participate in a fight.
- A reduction from technical foul to a timeout for a coach who questions a scoring or timing mistake when none occurred.
- In addition to the four rules changes, the committee approved the following:
- Establishing the 21-foot-9-inch three-point field goal.
— Creating a better-defined area for substitutes to sit in just before entering a game. The experimental area would be a defined box in front of the scorer's table. Currently, players can sit anywhere near the table.
Connolly leads KU to sweep of WSU
Staff writer
Wichita State pitched around the Kansas Jayhawks' leading home run hitter to get to Sheila Connolly three times yesterday. The strategy work-
8v ROB KNAPP
Kansas also won the first game 6-0 and improved their record to 15-13.
Connolly's three-run triple highlighted a six-run Kansas sixth inning as the Jayhawks beat the Shockers 11-7 in the second game of a doubleheader.
"I was frustrated after the first two times because I was ahead in the count, but then after bad pitches," she said. "I said, 'Why did you get the chance to redeem myself.'"
Connolly, who leads the Jayhawks with a 402 batting average, went 4-for-7 on the day. But Wichita State pitched around KU home run and RBI leader Kelly Downs to get to Connolly once in the first game and twice in the second.
Roanna Brazier led off the Jayhawks' sixth with a walk and went to second when Reenie Noble reached base on an error. Both runners scored on a double by catcher Gayle Luedke.
Kansas led early after scoring an unearned run in the first inning and four more runs in the third, but Wichita State came back and took the lead with three runs in the fourth and three more in the fifth of Jayhawk pitcher Reenie Powell.
Luedek came home on third baseman Sophie Rodriguez's single. After Sherri Mach grounded out, shortstop Cherie Wickham got to first on another Wichita State error. Left fielder Jill Williams grounded out to shortstop for the second Kansas out and Downs was intentionally walked, loading the bases for Connolly's triple.
Kansas had a strong pitching performance by freshman Brazier and shut out the Shockers in the first game.
Brazier went the distance, giving up only three hits and one walk while striking out nine.
The Jayhawk defense, which had averaged two errors a game in the first 26 contests of the season, did not commit a miscue behind Brazer.
Kansas got five of its runs in a second-innering burst off Wichita State pitcher Patty Bautista. Connolly opened with a single and scored on a double by Bauer. Luedke followed with a single, and both runners scored on a single by Noble.
12
Thursday, April 2, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Navy's Robinson wins 11th Wooden Award
United Press International
LOS ANGELES — David Robinson, entered the Navy as a little-recruited, under sized center, yesterday won the 11th Wooden Award as the top collegiate basketball player in the country.
The 7-foot-1 senior center was selected after a vote by 1,000 sports-writers and broadcasters nationwide. The announcement was made at the Los Angeles Athletic Club by John Wooden, the legendary retired UCLA coach after whom the award was named.
Robinson received 1,166 points in the balloting. Steve Allard, of NCAA champion Indiana, finished second with 645 points.
The other finalists in order of finish were Reggie Williams of Georgetown; Kenny Smith of North Carolina; Dennis Hopson of Ohio State; Armon Gilliam of Nevada-Las Vegas; Dallas Comeges of DePaul; Mark Jackson of St. John's; Kenny
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In order to be considered, a player must maintain a C average in his studies and display strong character on and off the court. Robinson, a map major, maintained a C-plus average during his four years at Navy and was primarily responsible for the academy's resurgence in basketball
Robinson was a little recruited and only early recruited player at Osburn Park. Italy
But he grew more than five inches during his collegiate years, worked hard on his game and unexpectedly blossomed into the top pro prospect in the country. This season he averaged 27.5 points, 11.8 rebounds and blocked a record 142 shots.
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
It's Thursday. Are you wearing Blue Jeans or Cords? Cords? Why? Are you scared of being an outcast just because of a conscious/unconscious behavior? What are you doing in an entire life with that fear for no good reason?
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Announcing: KU ON WHEELS. Spring 1872 Route Hearings. Thursday, April 2. Four of the 87-88 game dates for this season Board is holding an official route hearings to discuss possible changes in the Bus Routes for the next academic year. We will be receiving requests for updates on the bus routes April 2, 7-9 p.m. Call 864-3710 for an appointment. Remember to gather as much information as possible from the KU students' statement on the KU student body Call 864-4644 (morning) or 864-3710 for more information. Hearings will be held in Northwest (Upper level) offices. If you have any questions you are a baseball fanatic? If so, thou Rottiezeric League Baseball is for you. For more informa-
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International Film Festival sponsored by the International Club In McCollum Hall at 6:30 p.m. free admission Thursday 2 Fabulous Temples of Thailand Iraq Starway the Gods Friday 2 Australia Malaysia Building a Nation
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13
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Events of the Week Friday, April 3
Shabbat Dinner and Alumni Members Dinner—6:00 p.m. Services—7:30 p.m.
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Roommate Wanted for Summer Sublease.
Mastercraft Apt. 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath. Fullly furnished. Close to downtown & bus route $165 per mo. Call 749-2897
Large size 1, 2, 3 bedroom apts, on bus route. All have gas heat, appliances, carpet and drapes. Extra room is available to choose from. If you want the most room for your dollar, then come see us a 2166 W. 26th or call 843-6446.
Gatehouse
summer Sub: room in apartment on bus route
eating俯注, hath, decklet, cable, pool, fun
oomies with good taste near grocery, pizza,
brunch with me if $13 plus, but lil'.
sak RAND 749.749
Submarine Sublease: three or four person furnished
apartments bordering campus. Available in mid-
town and suburban areas.
Summer sublease for on campus 2 bbm apartment, Balcony, wtr, wr. lift, utilities 841-235-6700
Summer Sublet; Large 3 BR Townhouse AC
suburb; bus line, bus rent. Negotiated
IF YOU LIKE SPACE & QUIET
WE HAVE IT AND YOU
CAN STILL WALK TO CAMPUS
Spacious 2 bedroom
Laundry facilities
Waterbed fine
Swimming pool
10-12 month leases
VILLAGE SQUARE
9th & Avalon
842-3040
Spacious, 2 BR apt, to sub lease for Summer with option to rent in fall. Available June 1st. Covered by $600 per month.
Studio available for summer in super apt, complex, great maintenance, recreation facilities and laundry availability I will assume part of expenses.
Call 842-9676 after 6:30 p.m.
SUBLEASE. Furnished 2 BH apt. 1.1/2 bath, HA
FURNISHED. 401-876-9360 or May 15th
151 Free Park Bed. 842-760 or May 15th
842-760
SUBLEASE BEAUTIFUL 2 bedroom Pin Oak
Townhouse! GREAT kitchen w/ microwave,
dishwasher. Good for 2, 3, or 4 people $140
841 9629 keep trying!
SUBLEASE for Summer. Available June 12
Bedroom age, with pool, balcony, and fireplace
Available at $95 per room.
SUMMER SUBLASE Sparcions 1 bedroom
college gym basketball and tennis courts
pool house basketball and tennis courts
Sublease for summer, studio at Hanover Place.
Call 789-5440
Sublease for Summer: Brand new 3 bedroom tensele with 2 1/2 bath. One bedroom, garage, pool, microwave, dishwasher (treprelle) WD hookup Management charging $600.-We rent for $550 and management charging $600.-We rent for $550.
Sublease for Summer: Furnished one BR with hh with
campus. 749-9385 plus electric, close to
campus. 749-9385
Sublease for summer, Tanglewood, 2 bedroom apartment close to campus, 2 level Low utilities.
Sublease. Traitrue one bedroom apartment
Free, gas water, wafer Available mid-May
*onesize Available mid-May 1. b lock from cam-
puter to desk and move to apartmeet
*close to open beds in saucer room, 740°
Mastercraft Offers . . .
Completely Furnished
studios, 1, 2, 3, & 4
bdrm apartments—all close to Campus!
- HANOVER PLACE
- 14th & Mass. 841-1212
- TANGLEWOOD
10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
7th & Florida • 841-5255
- CAMPUS PLACE
Summer Submarine 2, Bedroom Townhouse; Pool near campus. 841-0749 early fall; 841-1287 (int)
Summer Suites, beautiful 3 BDR house with open concept. Kitchen 5 minutes to campus; private kitchen 6 minutes to campus. $180 per night.
Mastercraft Apartment!
842-4455
1145 Louisiana • 841-1429
Sublease for summer: 2 bdrm. furnished apartment.
Tangilley Call: 7491-1916.
Summer Sublease: 3 Bdr. Apt. Rent May to August. Please call 749-5680
EDDINGHAM
NAISMITHHALL™
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
913-843-8559
Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the amenities of Naismith Hall. Applications for fall semester are now being accepted while space remains.
Summer sublease 3 bedrooms in 4 bedroom
apartment with two 2 baths, and dishwasher
and stainless steel kitchen.
AMENITIES
OFFERING LUXURY 2 BR APARTMENTS
4th & Eddingham (next to Gamm
OFFERING LUXURY
PLACE
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
Satellite T.V.
- 10 or 12 month
Open Daily 3:00-5:00
Saturday 9:00-12:00
841-5444
- On-Site Management
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Kaw Valley Management, Inc.
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY NOW LEASING FOR FALL
in town
- Lowest utility bills
- Gas heat, C-A, D-W
- FF refrig, Disposal
- Ouiet location
Summer sublease: 3 bedrooms in new 4 bedroom
townhouse, 2 baths semi furnished. $128 plus 1/4
utilities. Available May 19th Sunrise Terrace,
841-3853
For more info. call between 9-6, Mon.-Fri.,843-4754
Located among 70 acres of rolling hills and trees, you'll enjoy the convenience of being close to campus and area shopping.
Location
Meadowbrook offers a selection of spacious and comfortable studios, 1, 2, or 3 bedroom apartments, and townhouses to fit your lifestyle
Lifestyle
RESERVE YOUR
UNIT NOW...
FOR SUMMER OR FALL!
FOR SALE
meadowbrook
Wanted: Subject to Sublet bedroom in apartment
C Call Tamar at 842 3534 for further information.
15th & Crestline 842-4200
Blue Mushiii 12 Speed Turing Bike, new tires,
excellent condition. Ask $170赔偿, 1976
Kawasaki KZ40 only 5,000 miles new tires.
Invoice for KZ40, ask $500
(Negotiable), 843-4509 or 843-2490.
Very nice two bedroom apartments available
at 218-302-7560. Room is conditioned,
and dryer/wash included. $300 per
month.
Apple II plus II with 2 disk drives, 9 column card,
iPod touch, iPhone, iPad, iPod touch Pro, Pasal/Fortran language system, games, and
applications.
184.1/2 Kaw GFP 750, 4,000 i owner
imu84.1/2 Kaw GFP 750, 4,000 i owner
imu84.1/Kaw Cover 2,200 furr. B443-015. Leave
imu84.1/Kaw Cover 2,200 furr. B443-015. Leave
Commodore 64 computer. Includes keyboard,
mouse, printer software, and accessories
$400. Dodge
1822 Honda Moped Express SR-EXcellent condition 900 miles; $300, but willing to negotiate. Call
For Sale. Eichelion 19" 12 speed Trek, 2 years old,
elegant condition, with pump and front bag.
$225.琴册, Schaller full sized upright, Mahogany,
$460. Gutar, Alvarzez 602, nice, with hand shell.
1978 Kawasaki LTD 100D Custom and high performance extra too number to mention. Must be registered in North America.
Dog House : extra large, insulated $65 00 841-4478
Barb
For sale. six PATRICK NAGEL "PLAYBOY" PRINTS prints from $75-649. Glass clipped frame. These are hard to find prints which are often in production. Call 816-735-2209. Leave Message.
FOR SLEECH-Charming old home. Roomy,
cook clean, b 130t. Connected. 842-1690.
www.sleech.com
74 Honda 450, all stock, a classic $450.00 O B.O.
842-326. Dave
New Smith-Corona XD-800 Memory Typewriter.
Boxed Loaded with Features $450.00
$300.00
barn
Drafting stools and desk chairs. Cheap and ugly.
JVC integrated price. 50 watts a channel. Excellent amplifier, condition. Call 844-6263, evenings.
MAX'S COMICS. Comic Books, Playbies, Penhouses, et al. 811 New Hammishne
Men's 12 Speed racing style bike Excellent condition. #75. DV4, 843-8683
New IBM PC48, Amber Screen and Modern. Hook
up your computer and work at home: Hook up
CALL 621-643-6966
"Everything But Ice." 4th & Vermont
"Ice in the Bowl." 2nd & Vermont toms
to B.O.C. One game, Dave
50.70% Off Coach Airline Ticket. Credit Cards on
Ask for the Midnight Fashion . 785.315
Single Bed Lok, IBM Electric Typewriter, KORG KD8000
Nintendo 3DS, 6 cute refill Refrigerator
Konica Minolta 1445
MOPED 1981 Motobecane 140 miles. Excellent mileage, Gas asking $292. Call WC.647-8050.
Swiss Mountain bike 18, speed and Schwinn Traveler bike 12, speed like Brand New Low-impact bike.
TREK 400 Bicycle In great condition! What a
Bargain! Call Paul: 843-4648
1977 Dodge Colt-Lift a speed, air. Dependible $600
Phone 841-6125 after 6.
1980 Dalton 200 SX $3600 O.B. B.1880 Toyota Corolla
SRS $2500 SJ $4000 O.B. 842-8462
AUTO SALES
Tuxedoes they last they last. $15.00 each. Includes jacket, skirts, vest, and tie. Maury. 842-8334
Volkswagen GTL Alpine System, Pirelli
maximum great, excelent condition Call Lei-
841-5990
Must sale: B28 Pontiac Firebird, 70,000 lwb, good
condition. B29 Pontiac Firebird, 70,000 lwb,
negotiation. B42-8469 MHW, after 3 p.m., if
needed.
LOST-FOUND
ECT M. I: Have your KU 13) 841-8953.
Found: Kues 5 kives on ring with a hook Found.
Eric M. : I have your KU ID. 841-6935.
Found: Keys: 5 on key on a book. Found near 13th & Ibch. Cali Mary, 864-462.
near 13th & Albio Call Mary, 864-4620
Lock: 2 Keys and a Jawkstone pendant Key ring
Loet: 2 Keys and a Jayhawk pendant Key ring.
Call 864102; if lost.
Lost: Perscription glasses in brown case. Please call Karen, 78527, if found
HELP WANTED
AIRLINES CRUISELINES HIRING Summer
Course Course Course Course Course Course
Cassette, Newsview 9116 804-4474 133
CD, 2.5-inch CD (Sony) 804-4474 133
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach swimming, canoeing, kayaking, golf, sports paddles, patting, crafts, dramas, or riding. Also kitchen office, maintenance. Salary $200 or more. Location: St. Thomas, 1765 Milep, Nifl. IL 60093, 316-424-2444
Are you good with children? You would like to be
able to help your child get well. IELA 14 PAMENTS: 730 Menlo Ave, 238
14th Street, Los Angeles, CA 90026.
Children's Counsellors, Activity Instructors. WSI
Bus Driver, Cook, Kitchen Manager, Kitchen
Help, Dishwasher, Maintenance, Nanny for
(eed) Mountain Summer Camp, P.O. Box 711,
Dallas, TX 75206.
Cocktail Waitresses wanted for Spring and Summer. Send resume to Amanda Jenkins, energetic who will train, apply in person. Alarmara Internship is open to college students.
Computer Graphics Consultants need office manager! Must have bookkeeping and computer experience. If you can think for your self and take charge of your projects, please visit Design. Basilig, 841-1510, 1414 W. 6th Street.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16.00-$25.00 yr. Who will Call 607-667-600 Ext. K 974 for current calls?
HAS SPRING BREAK
LEFT YOU BROKE
Paid Summer Internships
(any major)
— must be hard working
— $400 per week
For internet calls 749-7377
join our "Nanny Network" of over 500 placed by us in CT, NY, NJ, and Boston. One year commitment in exchange for top salary, room, office space, and meals to your satisfaction. Many families for you to choose from. Contact Helping Hands, at inc. at 834-784-1742 or NCMC's NCDS Today Show & Hour Magazine.
NANNY POSITIONS. Care for children in one of several East or West Coast locations. Room on the second floor. One year commitment. Non-smokers preferred. Call for interview LA PETITE MERE
Nanny Finders, Inc. looking for nannies Position available nationally. Good salaries, great benefits. Must make 1 year commitment. P.O. Box 4033, Chapel Hill, NC 27515
Personal care assistants new/now/Mornings
7:11 a.m., weekdays, 30 to 11 749 6288
8:15 a.m., weekdays, 30 to 11 749 6288
STUDENT WORK-STUDY POSITION. on-campus publisher helps seek 10 help 10s/week to open and distribute daily mail, answer phones, type, and assist in various duties. Must be eligible for college credit. Must have experience. To start immediately. Comply with 322 Carnegie curate to complete application by 4/8/87.
Student Draftsman Needed. Architectural detailing on campus projects including preparation of construction and fire safety codes. Preparation of drawings on campus site planning projects.
Summer Employment Lawn care 10am-4pm
female applicants welcome. Send inquiries to Box
2286, Warner Brothers Entertainment, 17th Flr.
New York, NY 10023
with an engineering or architectural office. This is a 12 month appointment. Call Rose Etta at 864-4636 for an interview. Deadline: Friday, April 4th at 11:00 a.m.
Summer Job. To assist disabled KU staff member as personal care attendant. Mornings, evenings. 7.12 hrs. per week. $4.5 per h. Relatable job. Attendance required. Continue after summer, preferred. 842.1981
Chris-Come, grow old with me the best is yet to be.
I love you, AMS
CRAIG B - HAPPY BIRTHDAY, SPORT! Here's a photo of Craig. He's out of sight, but not out of mind. Freed Hoe Low, CRAIG B.
Forced to have sex on a date or while garting?
Force to have sex on a date at 8435 WRSV RWSV (RWSV ATTRAT)
PERSONAL
Hey G.P. The "Twist" was last night and tonight's a long, "Last Challenge." The Change is in Phil: Happy 2019! Just think, 365 days until you have the job to help people. BECCA and MKE, Congratulations! Love.
WWW.AND FOR SPRING FIRE.LIcePCapisco said the
WWW.AND FOR MILK LEE.see the sky.
BUS. PERSONAL
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.
Be creative in gift fitting. Fullfill fantasies with beautiful Boudreau Portrait for all occasions; call today to book a portrait!
$$$$$$$$Xtra Income Opportunity. spare time in
writing a new Director's Association, P.O. Box 305
4789 WESTERN AVENUE.
HEADACHE, BACKACH, ARM PAIN, EEG PAINT] Student and most insurance accepted For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark Johnson 843-3979
*Telecharge with a song.* Send an 'I'm a kayakw*
*音盒 balloon bouquet. Other times available.
403 Vermont 749-0148 Southern Halls Mall
499-4341
GAYLESBIAN* Write for KS/MO info PER-
CAMERAS! Marked "Mixed" confidently
Net crinolines in pastel colors. New fun jewelry from LA. Bunny suits for rent.
Barb's Vintage Rose
Most reasonable rates in town for all your photo needs especially graduation, resumes, and portfolio portraits. 499-708-2631. www.eventcentral.com Records Buy, or Sale. Quantrill's 811 New Hampshire
GREENS PARTY SUPPLY
Weekly Beer Specials
April 1-7
Coors Gold 12 pk. $5.37
Coors Light 12 pk. $5.37
Lowenbrau 6pk. $3.10
Old Style 12pk. $4.21
Busch 12pk. $4.26
Weidemann 12pk. $3.49
SERVICES OFFERED
**AEROBES**
**AEROBES**
**AEROBES**
MF 5.3; This is the Lawrence School of Ballet
RMS 4.9; This is the Lawrence School of Ballet
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwrestling Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749
*Graduates and undergraduates; more for college*
*students. (913) 748-0996 or 1 860 UGA121*
MALE TRATTS EXPLAINED Learn hundreds of reasons why men do unimaginal things every day, 1. *TRATT EXPLANATIONS* Box 48453, Wichita, KS 67201
MATH I TUTOR since 1976. M.A, $/hr (courses
above) 199, $/hr ; 843 9032.
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES; Ekuchanr
processing within 24 hours. Complete B/E services.
PASSPORT $6.00. Art & Design Building,
Room 208. 864-4767
MUSIC & MEDIA
MUSIC & MEDIA
MUSIC & MEDIA
MUSIC & MEDIA
Music&Audience
Music&Audience
Music&Audience
Maximum P A A
Music&Audience
Music&Audience
LAWYER
HARPER
Need money for college? Let us match you with Scholarship and grant money for which you can qualify. For more information write Student Financial Aid Services 1615 SW Chester Drive.
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services. Overland Park... 9131-469-6878
Staenstroms. All ladies dresses can be made here in styles from the latest fashion trends, I will design them myself.
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your
students on a dedicated completion Transportation provides
their learning needs.
TUTORING MATH STAT. $8.00/HR CALL
M4STAT
FOR
WOMEN
ONLY
$37.50
total membership through 5-31-87
- 5 Levels Aerobics
* Body Toning Classes
* Tanning
* Weight Equipment
* Whirlpool
* Sauna
1
BodyShapes
FITNESS CLUB
Hours
M Fr 8:30-8:30
Sat 9:00-4:00
Sun. 10:00-4:00
☎ 611 Kanal Westside Quincy
601 Kasold Westridge Shopping Ctr. 843-4040
TYPING
secretary Gall Mrs. Nancy Mattua, 841-2190
Dependable professional experience
Willing to work in any environment
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or to large Acme
502,879 pages and working process, and workprocessing.
862,794 pages and Karger 794,879 pages.
AAA TYPING! Great typing, low prices! 8421942
at 4 o.p. mpm, any timeweekends
Dependable, professional experienced
JEANAMOR HAFFER Typing Service
INFUSION TECHNICIAN
A1 professional typing. Term papers, Theses,
and dissertations. Reasonable IBM Electronic
Typewriter 9422-83.
24-Hour Typing, 11th semester in Lawrence,
Resistance Training, papers; Copy to campam-
gus for future use.
Donna's Qualification, Typing and Word Processing,
Donna's Social Media, Mailings, Mail Art,
Donna's Accounting, Mail Order
I-1-1 TRIO Word processing. Responsible Concientious. Reliable. Call 842 3111 for service
1-100 pages. Typewriter with built in dictionary for automatic spelling check. Same day service available. Call Mindy 749-0426 evenings/weekends.
Experienced typist these, desserts, terminations, formulas 942.810 after 6:15 p.m. or M/F/Sun or Salat/Zafeh.
*ASSCRIPTION also; standard tape.*
*DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS. Mommy's typing is in Australia but will return. KEEP WATCHING THIS AD.*
For professional typing/word processing, call Myra 4160-4560. Spring special $12 payable double credit.
GUHANTEED PERFECT typing done on ward
GUHANTEED near locature Hall. Caf
843-7547
KU SECRETARY will do your typing and word processing. Fast, accurate and fast. 40 minutes after 8:49 a.m. Quality typing, excellent editing, grammar, spelling, punctuation skills. Fast, reliable writing.
- Policy
Resume Service-lasered 10 copies ONLY
$99.89-2193 after 5 p.m.
GOOD IMPRESSIONS Typing/Word Processing/Typestrings, Paper Tites, Typesetten
e.g. Wordflow, InDesign, Adobe Illustrator
Smart Ward Processing includes editing and抄查,
checking. Very reasonable rates. Faxter, 749-2740
THE WORLDOCORS. Why pay for typing? Word processing Legal, transcription: 843-3147
Typing: *very reasonable rates* will also assist with spelling punctuation and form. Call **941-826-259**
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations; papers, letters, applications. Resumes HAVE M.S. Degree 841-6254
Theses, resumes, and papers 841-3469
WRITING LIFELEVEL.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WANTED
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing, manuscript responses, letters, letter writing.
WANTED: Roommate. Close to campus. $142.40
up/1.12 tilt/2 calls. Call James. 845-2372 after 6 p.m
Roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom Apartment. Quit, non-smoker $150 and half utilities
Parttime bushmanneers wanted for Spring and autumn vacations. Special needs micrometer closeups, Buckingham Palace needs inspections.
Wanted 2 female roommates for next fall to share a 3 level spacious third bedroom townhouse. Nice furnished, fireplace, swimming pools, and lots of extras. On bus route B. 842-6414.
Wanted to buy Chevy T/1.2 ton pickup or Van RAL.
Call 415-780-9260 or Call 415-780-9261, ask for Marriage picture.
Contact us at:
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
Classified Information Mail-In Form
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words.
Classified rates are based on consecutive day insertions only
No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising.
Blind box ads please add $4.00 service charge
Tear sheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements. Found ads are free for three days, no more than 15 words.
- Prepaid Order Form Ads
Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansan.
Deadline is 4 p.m. two days prior to publication.
Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. two days prior to publication.
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| Words | 1 Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | 2 Weeks | 3 Weeks | 1 Month |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 0-15 | 2.70 | 4.00 | 5.70 | 9.50 | 14.25 | 18.00 |
| 16-20 | 3.20 | 4.75 | 6.70 | 10.75 | 15.75 | 19.75 |
| 21-25 | 3.70 | 5.50 | 7.70 | 12.00 | 17.25 | 21.50 |
| 26-30 | 3.70 | 6.25 | 8.70 | 13.25 | 18.75 | 23.25 |
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Classifications
001 announcements 300 for sale 500 help asked 800 services offered
100 entertainment 310 auto sales 700 personal 900 typing
100 printing 200 customer service 400 billing
Classified Mail Order Form
Address ___
(phone number published only if included below)
Please print your ad one word per box:
ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLIC
Date ad begins ___
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Amount paid ___
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OLOW KANSAN POLICY
Make checks payable to:
University Daily Kansan
Lawrence
Lawrence, K 66045
---
14
thursday, April 2, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Testaverde may sign for record $8 million
BOSTON — Miami quarterback Vinny Testaverde has agreed to a six-year pact worth more than $8 million, which would make him the highest paid NFL rookie ever and is expected to sign with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers within a week.
"We have a verbal agreement," his attorney, Bob Woolf, said today. The negotiations went well. I felt Vikram always wanted to play in Tampa.
Tampa Bay, which has had the No. 1 draft pick in both the 1986 and 1987 NFL drafts, last year lost Bo Jackson to baseball, the running back signing
with the Kansas City Royals. This year's draft will be held April 28, and Buccaneers owner Hugh Culverhouse said he wanted to have Testaverde signed before draft day.
Woolf said the verbal agreement was reached Monday night after nearly a month of negotiations.
Correction
Because of a reporter's error, Jack O'Leary was incorrectly identified in the March 30 issue of the Kansan. O'Leary is a Lurray senior.
-- Dennis Polkow So Easter morn awaits us all.
bad weather conditions in Kansas
only to find them in Winter Park,
Fla., at the Peggy Kirk Belt Invitational
on Sunday through Tuesday.
Lutheran Campus Ministry
1204 Oread 843-4948
Sunday Worship: 10:30 a.m.
We mourn the dead, but we too will soon be among them.
A
Hey! we're EXCITED to do ROCKCHALK with you ΦΚΘ!
ΣΚ
The Jayhawks will compete against Oklahoma State, Texas, Arizona and Oklahoma, which are ranked second through fifth, respectively, in the country this season. NCAA runner-up is the defending NCAA runner-up.
Men's golf team to compete in Houston
The first two rounds of play were cancelled because of the weather. The Jahayhawks finished sixth in the 10-team field with a 345 total. Ninth-ranked Indiana won the tournament.
The men's golf team is one of 24 teams to compete today through Saturday in the All-American Intercollegiate Tournament at Houston, in one of collegiate golf's most competitive fields this season.
The Kansas women's golf team left
Susan Pekar, who shot an 84, led the Jayhawks and Sherri Atchison was next with an 85.
Forum for City Commission Candidates To Speak on Relevant Student Issues
- underage bar admittance
- a non-voting student seat on the city commission
Followed by a question/answer period
Thursday from 6:00-6:45 p.m. in the Kansas Union
GALA WEEK 1987
GALA WEEK 1987
Alvamar
Thursday, April 2—
"Wear Blue Jeans if You're Gay Day." Can you tell who "is' and who "isn't"? Does it matter? Jack Bremer will be speaking on Christianity and Alternative Sexual Orientation. Gallery West in the Union. 7:30 p.m.
Alvamar
ORCHARDS
GOLF CLUB
-
Sponsored by GLSOK
Alvamar NOW OPEN!
3000 W. 15th St.
843-7456
ORCHARDS
GOLF CLUB
Joe Suggs, Manager
Sponsored by QLSOK
triangle
THURSDAY
75¢ Pitchers
4 p.m. - 3 a.m.
$1 cover
Fri. Special: All You Can Eat Tacos 4:30-6:30 $2.00
the Sanctuary
7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 843-0540
We Love Our
A G D
BABIES
luv your moms
OPEN HOUSE
Saturday, April 4, 1-5 p.m.
STUDENTS, STAFF, & FACULTY
NOW is the time to reserve your COMPLETELY FURNISHED studio,1,2,3,or 4 Bdrm. apartment for Next Semester!
A SHOP WITH A STORE
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas
- Adjacent to KU
- Studios, 1, 2, & 3 bdrm. apts.
- Completely furnished
- Laundry facilities
- Rentals from $280/mo.
- Rentals from $280/n
* Energy efficient
749-2415
few minutes—enjoy the luxury of Living adjacent to Campus!
Sleep those extra
Summit House
CAMPUS PLACE APARTMENTS
1145 Louisianna
1105 Louisianna
- On Campus
- Energy efficient
- Completely furnished
841-1429
- Completely furnished 1 bdrm., & 1
OREAD TOWNHOUSES
bdrm. w/ loft
- 1125 Tennessee * 826 Kentucky
- 916/919 Indiana * 922 Tennessee
- Rentals from $519/mo.
- 1317 Kentucky
- Kentucky Place (13th & Ky)
- 1316 Tennessee * 1311 Tennessee
- Rentals from $290/mo.
- 9th & Emery • 1700 Kentucky
- 1224 Ohio * 1217 Kentucky
- 1345 Vermont * 1332 Vermont
Rentals from $320/mo!
- Completely furnished Studios, 1
Located Between 14th & 15th on the West Side of Massachusetts Street 841-1212
- Laundry facilities
841-1429 * 749-2415
PINE SCHOOL
Hanover Place
- Water paid
- Short walk to KU and Downtown
- bdrm & 2 bdrm Apartments
- Rentals from $280/mo.
- Luxury townhomes also available
- Laundry facilities 749.2415
Call or Stop by Today to Reserve your home for Next Semester
Coldwater Flats
- Completely furnished 1 br. &
SUNDANCE
NOW LEASING
413 W. 14th Street
841-5255
bdrm and 1 bdrm w/loft
- On KU Bus Line
- Completely furnished Studios, 1
841-5255
• Rentals from $240/mo.
- Rentals from $300/mo.
- Laundry facilities Conveniently Located at 7th & Florida Just West of the Sanctuary
- Water paid
- Rentals from $300/mo.
• Water paid
HIGHLANDS
- Laundry facilities
13th & Ohio
841-1212
- Completely furnished, 2 Full Baths, 3 Separate Levels
* Perfect for 3-4 Students!
- Just 2 Short Blocks from the Student Union
• Completely furnished, 2 Full Baths, 3 Separate Levels
• Padded for 2 Students
841-1212
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details, page 2
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Friday April 3,1987 Vol. 97, No. 125 (USPS 650-640)
Mall ads are illegal under Kansas law, opponent charges
By TODD COHEN
Staff writer
Douglas County District Attorney Jim Flory will make an announcement at 9 a.m. today regarding charges made yesterday that political ads bought by the developer of a proposed downtown Lawrence mall violate Kansas law.
Tim Miller, a mall opponent, sent a letter to Flory yesterday asking him to prosecute the developer, Jacobs, Viscomi & Jacobs of Cleveland, for failing to list the company's chairman on the ads as required by state law.
Flory refused to comment further on the charges, which if filed, would be classified as a Class "C" misdemeanor that must be reached for comment yesterday.
The charges came only five days before the end of a pivotal city election that has been dominated by the mall issue. Residents will elect three city commissioners and vote on a three-question mall referendum Tuesday.
Miller wrote Flory, "The voters of Lawrence are being victimized by this apparent series of violations of a clear law. I therefore request that you investigate and prosecute these misdemeanors.
"Since the election is at hand, I urge you to investigate and file charges at once. We should not tolerate any illegal, corrupt political practices."
JVJ placed ads on local broadcasting stations and full-page ads in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World earl news paper, pro-mail vote on the mail repondent.
Neil Woerman, chief of staff to Attorney General Bob Stephan, said yesterday that Kansas statute required political ads to be identified as such and to list the name of "the chairman of the political or other organization" that bought the ad.
Woerman said the law applied both
to candidate elections and referendums. He also said such cases fell under the district attorney's jurisdiction.
The JVJ ads read: "Paid for in the public interest by Town Center Venture Corp. and Jacobs, Visconsi & Jacobs Co. (Pol. Adv.)."
Town Center Venture Corp. is a local group of investors working with the firm.
Other political ads bought by candidates and political action committees in the paper list the name of a campaign committee treasurer.
Ed Shultz, Journal-World advertising and marketing director, said. "We check all advertisements. It's our belief that no one has broken any law."
Miller, who publishes The Plumber's Friend, a monthly newsletter that has criticized the mall proposal, said. "JVJ is trying to buy an election. At least they should run a legal campaign."
Citizens should be able to contact a politician advertiser to respond. Multicultural.
"The state law is there for a purpose. The point of the law is to keep politics from being anonymous."
Miller, a frequent critic of the Journal-World, also charged that the paper refused Tuesday to let Lawrence city commission candidate Dennis Constance, a mall opponent, buy an ad to respond to JVJ's ads.
Schultz said the paper refused the ad because of a policy against publishing ads six days before an election that introduce "controversial material that is new and might require a response from the opposing side."
Constance's ad would have run in Wednesday's paper at the earliest, in violation of the six-day deadline, Schultz said.
Constance confirmed that his advertisement had been refused.
Recipes a hit at Homemakers School
Staff writer
By JOHN BUZBEE
If Lawrence resident Debby Quantance wants to fry some heart-shaped eggs this morning, she'll be ready.
And Dorothy Feist might be whipping up a mean ham and cheese omelet roll.
Homemakers School '87, sponsored by the Lawrence Daily Journal-World, featured Dallas home economist Beth Woerner cooking food, demonstrating appliances and telling homemaker jokes.
They and about 850 other people, some happy and some noticeably unenthusiastic, left the Lawrence High School auditorium last night after watching two and a half hours of cooking demonstrations. Some won appliances while others left with bags full of coupons, recipes and advertisements.
"When I used to think of dates, I only thought of males," she said. "But since I've started working in the Homemakers School, I've learned that dates can add a lot to many recipes."
She displayed all the foods at the end of the evening before giving them away.
Woerner's peanut butter pie went over pretty well with the audience. Her oriental pepper steak and omelet roll were well received. But her chocolate-filled oatmeal bars took the cake.
Her presentation also included numerous plugs for appliance and food brands. Several national companies sponsor the classes, which she and other home economists conduct all over the country. In one plug, she encouraged the audience to sing a TV single.
"Everything's better," she began as a Jour-
nicle World employee wearing a blue hat stood
next.
"With Blue Bonnet on it," the audience replied.
Guenter de Vries, who said he was a pretty good cook himself, came for the prizes.
"I think she is talking too much advertisement," said de Vries, a Lawrence resident. "The recipes seem to be incidental in the whole thing."
Lawrence resident Ric Silver came with de Vries but left with a microwave. He also learned in the lab.
Silber and de Vries were a big part of a small minority at the class. Women made up most of the audience.
Feist said, "What we need to do is get more men. Men are good cooks."
"I learned something about the appliances that I didn't come to learn."
Katherine Heartsbear
Beth Woerner, a home economist from Dallas, demonstrates how to properly roll out yeast dough at the seventh annual Lawrence Homemakers School. Woerner shared her talents last night in the auditorium at Lawrence High School, 19th and Louisiana streets.
Fred Sadowski/KANSAN
INSIDE
INCIDE
Tennis anyone?
The men's and women's tennis teams begin their Big Eight Conference season today against Oklahoma State at the Allen Field House courts. See story page 13.
Liquor debate
Five of the Lawrence city commission candidates support the idea that allows underage students in bars that serve 3.2 percent beer by 8 p.m. The ideas were discussed last night in a debate sponsored by the KU Student Senate. See story page 3.
XII
IX
VI
Daylight-saving time begins at 2 a.m. Sunday, when time springs forward an hour to 3 a.m., according to the National Weather Service.
Pastor fosters neighborly vision
Spring forward!
Daylight-saving time starts at 2 a.m. the first Sunday in April and continues until 2 a.m. the last Sunday in October.
By PAUL SCHRAG
Gareth Waltrip/KANSAN
Most servicemen who were nominated for "soldier of the week" in 1958 probably felt honored. But not uncle Howard. He didn't want to be a soldier ally.
Staff writer
Bremer thought war was wrong. He had registered for the draft as a conscientious objector, but his pastor and his priest were not military service would shame his family.
Luckily, Bremer, who was stationed in Augusta, Ga., was able to avoid his potential citation as an outstanding soldier.
T. M. SMITH
"I got sick and couldn't go to the competition. Thank God for that," he said.
Jack Bremer, director and campus pastor of Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave., leads a Bible discussion group. Bremer, who traveled to Iran in 1980 to conduct an Easter service for the U.S. hostages, thinks the Bible's main message is "Love God and love your neighbor."
Bremer went directly from the army signal corps to Yale University Diversity School in 1958. Since 1979, he has been director and campus pastor of Ecumenical Christian Ministries. 1204 Oread Ave.
PETER D. RUBER
Bremer, a Methodist, still is opposed to war. His peace activism has led him to participate in demonstrations against nuclear weapons. He has talked with war victims in Central America and has been outspoken in his criticism of U.S. military policies.
He first traveled to Central America to show solidarity with war victims there in 1984. He visited Nicaragua and Honduras for two weeks in February, along with other ministers, to establish ties between Kansas Methodists and a Nicaraguan church.
Students describe Bremer, 52, as a caring person who is easy to talk to. Dressed in a sweatshirt, jeans and white athletic shoes as he leads a Sunday evening worship service at the ECM building, he proves that reverence doesn't require formality.
These actions are motivated by what Bremer calls the central message of the Bible: Love God and love your neighbor.
Bremer went to Iran in 1980 to conduct Easter services for the U.S. hostages.
Bremer's definition of a neighbor includes oppressed people throughout the world. One of his goals in campus ministry is to encourage students to relate their Christian beliefs to action on global concerns.
"He has a spirit of love about him," said Benson Jba,介质 graduate.
"One of the great needs of our world is to find non-violent means of social transformation," he said. "We must break the cycle of violence.
Bremer's bridge-building takes many forms. His diversity of interests and ways of ministering lead Mike Grear, Baldwin City graduate student, to describe him as a "Renaissance-type guy."
"We are all creatures of God. We need to affirm our common part in one human family. We need to find ways to build bridges of understanding."
As director of the University Forum series, Bremer applies his concerns for peace and justice to a secular setting. For the forum, a weekly lecture and discussion series is offered each week during Bremer directs a committee that selects topics of ethical and sometimes religious concern.
Hector Clark, associate professor of mechanical engineering, regularly attends the forums. He describes himself as a "card-carrying secular humanist," and says he has a lot of
See BREMER, p. 11, col. 1
Senate rejects veto, enacts highway bill
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Senate rejected a personal, last-minute plea from President Reagan and voted yesterday to override his veto and enact into law an $88 billion highway and mass transit bill.
The 67-33 vote, exactly the two-thirds majority necessary, capped
See related story p.11.
bill that became a high-stakes test of wills between Reagan and leaders of the Senate's Democratic majority.
Besides authorizing highway and mass transit projects that Reagan had opposed as overladen with pork, the bill permits states to boost the speed limit on rural stretches of interstate highways from the current
The bill includes $7.2 million for a proposed southern Lawrence traffic
Democrats reclaimed one vote they had lost in an initial vote Wednesday, but Republicans were unable to override it. Both voters who had voted to override the veto.
55 mph to 65 mph.
Afterward, though, winners and losers alike will try to minimize the effect [Results]
"This isn't going to make or break the president of the United States," said Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd. "There will be other vetoes."
But arguments over the substance of the legislation were overtaken by the political fight.
Reagan issued a statement that said he was deeply disappointed by the outcome but vowed to continue against excessive federal spending.
White House spokesman Martin Fitzwater said the defeat would help Reagan by demonstrating his will to fight in his final 21 months in office.
Hours before the vote, Reagan had upped the ante in terms of his political prestige by visiting the Capitol to meet with GOP senators to back him.
Fitzwater quoted Reagan as telling the senators, "I beg you for your
See HIGHWAY, p. 6, col. 3
Detective to investigate alcohol link in fatal crash
By a Kansan reporter
The Douglas County District Attorney's office yesterday appointed a sheriff's detective to investigate the possibility that four KU students killed in an accident in North Lawrence last Friday might have been sold alcohol illegally.
"The coroner's report indicated that there was alcohol in the blood," said Jim Flory, the district attorney. "Based on that, I asked the sheriff to determine whether there was illegal action involved as a result of the sale of alcohol to minors.
"What the investigation is looking for are facts on which we could base
The students, Jennifer Jones, 19. St Louis freshman; Daniel McDevitt, 19. Salina sophomore; Joel Granham, 20. Overland Park sophomore;
and Betys Dunlap, 21. Salina junior,
were on the way to a barn party when
their car was struck by a Union
Pacific train at a railroad crossing on
Douglas County Road 1900N, about
a mile north of Lawrence.
Mike Suitt, the appointed detective, said he spent his first day on the assignment being briefed on the case. He could imagine could take several days, he said.
Earlier this week, blood-alcohol tests conducted by Alan Sanders, the Douglas County coroner, revealed that all four students had been drinking, although they were not legally drunk as defined by state law.
A second blood-alcohol report prepared by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation was released yesterday to Sanders.
Sanders would not make public the findings of that report.
2
Friday, April 3, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Around the World
Soviet Union reports defection of U.S. serviceman and his wife
MOSCOW — The Kremlin announced yesterday that a U.S. soldier and his West German wife had defected to the Soviet Union and been granted asylum because they feared political persecution.
The U.S. Army in West Germany and the Pentagon could not confirm the defection, which would be the first by a U.S. serviceman to the Soviet Union since the Vietnam War.
The Pentagon issued a statement, however, saying that it was investigating an enlisted man with a name similar to that announced by the Soviets who had deserted in West Germany a month ago. It said that it was not certain whether he was the same person.
The reported defection came at a time when the U.S. Embassy in Moscow was trying to deal with a spy case in which two former Marine guards had been charged with espionage.
Soviet Foreign Ministry spokesman Gennady Gerasimov identified the soldier as William E. Roberts of the U.S. Army, whom he said had been stationed in West Germany.
Gerasimov said he was not sure of the couple's present whereabouts. The official Tass news agency said it would provide a photograph today showing the couple in Turkmenia, a Central Asian Soviet republic that borders Iran and Afghanistan.
Mine fire in Quebec kills one; 46 rescued
MURDOCHVILLE, Quebec — An explosion in a Quebec copper mine sparked a fire Wednesday that spewed clouds of black smoke through a tunnel, killing one miner, officials said yesterday. Rescuers reached 46 others trapped underground.
After the blaze broke out Wednesday night, 29 miners held up in an underground lunchroom 2,000 feet beneath the earth's surface. The room was below the fire and the miners had air and water, Susan Lewis, a spokesman for the
company that owns the mine said. Seventeen other miners initially unaccounted for because of a breakdown in radio communications were found by rescue teams in other lunchrooms, also with suffient air and water, about 1,700 feet underground, she said.
Lewis said rescue workers planned to leave the miners in the lunchrooms until thick smoke from ramps leading to the surface.
Lewis said company officials did not know what touched off the fire.
Lawyer says he wasn't involved in spy deal
TEL AVIV, Israel — A U.S.born Israeli lawyer byu s. U.S. investigators in connection with the Pollard spy case yesterday denied involvement but said he was told that his Washington apartment had been used in the esponage affair.
U. S. Embassy in Tel Aviv
In a statement issued at his suburban home in Tel Aviv, Harold Katz revealed that he was a senior legal adviser to the Israeli Defense Ministry an thus was not permitted to be interrogated in the United States.
But Katz, 65, a Harvard-educated lawyer who holds both U.S. and Israeli citizenship, said that he had offered to be questioned at the
The Washington Post reported yesterday that U.S. investigators wanted to question Katz about his role in channeling Israeli payments to Jonathan Jay Pollard, who received $2,500 a month for suitcases of classified U.D. documents. The newspaper said prosecutors thought Katz owned a Washington apartment building where Israelis photocoped the U.S. secrets.
Katz said his Washington apartment was often unoccupied and denied having knowledge that anyone connected with the Pollard case used it.
Across the Country
Former CIA official denies role in arms sale
WASHINGTON — A former top CIA official, whose name emerged as a possible figure in both the Iran arms deal and contra diversion, said he played no role in either affair.
Theodore Shackley, the CIA's top agent in Vietnam and Laos in the late 1960s, was mentioned in both the Tower Commission and the Senate Intelligence Committee's reports on the situation and in subsequent news accounts about the case.
He said the committee was wrong in including in its report an uncorroborated statement that his name was on one of the secret Swiss bank accounts. Profits from the Iran arms deal were diverted to those accounts.
But Shackley objected to how he was portrayed by the Senate Intelligence Committee.
Jazz drummer Buddv Rich dies at 69
Shackley said that he never had a Swiss bank account and that he had nothing to do with the Iran arms deal.
LOS ANGELES — Buddy Rich, the legendary jazz drummer who began his career more than a half century ago as a vaudelle song-and-dance prodigy, died yesterday. He was 69.
Rich, a self-taught drummer who played with Artie Shaw and Tommy Dorsey before starting his
own band, and undergone surgery March 16 at the UCLA Medical Center for a brain tumor and had been undergoing daily chemotherapy treatment at the hospital.
"I could hardly believe the news of Buddy's death, if only because he was so vital and full of life," said Frank Sinatra.
From Kansan wires.
Weather
From the KANSAN Weather Service
LAWRENCE FORECAST
Today will be sunny and warm with west-southwesterly winds from 5-10 mph and a high of 51 degrees. Tonight, skies will remain clear with a low near 33 degrees.
WEATHER OUTLOOK: Tomorrow and Sunday will be mostly sunny and warm. Highs will in the 60s and lows 40s.
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TOPEKA
53 / 31
COLUMBIA
46 / 29
ST. LOUIS
43 / 26
SALINA
54 / 34
WICHITA
58 / 34
CHANUTE
54 / 32
SPRINGFIELD
49 / 29
TULSA
58 / 39
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3
Local Briefs
International club and hall to hold festival
The KU International Club and McCollum Hall will sponsor a Festival of Nations tomorrow in McCollum's lobby.
KU students from about 20 countries will participate in the festival, said Thuer Laham, club president. The festival will include an exhibition from noon to 5 p.m. featuring costumes, handicrafts and literature from each of the countries.
"We would like to leave one day for students from different parts of the world to put away their differ-ient gifts, just have a good time." Laham shadda.
A 90-minute cultural program representing the music, dance and costumes of the different countries will begin at 6:30 p.m.
Both the exhibition and the cultural program are free, Laham said.
Students also will have the chance to sample food from different countries. For a 25 cents, students can buy one plate of food from any one of the countries represented, Laham said.
Navy ROTC to hold drill competition
KU's Navy ROTC will sponsor the 20th annual Big Eight Drill Competition from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. tomorrow at Hoch Auditorium
Navy ROTC squads of a maximum 12 members, platoons of 13 or more members and exhibition groups will compete in precision drill, rifle and pistol team categories.
Deadline to get ballot is Monday
Active-duty marines will inspect the groups before the competition begins.
Registered voters who want to vote in Tuesday's general election but are unable to go to the polls have until noon Monday to apply for absentee ballots, Douglas County Clerk Patty Jaimes said yesterday.
Voters who are unable, for medical reasons, to go to the polls may send another registered voter to pick up a ballot before the Monday deadline. Jaimes said. Ballots must be returned to her office by 7 p.m. Tuesday to be counted.
Fall applications for Kansan available
Applications for Kansan fall editor and business manager now are available in 119 and 200 Stauffer-Finn Hall.
Applications are due by 5 p.m. Tuesday. The Kansan Board will interview candidates Wednesday.
Kansan summer news staff applications are due by 5 p.m. Monday. Summer news staff candidates should sign up for interviews in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Staffer-First Hall.
Clarification
Because of incomplete information, a Student Senate coalition's platform was misrepresented in Wednesday's Kansan. The Synchronicity coalition is in favor of a 100 percent fee waiver for all graduate teaching assistants. In addition, Phillip Duff, Synchronicity presidential candidate, said that using the entire Senate unallocated account to open extra classes would serve only 100 students.
From staff and wire reports.
Candidate favors minors in taverns
By TODD COHEN
Staff writer
Accidents like one last week that killed four KU students could be avoided if Lawrence repealed a law that bans minors from taverns serving 3.2 percent beer after 8 p.m., a Lawrence city commission candidate said last night.
Ellis Hayden, speaking at the Kansas Union in a debate sponsored by KU's Student Senate, said students wouldn't have to rent rural buildings for parties if they were allowed in taverns.
The four students, at least two of whom were under the legal age to purchase 3.2 beer, were killed when their car was struck by a train at a crossing on a rural Douglas County road. The students were on their way to a Chi Omega sorority party in a rented barn north of Lawrence.
"If those students had been allowed in, maybe they wouldn't have been out there. Think about that," Hayden said.
A city ordinance allows underage persons to enter until b 1 p.m., but not drink, at establishments with cereal malt beverage licenses, Mike Wilden, assistant city manager, said yesterday.
The city, which issues only cereal malt beverage licenses, has no authority over liquor consumption and sale. Wilden said.
John Cissell, a student senator who moderated the debate and represented the Senate's position, said Manhattan and Stillwater, Okla., have similar ordinances but without any time limits.
Cissell also said candidates should consider the Douglas County coroner's report, which stated the four victims were not legally drunk at the time of the accident. Results from a Kansas Bureau of Investigation blood test have not been released.
Hayden was responding to a ques
tion of whether the candidates would support an ordinance like those in Stillwater and Manhattan, which are diverse. The University and Kansas State University.
The current Student Senate administration ran for election last fall on the Cheers platform, which promoted changing Lawrence's ordinance so minors could enter but not drink in taverns until closing time.
However, Wilden said the Senate administration never made a formal request for the change. Commissioners Ernest Angino and Howard Hill said student senators had never consulted them either.
Of the six candidates, only Mike Rundle opposed the idea.
"I don't think it has any value," he said. "The potential for abuse is pretty high."
Rundle, who said his family had suffered from problems associated with alcoholism, said the Senate should focus its efforts on solving the problems of alcoholism.
Angino said it was premature to discuss the issue because the Kansas Legislature was considering legislation to execute the liquor-by-the-law law, which last year and might make changes in cereal malt beverage regulations.
Dennis Constance said he supported the idea but expressed reservations because it would burden bar owners. Minors would have to carry I.D. cards so owners would know not to serve them, he said.
Hill and former commissioner Bob Schumm were more enthusiastic. Schumm said that when he was a commissioner in 1980, he wrote the ordinance now on the books and would support a review of the law.
the support of the law Hill said he sympathized with the Senate. The current laws often separate friends who vary in ages.
"Let's take it off the books," Hill said.
'Nice Girls' bombs in Lawrence debut
If "Nice Girls Don't Explode," what was that bomb I saw last night in Lawrence?
The long-awaited world premiere of "Nice Girls," filmed here last summer, was delayed from Wednesday night because of mechanical difficulties. Apparently, the movie got no better with age.
Columnist
John Benner
In fact, this juvenile pseudo-country included insulting jokes about another country, predictable situations, abuse of a cat, and crude jokes about human reproductive organs. Even the slapstick wasn't done well.
desire to keep April at home
In other words, don't waste $4 on this movie. It's too bad my ticket to get there.
Mom convinces April that her overheating hormones are causing the oesophagus to leak.
At the beginning of the film, we see April and her friend, Andy, as children. Mom tries to keep them apart by securing April to a leash in the back yard. I suppose the leash was intended as a subtle symbol of Mom's
Just in case you're still interested in seeing the film, here's the basic plot. Mom is afraid of losing her daughter April. To keep April at school, she wants fire to and blows up objects near April and her prospective suitors.
In any case, the film then jumps 13 years ahead to the occasion of April's date with a boy (not Andy) with a sports car. Mom exherts April to take along "some protection." The protection is a miniature fire extinguisher.
The young couple goes to a restaurant where April uses the extinguisher several times in the first five minutes.
Most of the film is handled the same way. Every time a situation begins to be funny, it is milked until long after the audience has finished laughing — if indeed it ever began to laugh.
April and Andy are reunited at a local recreation center where Andy has a serious pingpong accident and stops to see whether he is still alive.
Before the movie mercifully ends, the audience is subjected to idiotic jokes about shaved pubic areas, an insensitive joke about the Tylenol murders, and this gem of a monologue from Mom:
"April, there's only one thing tougher than being a mom and that's not being a mom. I just wanted to keep on being a team and not let our relationship shrivel up like a belly-button."
When Andy later shows up at April's house, Mom knows she has her work cut out for her if she's going to keep the two young lovers apart.
Early contract response may ease housing hassles
That's about as profound as a whoopie cushion is funny. Actually, a whoopie cushion would provide a bigger explosion than "Nice Girls" did.
KU's residence halls may be filled a little earlier than they normally are, and housing officials say that might eliminate some typical fall housing difficulties.
By JOSEPH REBELLO
Staff writer
About 2,700 students, more than half the capacity of KU's residence halls, already have signed and returned housing contracts for the 1987-88 academic year, Fred McEilenie, director of residential programs, said yesterday.
That early response will help the office plan ahead and might ease its problems in finding last-minute tempiers. Students who contract labs, McFheenbry,
By March 25, the office had received 1,400 more signed housing contracts from prospective residents than it had by last March, he said.
Only 2,000 more spaces are available in the halls. he said.
Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said halls usually didn't fill until July or August. This year, students would fill spaces could be filled before June.
McEllenie said, "That would indicate to people who want housing to get on the bandwagon."
Stoner said he had not expected the number of signed contracts received by March to be so high.
Last year, between August 1 and August 17, nearly 500 students arrived at the University of Kansas seeking student housing. Many of them had to live in temporary housing for as long as a month.
But students will no longer be able to find student housing if they arrive at the University just in time for fall enrollment and have not yet signed a housing contract. Stoner said.
McElhenie said, "That will make it easier for us because we won't have those crazy days in the fall when people are arriving on the spot and contracting."
One reason for the increase of early signed contracts received by the office is that the office changed its application process to encourage early signing of contracts. Stoner said.
Until last year, housing contracts were sent to students who requested
them only after the students had been admitted to the University.
That has made it possible for students to contract early, he said.
But last fall, Stoner said, that policy was changed to allow contracts to be mailed to students as early as they were requested. The contracts are not valid until the student is officially admitted to a school.
And a new University admissions deadline has placed a premium on signing contracts early, he said. Under the new deadline, students applying to the University after May 1 will not be admitted.
"That gives us a harder count of the students that are coming in." Stoner said.
McElhennie said that receiving so many signed contracts did not necessarily indicate that more students were seeking student housing.
"The halls might till up sooner, but that's not a bad thing," he said. "It might mean there aren't going to be more people applying."
Edvard Radzinsky, (left) Soviet writer-in-residence at KU, answers questions from his audience as Gerald Mikkelson, professor of Slavic languages and literatures, interprets Radzinsky talked to more than 100 people last night in the Kansas Union about recent cultural changes in the Soviet Union.
Soviet writer talks about creativity
Staff writer
By PAUL SCHRAG
Censorship of literature and music has ceased to exist in the Soviet Union, a leading Soviet plavright said last night.
Edward Radzinsky, Soviet writer-in-residence at the University of Kansas, said that Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev had ushered in a new era of cultural openness that had revitalized creativity and destroyed indifference.
In a lively question-and-answer session, Radzinsky's humorous comments frequently drew laughter from an audience of more than 100 people at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Radzinsky spoke in Russian, and Gerald Mikelsen, professor of Slavic languages and literatures, interpreted.
Radzinsky, one of the most popular and influential playwrights in the Soviet Union, will conclude a two-week visit to KU today.
dom in the Soviet Union began when Gorbachev came to power in 1965, but other factors have been at work. Radzinsky said.
“These changes have been dictated by internal necessities,” he said. “No one can change them monarch is the slave of history.
"If the policy of openness will continue, everyone can say what they like."
Jake Kippe, Lawrence resident and a senior analyst at the Soviet army studies office in Leavenworth, said after the speech that Mr. Nisky's optimistic view was correct, but that he forsaw problems.
"There are many contradictions in Soviet society," he said. "This is very difficult for any society, especially for the former Soviet Union, a traditional of the Soviet Union."
Radzinsky was asked whether he thought the U.S. government feared that cultural changes would
make the Soviet Union a more viable society and thus a more dangerous enemy.
"You may be right." Radzinsky said. "But we have said so many bad things about each other, and with such delight, that I am not going to say anything more.
"Our relations got so out of hand that they can only get better now. The rest of the world is tired of hostility between our nations."
Radzinsky said he always had tried to isolate himself from politics. He said that under Gorbachev, rationality finally was guiding the Soviet government's treatment of the arts.
Before Gorbachev, he said, the government usually suppressed the art and literature the public liked. But now, for example, rock bands that had been forced to play in secret are able to perform openly.
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Friday, April 3, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Benevolent snitching
KU students are paying special attention to the hazards involved in drug use and are expressing their concerns by voluntarily "snitching" on drug violators.
This action has long been sought by law enforcement officials and is vital in any efforts to curb widespread drug use. An article in Friday's Kansan disclosed that arrests for drug violations have increased this year. The increases have not been attributed to increased use of drugs but to more students and living groups reporting drug violations.
Students' concern with drug use has been heightened recently as a result of numerous national and local endeavors to spell out its physical and mental dangers. Many residence halls, fraternities and sororites have been a part of the drug education program provided by KU police.
Activity in such programs and willingness to police drug abuse indicate that many students are doing what they can to turn themselves and their peers away from drugs. It also indicates that students' perspectives on drugs have changed.
Most students are not willing to play biological roulette by swallowing, injecting or inhaling chemicals known to have a harmful effect on the human body. Concerns at the University include educational success, which often is precluded by fitness, both mentally and physically.
Drug abuse does not fit in with these interests. Therefore, students are feeling free to assist in the endeavor to eradicate drug abuse by reporting violators and are giving a more benevolent meaning to the term "snitching."
The roar of a thunderstorm was not enough to deter NASA from launching its $78 million rocket last week. Once again, NASA paid dearly for a mistake that should have never happened.
Credibility crashes
NASA launched the Atlas Centaur, which was carrying an $83 million military communications satellite, last Thursday into the deadly lightning.
Seconds after lightning flashed near the rocket, its electrical system lost control and the rocket left its course, leaving NASA officials little choice but to destroy the rocket.
Officials still are unsure whether the lightning, or some other complication, caused the failure.
The U.S. space program has been plagued by setbacks after
the space shuttle Challenger blew up seconds after launching last year.
Each time NASA prepares the launch pad, it puts its reputation on the line. The space program has been fighting to regain its momentum and continue research. It should do everything within its power to see that the environment is favorable for a launch. If heavy rains and lightning are anywhere in the area, NASA should delay all scheduled launches.
The space program will not bounce back if it keeps experiencing costly failures. NASA never will be able to guarantee successful launches, but the program will continue to suffer if failures occur because of mistakes that could and should have been avoided.
A few good men
What do Soviet spies in Moscow have in common with the U.S. Marine Corps? They both spend a lot of time "looking for a few good men."
The U.S. government has been re-learning a tough lesson this past week: a chain is only as strong as its weakest link. The lesson is coming in the form of a widening investigation of information gained by Soviet spies with the help of members of the Marine guard at the U.S. embassy in Moscow.
Apparently, the Soviet spies worked their way around the embassy's elaborate security measures by cozying up to some Marines. At least two Marines have been charged with suspicion of espionage and a third has been arrested because he is "suspected of having associations with Soviet women on several occasions" and failing to report them.
The trade the guards made seems simple enough. In exchange for sexual favors from undercover female KGB agents, the Marines gave the agents access to embassy offices. It is thought that the KGB agents obtained the names of U.S. intelligence contacts and were able to read messages from Washington at the time of the Reagan-Gorbachev march in Reykjavik, Iceland, during these romps through the embassy.
It is embarrassing that the U.S. government has to pay such a high price for its tendency to be more concerned with the details than with the basics. Before installing sophisticated equipment to ward off spying attempts, the government should have spent more time training its guards.
After all, what good is new technology when it easily can be circumvented by one of the oldest tricks in the world?
News staff
News staff
Frank Hansel ... Editor
Jennifer Benjamin ... Managing editor
Jul Warren ... News editor
Brian Kelleher ... Editorial assistant
Sandra Engelland ... Campus editor
Mark Siebert ... Sports editor
Diane Dulmeir ... Photo editor
Bill Skeet ... Graphics editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Lisa Weems ... Business manager
Bonnie Hardy ... Ad director
Denise Stephens ... Retail sales manager
Kelly Schuster ... Campus sales manager
Duncan Calhoun ... Marketing manager
Lori Copple ... Classified manager
Jennifer Lumianski ... Production manager
David Nixon ... National sales manager
Jeanne Hines ... Sales and marketing adviser
Opinions
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. Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The
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The Kansan reserves the right reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall
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WHO?!?
DEMS
GEPHARDT!
DUKAKIS!
BABBITT!
GEPHARDT
DUKAKIS!
BABBITT
The Miami Herald
Distributed by Kino Features Syndicate
WHOSIERS
Reagan persuasive in Central America
President Reagan appears to be persuasive in making his case on the threat of communism in Central America to the American people — the Central American people that is. According to the results of Gallup
Paul Campbell
Columnist
polis taken in four Central America.. nations, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador and Costa Rica, concern about the Sandinista regime is at an all-time high.
In a 1985 Gallup poll, people in these nations were asked what country constituted the biggest military threat to them. While the United States was cited about 5 percent of the time, Nicaragua was the winner, with about 50 percent of Guatemalans and 90 percent of Costa Ricans responding that the Sandinistas were
the biggest threat.
With the continued military buildup in Nicaragua, unprecedented in Central American history, this expressed dread cannot have been alleviated. A recent Gallup poll produced responses to these follow-up questions.
On the question of "How justly does the government of Nicaragua treat its people?" the range for response of "very justly/somewhat justly" was 8 percent in Costa Rica to 24 percent in Guatemala. The response "not justly at all" ranged from 27 percent in Guatemala to 56 percent in Costa Rica.
In response to "Do the majority of Nicaraguans support the Sandinistas or the contras?" the Sandinistas received 12 percent of the vote in Costa Rica to 23 percent of the vote in Guatemala. The contras received from 46 percent of the vote in El Salvador to 75 percent of the vote Honduras.
Between 84 to 91 percent of those polled in the four nations said yes to
"Can Central Americans depend on help from Uncle Sam in the event of future military attack?"
On the question of "Should Nicaragua's neighbors support the contra effort?" those answer yes ranged from 54 percent in Guatemala to 74 percent in Honduras.
While polls themselves are telling, they should not be taken as the only indicators of opinions that are prominent in these Central American nations. Polls of this sort are not permitted in Nicaragua.
The Sandinista rule in Nicaragua, which has been wearily watched by its increasingly nervous neighbors, is augmented on by leaders in Costa Rica.
Sandinismo.'
In 1983, after watching the build-up of the Nicaraguan military machine, former Costa Rican President Laís Alberto Monge compared the threat posed by the autocratic Somoza regimes and the totalitarian Sandinista rule by saying that "in 40 years of Somocismo, we never had the threat that we have in four years of
President Oscar Arias, who was elected to replace Monge, said that his northern neighbors, the Sadinistas, had "neither a true interest nor will for peace in Central America."
This message also will be expressed directly by a senior State Department official who will come to the University of Kansas soon. Assistant Secretary of State For Inter-American Affairs Elliot Abrams will speak on "Central America: What Are the Alternatives?"
Abrams is a 1973 graduate of Harvard Law School and also earned a master's degree in international relations from the prestigious London School of Economics. Since 1985, he has served as President Reagan's primary architect for United States policy in Latin America.
As he speaks to the University audience, one only can hope that the assistant secretary will have some of the persuasive power, which has been successful in Central America, over the nation and the Congress.
Mailbox
Times have changed
To the "handful" of alumni who complained about the class of the pompon girls. 1. Am ashamed of you! Please tell me you have better things to do than criticize a group of girls who are respectfully entertaining their peers and sports fans of all ages. True, KU is rich in tradition, but the ankle-length skirts and overcoats you are imply are difficult to perform in with today's competitiveness and athletic ability required.
Times have changed. They're always changing. When I was a KU cheerleader, we attended a major cheerleading camp in Memphis. That is where KU's "tradition" was thrown in our face, and the president of the Association informed us we "did not have the T & A for today's collegiate cheerleading."
KU is getting wonderful press lately. We need to show potential students that we don't have corn sticking out our ears.
If you still feel the need to “concern” yourself with the program, please choose one of two options: A. Donate to the financing for camps, new uniforms or, better yet, join! B. Lighten up. it’s just cheerleading! This is a big division I university. We have great sports and better fans! Enjoy the games and don’t lose anymore sleep over goofy things!
Alexis Faulkner Prairie Village senior
Blame is misplaced
I want to respond to Barb Heck's opposition to the Crimson Girls as quoted in an article in the April 1 issue of the Kansan and also take the opportunity to present my feelings to the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation. The blame for the rude behavior during the Crimson Girls' performances is misplaced. Certain dance movements do not cause rude reactions; immaturity, immorality and peer pressure breed rude behavior.
I fully support spirit squad coordinator Elaine Brady, Dana Smith, Ann Pinkerton and the remaining Crimson Girls. When I want to see stunts effectively sparking team enthusiasm and crowd spirit, I watch the strong and agile cheerleaders.
The "barking hound" syndrome reflects poorly on the University and the male population that conducts itself as adults. The unruly fans are nothing more than children seeking attention with inappropriate and inhuman actions. Lacking self-control, these children need supervision. If I had my choice, I would have the school hire a few nannes to patrol the stands — a slap upside the head, a crack of a ruler across the knuckles or a forceful yank of the earlobes in front of one's peers should effectively curb the rude behavior.
Dance, like cheerleading, is an art. Dancers, for me, generate mood swings from serenity to vivacity. I watch dance to harvest the physical
and emotional electricity that drives dancers to do their best. My suggestion to Heck and the viewing public decide what you want out of a performance and concentrate on finding it. You may have to look beyond the surface of the performer.
As for the Kansan, the editors have undeniably failed to present an unbiased view of the Crimson Girls. The editors' failure to photograph the models' full bodies lends to the comotion about the uniforms, and generally degrades the female models as people. I can't help but swear every time I see the photo of three Crimson Girls cropped at the neck. Whatever the motivation or intent, you erred
The editors of the Kansan are no better than the "barking hounds." both focus on the flesh before their eyes, indifferent and insensitive to the girls' personalities, feelings, expressions and total physical attributes. The Kansan owes the Crimson Girls an apology.
Paul Flake Prairie Village law student
Paul Flake
Keeping up the fight
It was very nice to see the Kansan give front page coverage to the Gay and Lesbian Awareness Week "Nightwatch" vigil. I think the vigil was one of the most important events to happen on campus in a long time. The fact that 25 to 35 people attended, even though the temperature was in the 20s, shows that the people of the
University of Kansas and citizens of Lawrence are not about to give up the fight against oppression.
In a time when open bigotry and prejudice are rapidly on the rise, the ideals behind the vigil need to become a daily part of everyone's lives. All people, no matter what their race, color, nationality, religion, sex, sexual orientation, political beliefs, physical abilities, marital status, economic status, hair color or shoe size, need to speak out against all types of oppression. This can include anything from correcting someone when they say the word "mankind" instead of "human being" because it doesn't promote ideas of male domination, all the way to boycotts and protests of openly racist organizations.
But let us also remember that with our responsibility to speak out, we must also ensure against oppressing and controlling the will we become as wrong as they are.
The one thing the Kansan forgot to mention was that Todd Rowlett, secretary and public events coordinator for GLSOK, almost single-handedly was responsible for coordinating "Nightwatch" Todd, we all applaud your honorable work.
Kevin Elliot office manager, GLSOK
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 3, 1987
5
Booster stations, new home benefit audio-reader service
By TIM HAMILTON
Stait writer
The timing couldn't be better for the Audio-Reader Network.
Remodeling of the network's future headquarters, the former Phi Kappa Tau fraternity house at 1120 W. 11th St. began this semester.
At the same time, KANU-FM 91.5, which broadcasts Audio-Reader's programs for the handicapped and visually impaired, began to expand its broadcast area with eight booster stations in Kansas and Oklahoma.
The new headquarters will be named the Louis W. and Dolpha Baehr Audio-Reader Center, after the benefactors who financed half of the renovation, said Jim Martin, senior vice president of private support for Kansas University Endowment Association. Janet Campbell, Audio-Reader's operations manager, said the Baehr Center, scheduled for completion in September, would greatly improve the network's services.
Audio-Reader now is housed in both Sudler House, off of West Campus Road, and in a mobile home between KJH-KFM 91 and the Triangle fraternity house.
The Baehr Center will improve the quality of the service's recordings as well and double its recording capabilities. Campbell said.
studios now, and the center will have between six and eight," she said. "Plus we'll have everyone in the same building."
"We have only three recording
Steve Kineaid, chief engineer at Audio-Reader, said the service now supports a wide range of devices.
"Basically it's like trying to record in a tin can," he said.
The new studios will contain sound-proof walls and floors to eliminate noise.
"Also, the air ducts have been designed to cut down on air noise. Those things will make the biggest improvements." Kincaid said.
"If someone buys a microwave and wants the instruction book recorded, we'll have space to do it," she said.
The additional recording studios will allow the network to do more special recordings beyond its normal programming, which took top priority, Campbell said.
Already, KANU booster stations are operating in Manhattan, Emporia and Junction City. Stations soon will be operating in Independence, Parsons, lola, Pittsburgh and Bartlesville, Oklah, Berman said.
"With every translator station that KANU installs, our audience will be more engaged."
Berman estimated that the booster stations would potentially increase KANU's audience by 350,000 people. He said the station would
Campbell said the stations would
provide the Audio-Reader service to new listeners as well as improve service for existing audiences in Emporia and Manhattan who now receive the service through paycable channels.
The stations in Manhattan and Emporia provide service to those who previously couldn't afford cable. Kincaid said.
"So far they're putting the stations
up along 70 - 75 meters, have cable
lines, and a fiber optic fitted."
Now, these audiences need only a free Audio-Reader radio-receiver. Campbell said she hoped that groups like the Lyons Club might raise money to buy receivers for the visually impaired.
Campbell said the network would advertise in cities near booster stations to inform people of the new service. She said the service would contact optometrists, the department of Social and Rehabilitation Services and libraries to find potential audiences.
"We would like to get in with the libraries because they have visually impaired services," she said. "Most people don't use computers now use Talking Book services."
Campbell said she was going to Manhattan next month to speak to a visually impaired group and visit the libraries.
State AIDS task force appointed
From staff and wire reports
Lt. Gov. Jack Walker yesterday appointed 15 people to serve on a Kansas AIDS Task Force, including a member of the Kansas gay community but no representative of Right To Life, which had sought a seat.
William Reals, dean of the Wichita branch of the University of Kansas School of Medicine, will head the task force, Walker said. Reals is a physician, pathologist, educator and administrator.
The task force will work to coordinate the state's role in combatting the spread of AIDS. The panel will meet for the first time at 1 p.m. April 15 at the Statehouse to set ground rules and develop applications to grant grants, said Bruce Ney, deputy secretary for Gov. Mike Hayden.
Walker said the task force would
serve a proper role in responding to the various health, social, legal and educational questions posed by the disease. Walker, who also is acting secretary of the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, will be on the task force.
The task force also will consider which avenues, including legislative action and education programs, the state should take to deal with the disease and what the governor's role should be. Ney said.
The task force's report officially is due in time to present to the 1988 Legislature, but Walker said parts of the report dealing with AIDS education in Kansas schools could be presented earlier.
"We will have some sort of base to work with now in case the Centers for Disease Control, for example, recommends action to take to combat the disease," Ney said. "The task force will be able to determine if proposed
action would be good or bad for the state."
Task force members include a member of the state Board of Education, the president of the Kansas-National Education Association, president of the Kansas Medical Society, state legislators, representatives from the health services and a half dozen representatives of the public.
Walker acknowledged that one of the members is a representative of the gay community but declined to identify the person.
Helen DeWitt, a lobbist for Right to Life, which did not have a representative placed on the panel, said the group had hoped to influence the type of AIDS educational programs could be offered in Kansas schools.
The Associated Press supplied some information for this story.
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Friday, April 3. 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON
Lord of the jungle?
Lord of the jungle?. Ha! You couldn't make Lord of the compost pile! Oh great. Here we go with his "Little chest" pounding routine.
Kreegah! Bundolo!
Tarzan bundolo!
Kreegah! Kreegah!
The Greystokes at marriage counseling
Highway
vote. Give us this vote and let us stand for a majority (within the Republican Party) that can run this party."
Continued from p.1
But after the extraordinary meeting, Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole told the Senate, "I think it's safe to say no minds were changed."
Reagan, after deciding on short notice to travel from the White House to the Capitol, spent two hours trying to press his case. First he met with all Republican senators, then with the 13 who sided with the Democrats in the first vote.
"The president is heightening the stakes by coming up here," Byrd said. "But I don't blame him, giving it the old college try."
At issue was a measure that permits states to raise the speed limit to 65 mph on rural stretches of interstate highways and earmarks funds for more than 100 highway demonstration projects tail-made for individual lawmakers.
Reagan vetoed the bill last week, calling it "budget-buster that was wrong."
Democrats maintained that the bill was under budget and said that sustaining the veto would cause the loss of 800,000 jobs during the warm-weather construction season.
But beyond the legislation itself, the veto fight became a test of Reagan's standing and prestige after months of political damage caused
The Senate voted on Wednesday 65-35, with one vote to spare, to sustain the president's action, but a change of heart by Democrat Terry Sanford of North Carolina, a 69-year-old freshman senator, left Democratic candidates and considering the veto on the second, consideration vote yesterday.
by the Iran-contra affair.
The House voted 350-73 on Tuesday to override the veto, but it takes a two-thirds vote of both houses to enact the bill into law over a veto.
Sen. Alfonse M. D'Amato of New York, one of the 13 Republicans voting against the president, said this legislation was the "wrong area to test political wills."
Panel votes to stay in waste agreement
TOPEKA — The Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee yesterday rejected a proposal to withdraw Kansas from a regional waste compact.
The Associated Press
The committee voted 7-4 against amending a bill so that it would pull the state out of the Central Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact, which includes Kansas, Arkansas, Louisiana, Nebraska and Oklahoma. The committee unanimously endorsed the original measure, which would ban the burial of such waste in Kansas unless the Legislature made an exception.
State Sen. Francis Gordon, R Highland, said pulling out of the compact would be premature because a host state for the dump site has not been chosen.
Congress has set a 1984 deadline for compacts to choose host states for regional dump sites. The sites must be operating by 1993.
Kansas opponents also have criticized a recent study by a consulting firm the compact hired.
Opponents of the compact fear Kansas will become the host state for the regional dum.
On Campus
- The women's tennis team is scheduled to play Oklahoma State University at 9 a.m. today at the courts at Allen Field House.
- The men's tennis team is scheduled to play Oklahoma State University at 1 p.m. today at the courts at Allen Field House.
- "Engine Research," an aerospace
aquarium, is scheduled at 3:30 p.m. on
Wednesday.
- A Latin American Film Festival is scheduled at 7 p.m. today in 300 Strong Hall.
- "Kansas Women," a discussion, is scheduled at 7 p.m. today in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union.
"The Boy Who Could Fly," a film, is scheduled to be shown at 7:30 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
■ The Lindley Hall observatory is scheduled to have an open house at 8
The KU Men's Glee Club spring concert is scheduled at 8 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 3, 1987
7
Student alumni organization links past with future
By JERRI NIEBAUM
Staff writer
KU students no longer have to graduate to become active in the University of Kansas Alumni Association.
The Student Alumni Association,
started and sponsored by the Alumni
Loren Taylor, director of membership development for the older association, said the new one would give students an appreciation for their alma mater that many wouldn't otherwise get until about five years after graduation.
"We're trying to instil that loyalty into them while they're still here on campus," Taylor said.
Last summer, Taylor hired Judy Ruedlinger as membership development coordinator and put her in charge of building the student group.
Ruedlinger said she thought the group would form an important link between students and alumni.
"There are many students who have never been in the building," she said.
In the fall, Ruedlinger found members for the association by sending letters to deans and professors across campus. She asked for names of students who excelled academically and were involved in outside activities.
The deans and professors responded with the names of 60 students, who became charter members of the association.
Lenny Geist, McPherson junior, is the Executive Council's business manager.
From the 60 charter members came six seniors who now serve on the Senior Executive Advisory Council and are officers as officers on the Executive Council.
"No one in my family has ever done anything like that," he said. "Neither of my parents went to college."
Geist said he thought the association would help teach students about what alumni members have to offer
who learns to memorize a law or rule.
"A lot of students don't have any idea what they do or what it means to be an alum." he said.
Among other things, the Alumni Association keeps people informed about where their classmates are, who they can contact if they want to return to campus for events or activities and how the University is ranking academically and athletically. The association has 37,000 members, and addresses and phone numbers for 170,000 alumni.
Geist said that KU had been the only Big Eight school without a student alumni group.
"Even Wichita State and Fort Hays State have them." he said.
Megan Stroup, Murray, Ky., freshman, said her parents were members of the Alumni Association, and she would also be the student group would help tie together
the past and the present
"The older alumni sort of feel like there's no bond," she said. "They're not even involved with KU anymore."
'We're trying to instill that loyalty into them while they're still here on campus.'
Loren Taylor director of membership development
The students will co-sponsor several Alumni Association events, including the senior breakfast on the morning of graduation at the chancellor's house. They also will sponsor a senior
open house on April 22 in front of the Adams Alumni Center. The event is a hamburger cookout that the Alumni Association has sponsored since the center opened four years ago.
To raise money for projects and conferences, the students are selling $17 sweatshirts that say "Kansas Alumni" with a Javhawk on them.
Members will attend conferences at many of the approximately 70 cities in which KU has alumni chapters. In February, several members attended a Wichita meeting at which they met and talked with Chancellor Gene A. Budig.
Stroup said the group had provided her with an opportunity to meet people from many different sides of campus.
Eddie Watson, Arkansas City senior, is a member of the Senior Executive Advisory Council.
"I was one of the few minority students to get involved," he said, adding that he planned to act as a
messenger to minority students.
Other members of the Senior Executive Advisory Council are; Lisa Ashner, Kansas City, Kan, law student; Bob Brada, Hutchinson senior; Duncan Calhoun, Lincoln, Neb., senior; Julie Collingwood, Wichita senior; and K. K. Neilsen, Sioux City, Iowa, senior.
President of the Executive Council is Todd Becker, Morton Grove, Ill., junior; and vice president is Diane Filipowski, Birmingham, Ala., junior. Corresponding secretary is Walt Niedner, Overland Park junior; and recording secretary is Jackie Lewis, Lawrence sophomore.
Publicity will be managed by Kurt Messersmith. Wichita sophomore and special projects will be coordinated by Megan Hughes, Lawrence sophomore. Joe Low, Cape Girardeau, Mo., sophomore; and Carla Brown, Overland Park freshman, will represent their classes.
State constitution may need overhaul
Staff writer
By CHRISTOPHER HINES Staff writer
Questions about how the state should govern its higher education system prompted a Kansas Senate committee Wednesday to study the possibility of amending the state constitution.
"All the education bills now going through the Legislature still do not clearly define the state's role in governing higher education," said State Sen. Joseph Harder, R-Moundridge, chairman of the Senate Education Committee.
"Universities have expanded their programs and resources, and the state hasn't kept up."
making them decide."
Harder's committee postponed deciding on a bill approved by the House that would transfer control of Kansas' 19 community colleges and Washburn University of Topeka from the state Board of Education to the Board of Regents.
"The House bill will be a major change, and I don't think we're prepared to make that kind of choice," he said. "We're throwing the responsibility to the Regents and
Harder recommended that the Senate postpone considering the bill and instead hire a private consultant to study the issue this summer.
Harder recommended that the private consultant work under the supervision of a legislative steering committee.
The study would involve reviewing the education articles in the state constitution and could result in the drafting of an amendment for voter approval.
Charles J. Carlsen, president of Johnson County Community College, said yesterday that he supported Harder's proposed study and that the information before it gave control of the community colleges to the Regents.
Carlsen said that community colleges depended on local financial support and that the House plan could result in a loss of local control.
The Regents also would play a role in deciding entrance requirements for high school students to all postsecondary education institutions in Kansas.
Without God,it's a vicious circle.
Under the House bill, the Regents would plan and coordinate all state public higher education. They would be responsible for approving new courses and programs at the schools, along with easing transfer of credits from one Regent's institution to another.
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Friday, April 3. 1987 / University Daily Kansan
BENNIE BURTON
Chad DeShazo/KANSAN
Forms may not tax students, expert says
By PEGGY O'BRIEN
Marc Jaben, Lawrence junior, practices T'ai Chi, a form of self-discipline, which he says unifies his mind and body. Jaben practiced yesterday in South Park.
Like it or not, the deadline for filing 1986 federal and state income tax returns is drawing near.
Staff writer
But local tax experts say the process should be painless for most students.
Individuals filing an income tax return for the first time may make fewer mistakes than those who have done returns for years, an Internal Revenue Service spokesman said last week.
"The mistakes are usually simple clerical errors and don't involve complicated tax issues," said James Kamsuzak, Kansas IRS spokesman.
Fine form
A few errors, such as transposing numbers, forgetting to sign a return or failing to make an entry on the correct line are common to both novice and experienced filers, he said.
Midnight, April 15, is the deadline for filing 1986 tax returns. Bill Reynolds, Lawrence postmaster, said the postal service would keep the main office at 445 Vermont St. open until
Reynolds said that a self-service stamp machine would be available and that an extra postal worker would be on duty to assist last-minute filers. He said people shouldn't plan to find tax forms cr instruction books the last day because the office probably wouldn't have any left.
midnight on the 15th.
Reynolds also warned that individuals who mail tax returns in mailboxes should check the schedule posted on the box to make sure their forms would be postmarked the day they intended them to be postmarked.
Individuals who are single, have no dependents and make less than $50,000 a year can file the 1042 EZ form, what Manuszak called the IRS "no-frills tax return." This form takes little time to fill out and saves the IRS time in processing and correcting errors, he said.
Although students who are entrepreneurs may have complicated tax records, most college students can file the 1040 EZ. Manuszak said.
Kirsten Andersen, tax practitioner and owner of the Lawrence Tax
Center, 1203 Iowa St., said that depending on the number of W-2 forms a student had, the procedure for filling out the IRS form should take no more than 10 to 15 minutes.
Nemeecek said that this was the third time she'd filed and that she'd never needed any help filling out the forms.
"The 1040 EZ was simple," said Lisa Nemecke, Overland Park sophomore. "In fact, the Kansas form was more complicated."
She said that, unlike the last two years, this year she filed early. She already has received her refund.
Andersen and Manuszak both advised that filers make sure they had all their records, such as W-2s and 1099s. Form 1099 is the information form from banks, credit unions and other sources that report money not subject to withholding. The form is not mailed in with the return.
"'t needed the money,'" Nemecek said.
Andersen said that students might get hung up trying to find the W-2 forms they needed to accurately fill out their returns. But, she said,
getting a duplicate from an employer, past or present, shouldn't be a problem.
"The biggest problem is getting everything together, remembering all the jobs the student may have had," Andersen said.
She said that students receiving scholarships or grants did not need to report that income for 1986 but that most of them would become taxable in 1987 because of recent federal tax reform laws.
Married couples filing a joint return can claim the spousal deduction, which allows them to deduct 10 percent of the lower-paid spouse's income, up to $3,000.
Andersen also said child care was deductable on both federal and state taxes.
For state income tax returns, which have the same April 15th deadline as the federal forms, wage files are filed in each state they've worked on.
"Even if you've only made $100 in Kansas and the state withheld $20, you'll want to that money back," Andersen said.
On the Record
- A KU student's purse and its contents, valued at $57, were taken about 3:00 p.m. Wednesday from the ground near a tennis court at Robinson Gymnasium, KU police reported.
- A color television set valued at $50 was taken about 5 a.m. Thursday from Blalock Hall on the Haskell Indian Junior College campus, Lawrence police reported.
A shirt and a pinstripe suit coat, valued at $208, were taken Wednesday night from a department store in the 1800 block of 23rd Street, Lawrence police reported.
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If you didn't purchase an All-Sports Ticket,you can still get a button for only $2.00 until April 17.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 3, 1987
9
Too few staff may threaten future of Kansas hospital
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — State lawmakers are anticipating a report by health agency investigators which Gov. Mike Hayden yesterday said could threaten certification of the Norton State Hospital.
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, said he feared Norton might face problems with its certification similar to those recently at the Winfield State Hospital and Training Center.
A multitude of problems at Winfield, the most serious involving abuse of patients and intimidation of
Welfare officials say Norton has not experienced the type of patient mistreatment problems as happened at Winfield. Hayden said other problems, including too few staff for the number of patients, might threaten Norton's certification.
staff, led to federal decretication and nearly cost the facility $24,000 a day in Medicaid funds.
Winter, State Rep. Sandy Duncan, R Wichita, and others think the state should use the problems at its mental retardation facilities to achieve a large revision in state treatment policies.
Norton as a state hospital for the mentally retarded and turn the facility over to the Department of Corrections for housing minimum-security inmates.
Both men support a plan to close
Winter is chairman of a Senate subcommittee which handles the budgets of mental retardation hospitals.
Winter and Duncan, chairman of the House subcommittee, are designing a proposal to turn Norton over to the corrections department and remove the 106 patients currently under care in Norton, which is located 11 miles from the Nebraska border in northwest Kansas.
Hostage near death, tape says
BEIRUT — U.S. hostage Jesse Turner said in a video released yesterday that fellow captive Alann Steen could die within hours and appealed for the United States and Israel to "do something to save us."
United Press International
In a three-minute color videotape, Turner, 39, read a prepared statement, possibly written by his captors, urging the U.S. government to "seek a happy ending for Steen's issue and all of us."
The bearded Turner, who was wearing a red and blue track suit, appeared tired and tense and kept his head down as he read the statement.
Besides Turner and Steen, 47, Robert Polhill, 52, and Indian-born U.S. resident Mithileshwar Singh, 62, were kidnapped in January from the private Beirut University College by gunmen posing as police officers.
"We hope that this will not be the last message we send before the death of Steen. We feel that his life would over in a few hours." Turner said.
"His condition is worsening as time goes by despite the treatment he is receiving and the continuous care the Islamic Jihad for the Liberation of Palestine is giving to save his life."
The Islamic jihad for the Liberation of Palestine, in a statement issued Tuesday, threatened to punish their hostages if the Reagan administration and Israel do not respond to their demands.
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MIKE RUNDLE ADDRESSES THE ISSUES
On April 7, skip the personalities. Vote on the issues. Here's what Mike Rundle thinks about some of the main ones:
DOWNTOWN DEVELOPMENT. The 600-block mall proposal is not what downtown Lawrence needs. Let's vote on it now before we waste any more money. Then let's get on with sensible downtown development.
TRAFFIC SANITY. Growing cities have problems with traffic. Mike Rundle believes that we need to slow traffic down on residential streets and around schools, keep it flowing smoothly on major arteries, and keep big trucks on the truck routes. He also says we need to provide for bicyclists and pedestrians, as well as motorists.
PRESERVING OUR HERITAGE. Everyone talks about preserving our fine old buildings and our neighborhoods, but we keep losing them. Mike Rundle says the city can promote preservation with well defined policies.
VOTING. When over 4400 citizens sign a petition asking for a vote on a major issue, they deserve a binding vote
GROWTH. The issue is how, not whether, we grow. We need good planning and controlled growth to make sure new development doesn't erode the qualities which make Lawrence such a special place.
By denying that right, the current city commissioners have failed those they govern.
C. A. KINNEY
MIKE RUNDLE
City Commissioner
Paid for by the Mike Rundle for Lawrence Committee, Neva Entrikin, Treasurer
Foreign educators to come to KU
By a Kansan reporter
Fifteen English teachers from 15 countries will learn about contemporary culture and life in the United States at a seminar at the University of Kansas next week.
The foreign educators will hear several lectures and panel discussions by KU faculty and will participate in field trips to Lawrence High School and an area dairy farm during the seminar, which begins Monday and ends Saturday, April 11.
ment is sponsoring the event at the request of the Academy for Educational Development in Washington, D.C. KU was selected to sponsor a similar event last fall, after a rigorous selection process, said Gina Witt, assistant program coordinator for the secretary and secretary for American studies.
KU's American studies depart-
The fall seminar was so successful that the academy made the unusual decision to invite KU to sponsor another seminar without requiring it to go through the selection process
again, Witt said.
The academy's seminars are part of an educational program for citizens of other countries sponsored by the U.S. Information Agency.
"This shows that the USIA believes that the University of Kansas has a strong American studies program and strong capabilities in cross-cultural programs," said Forrest Berghorn, chairman of American studies. Seminar participants will visit Lawrence High School on Wednesday
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Friday, April 3, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Aging smokestack to come down in fall
By KJERSTI MOEN
Staff writer
KU will lose a longtime landmark next semester when its 257-foot concrete smokestack is torn down.
The smokestack, which facilities operations officials say is aging and
obsolete, probably will be torn down in September, said James Modig, director of construction administration.
Thomas Anderson, director of facilities operations, said the stack had gradually deteriorated since its
installation in the early 1920s. It may become dangerous if it doesn't come down soon, Anderson said.
"It is falling down. It's of no value," he said.
Facilities planning originally scheduled the demolition for this spring.
JULY 1984
Fred Sadowski/KANSAN
Members of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity, 1621 Edgehill Road, load 15 tons of sand into bags. The members were working yesterday to prepare for their formal party April 25. The sand will be used to make decorative ponds at the party.
Group effort
Before they can begin, two smaller steel stacks will be constructed to replace the old stack.
Modig said that tearing down the stack would cost $87,450.
Facilities operations had to insure that demolition of the stack would not ruin the building.
Workers collected samples of the mortar for asbestos testing at the Kansas Department of Health and Environment laboratories, Anderson said.
Howard Saiger, environmental engineer at KDHE said yesterday that the two samples of the smoketack's mortar had shown no asbestos.
However, the dust poses a problem, he said. To avoid dust clouds from spreading when the stack is destroyed, workers will hose the stack with water. They will hammer the bricks from the top into the stack's inside one piece at a time. No explosives will be used, he said.
The smokestack originally let it out smoke from burning coal. It was built high enough to prevent the coal dust from being a hazard.
When the University switched to natural gas and oil as heating sources in 1952, the two boilers connected to the smokestack were converted to handle oil and natural gas. There was a need for steam boilers occasionally have been used since then as a back-up to the plant's two main boilers, Anderson said.
He said the project was part of an upgrading of the University's power plant. Since December 1986, facilities operations has spent about $300,000 making the plant more modern and efficient.
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We want your support in re-electing school board member MARY LOU WRIGHT
Christian churches should allow all people to give and receive love and affection, a local minister said last night.
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Jack Bremer, director of Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave., told about 20 people in the Gallery West of the Kansas Union that a conspiracy of silence existing in churches had alienated thousands of homosexual people. He said God had created a variety of facets in the world, including a variety of sexual orientations.
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Tim Folds, pastor of Faith Southern Baptist Church, 1000 New York St., said yesterday afternoon that homosexuality was not a normal way of life. He said it was something people chose to do.
Bremer said the Bible needed to be placed in its historical setting to be understood. He said the Bible did not condemn homosexuality, only the exploitation of young boys by older men.
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Bremer said that because God created some homosexually oriented people, churches should nurture, be compassionate and help gay people express their love in responsible ways.
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Chris Hrabe, treasurer of Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas, said he didn't think the Bible could be used to condemn homosexuality because it contained many ambiguous statements.
He said homosexuals couldn't any more choose to become heterosexual than heterosexuals could choose to be gay. And he said none of the homosexual people he had counseled wanted to be gay. It is too painful of a life for anyone to will upon themselves, Bremer said.
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Bremer said all sexual orientations were gifts from God and should be valued.
"Sexual orientation is not a matter of choice or subject to change," he said. "If it's not genetic, then orientation happens early in life."
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 3, 1987
11
Bremer
Continued from p. 1
respect for Bremer
"There is an openness and freedom about the environment at the forum that is just beautiful." Clark said. "I think Bremer is largely responsible for that atmosphere."
Clark and Bremer agree that they share similar concerns, although different philosophies motivate them.
A pastor who expresses agreement with a secular humanist is likely to be considered a liberal. Bremer also opposes the death penalty, takes a pro-choice position on abortion and doesn't condemn homosexuality
But he doesn't like the liberal designation. He said convictions for this kind of behavior had little value.
"We don't want a watered-down biblical faith," he said, "but rather a faith that allows us to live out its implications in relation to our neighbors."
Bremer decided to become a minister while he was a student at Ottawa University. After he was accepted into divinity school, he performed his military service.
"As a matter of conscience, I could do that again and be faithful to Christ."
He earned a master's of divinity degree in 1961 and a master's of sacred theology in 1962, both from Yale. He pastured a parish at Blue Mound and Selma, Kan., 1962-64; East Topeka United Methodist Church in Topeka; United Methodist Church in Topeka, 1969-79. He received a doctorate in ministry in 1976 from San Francisco Theological Seminary.
Bremer came to the University of Kansas a year after ECM was founded in 1978. He said his role as campus counselor helped students as well as to teach them.
Bremer's ministry reaches hundreds of students each year. Attendance at his Sunday evening worship services ranges from 15 to 35 students, 22 students were enrolled in his study seminar this semester, 20 to 25 students participated in his two weekend retreats this year, and ECM Friday night movies draw 30 to 70 students.
"Students are in the searching stage of spiritual progress," he said. "They are asking the radical questions: Is there a God? Is there a purpose for my life?"
"My kind of ministry doesn't view that questioning as sin, but as a healthy, normal part of the process of spiritual maturing. Campus ministry has a special responsibility to help students face the radical questions."
Bremer enjoys the university atmosphere and recognizes its chal-
"Students' danger is that they may become Ph.D.s intellectually but kindergarteners spiritually," he said. "One of the great challenges is to gain a spiritual maturity adequate to
As Bremer counsels students through difficult times, he has an intuition to form from personal experience. He is 25-year marriage ended in divorce in 1983.
give guidance to using our knowledge and power wisely."
Bremer said that after his wife became active in the feminist movement, she decided she no longer wanted to be part of a traditional marriage. They have two daughters, ages 27 and 25.
"It was devastating to me," Bremer said. "I was reasonably happy in the marriage. But I also know that when human efforts are not sufficient, we have to be willing to accept God's grace for our lives."
With limited family obligations, Bremer is able to approach his mini- mentee with a single child.
Jean Hendricks, pastor of Lawrence Mennonite Fellowship, which meets at the ECM building, said. "He gets really emotionally involved and puts so much personal
energy into what he's doing. He's working from a deep sense of internal commitment."
Mark Knewton, Caney senior, said, "He's a really good pastor because he understands people and their problems."
Love of God and love of neighbor
tamera frequently returns to this them
Grear said, "What impresses me is that he doesn't go out and try to force his beliefs on anybody. He's a stabiling influence. He sets an example."
"For me, Christianity proclaims an alternative vision, a life that is dedicated to the service of others and the love of God," he said. "I feel privileged to work with students in their process of spiritual formation."
Officials relieved by bypass vote
Bv TODD COHEN
Staff writer
Douglas County and Lawrence officials expressed relief yesterday after the U.S. Senate reversed itself and overrode President Reagan's veto of a bill that included money for a proposed southern Lawrence trafficway.
Lawrence Mayor Sandra Praeger, who had lobbied personally for the bill, said. "I'm relieved. It's been a lot of work."
Chris McKenzie, county administrator, said, "It's a very significant hurdle, and we're very pleased to have this behind us."
Reagan last week had vetoed the bill, calling it a budget-buster, and offered an alternative, slimmed-down version of the bill. He also eliminated the traffic-flow money.
After the Senate tentatively voted Wednesday to sustain the veto, McKenzie said that the project wouldn't die if money were not allocated but that the veto probably would slow its development.
The local officials also said they
were not angry that Kansas' senators, Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole and Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, had voted to sustain the president's veto. Praeer said Republicans Dole and Kassebaum thought they had an obligation to the president.
County Commissioner Nancy Hiebert said, "The political realities for Senator Dole as minority leader are understandable. But I can't say enough for Congressman Jim Slattery."
Slattery, who represents the Lawrence area, voted for the override when it came before the House on Tuesday.
Hiebert said now that the $7.2 million is on its way, work on further environmental and engineering studies can move forward. Construction could start before the end of the year, she said.
However, the project still faces opposition from local environmentalists who charge that the trafficway would harm the Baker Wetlands, a wildlife refuge that is home to the endangered Northern Crawfish frog.
One of the environmentalists, John Simmons, said he was disappointed by the Senate's action. Simmons last year created Agnes The Frog as an anti-trafficway write-in candidate against Hiebert.
But Simmons said the fight was far from over.
"Just because they have the money doesn't mean they can build the road." he said.
Simmons said the next step for opponents was an April 20 public hearing in Lawrence on a draft environment statement for *Wayne Wiley* and *WAYNWAYS FORUM*.
The trafficway would run south of Lawrence to link Kansas Highway 10 with Interstate 70. It would border the wetlands for one mile.
United Press International supplied some information for this story.
Hayden's hopes ride on death penalty bill
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Gov Mike Hayden said yesterday that he remained hopeful the Senate would pass a bill today to reinstate capital punishment in Kansas, but if it failed, "We'll keep working on it."
On the eve of Senate debate on an issue important to Hayden's political prestige, Hayden admitted that he wasn't sure the House-passed bill would win Senate approval. He said he was counting on senators who supported it in the past to do it again.
"If we don't get it, I'll continue to work for it, because I support it," said Hayden, who virtually assured voters during his campaign in the fall that he would deliver a death penalty law.
"I'm hopeful it will pass. I've seen a lot of counts," he said. "None of the counts I have seen showed 21 noes or 21 veses.
were 24 votes for it, and except for one, they're all the same senators.
The informal polls cited by Hayden have showed between 17 and 19 votes for the death penalty, said sources in the parties. The bills need 21 votes to pass.
"The last time they voted there
Hayden cautioned senators that they should vote the wishes of their constituents. "The worst thing a person could do on an issue such as this," he said.
He said he thought some Democrats who voted for capital punishment in the past were saying they would vote against it this time for political reasons, to try to embarrass him.
Among Republicans who formerly voted for death penalty bills but have said they planned to vote against this President Ross Doyne, R-Cordonia
"We'll have to wait and see what Senator Doyen does," Hayden said.
Surrogate to keep up legal fight
The Associated Press
RED BANK, N.J. — Surrogate mother Mary Beth Whitehead, stripped of the right to see her daughter again, vowed yesterday to continue her legal battle for the child. She said she'd never stop loving the little girl known as Baby M.
"We love each other very much." Whitehead said Tuesday. It was her first public statement since Judge Harvey R. Sorkow issued the country's first ruling upholding a disputed parenting contract.
"I believe that there is something so wrong and so harmless unnatural about the surrogate practice that our clients have to practice," return Sara to rp." Whitehawk said.
The biological father, William Stern, was custody and Stern's wife, Elizabeth, was allowed to adopt the child
The case, which brought worldwide attention to surrogate parenting, was sparked by Whitehead's refusal to honor the $10,000 contract in which she agreed to be artificially inseminated with Stern's sperm.
Whitehead's attorney, Harold J. Cassidy, said the appeal, probably to the New Jersey Supreme Court, will cite at least 15 grounds for reversal. He said another law firm and two law assistors have joined Whitehead's case.
Cassidy said he first must block Sorkow's ruling and halt the adoption, the change of name and the termination of Whitehead's parental and visitation rights to the baby. A hearing was set for today.
Cassidy said the appeal would content that surrogate motherhood was "indecent and the worst form of abuse" and asked for being for the gratification of another.
Sorkow's ruling said that surrogate parenting didn't exploit women. The judge also said the practice wasn't immoral, and didn't amount to baby selling because the father couldn't buy "what is already his."
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12
Friday, April 3, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nazi suspect will appeal deportation
United Press International
NEW YORK — A federal appeals court, temporarily thwarting the U.S. government's deportation of accused Nazi Karl Linnas, granted him a four-day reprieve yesterday so he could take his appeal to the Supreme Court.
The action by the U.S. 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals came as Attorney General Edwin Meese had prepared to deport Limas to the Soviet Union, and was summoned for running a notorious camp where 12,000 people were killed.
Linnas, in custody for accusations that he participated in mass murder while head of the notorious World War II Tartu concentration camp.
was moved to a detention facility at Kennedy International Airport.
Attorneys for Linnaus convinced the appeals panel, the same one that Wednesday lifted a stay and cleared the way for his deportation, to approve the four-day delay so his attorneys could make an 11th-hour appeal to Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall.
"A stay of deportation has been granted until 5 p.m. Monday to permit a motion . . . to be made in the Supreme Court of the United States for a stay of deportation," the brief order said.
The high court twice has refused to intervene. A Justice Department spokesman said Meese would not act
until after Marshall had made a decision in the case.
Meese told reporters that he would review the decision Wednesday by the U.S. 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals to determine whether he could deport Linnas, 67, of Greenlawn, N.Y., independent of a high court ruling.
Officials said Meese would deport Linnas to the Soviet Union unless the Supreme Court prevented it.
Linnas, who has been stripped of his U.S. citizenship for concealing his wartime activities when he arrived in the United States in 1951, has been accused of war crimes allegedly committed in the Soviet Union as commander of the Nazi concentration camp in Tartu, Estonia. Meese
has been battling efforts to deport him since 1979.
Testimony at Linna's denaturalization trial in 1981 showed that he forced camp inmates to kneel at the ground when he was told he gave the order to guards to open fire.
In 1962, Linnas was convicted in absenta in the Soviet Union for war crimes and sentenced to death.
In many cases he drew this gun and fire into the pile of victims who had fallen into the grave, "just in case," according to testimony. Twelve thousand people. Jews and non-Jews, were exterminated at the camp.
Report says Israel violated arms ban
United Press International
WASHINGTON — Israel appears to have been the worst violator of a 1977 international arms embargo against South Africa, providing military systems and technology to the white minority-rulled government on a regular basis, an administration report to Congress showed yesterday.
The report on nations that may have violated the United Nations ban on arms sales to South Africa was required under the Anti-Apartheid
Act passed over President Reagan's acts on last year. Its release had been delayed.
The law requires the president, with Congress' approval, to cut off U.S. military aid to those countries found in violation.
An unclassified version of the report released on Capitol Hill said here was limited evidence of violence in Israel as the apparent worst offender.
contracts with South Africa. That action is expected to be sufficient to allow Israel to escape the mandatory sanctions contained in the U.S. legislation.
"Irareal appears to have sold military systems and sub-systems and provided technical assistance on a regular basis," the State Department report states, "that the state government was fully aware of most or all of the trade."
The report said France and Italy had maintained and upgraded weapons systems sold to Pretoria before the embargo was imposed The report also said that individual companies in West Germany, Great Britain, the Netherlands and Switzerland had broken the embargo on occasion without governmental permission.
French Prime Minister Jacques Chirac Wednesday denied that France had sold arms to South Africa in the past 10 years.
Phone charges must increase,FCC says
United Press International
WASHINGTON — The Federal Communications Commission told a House panel yesterday that a plan to raise telephone access charges from $3.50 a month by 1989 is absolutely necessary and represents the final increase.
Although Rep. Edward J. Markey, D-Mass., chairman of the House telecommunications subcommittee, threatened possible legislation to block the increase, the FCC testified
that it planned to adopt the access charge hikes proposed last month by a joint panel of federal and state regulators.
The commission is expected to make a ruling April 16.
Under the plan, the access charges on monthly phone bills for residential customers with one phone line, now at $2, would rise by 60 cents in June, another 60 cents in September 1988 and 30 cents in April 1989.
Markey, noting local phone bills
have gone up an average 39 percent since the 1984 Bell System breakup, said U.S. residential phone customers had "ridden a roller coaster with more ups and downs and fast turns than Space Mountain at Disneyland."
The access charges, also known as subscriber line charges and first put into effect in June 1965, are designed to pay for the local network connections used to complete a long-distance phone call.
FCC chairman Mark Fowler said the proposal was "intended as the final step in nationwide subscriber line charge implementation" for both residential customers and businesses, which pay about $6 per month per phone line.
Fowler, noting that he originally wanted the residential charges increased to $6, said the current plan "is largely a political compromise based on the concerns of the states and the Congress."
Pope addresses rally amid protest in Chile
United Press International
SANTIAGO, Chile — Pope John Paul met with military ruler President Augusto Pinochet yesterday, urged political reforms and addressed a giant rally in a slum where violent anti-government demonstrations broke out.
The violence erupted toward the end of the rally at which the pontifix addressed about 300,000 poor people anti-Pinochet south-side of Santiago.
Police used tear gas and buckshot to disperse the demonstrators, and army troops were called out to end the attack, although no arrests were reported.
Groups of protesters stoned police men guarding the pope's route, injuring at least five officers. The protests looted nearby shops, authorities said.
democracy be acted upon promptly.
The pope asked that reforms promised by the government to move the capitalism economy toward a more
Pinochet's presidential term expires in 1989, but opposition leaders accuse him of planning to rig a presidential he can stay on another eight years.
Pinochet recently has legalized non-Marxist political parties. But he has resisted demands to shorten his own political term and to substitute a planned 1989 plebiscite with free elections.
Chile's Pinochet-sponsored constitution requires the military junta to propose a single candidate as president to be ratified in a 1989 plebiscite.
According to the constitution, if the candidate is rejected results of free elections will determine an alternate.
Many opposition members think that Pinochet will be the lone junta candidate and, by controlling election machinery, will make sure he wins.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 3, 1987
13
7-footer too good to be true
By ROB KNAPP
Staff writer
When a call came to the Kansas men's basketball office yesterday about a 7-foot Italian high school star, assistant coach Mark Freidinger couldn't help but be interested.
'What we wanted to do was make sure that it was clearly labeled, so that when people would get through reading it they would say, 'Hey, I've been fooled.'
Street from Nassau City informed him about 16-year-old Adofo Falligeri, who among other things, had scored 101 points in a game, and reportedly wanted to attend KU.
Chris Cox Dispatch-Tribune associate
editor
But Falligeri, the superstar and grape-masher from Apricini, Italy, never will be a Jayhawk because he is fictitious, an April Fool's day joke by a Kansas City-area newspaper columnist.
Courtesy of KU Sports Information
Falligeri was the creation of Raytown Dispatch-Tribune sportswriter Todd Rector, and was featured in Rector's April 1 column. The column reported that Falligeri was transferring to Raytown South High School for his junior and senior years, and that he was interested in playing for the Jayhaws.
Some of Falligeri's other achievements, attributed to various sources, included a 4.0 grade point average, shutting down former professional player Bob McAdoo in an Italian Professional League game while scoring 24 points himself, and shooting half-court hook shots as part of his pre-game warm-up.
"What we wanted to do was make sure that it was clearly labeled, so that when people would get through reading it they would say, 'Hey, I've been fooled,'" said Chris Cox, Dispatch-Tribune associate editor.
i Oerter
Amer
Al Oster, a two-time All-American in the discus at KU, will return to the Kansas Relays for the first time in 20 years. The Relays will be held April 15-18 at Memorial Stadium.
Oerter returning for Relays
By DIANE FILIPOWSKI
Staff writer
Four-time Olympic gold medalist Al Oerter will compete at Memorial Stadium for the first time in 20 years when the former Jayhawk returns to Lawrence on April 15-18 to compete in the 62nd annual Kansas Relays.
peting until he has acheived one final goal.
At age 50. Oerter is not ready to stop making history or stop com-
"After the Melbourne Olympics in 1904, "Oerter said Tuesday in a telephone news conference from his winter home in Fort Meyers, Fla., "I promised myself five gold medals."
Oerter, who is the only athlete to win four gold medals in the same event, back-to-back Olympic golds in the discus from 1956 to
1968 and will be inducted into the Kansas Sports Hall of Fame during the Relays
Al Fereshetian, Relays manager, said he chose Ozer to highlight the relays this year because the Olympics were a year away and because KU's throwing fields were being rededicated.
A discus thrower appears on
See OERTER, p. 16, col. 1
KU loses again; WSU rallies late
By DAVID BOYCE
For eight innings yesterday against the Wichita State Shockers at Quigley Field, the Kansas baseball team played some of its best baseball of the season.
Baseball
The game went nine innings.
With Kansas leading 8-5 in the top of the ninth, it looked like Kansas was on its way to snapping a six-game losing streak and handing No. 21-ranked Wichita State its first loss in nine games.
Bilyeu gave up two runs early in the inning, and Wichita State pulled
But relief pitcher Tom Bilyeu, who pitched masterfully in the seventh and eighth innings, ran into trouble in the ninth.
The Shockers then loaded the bases with two outs, and Shocker outfielder Tim Raley stepped to the plate.
"I thought Bilyeu still had his good stuff," Coach Marty Pattin said of his decision to leave Bilyeu in the game.
Raley hit a Bilyeu change-up over the center-field fence for what proved to be a game-winning grand slam home run.
"It felt great to be in that situation. Railey said we just looked for a place."
The Shockers scored a total of eight runs in the ninth, with the help of two home runs, making the final score 14. Kansas did not score in the last innings.
Kansas now has gone eight games without a victory, including seven losses and a tie. The Jayhawks' overall record dropped to 18-13-1, and Wichita State raised its record to 23-9.
The Jayhawks have not won a game since Pattin informed the team that the athletic department would renewing his contract for next season.
Kansas' next games are against
Nebraska at noon tomorrow and
April 10 at noon.
"I thought they played really well." Raley said. "You've got to give them a shot. We were down in the last innertight, and they hit the ball well."
As a team, Kansas collected 14 hits. Scott Seratte led the hitting attack, going 4-for-4. Darrel Matthew stroked three doubles, going 3-for-4, and John Byrn hit his sixth run, going 2-for-5.
"I was kind of due." Seratte said of his hits. "I have been swinging the bat fairly well, and today the ball
dropped in."
Although the Jayhawks lost, Seratte said the team played well against a good team, and that should help them when they play No. 20 Nebraska this weekend.
Starting pitcher Scott Taylor settled down after the second, and allowed only one run in the next six innings.
The game started with both teams scoring two runs in the first inning. The Shockers added two more in the second, while Kansas scored a single run on an RBI-single by Seratte that scored Matthews.
'Any loss is disappointing. I thought we had many opportunities to win.'
Marty Pattin Kansas baseball coach
"It really doesn't matter," Taylor said of his performance. "We lost.
"We played eight innings of good baseball, and have nothing to be ashamed of."
Kansas built its 8-5 lead by scoring three runs in the bottom of the seventh when Matthews, Serratte and Jarrett Boeschen knocked in runs.
"Any loss is disappointing," Pattin said. "I thought we had many opportunities to win.
"The kids went out and did a good job, but good teams find a way to win. That's the nature of baseball."
Kansas ended three innings by getting runners picked off at first base. The first pickoff came in the second inning with two outs and bases loaded, and KU's leading hitter, Hugh Stanfield, at the plate.
Although Kansas lost, this year's game was much closer than the two teams' first meeting last year. In that game, Wichita beat Iowa 18-6.
WICHITA STATE 13, KANSAS 8
V, St. 220 100|88—13 17
Kansas 210 100|32 — 8 14 3
Mcintyre, Cedeno (6) Bluma (7) Lunnon (8)
Newlin (9) Wedge, Taylor, Bileye (7)
Stoppel (9) Boeschen W-Lunnon L-Bileye(0-1) 2BS-WSU - Standford KU - Matthes
3. Byrn 3Bs-WSU - Raley HRS-WSU - Raley Headley, Olivas KU - Birmingham (6)
By a Kansan reporter
Jim Hershberger, a member of the Kansas track team from 1951 to 1953, will be the first person inducted into the KU Athletic Hall of Fame under a special admittance clause. Monte Johnson. KU athletic director, announced yesterday.
Hershberger to be inducted into KU Hall of Fame
Under the admittance clause, Hershberger was chosen as an individual who has made an accomplishment or contribution of such high stature to a sport that it is recognized nationally, and subsequently has brought distinction among those involved and to the University of Kansas.
Johnson said the University was grateful for
the support it had received from Hershberger over the years.
"I feel that it is extremely appropriate that Jim Hershberger be the first such individual honored in this way, over and above his outstanding athletic career," Johnson said.
An active supporter of Kansas athletics, the Jim Hersberger Track at Memorial Stadium was named in recognition of his contributions.
Hershberger also donates eight men's track scholarships a year, including one named after Bill Easton, the men's coach from 1948-1965. He also invited Bob Kentons, Kansas coach since 1965.
winning 1951 Big Eight Conference Indoor mile relay team, won four Kansas Relays and Texas Relays titles and two Philadelphia Classic championships.
Since his track career at Kansas, Hershberger has broken 25 world age-group records and has captured 20 Amateur Athletic Union and 14 National Championship and Field Federation national championships.
While at Kansas, Hershberger anchored the
To recognize Hersherberg's contributions to the NCAA and his demonstration that track can be a lifetime sport, the Oklahoma City All Sports Association decided to name the outstanding athlete trophy of the NCAA Indoor Track and Field Championships in Hersherb-
ger's honor.
get a subjob
Hershberger, 55, has also been active in his hometown, Wichita, and has been inducted into the Wichita State University Sports Hall of Fame. He also sponsors and participates in the Jim Hershberger Most Versatile Performer Games, held annually in Wichita as a test of athletic versatility and endurance.
Earlier this year, Hershberger became the first native Kansan and the oldest athlete ever to be featured on boxes of "Wheaties" breakfast cereal.
After he is commissioned, a portrait of Hershberger will be hung in the KU Athletic Hall of Fame.
Davis Chase of
Darcy Chang/KANSAN
KU tennis player Marie Hibbard volleyes with teammates during practice at Alvamar Tennis and Swim Club, 4120 Clinton Parkway.
Tennis teams begin Big 8 action
By ROB KNAPP
Staff writer
The Kansas men's and women's tennis teams begin Big Eight Conference play today, and Marie Hibbard is ready.
"I think that I just start feeling more motivated as the Big Eight season approaches," said Hibbard, who has played with enough motivation to win 12 of her last 13 matches.
The Kansas teams meet Oklahoma State, and Hibbard, playing at No. 5 singles, goes after her sixth consecutive victory at the Allen Field House courts. Women's matches begin at 9 a.m. and the men at 1 p.m.
Kansas faces Oklahoma tomarow at the field house courts with the women starting at 9 a.m. and the men at 1 p.m.
In case of bad weather, the matches will be moved indoors to the Alvamar Country Club, 4120 Clinton Parkway.
Men's and women's coach Scott Perelman said Hibbard's success was a result of her patience.
"She's basically a baseline player. Perelman said, "She's got to believe she's going to get the ball more times than the other player."
That's exactly what Hibbard is doing, though the strategy is producing matches that sometimes last two and a half hours.
"I'm not the strongest player." Hibbard said. "I don't hit the ball that hard, but I can stay out on the court all day if I have to."
Today's matches mark the opening of Big Eight play for both schools.
"This is what you play your entire year for," Perelman said.
I think that I just start feeling more motivated as the Big Eight season approaches.
Marie Hibbard Kansas tennis player
"We've been playing since August to get ready for the Big Eight season.
"This weekend will set the tone for the rest of the month. Someone is going to gain control of the conference."
The Jayhawks will be bolstered by the return of their team captains.
weekend's matches in West Virginia. Wolf came home early from the teams' spring break trip to the Georgia State campus, where mental and physical exhaustion
Men's captain and No. 1 singles player Mike Wolf will return to the lineup after sitting out last
Perelman said Wolf returned to team workouts this week.
"He hasn't played in some time, but he, more than anyone on the team, realizes the importance of this month." Perelman said.
Women's captain Barb Inman also returns after arthroscopic knee surgery last week, in which doctors repaired frayed ligaments. Inman will play No. 6 singles.
The Oklahoma men's team returns Olivier Lorin, last year's conference champion at No. 1 singles, and Mark Fentris, another returning singles champ.
Oklahoma State is a traditional Big Eight power. The men's squad has won nine of the last 10 conference titles, and the women have won six straight Big Eight championships.
But both the Kansas men's and women's have been closing the gap, capturing second place in the conference each of the past two seasons. And earlier this year, the mens squad beat the Cowboys 5-4 in a qualifying match for the ITCA National Indoor Championship.
Wolf holds a 5-3 career edge over Lorin, but Lorin has won the last three meetings.
From Kansan wires
Wilson Royals defeat Omaha
FORT MYERS, Fla. — Willie Wilson collected three hits, stole two bases and scored one run as the Kansas City Royals topped Omaha, their AAA farm club, 2-1 yesterday.
Mark Gubicea, in his final exhibition start, shut out Omaha on three singles for seven inmings.
Spring Training
Wilson led off the first with a single and stole second but he advanced to third on Kevin Setzer's ground out and scored on George Brett's sairacie.
Danny Tartabull and Thad Bosley singled to open the second. Tartabull scored on Ed Hearn's ground out.
Seitzer dropped a fly ball in the eighth inning, allowing Chito Martinez, who had singled, to score.
Dan Quisenberry picked up the save after retiring Omaha in order in
In a roster move yesterday, two left-handed relief pitchers, Israel Sanchez and Steve Shirley, were placed on the roster of the Omaha arm club.
The moves left the Royals with 25 players in camp, one above the regular season limit They must reach a scoring streak against the Chicago White Sox.
Buddy Black remains the only left-hander in the bulldip of the nine-yard zone.
Sanchez appeared in four games this spring and was 1-0 with a 5.63 earned run average Shirley was 0.1 number of appearances and posted a 2.43 ERA.
14
Friday, April 3. 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Mets' Gooden arrives at clinic for treatment
United Press International
NEW YORK — Dwight Goswen, hustled by bodyguards past young sters calling his name, entered a Manhattan clinic yesterday for treatment of a cocaine problem that could raise new legal problems for the New York Mets pitcher.
Gooden arrived at the Suthers Alcoholism and Drug Treatment Center at 10:15 a.m., encountering the scrutiny certain to follow him since he tested positive for cocaine
That scrutiny extends to Florida, where in January he pleaded no contest to charges of battery of a police officer and resisting arrest. Circuit Judge John P. Griffin, who presided over the trial, has asked for a written report and a recommendation from probation officials.
"We are going to recommend that his probation be modified with a special condition requiring that he enter the drug rehabilitation program and then submit to periodic untimely through record of his action." And Erio Alverez, an administrator with the state Department of Corrections.
The Mets confronted Gooden Wednesday with a urinalysis positive for cocaine. The 1985 National League Cy Young Award winner agreed to undergo treatment rather than be suspended from baseball by Commissioner Peter Ueberroth.
Mets team physician James Parkes said Gooden gave no previous sign.
"He never in any way with us behaved in an irrational way," Parkes said. "Now I've had some characters. We see a lot of abnormal people. Dwight never behaved in an abnormal way. I think in some way he was influenced by people who took advantage of him because of who he is."
Parkes said Gooden would undergo in-patient treatment, then out-patient counseling. If Gooden cocaine use was incidental and not heavy, the in-patient treatment could last from seven to 14 days. Parkes said
A crowd of about 80 photographers, cameramen and reporters greeted the crimson van bearing Gooden. The vehicle hesitated briefly, as if the driver considered turning around, then moved slowly to the clinic entrance.
Wearing a dark suit, Gooden said nothing and looked straight ahead. Two bodyguards, one on each side, shielded him. From a nearby schoolhouse, they watched as Dwight, *Dwight*, and assailed the waiting press corps as "ghoul's."
Gooden's return to New York began at 5:50 a.m. in Tampa, when Mets public relations man Jay Horwitz arrived at Gooden's house. Under his arm Horwitz carried four inches of newspapers, one of them with a headline reading, "Gooden's Drug Test Is Positive."
Gooden wore a blue pinstripe suit and carried a blue overnight bag. Horwitz shouted to a crowd of men, "I don't want this to be a circus."
Gooden's problem has stunned the Mets, leaving them with an uncertain outlook for repeating as the World Series champions. With their remaining starting staff of Ron Darling, Sid Fernandez, Bob Ojeda and Rick Aguilera, the Mets still look like a strong team. None of these pitchers has ever had to lead the staff for any extended period of time. That was Gooden's job.
Three new teams could join the NBA
NEW YORK - The NBA expansion committee recommended yesterday that the league expand to 26 teams by adding franchises in Charlotte, N.C.; Minneapolis; and either Miami or Orlando, Fla., for the 1988-89 seasons.
work to do."
The Associated Press
The five-member committee recommended that Charlotte be admitted for the 1988-89 season. Minneapolis the following season and the Florida team in one of those two seasons. A decision between Miami and Orlando will be made by the league in October.
"We're extremely delighted. We were such a long shot candidate," said Dan Lohwasser, a spokesman for the NBA in Charlotte. "People even locally don't give us much of a chance to win." When coming out No 1 Of Course, still has to get by the NBA Board of Governors, so we still have some
Each city would pay $32.5 million for its franchise if the NBA Board of Governors goes along with the recommendation when it meets April 16. The owners will three-quarter vote of the owners is needed for a franchise to be accepted.
Bob Stein, the attorney for the group that would return pro basketball to Minneapolis, said, "We won't make any type of real decisions until after April 22. Now we're just hoping the rest of the league agrees.
"We're excited about having the opportunity to join the league. We are thrilled and flattered that we are being considered like this."
The committee also considered Toronto, Anaheim, Calif., and St. Paul.
Lohwasser said, "We feel like Charlotte was in such a strong position, having a new coliseum. This is the heart of basketball country, right dead in the center of the ACC, and we had an excellent coliseum lease with the full backing of the city. Businesses have made sales. We sold 8,900 season tickets."
"It's a growth area, and they're businessmen and recognize that we are a viable city for a major league team. They would team up with the team would be known as the Sori!
ORCHARDS NOW OPEN!
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843-7456
Joe Suggs, Manager
GOLF CLUB
NOW LEASING for fall 1 & 2 bedroom apartments
The football program already was suspended for 1987 by the NCAA for repeated payout and recruiting violations.
DALLAS — Southern Methodist University's intermaint preident hinted yesterday that he might announce next week the cancellation of the Mustangs' football program in 1988.
Southhidge Plaza Aprs.
1704 West 24th
Lawrence Kansas 66044
SMU might not play in 1988
southbride
The president, William Stallcup, speaking to reporters after a meeting of the university's newly organized governing board, said no deci- dation had been made on whether to field a team in 1988.
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SMU, which was placed on NCAA probation in 1985, was barred from fielding a team in 1987 after the NCAA discovered improper payments to SMU players while the school was on probation.
The football program also was placed on NCAA probation through 1980 and limited in terms of recruiting and scholarship awards.
But he added: "We need to keep in mind that we're limited to seven games (in 1988) away from campus, so I have to wonder what purpose we have. We could get off to a better start in 1988."
show the First Lady, who was watching the ceremony from an upstairs window of the White House.
The gift-laden president walked across the Rose Garden toward the Oval Office, reporters shouted questions about the veto override vote. The president, bouncing the ball once off the grass, replied, "You heard what happened. I'm playing defensive ball."
Student Union Activities, the KU Frisbee Club and radio station KJIK are sponsoring the Ultimate Fools Festival this weekend at Shenk Complex at 232 and Iowa streets.
APRIL 9,10,11,&12,1987
Frisbee tourney tomorrow
Compare the price, componentry,
and warranty of any Road, ATB,
or commute to that of Schwinn
and then you will see why
TODAY'S Schwinn is an unbeatable
value. everyday!
FOUR BIG SALE DAYS!
Ultimate Frisbee games will be played from 9 a.m. until dark tomorrow and 10 a.m. until 5
لنبذل على مشروع أخرى
Tennessee coach Pat Summit told Reagan, at a low point in his presidency, "I knew if there was anyone in America that would appreciate that defense, it would be you."
Reagan noted that the team had prevented Louisiana Tech from scoring more than 44 points in the championship game Sunday. Facing an embarrassing veto override an hour later, he told the team, "Believe me, I had a special feeling about all of you coming here today because, as perhaps you know, lately I've been playing a little defensive ball myself."
WASHINGTON — President Reagan greeted the NCAA women's basketball champion Tennessee in the Rose Garden yesterday and compared a current political situation he faced to the Lady Volunteers' playing style.
Phillips said that he and New York attorney Robert Kheel, who represents the American and National leagues, had exchanged proposals but that the sides remained far apart on a variety of issues, including salary, expenses, pensions, insurance, post-season compensation and post-season selection.
Reagan was to greet the NCAA men's champion Indiana in the Rose Garden today.
p. m. Sunday. The tournament is expected to attract 20 men's teams and three women's teams, including teams from Boulder, Colo.; Chicago, Dallas; Denver, Madison, Wis.; New York City; Oklahoma City; and St. Louis.
Baseball umpires may strike
"Right now, I'd have to say the umpires' feeling is if we can't reach an agreement, they should withhold their services," said the umpires' attorney, Richard Phillips.
The KU men's team, the HorrorZontals, and the women's team, Betty, will compete.
LAWRENCE SCHWINN CYCLERY
PHILADELPHIA — Major league baseball umpires are prepared to strike when the season opens Monday if a new agreement is not reached, the umpires' lawyer said yesterday.
Team captain Shelley Sexton gave Reagan an autographed game ball, a Tennessee T-shirt and a pair of orange sneakers for himself and a gray pair for first lady Nancy Reagan.
KJHK will have a disc jockey at the games to provide musical entertainment.
Reagan greets Lady Vols
Phillips said progress had been made but he refused to speculate on the chances of reaching a settlement.
The president draped the long-laced shoes over each shoulder and held the gray pair up to
Kheel said both sides were "working very hard."
1601 W. 23rd
842-6363
The Southern,
Hills Mall
From staff and wire reports.
Natural Fiber Clothing 820 Mass. 841-0100
CONSTANCE
DEUER EISENFELD
NO WAY JVJ!
CITY COMMISSION
You've got to spend money to make money, they say.
A Cleveland-based mall developer is trying to influence your vote by buying massive newspaper and television ads
Money can't buy everything, and it shouldn't buy your vote.
The reason is simple. They want $20 million in public money for their private project.
NEW
Vote for Dennis Constance.
Vote for Dennis Constance.
Pol. Av. Paid for by the Committee to Reefer Dennis Constance
R.S.C. for District 731 MIssissippi 731 Missouri
HURRY!
842-5111
Don't miss a chance living with all your friends next year!
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
NEW!
1301 W 24th (one block East of Gammons) 842-5111
The apartment complex built with the STUDENT in mind!
SUNDAY JULY 16TH 1978
Come see our model units, indoor pool & 3 hot tubs.
- one bedroom apt. ($345)
two bedroom apt.
with two full bathrooms ($370)
- 3 outside hot tubs
- large indoor/outdoor pool
- fully equipped kitchen with
- weight room
- laundry facilities
MICROWAVE, DISHWASHER and ICEMAKER Pre-leasing Now Accepted 10 Month Leases Available!
- satellite extra
- satellite extra
ClassifiedAds
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Are you a baseball fan? If so, then Rottazeris
can help you. For you, for more information,
call 864-6014.
Garage Garage - lots of new and discontinued products, make up and collectibles. 4 Fridays
Paid for by Synchronicity
Today, Wescoe.
Folk Legend ramblah Jack Elliott who has shared the stories of his early days as a Garrifte, to perform at the Lawrence School of Ballet, 8th & Vermont. With special guest Melvin Laiton. Showtime on p.m. 4, April-4. Advance tickets available.
Sunday, April 3,
Australia
Malaysia Building a Nation
International Film Festival sponsored by the International Club in McCollum Hall at 6:30 p.m.
Modern Users: Loney? Bored? Want a new use for that modern gathering dust next to your computer? Meet new people on the K U. Connection, 842-3122
JASON KRAKOW
PRESIDENT
STEPHANIE QUINCY VICE PRESIDENT
STUDENT SENATE ELECTIONS
APRIL 8 & 9
BOTTOM LINE
Paid for by Treasurer: David Epstein
Bottom Line Spencer Calvin
On Our Land. A movie about the Palestinian pro-
tests in Gaza, 7 p.m. April 15, Smith Hall Auditorium.
Auto Mechanics $ \mathrm{I I}^{*} $
Explore the fundamentals of basic car maintenance under the direction of a licensed mechanic
- Work in a small group
- Learn more about the mechanics of your car
- mechanics of your car
- Learn how to tune-up
- Receive individual
- Receive individual attention
Wednesday,
April 8,1987
6:30-9:30 p.m.
运动会
906 Vermont
Lyon s Autonau,
906 Vermont
Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
You will follow up applications will be on Wednesday, April 15 and 22.
Ericardum is limited; call 643-352 to pre-require. There will be a charge of $0.00
EVERYONE IS PSYCHETIC TO SOME DEGREE.
A Tarot Reading can help you channel that power,
make decisions, and heal the spirit Tarot
Therapy. 843-4235
Student Union Activities is accepting applications for the Inner Harbor Recruitment Board member position for Fall 2016. Applications can be submitted at SA, UCLA or the Kansas University, beginning in April, tuesday. April 7.
Resort Hotels, Cruiseshelle, Airlines, Amusement Parks, NOW accepting applications For more information and an application write *National Information Service* (P.O. Box 804) Hillton Head, SC 29318
VOTE JON GREGOR FOR RESIDENCE HALL
SENATOR! Paid for by Synchronity
ENTERTAINMENT
PREMIERE PERFORMANCE
At the Rock Chalk Saturday, April 4 NO COVER!!
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Have the Hottest Party in Town: Rent A Hot Tub Call Tub to Go 841, 2690
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Private parties for all
occasions, for more information call
843-0510
M Your Request 1 Laurence's Best and Most A
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FRI. & SAT. ONLY $3.00
ANIMATION
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ONE OF THE MOST FASCINATING AND ENJOYABLE FILMS OF THE YEAR." —Bill Harris, At The Movies Also: Tonight At 7:40 £ 9:30 Sat. Matinee At 2:00
LIBERTY HALL
Metropolis Mobile Sound. Number 1 with a buildup:
DJ Extraordinary Weddings, Dances, Parties,
Proms. Booking graduation parties now. Hot
Sets for Maximum Power Thirst! 841-7803
FOR RENT
1 bfrm furnished & 2 bfmr unfurnished with
battery available at Southbridge Plaza Ap-
line. Call 403-785-6900 for details.
2 Bedroom apartment for summer sublease; nice close room; TW, bathroom water paid $2500; balcony $1500.
3 bedroom apartment available June 1st. Close to
town and campus. Includes washers and dryer.
4450: Utilities paid. Other apartments available.
841-4144
8 Bedrooms. 3 Bathrooms. Adjacent to campus.
No pets. Call 842-8971
University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 3, 1987
15
4 Bedrooms available this summer in large furnished house. 3 blanks from campers $15 per person. 2 bedrooms available this summer in large furnished house. 3 blanks from campers $15 per person.
IF YOU LIKE SPACE & QUIET
WE HAVE IT AND YOU
CAN STILL WALK TO CAMPUS
Spacious 2 bedroom
Laundry facilities
Waterbed line
Swimming pool
10-12 month leases
VILLA GAGE SQUARE
9th & Avalon
842-3040
bathroom, pool, and tennis courts. Call 841 7896.
Apartments for summer and fall at University Terrace Apartments, 1607 W. 9th. 1 Bedroom for June and July only $190 unfurnished,
furnished; June and July only $240 unfurnished,
summer; June and July only $240 unfurnished,
furnished $260, plus all utilities. 1 Bedroom for month leave, August 1-June 1; furnished
$250, unfurnished; furnished $250, unfurnished;
fall: August 1; Fall: $130; Spring: $290 unfurnished, plus all utilities. Central air, bus route, large rooms, gas heat. Come on bus see, or call 841 7896. W. 9th or 841 3230. If no answer call 841 1433.
Aspen West now leasing for Summer. Energy efficient, 1 and 2 bedrooms. 3 Blocks west of oncw in Private patios/decks, ceiling fans, no pets, month/month 749.1288, open house Saturday, 11 p.m.
Available mid May for summer sublease. Studio near campus. Water paid. Unique design. Call
DON'T DELAY! Sublease 3 story, $14 BH.
DON'T DELAY! Sublease 3 story, $14 BH.
Fireplace洗碗(dryer)/more Great opportunity.
Fireplace洗碗(dryer)/more Great opportunity.
PINECREST
Under New Ownership & Management
COME TAKE A LOOK!
Several 2 RB
All new carpeting, cabinets,
and windows
Cable TV
block to bus route
Laundry facilities
Energy efficient
I leaving now and for fall
Pinecrest
749-2022
2563 Redbud Lane block E. of owain on 26th Furniture by Thompson Crawler
Female. No smoker needed to share co-ced house for summer. B4 864-9212 or 842-0727.
Experience student cooperative living at Sunflower屋. Enjoy a private room and group work sharing meals, and other facilities. Rooms work sharing rooms, and fall. Call 784-9817 or come by 140 Tennessee.
Female roommate wanted for this summer and
for the bedroom apartment at Sunrise Place. Call 841-8044.
Great 2 BR house. Sublease now or for summer
at three 1 room, very large hr room 240.585
For Rent. August '14 or for June 1 through June 1 | 1988
for rent $250 per week for one girl $295 and for three girls $435 plus 1/2 water and electricity. (Outside balcony and no pets)
Great 2 BR house. Sublease now or for summer.
AMENITIES
NAISMITH HALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
913.843.8559
Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the amenities of Naismith Hall. Applications for fall semester are now being accepted while space remains.
Houses. Bedroom Apartments. Sleeping Rooms.
Available June 11: 2-bedroom apartments. 1,2 and
3-bedroom apartments; and, sleeping rooms.
Near Campus. No pets. Call 842-8971.
location; fireplace; garage; laundry. No pets.
Release & reefs. Req. Couple费 $p90. 843-736-7
LIKE CATS? For summer. beautiful apartment in older house. Spacious, wood floors, fireplace, washer/dryer $m0. mo plus gas & electricity, for summer set sunspots. Ame. 749-358-7
MEDABOOKRO APT FOR SULBEASE 2
BIDIRA introduce, near pool Available May 19
Most sublease for Summer. Short walk to cam
nus. 2 bfrm. townhouse. Call 841-8281
Reserve your apartment now. Just 2 short blocks
from the train station, across from the Furnished with some utilities paid and off street
Room for rent $110/mo. plus 1/4 utilities 4 minutes from Frazier. Call 841-8819
Roommates desired for nice house 2172 blocks south of Worcester, 841-6060 (evening) 8319-5194 (weekday)
*Looks like a large box, but it's not.*
Roommate Wanted for Summer Sublease.
Mastercraft Apt. 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath. Fully furnished. Close to downtown & bus route. $165 per mo. Call 749-2887
Roommate desired: three bedroom Townhouse
adjacent to pool and tennis court on KU bus route.
$155 plus 1/3 utilities. Available April first. Call
841-8019
rooms available for summer and the 1987-88 academic year in the Christian living community "Kronanna" at Ecumenical Christian Ministers. Information come to 1204 Orad or call 843-8433.
Spaussion, 2 BHP acri, to sub-lease for Summer with option to rest in fall. Available in June. Covered watercraft only.
Studio available for summer in super apt. complex, great maintenance, recreation facilities and laundry available. I will assume part of expenses. Call 842 9859 after 6:30 p.m.
**UBLEASE.** Furnished 2 BR apt. 11/2 bath.
**UBLEASE.** Furnished 3 BR apt. 11/2 bath.
May 15 10-day leave. 8780 or 7860 for May 15
10-day leave. 8780 or 7860 for May 15
UBLEASE BEAUTIFUL 2 bedroom Pin Oak
'ownhome! GREAT KITCHEN w/ microwave,
fishwhash. Good for 2, 3, or 4 people $410
41 9629 keep trying!
SUBLEASE for Summer Available June 1, 2
Bedroom Place Call B2-909 2006
Room Place Call B2-909 2006
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Spacious 3 bedroom
Meadowbrook apartment furnished, A.C., swim-
ming pools, basketball and tennis courts.
900.00/month, 842.2625
albsee for summer, studio at Hanover Place
all 749.5440
Sublease for Summer: Brand new 3 bedroom beach house with deck. Swimming pool, garage microwave, dishwasher, fireplace, W/D hookup, pool table, wet dog box. Management charges $80. We rent for $50 and management charges $60.
Location
Located among 70 acres of rolling hills and trees, you'll enjoy the convenience of being close to campus and area shopping.
Lifestyle
Meadowbrook offers a selection of spacious and comfortable studios, 1,2, or 3 bedroom apartments, and townhouses to fit your lifestyle
RESERVE YOUR
UNIT NOW...
FOR SUMMER OR FALL!
meadowbrook
Sublease for Summer: Furnished one BR with hifi used as second BR, $35 plus electricity, close to home.
15th & Crestline 842-4200
Sublease for summer: Tanglewood, 2 bedroom apartment. Use to campus. 2-level. Low utility space.
Sublease Trailridge one bedroom apartment Pool, Free gas, water Available mid-May
Berkley FLATS
843-2116 11th & Mississippi
LEASING NOW & FOR FALL
- Over 40 New Units
* Great location
- walk anywhere
- Laundry facilities
- Furnished Units
- Available
- On KU Bus Route
SHORT LEASES AVAILABLE
1123 Indiana Furnished by Thompson-Crawley
Sublease Available mid-May 1. Book from campground.
New Mastercraft, apartments 789-2450,
Tahoe City, California 749-2899.
Sublease for summer. 2 bdmr. furnished apartment, Tangelle. Call 749-196.
Sublease for summer. one large bedroom in two bedroom apt. Mall's Old English Village.
Summer Sublease, beautiful 1HD house with office,
garage, pool, tennis court, barbecue, kitchen,
bedroom, kitchen, bedroom, kitchen, bedroom,
kitchen, bedroom, kitchen, bedroom, kitchen
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Open Daily 3:00-5:00
Saturday 9:00-12:00
841-5444
24th & Eddingham (next to Gammons)
- Exercise Weightroom
* Laundry room
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
Summer Subway Large 3 IH RI Housewash. AC
New pool, bar line, bus line. Rent negotiated.
Summer Sublease: three or four person furnished
summer bordering hordery camps. Available in mid-
fall. $295/week.
- Fire place
Summer Sublet 2, Bedroom Townhouse; Pool,
new campground; 2 early午(181-1397)
Campground
- Swimming pool
- Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Management, Inc
- On-Site Management
EDDINGHAM PLACE
- Energy efficient
Summer sublease for on campus 2 bdrm at
Balcony, wf. pd., low utilities 843-792
or 843-793
Summer Sublease 3; bedroom Apartment with baths, a. c., d. w. Pool. Close to campus. 841-5697
Summer Sub: room in apartment on bus route featuring private bath, decklet, cakelet, pool, fun kitchen, office area or near grocery pizza, shopping center. Coca-Cola plus all bills, but让 Hand. Rand 749-7349
Satellite T.v.
* Exercise Weightroom
Summer Sublease: 3 Idr. Rent May to August. Please call 749-4567.
Summer sublease. 3 bedrooms in new 4 bedroom
summer屋. 2 baths half-furnished. 5142 plus 1/4
utilities. Available May 19th Sunrise Terrace,
841.3853
MASTERCRAFT
offers.
Completely furnished
apartments--all near KU!
Consider:
- Custom furnishings
- Furniture efficient
- Variety of floorplans
- Designed for privacy
- Designed for privacy
- Professional management
CAMPUS PLACE—1145 Louisiana 841.1429
SUNDANCE—7th & Florida
TANGLEWOOD—10th & Arkansas
749-2415
OPEN DAILY 1-5
OPEN DAILY 1-5
Summer sublease: 3 bedrooms in 4 bedroom apartment with kitchen and dishwasher. Place for top of bed. Bill: $849.
Very nice two bedroom apartments available
with enclosed basement, conditioning,
and dryer/dishwasher $120 a month.
Wanted: Person to Submit bedroom in apartment for further call. Call Tamer at 802-3548 for further appraisal.
FORSALE
1978 Kawasaki LTD 1000 Custom and high performance extra two numbers to mertust. Must be certified by a motor shop.
1982 Honda Moped Express SR Excellent condition 600 miles; $300, but willing to negotiate Call
1984 1/2 Kaw GP2. 750 4,800 1 owner, all
maintenance records. Kiwi full face
helmet/Cover. 2,000.0 firm. 843.053. Leave
message
90-70% off Coach Airline Ticket. Credit cards on-
line only.
Apple II plus with 2 disk drives, 80 column card,
apple, green monitor, word processor,
Passal/Fortran language system, games,
and utilities. $150, 841.796. Keep trying
Bianchi 12 Speed bicycle, 21 inch frame, excellent condition, $150 Call Mark, 864-3433 weekdays
80 Datsun 210 Sedan 2D, Stereo, 65K miles, 1kile,
hitch $120 Excellent Condition.
After 8.62 B&H
**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**
Blue mishui 12 Speed Touring Kite *new tires,
excellent condition* Asking $70 negotiated, 1976
Gawashie KZ 400 or 5 300 miles, new tires, ex-
cellent condition* Asking $50 negotiated,
$83 450 or $83 450
74 Honda 450, all stock, a classic $450.00 O R O
842.336, Dave.
Commodore 64 computer. Includes keyboard,
monitor, software, and accessories.
Design Designer 64.
www.commodore64.com
PA EXAM Study Material Best. CPA Review
Survey with cassette tape. Serious inquiries only.
Contact us at 1-800-655-4321.
Dog House: extra large, insulated $65 00 841-4478;
Barb
Drum set 3: piece, new cymbals, 4 rots on.
$450.0 @ B.O.C. Play, 842,338, Dave.
Fender Acoustic/Electric Guitar $130. Univox Electric Guitar/Case, 50 watt Musician Amplifier. Ianex Flanger All $250 Good Condition. 842.3142
For Sale. Fully 10" 12 speed Trek, 2 years old,
excellent condition, with pump and front bag.
$252. Piano. Schuler full sized upright, Mahogany,
39" x 47". Schuler 6022, nice, with hand shell,
$73. Call 842 865 663.
For sale: six PATRICK NAGEL "PLAYBOY"
PRINTS prices from $75-80. Glass clipped
framed. These are hard to find printers which
are in production. Call 816-7533-229. Leave
Message.
JVC integrated amplifier 50 watts a channel. Ecx
price condition, price 846-6625, evening.
Phill, Glenn, Pat, Diane, Kevin, Allen,
Jennifer, Chuck, Rob, Deb, Michelle
Ruth, Tom, Heidi, Jon, Frank, Debbie
Sawyer, Jeff, Tom, David, Tracy,
Alice, Tracy, Joyanne, Sam & Dean.
Wen X 112 Speed racing style bike. Excellent condi-
ion. J75, Duane. 841-863
Paid for by Synchronicity
TEN SPEED BIKE FOR SALE! Vista Carrera,
have. 440-6055, and quit惠享. Contact
save. 440-6055
Single Bed Lift, IBM Electronic Typewriter, KORG
Call for prices. 780-896-8186; Refrigerator
Call for prices. 780-896-8186
MAD MAX'S COMICS. Comic Books, Playbys, Penhous,
ect. 811 New Hampshire.
Schwinn Mountain Bike; 18 speed and Schwinn Traveler Bike; 12 speed like Brand New, Low Price.
100,000 more films $30 taxes 664-284-7190
Color TV 200 contact Mike Reynolds 844-521-7190
HELP WANTED
New HM PCB Amber Screen and Modem. Hook up with KU terminals and right work at home.
Racing Bike Tunturi 23 lbs. 125" with lock. Cyclo computer more first $30拿 864-283.
1908 Datum 200 SX $2600 O B O 1880 Toyota Corolla
SHS$250 SHS$00 B O 842-8442
Morgan Rabbi. Breathtaking beautiful body, robust fire-resistant long highway car, free gas for 1000 tires, long highway car, free gas for 1000 tires
1984 Volkwagen GTL Alpine System, Prepair
tire. Huns great, excellent condition Call Lisle.
*VOLKWAGEN*
1977 Dodge Cult-4 speed, air, dependable $600
Phone 844.412.3550
TREK 100 Bicycle. In great condition! What a bargain! Call Paul: 843-4648
Checkers Pizza has immediate openings for (5) hard working, responsible driver nurses. Must be 18 years old or older and have own car and insurance. Starting pay $3.50 hr. plus commission per person 2.00 p.m. 8 p.m. daily Checkers Pizza, 212A Yale Road, Equal Opportunity Employer
AUTOSALES
Must Sell 1782 Chevrolet 4 cylinders, Automatic Hatchback 87 000 miles, 4 new radial tires, Air conditioning, Break lining (recently paid $90) $1300 (Firm). 81-5533.
Nice Toyota Starlet 82^ Air, Stereo, 5 speed, good condition. Ask for $240 Call Al or McNell
Must sale: 82 Postilla Firebird, 70,000 mg. blank condition; store tape equalizer $3,700 negotiable condition; store equalizer $3,700 negotiable
Children's Counselors, Activity Instructors. WSL.
Bus Driver, Cook, Kitchen Manager, Kitchen
Helper, Dishwashing, Maintenance, Nanny for
Elderly, Bathroom, P.O. Box 712,
Boulder, CO 80066 (303) 442-5357
COULD YOU BE A BOSTON NANNY? We have many families interested in a commitment, excellent salary benefits, round trip transportation. Mice & Fish, Brooklyn, MA 02146, 617-569-2688 kkmister d.R., Brooklyn, MA 02146, 617-569-2688
LOST—FOUND
AHI LINES CRUISE LINES HIRING Summer
Travel Destinations
Cable TV, Newswire, "Nielsen"
(916) 843-4447 Ext. 10
http://www.nielsen.com/
Are you good with children? Would you like to be paid to live with a California family and help with children? **HELP PARENTS** 770 Menlo Ave. 219, Pen岭 Park, CA 94255 (415) 322-3816
Computer Graphics Consultant need office manager * Must have bookkeeping and computer skills * Need to be a joke we want you. Detailed job description available. Designer, baski-1451, 8110, 1414 W 6th Street. GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16,800/yr230 for衣 Call 895 687 6000 Ext. R 728 for current
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach swimming canoeing sailing waterskiing, gymnastics, swimming, water polo, camping, crafts, dramas, OR riding lessons; maintainance. Salary $10 or more. 603-342-4444; Martine Sager, 1756 Niles Mld. 6003, 6193-342-4444
2 Idm Townhouse for summer special rate,
8-KU-147. City Council KU-147.
Call 843 907 between 8 a.m. & 5 p.m. on weekdays.
Found: Keys: 5 keys on ring with a hook Found near 1th &邑 Hall, Call Mary. 864-4602
Need
Lost: 2 Keys and a Jawahk pendant King ring,
码 664-102, if found.
We've got it all! Call today.
Lost: PerSCRIPT glasses in brown case. Please call Karen, 842-7525 if found
money for school?
flexible work hours?
excellent wages?
cash bonuses?
incentives?
Relaxed atmosphere?
evening-Weekend hours?
No Experience required?
E. O.E.M/F/H
SUBSIDIARY OF ENTERTAINMENT PUBLICATIONS, INC
Join our "Nanny Network" of over 500 placed by CT in NT, NYJ and Boston. One year commitment in exchange for top salary, benefits, room, board, travel and other fees is your satisfaction. Many families for you to choose from. Contact Hearing Help, at i230-843-1742 or NBC Today Show & Hour Magazine.
NANNY POSITIONS Care for children in one of our daycare centers, board, $120-$300 per week. Attend school even one year commitment. Non-smokers preferred. Care for interview LA PETITE MERE MORE
Nanny Finders. Inc. looking for nannies. Position available nationally. Good salaries, great benefits. Must make 1 year commitment P.O. Box 4033 Chase Hill NC 27515
NEED AMBITUROUS, HARDWORKING PERSONABLE PERSON TO operate a new day care facility. Requires licensing qualifications and have two years supervisory day care experience. Mail 844-621-916 for inquiry.
Personal care assistants new / summer. Morning:
7:12 and 8:12, weekends 9:30 to 11:49 (7:29)
8:30 to 10:30 (8:39)
STUDENT WORK-STUDY POSITION on-campus publisher helps seek up 10/8 hours/week to open and distribute daily mail, answer phones, type, and assist in various duties. Must be eligible to complete work on campus with experience. To start immediately. Come to 326 U.S. 4th Rd to complete application for 4/8/87
CALIFORNIA DREAMIN?
$$$$$$$$ Extra Income Opportunity spare time in your home Large Profits. For more information law. New Directors Association P.O. Box 3655 Lawrence, Kansas 60046
HEADCHEEK BACKACHE ARM PAINT, LEG
HEADCHEEK BACKACHE ARM PAINT, LEG
complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark
Net crinoline in pastel colors. New fun jewelry from LA. Bunny suits for rent
NANNIES - Needed on west coast. Established midwest firm with excellent reputation arranges your placement. We screen families in their homes. Licenced, No Fee, Minumum stay 1 year. Call or Write: ARCHER DAWSON AGENCY OMAHA, NEBRASKA 68104 (402) 554-1103
Spring Fling
Barb's Vintage Rose
927 Mass. 841-2451 M.S. 10:5:30
GLEVISHAN J. *Write for KS/MO info* PER
460916211 Mailed discreetly confidentially
460916211 Mailed discreetly confidentially
(major only)
— must be hard working
— $400 per week
For interview call 749-7377
Most reasonable rates in town for all your photo needs, primarily photography, reception and portraits. Call 1-800-426-9350.
PERSONALIZED GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS
BRIDAL FORMAI
815 MASSACHUSETTS
843.7628
808 W.23rd
GREENS PARTY SUPPLY
Marks
Need music for your wedding? Call Jean, 843-704. Gives piano and voice lessons over summer. Rare and Used Records. Buy, Sell, or Trade Quanfairt's 811 New Hampshire
April 1-7
Weekly Beer Specials
Coors Gold 12 pk. $5.37
Coors Light 12 pk. $5.37
Lowenbrau 6pk. $3.10
Old Style 12 pk. $4.21
Busch 12 pk. $4.26
Weidemann 12 pk. $3.49
SERVICES OFFERED
CRIMSON SUN PHOTO is looking for young women interested in developing a modeling portfolio. 15% over direct cost. No set fees. Call 841-96208.
AEROBIC AEROBIC AEROBIC AEROBIC
WITH THE Tian Jia Lawn School School of Ballet
WITH THE Tian Jia Lawn School School of Ballet
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
Student Draftsman Needed. Architectural detailing on campus projects including preparation of project cost estimates and applications of current building materials, feasibility studies, cost estimates, and detailed drawings on campus site planning projects. Prepare presentations with an engineering or architectural office. This is a 12 month appointment. Call Rose Etta at 800-429-3767 or review Deadline: Friday, April 18 at 10:00 a.m.
*Graduates and undergraduates, money for college is available. Contact College Scholarship Sources. (913) 764-0299 or 1-800-USA-1221 Ext. 7099.*
Summer Employment Lawn care lawn care professional female applicants welcome. Send inquiries to Box 10398.
Summer Job. To assist disabled KU staff member as personal care attendant. Mornings, evenings. 712 hrs. per week. $4.5 per hr. Reliable transportation from college to job site. Preferred. 842-1091.
ALEN LEVINE the right choice for Off-Campus
Senior mail for by Synchrony Inc.
PERSONAL
ANNETTE and TYLER. Congratulations on your pinning Love, the Alpha Gaps.
BK F1F0D4H2GRAPH SERVICES KEachkulture
BK F1F0D4H2GRAPH SERVICE Art & Design Buildings
$60.00 BK
Forced to have sex with a male or white girl/groom:
Vaccinated HIV/HIV-positive through HAQP204 (014) 654-2668
HIV/Virus-specific test for HAQP204 (014) 654-2668
Hey Xay! Are you going to see One Tom Toni Sat? You Better! Mr. Foto
Jessica: Highway patrol got ya and so did we!
"Fooled you." Love Lily and Kim
Mary. Saw you on David Letterman, too. There is something wrong with your hair and you don't care. You look unkempt. You're a mess.
Be creative in gift giving. Fulfill your passion with beautiful Boudreau Portraits for all occasions. Call (804) 639-1752. www.boudreau.com
MALE TRATS EXPLAINED Learn hundreds of reasons why men do unusual things every day $1. TRAT EXPLANATIONS, Box 48435, Wichita, KS 67201.
- celebrate with a song * Send an "I'm a Jayawk"
* music box balloon bouquet * Other times available
**63 Vermont** 749-0148 Southern Halls Mall
**109-4341**
Suzi, Happy! I Year Anniversary! It's been great!
I love you! Dan
vies Overland Park.
Seaismet. All ladies' dresses can be made here in town. You choose your favorite designs or you can make them for you. Call Sei. 841-3449.
BUS. PERSONAL
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob Gyn and Abortion Services. Overland Park...913-491-6078
MATH IU TURSER since 1976, M.A. $/hr, courses
109, U.S. $/hr, 1433-9032
SUNLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided 841.2316
TUTORING MATH STAT. $8.00/HR CALI
3U1-TST
MUSIC ***** MUSIC ***** MUSIC ***** MUSIC
Red House Audio 8 track studio, P.A. and
Mobile Party Music, Maximum Audio Wizardry
Call Brad 749-1275
Need money for college? Let us match you with Scholarship and grant money for which you can qualify. For more information visit StudentLife.com or 1815 SW Chester Drive, Tugela, Kapsa 66049
TYPING
24-Hour Typing, 13th semester in Lawrence
Resumes, dissertations, papers. Close to campus
Best quality and fastest service. 814-506
1-100 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing. Judy, 842-7945 or Karen, 749-2341.
A1 professional typing. Term papers, theses,
IBM typewriter. Typing.
Typewritten typetype: 842 324 790
http://www.mathopenings.org/
Exercise shortend typing by former Harvard
researcher Jeffrey Berman. Dependable, professional experiences
JEANETTE SHAFFER Typing Service
TRANSSCRIPTION also standard tape 8434877
www.mathp.com
AAA TYPING! Great typing, low prices! 842 1922
at 4:00 p.m., any time weekends.
1-1-1 TRIO Word processing. Responsible. Conscientious. Reliable. Call 842 3111 for service
Daima's quality Typing and Word Processing
resumes, applications, mailing list Letter
quittal resumes, application forms.
Experienced typetask dissertations, term papers M82102 after 6.15 p.m. M or S/Suil or Sun M82102 after 6.15 p.m. M or S/Suil or Sun
For professional typing/word processing, call
814-436-8900; Spring special 512; pouch, double
phone numbers.
GUARANTEED PERFECT typing done on word processor. Located near Lawrence hospital. Call 718-264-3000.
KU SECRETARY will do your typing and word processing. You must have experience in competitive rates. Memore 8411-2039 after a 49 hour m, quality training, excellent editing, grammar, spelling, punctuation skills. Can reliable data entry work.
Resume Service-laserwritten 10 copies • ONLY
809-749-2193 after 5 p.m.
Smart Word Processing includes editing and spell checking. Very reasonable rates. Fax: 780-2740
THE WORLD DOCTORS. Why pay for typing? Word processingeling, transcription: 843-347 123
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional wordpress
management, manuscripts, resumes, theses, letter
forms.
Theses, resumes, and papers. 841-3469
WRITING LIFELEVEL.
TYPLING Plus assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes HAVE M.S. Degree 841-6254
Typing, very reasonable rates, will also assist with spelling punctuation and form. Call 842-2692-8001
WANTED
Female Deposit $157.00 Summer only or into fall
Ronda. Anytime Tues. or leave by
thursday.
Needed: Ride to and from Chicago DEAD shows. April 8, 10th. Will help with gas and $d rentals.
Part-time housekeepers wanted for Spring and Summer. Day or evening hrs. If you are a meticulous cleaner, Buckingham Palace needs your calls. Talq 812624
Roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom Apartment. Quail, non smoker $150 and half utilitary.
Roommate Wanted: Beautiful apartment in older house, close to KU and downtown, spacious, wood floors, FP, WP, Must like cats (2) 875 plus I electricity and Electricity. Anne 749, 737 after 4.
WANTED: Rommatee. Close to campus. $142.40
+ 1/2 tlts. Call James. Calam 841578 after 6 p.m.
worn clothes premorbid for now are not so well known. The most common is a furnished, fireplace, swimming pool, and later a furnished, bed or dressing room.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wanted to buy Chewy 1/2 ton pickup or VAN. RAL
914-630-7500 or 914-630-7201. LSK
ask for Marine; please leave a message.
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16
Friday, April 3, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Oerter
Continued from p. 13
caps, T-shirts and buttons that promote the Relays.
McCook Field, the field events area at Memorial Stadium, will be renamed Olympic Field, and the event will be named in honor of Oerter.
Oerter said he was glad to be returning to Lawrence both because of fond memories and his desire to compete again.
Oerter, who came out of retirement in 1974, is a resident of Islip, N.Y., but spends the winter months in Fort Meyers, Fla., where he trains year-round for the Olympic trials.
Oerter said his training consisted of either walking on the beach, lifting or throwing. He said he had been running because he didn't like it.
Olerer said that he was not in top condition right now, but that 1987 was more of a preparation phase for the Olympics in Seoul, South Korea.
"My training depends on how the fish are biting here." Oerter said. "Lately the fishing has been good."
Oerter, however, has competed consistently, posting a top ten finish at the Athletic Congress nationals last June in Eugene, Ore., with a throw more than 200 feet.
Oerter said he no longer felt pressure from competing. His decision to keep competing results from his unincornish of age.
"Being older than my competitors is a little strange at times because I am a grandfather and some of the competitors are younger than my daughters." Oerter said, "But once the competition starts, people forget about it."
Oerter said he was capable of training alone because he was able to motivate himself, adding that he had more equipment and training facilities available to him in Plerville and had at kU in the early 1950s.
Oerter said he supported the NCAA's new drug testing policy, saying it was something that should have been done in the 1960s and 1970s. That attitude was based on his disapproval of drug use by athletes, a factor that prompted his retirement in 1968 after he won his last gold medal.
"I don't think they should be suspended for 18 months, though," Oerter said. "They should be suspended for 30 months - long enough that it affects their careers."
Oerter had the opportunity to speak with former KU men's track coach Bill Easton, who also attended the news conference. Oerter said Easton, who coached at the University from 1948-1965, provided him with his foundation for throwing.
Oerter talked of his fondest memory of his coach.
"He would train and prepare his athletes," Oerter said. "Then he told them to enjoy their capabilities."
Hagler, Leonard may be a little rusty
LAS VEGAS, Nev. — Marvin Hagler and Ray Leonard face an opponent Monday night possibly more dangerous than either fighter, rust.
United Press International
Hagler, who defends his World Boxing Council 160-pound title outdoors at Caesar's Palace, has not fought since stopping John Mugabie in 11 rounds March 10, 1986. His previous bout was April 15, 1985, a third-round knockout to Thomas Hearns.
And Hagler is the active fighter among the two. Leonard last fought 35 months ago, winning a ninth-round knockout over Kevin Howard May 11, 1984. His previous bout goes back more than five years to a Feb 15, 1982 victory over Bruce Finch. The championship bouts who used to fight three championships in his career
"It will keep people guessing," Hagler said.
"It will keep people guessing," Hagler said. Talk of Leonard's long layoff has irritated the former welterweight and junior middleweight chamo.
"Wouldn't ring rust affect him, too?" Leonard said. "His old coat beaches through."
Hagler says he is 32, although the Leonard camp
claims Hagler is 36. The wars he has fought were a 15-round decision over Roberto Duran in 1983, the quick but brutal Hearski fight and the toe-to-toe punchout against Mugabi.
"I think the rest is good," Hagler said. "I think the mind needs more rest than the body."
Hagler appears rested and loose in the days leading to the fight.
"I feel better for this fight than other fights," he said. "For the Duran fight, I felt tight around this time. For the Hearns fight I was less tight. This time I know what I have to do."
"I listen to what Hagler says," said Leonard, who is 30. "He has a chance to rest. I had two years off, that should make me better." (of who likes Muster Dan.)
"Fights like Hagler-Duran take a lot out of you. What he's saying is he needs the rest.
"But I don't want people to say Hagler's starting to deteriorate. He's getting old. He's been off a year. I don't want that. I want people to say I beat Hagler at his best."
Hagler says Leonard need not worry, he remains at his best.
"A lot of people said Mugabi was my toughest fight. It wasn't," he said. "I took a 'took all of punches because I realized I had to take something to get something back."
"I'm not an old man, believe me. I still feel very young. Age is just a number. I feel good at age 32. I feel a lot stronger, and I think I have the tools to put him away."
The toll from Leonard's rights were taken mostly on his left eye. The eye was swollen shut during Leonard's 11th round knockout over Hearns Sept. 7, when he was injured and required surgery to repair a detached retina on his left eye.
Hagler of Brockton, Mass., is 62-2-2 with 52 knockouts. He is making his 33th middleweight title defense. If successful, he can tie Carlos Monzon's record of 14 middleweight title defenses in his next bout. Leonard, Potomac, Md., is 33-1 with 24 knockouts.
Hagler is guaranteed $12 million and Leonard $11 million for the bout, which is expected to be by more than two million viewers around the country on closed-circuit television.
Track teams head south to Texas Relays
By DIANE FILIPOWSKI
Staff writer
Ten members of the men's and women's track teams will compete today and tomorrow in the Texas Relays at the University of Texas at Austin, the first leg of the triple crown of outdoor track.
Women's coach Carla Coffey said that the meet included some of the best collegiate, junior college and high school track and field athletes in the country. The meet is prestigious, she said, because it is the first
important relay meet of the season followed by the Kansas and Drake Relays.
Jayhawks who qualified to compete in the meet include Anne O'Connor, high jump; Denise Buchanan, shot put and discus; pole vaulters Chris Bohanan, Scott Huffman and Pat Manson; triple and long jumpers Johnny Breckins and David Bond; hurdler Courtney Hawkins and javelin throwers Ron Bahm and Vince Labosky.
that this would be the first time this season that Bahm, a returning All-America, and Labosky, a high school All-American, will compete in the javelin.
Bob Timmons, men's coach, said
The other members of the men's and women's teams will compete Saturday in the Kansas State Pepsi Invitational in Manhattan.
Timmons said that Kansas would compete against some Big Eight conference teams, including Kansas State. Oklahoma State for the first time in Oklahoma State for the first time in
Get Something Going!
the outdoor season.
"This will also be an opportunity for our athletes to compete in events that are only run outdoors," Timmons said, "such as the disc, javelin, steeplechase and the 4 x 100 relay."
Coffey said that she hoped for good weather this weekend, but that bad weather would give the team an opportunity to practice competing in windy, cold or rainy conditions that are sometimes part of outdoor track.
Kansan Classifieds 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
April 6, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 126
(USPS 650-640)
MALAYSIA
Chad DeShazo/KANSAN
Reza Yuwono, 3, from Surabaya, Indonesia, peers past an authentic Indonesian fan at Ferra Soegijono,
Surabaya, Indonesia, junior. Soegijono was helping with the Indonesian booth at this year's 35th annual
International Festival of Nations on Saturday afternoon at McCollum Hall.
Students partake in festival of nations
By JENNIFER FORKER Staff writer
A man strolled through a throne of people Saturday, dressed in a long, white robe and turban, with a long sword slipped into the belt of his robe.
A woman from India stood behind a counter, dressed in a long, sheer, purple dress. Her
Monday Morning
The two attended the 35th annual International Festival of Nations on Saturday at McColum Hall. People from 19 nations, some dressed in their nations' traditional attire, participated in the festival.
purple sari, a traditional Indian style of dress, rested on her shoulders.
Participants displayed native artifacts and foods during an exhibit from noon until 5 p.m.
He said that about $290 was made from 25-cent food tickets but that not much money would remain after paying bills and splitting the profits with McColum Hall.
Laham said club members wanted to get people from different nations together for a festive, joyous occasion. Although the exhibits, costumes, dances and foods were all different, the people were similar, he said.
Admittance for browsing through the exhibits and watching the evening's festivities was free.
"We want everybody to take pride in their countries, but we want to show how much alike we are." Laham said.
Food tickets were used to sample the exotic foods, from Bangladesh's chicken and rice to Korea's bulgoki, which is the nation's rendition of barbecue beef. Students at the French exhibit offered leek or onion quiche and students from Portugal supplied a dessert called sweet rice. Sardines and tuna also were offered at the Portugual display, but the sweet rice sold fastest.
Malaysians displayed their national flag, ornate fans and kites and traditional Malaysian clothing, like sarongs. Sarongs are skirts of long pieces of colorful cloth sewed together to form a tube. Malaysians step into the tube-shaped material and then wrap the material around their waists.
Steven Teoh, Malaysia fresh
man, said the sarongs, used for summer wear, were cool and comfortable.
Indonesian students exhibited their national flag, wood carvings from Bali, sandalwood fans and shadow puppets. Nigerians had a table of red-dyed and black-dyed leather goods from purses to
bracelets. The exhibit from India displayed sandalwood carvings of Buddha and the Hindu deity, Krishna, leather purses and saris.
Other groups with exhibits were Venezuela, Panama, Peru, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Colombia, Palestine, the Ivory Coast, Syria, Lebanon and Pakistan.
About 200 people gathered to watch the dancing and singing by seven groups. Afterward, the winners of the day's events, based on food, exhibits and the evening's show, were announced.
The Palestinian and Indonesian groups tied for first place.
Mall construction would spell doom for block of homes
Editor's note: This is the first in a two-part series that examines the effects of Lawrence's proposed downtown mail. The second part will examine how the proposed mall would affect owners of businesses in the 600 block of Massachusetts and Vermont streets.
By TODD COHEN Staff writer
In a Peanuts comic strip a few years ago, Snoopy hopped off his doghouse and journeyed to revisit the place of his birth, the Daisy Hill Pupoy Farm.
But Snoopy's homecoming was ruined when he found, where the puppy farm once was, a six-level parking garage.
"You're parking on my memories." he wailed.
The residents of three houses in the 600 block of Kentucky Street soon may share Snoopy's anguish. Their houses are in the exact spot where a six-level parking garage would be if a proposed downtown Lawrence mall is approved.
However, only one of those residents has tried actively to stop the plan, which Lawrence residents vote on tomorrow. A three-question advisory referendum on the mall project, which was proposed by Cleveland developers Jacobs, Visconsi &
Jacobs, awaits the voter's decisions.
Jacobs, awaits the voter's decisions. Bonita Yonder has her law office on the first floor of a turn-of the century pink stucco house on the corner of Sixth and Kentucky streets. Singer and writer Danielle She's in the building's original oak floors and trim. She's also in the process of buying it.
"When I first walked in, I knew it was mine," Yoder said. "I thought, 'This is my place.'
"This is my ideal house. It fits my personality. I love older buildings."
Yoder wants to save the house. In February she joined Citizens for a Better Downtown, a group opposed to the closing of streets for the mall, and helped collect the 4,430 signatures on a CBD petition that forced the city commission to put a referendum on the ballot.
"Frankly, I think the 600-block proposal is going to be dead soon."
The parking garage site for the 600-block proposal was recommended in a traffic study done for JVJ by the Bachman Associates, Evanson Ill.
The study stated that '60 percent of the site traffic has direct access to the garage without traveling through
See PARKING, p. 12, col. 1
Student dishonesty worries KU officials
By VALOREE ARMSTRONG Special to the Kansan
The KU office of admissions is taking steps to stop transfer students from lying about their previous academic records.
Bruce Lindvall, director of admissions, said recently that he was concerned about transfer students who misrepresented their past work so they could meet the University of Kansas' 2.0 grade point average admission requirement.
The current application forms for transfer students include a stronger warning than previous applications. The bold-lettered warning emphasizes that the applicant must send proof of identity, documents, or face a penalty for falsification.
Lindvall also has instructed his staff to be alert for suspicious applications. Suspensions now are pending against several students who allegedly gained admission dishonestly, he said.
"We have tried to become more alert to the possibilities of the problem," he said. "If we suspect a problem, we'll write a letter."
Lindvall's crackdown comes at a time when KU is tightening admissions standards because of increasing pressure to accommodate an enrollment boom. Students are finding it difficult to get into certain classes because of cuts in state financing.
Dishonesty in applications is a concern at other universities, too, and a wide range of social observers express concern at the nation's increased acceptance of dishonesty.
Millard Storey, director of admissions at the University of Colorado, said his staff was "on the look-out for suspicious applications," and offenders generally were treated severely.
Lindvall links the lack of honesty in students to society's tolerance of dishonesty in everyday life.
"I think it's a national trend," Lindvall said. "We must be living in a society that says it's OK to cheat on your taxes. If it can help you get ahead, why not? If it will help you get into KU, why not?"
AT KU when foul play is suspected, the admissions staff requests in a letter, in person, that the student verify the information. Lindvall has evidence of misrepresentation after a student is admitted, he requests a hearing that can result in suspension
Lindvall is involved in two such hearings now.
KBI blood tests show victim was intoxicated
See FALSIFY, p. 6, col. 5
Bv PAUL BELDEN
Staff writer
One of the four KU students killed March 27 in a car-train wreck was intoxicated as defined by state law when the accident occurred, blood-alcohol tests from the Kansas Bureau of Investigation indicate.
Alan Sanders, Douglas County coroner, said Friday that according to the KBI tests, Daniel J. McDevitt, 19, Salina sophomore, had 0.10 percent alcohol in his blood when the accident occurred. In Kansas the minimum blood-alcohol level for intoxication is 0.10 percent.
The accident occurred at 10:45 p.m. at a train crossing on County Road 1900N, about a mile north of Lawrence and 75 yards west of U.S. Highway 24-59. Also killed in the accident were Joel D. Grantham, 20, Overland Park sophomore; Jennifer Lyn Jones, 19, St. Louis freshman; and Elizabeth "Betsy" Dunlap, 21, Salina junior.
J. D. Hall, Kansas highway patrolman, said investigators did not know who was driving the 1970 Plymouth family when a train tore the car in half.
All four victims were members of KU fraternities or sororites. They
reportedly had just left a Phi Gamma Delta fraternity party at TeePee Junction and were headed to a Chi Omega sorority barn party when they were killed.
According to KBI tests, the other three students had blood-alcohol contents of 0.04, 0.08 and 0.08, all below the legal limit, Sanders said. He would not specify what level each of the other victims had.
Jim Flory, Douglas County district attorney, said he was investigating where or from whom the students got the alcohol. He said the exact percentage of alcohol in the students' blood was irrelevant to his investigation.
Earlier last week, Sanders performed unofficial blood-alcohol tests at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Those tests indicated that all four had blood-alcohol levels below 0.10 percent. Sanders said.
The KBI toxicology lab also is testing the students' blood for various drugs. Sanders said, but isn't finished.
"The investigation just deals with the issue of underage people being in possession of liquor," said Flory, who expects to finish her investiga-
See ACCIDENT, p. 6, col. 3
INSIDE
Top qun
About 170 Navy Reserve Officer Training Corps students demonstrated their shooting skills and general military knowledge in the Big Eight Draft Competition on Saturday in Hoch Auditorium. See story page 3.
Election preview
Students will choose a new student body president, vice president and senators Wednesday and Thursday. The Kansan takes a closer look at the three coalitions in this year's elections. See stories page 16.
MCI officials will investigate abuse of access cards at KU
By JAVAN OWENS
Marsha Ambler, Pratt law student,
received an $800 MCI phone bill last
July. Her access code had been used,
but she had not placed any of the
calls. She called the company to
straighten out the problem and to
cancel her service.
Special to the Kansan
Ambler said that when she called investigators for MCI Telecommunications, they were understanding of her predicament. But MCI officials are much less understanding toward students who use illegal access codes and send astronomical bills to people like Ambler.
"We want to let the students know that there are no free lunches, and there are no free phone calls," said William J. MchHale, MCI Southwest division director of public relations in St. Louis.
MCI officials today will begin conducting a two-week investigation in Lawrence, allowing KU students who have abused the phone service to come forward, identify and pay for calls they have placed illegally. Students who know of phone abuse also are encouraged to contact investigators.
Some prosecutions now are pending at North Texas State University in Denton, Texas, and American University in Washington, D.C. McHale said more than 1,000 students came forward at Texas and some fewer than that at American University.
Students who do not come forward to make restitution during the investigation will be turned over to local police if they are identified. McHale said.
"There is usually evidence for prosecution and in some cases conviction," McHale said. "We consider this a very serious matter."
McHale explained that college campuses provided a perfect oop-
McHale said the long distance service industry was concerned about the frauds because the illegal use of access codes have cost the industry more than $500 million. Those losses are transferred to the consumer.
The team of investigators will conduct interviews in room 222 of All Seasons Motel, 2309 Iowa St. The room will be open from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m. today through Friday and from April 13 to 16.
1
Lt. Jeanne Longaker, of the KU police, said police learned of the investigation last week, but would report to MCI investigators called them in.
She said MCI already had traced phone calls to a specific number in Lewis Hall where there were 85 attempts to use an illegal phone code. She said she was sure other phones would be targeted for investigation of abuse as well.
unity for the abuse of long distance service.
"Someone gets abold of a code and they give it to a friend and they give it to another friend, and pretty soon it's all over campus," McHale said.
"They felt it was at least one student, and they felt reasonably sure it was more than one." she said.
Mhale said that MCI officials would work with the local telephone company, Southwestern Bell Telephone.
The abuse of long distance codes is considered a theft of telecommunications services by Kansas law. A first offense would be classified as a Class A misdemeanor, punishable by up to one year in the county jail and up to a $2,500 fine upon conviction.
I
2
Monday, April 6, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Around the World Shiite Muslims, Palestinians agree to Syrian-backed truce
BEIRUT — Shite Muslims and Palestinians agreed yesterday to a Syrian-sponsored truce in the nearly two-year-old fight for control of Palestinian refugee camps in Beirut and southern Lebanon.
The cause-fire was to begin at 8 a.m. today, the warring factions said in a joint statement.
The Shite Amal Miltia also agreed to end its nearly five-month blockade of two Palestinians in the West Beirut, the statement said.
The statement was issued after a meeting between the two sides under the auspices of Brig. Gen. Ghazi Kenann, Syria's chief of military intelligence in Lebanon.
The meeting was attended by representatives of Aral and the Palestine National Salvation Front, a coalition of six pro-Syrian Palestinian guerrilla factions.
There was no indication that the truce would be more successful than a succession of other ceasefire accords proclaimed since the so-called camp wars began in May 1985.
A spokesman for the coalition said the Palestine Liberation Organization would not contest the agreement, even though PLO chairman Yasser Arafat and his Fatah faction were not repre-
Soldiers arrest armed man near Aquino
MANILA, Philippines — Soldiers yesterday arrested a suspected communist death-squad member, armed with a pistol and a hand grenade, about 50 yards from a stage when President Corazon Aquino sat at an election rally.
Neither Aquino nor members of her staff were notified immediately of the arrest, which took place in Tacloban, 360 miles southeast of Manila, a military spokesman said.
It was not known whether the suspect, Doming Maray, who was being held at a provincial police station, had been attack Aquino, the spokesman said.
Soldiers arrested Maray about 50 yards from where Aquino sat
with the administration's candidates for the country's upcoming congressional elections, the spokesman said.
Police arrested Maray, in his late 40s, because they recognized him as a suspect in the killing of a paramilitary agent last month. The man was armed with a .45-caliber pistol and a hand grenade, the spokesman said.
The spokesman said the suspect allegedly was a member of a "sparrow unit," the popular name for communist death squads known for rapid attacks. Maray is known as a leading member of the Communist New People's Army in the area, the spokesman said.
Pope defends workers' rights on Chile tour
CONCEPCION, Chile — Miners in yellow helmets cheered Pope John Paul II yesterday as he defended workers' rights at an outdoor Mass for 450,000 people. Security was tight to prevent renewed anti-government violence that has marked the pontiff's visit to Chile.
There was no trouble during the Mass, but after the pope left, many in the crowd booed and jeered at them. The priest had to prevent any demonstrations.
The pope then traveled to the agricultural town of Temuco to meet with descendants of the
Mapuche Indians who fought off Spanish conquerors and their Roman Catholic priests for nearly 300 years.
Speaking from a podium decorated with native designs, the pope urged big landowners to give landless peasants a "better future with progressive access to land."
John Paul later flew to the Pacific Coast desert city of La Serena where he met with 70,000 people, many of them miners and gold prospectors from the nearby mountains, who put on a show of religious folk dances.
Across the Country
Reagan opens 24-hour summit in Canada
OTTWA, Ontario — President Reagan opened yesterday a 24-hour summit with Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney. Reagan said that U.S.-Canadian relations were "an example of peace and harmony to the all-too-troubled world."
come and a 21-gun salute when he arrived in Canada.
With trade tensions and acid rain at the top of the agenda, Reagan received a red carpet wel-
Reagan praised the cross-border relationship, which has been plagued in recent months by political and economic problems.
On Parliament Hill in downtown Ottawa, 1.500 sign-carrying and slogan-chanting demonstrators protested U.S. inaction on acid rain and intervention in Central America.
For Reagan, politically wounded by the Iran-contra scandal, the trip was his first out of the country since the controversy broke in November and was an opportunity to portray him as an active president engaged in state affairs.
Part of New York Thruway bridge collapses
FONDA, N.Y. — A 200-foot section of a bridge on the New York Thruway collapsed yesterday and witnesses said as many as four vehicles plunged 80 feet into a rain-flooded creek below, officials said. The bridge apparently had been washed out by the swift current
There was no immediate word on any casualties, but one state trooper said surviving such an accident "would be very, very remote." Arthur D'Isabel, a spokesman for the Thruway Authority, added. "It's as bad as you can imagine."
From Kansan wires
Weather
From the KANSAN Weather Service
LAWRENCE FORECAST
Today, sunny skies and mild temperatures continue as the high reaches 58 degrees with 1-5 mph winds from the west. Tonight, some clouds will return, with a low near 40 degrees. Tomorrow should be the same as today
with a nigh in the low bows.
EXTENDED FORECAST
DES MOINES
56 / 40
OMAHA
57 / 37
LINCOLN
55 / 37
CONCORDIA
56 / 38
SALINA
60 / 38
TOPEKA
59 / 37
KANSAS
CITY
57 / 39
COLUMBIA
56 / 41
ST. LOUIS
55 / 41
WICHITA
61 / 37
CHANUTE
58 / 38
SPRINGFIELD
56 / 38
TULSA
63 / 39
sunny partly cloudy partly cloudy
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Campus and Area
University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 6, 1987
3
Local Briefs
Student hurt in collision of car, motorcycle
A KU student was injured Friday when he was thrown from his motorcycle after striking a car turning in front of him, Lawrence police said yesterday.
The student, Henry A. Driskill,
Lawrence junior, was treated at
Lawrence Memorial Hospital but
not admitted, a nursing supervisor
at the hospital said.
Driskill told police that he had been riding his 1985 Honda motorcycle southbound in the left lane of Tennessee Street, which is one-way, when a car in the right lane of Tennessee Street turned left in front of him onto 11th Street.
Driskill struck the left front side of the car, he said.
Marjorie A. Burns, Bonner Marriage, was driving the car, a 1977 four-door Chevrolet. She told police that she had turned left onto the road from the right lane because she hadn't seen a vehicle next to her.
Driskill was the only person injured in the accident.
Lawrence police cited Burns for an improper left turn from the wrong lane and Driskill for not having a class D license, needed to operate a motorcycle.
Scientist to speak on Darwin, history
Steven Jay Gould, a writer and natural scientist, will speak at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union
Gould's speech is titled "Charles Darwin and the Science of History. The speech is part of the series 'Contemporary Thinking' in a collection sored by the KU Committee on the History and Philosophy of Science.
Gould has made important and sometimes controversial contributions to scholarship and theory in the natural sciences.
He has published many widely read books on popular science, such as "Ever Since Darwin," "The Flamingo's Smile," "The Panda's Toe" and "The Mismeasures of Man."
The speech coincides with the publication of his latest book, "Time's Arrow, Time's Cycle: Myth and Metaphor in the Discovery of Geological Time."
Gould is a professor of geology and zoology at Harvard University. He also is a curator of invertebrate paleontology at Harvard's Museum of Comparative Zoology.
Positions named;
fall jobs available
The Kansan Board last week named John Benner, Lawrence senior, as summer editor of the Kansan and Lisa Weems, Lenexa senior, as summer business manager.
Benner now is a columnist for the Kansan, and Weems is the spring business manager.
Applications for fall editor and business manager are available in 119 and 200 Staffer-Flint Hall. The deadline is 5 p.m. tomorrow. Candidates will be interviewed Wednesday by the Kansan Board.
Correction
Because of a reporter's error, John Wells' name was incorrect in a story in Thursday's Kansan. In the movie "Nice Girls Don't Explode."
From staff and wire reports.
Danny Ray/KANSAN
Kevin King, left, and Dan Divine, members of the Iowa State Navy ROTC, compete in a pistol team contest. Iowa State took first in the pistol team and won the overall drill contest in the 20th annual NROTC Big Eight Competition, which took place Saturday in Hoch Auditorium and the Military Science Building.
Navy ROTC drills for perfection
By KJERSTI MOEN
Staff writer
As an officer shouted drill commands, 50 Navy ROTC midshipmen moved with staccato precision. But they were not training; they were competing.
They were participating in the individual drill knockdown competition, part of the Navy Reserve Officer Training Corps' 20th annual Big Eight Drill Competition KU's NROTC unit sponsored the event Saturday in Hoch Auditorium.
About 10 people, mostly participants' family and friends, watched the midshipmen perform the drill exercises.
"Attention! Present arms! Left shoulder arms!"
About 170 NROTC students from Iowa State University and from the universities of Missouri, Colorado, Nebraska, Kansas and Oklahoma demonstrated their skills in shooting, drill and general military knowledge.
Fifty students in navy uniforms, with alertness and deep concentration showing on their faces, executed drill commands as five judges moved along their street lines, keenly watching each student for one little slip-up, one foot out of one line, of the hand at an incorrect angle
Paula Bloom, Wilmette, Ill., junior, hung in there for a while, until she made a mistake and was told to walk out.
Lisa Bull, an Iowa State University sophomore, made it perfect and won the individual drill competition. James Madril, Lawrence sophomore, left the floor just before Bull, and took second place. Jon Berg, a University of Nebraska sophomore, won third place.
"You're always thinking, 'What's going to happen next?'" she said. "It's kind of nerve-racking when you want to make it perfect, not to get kicked out."
He said that attention to detail was the most important skill required to win the competition. Participants must have their feet on line and their heels together. They must execute the correct phase of the movement at the right time with soap and pen, he said.
Staff Sergeant Otis Jones of the ninth Marine Corps district headquarters in Shawnee Mission, watched the students as he shouted commands.
Those skills also were important
in other drill categories. From 8 a.m to 3 p.m., students also competed in squad drill, platoon drill, exhibition squad drill and exhibition platoon drill.
In the basement of the Military Science building, teams of five gave their best shot at the pistol and rifle team competitions.
Daniel Caballero, a University of Oklahoma platoon commander, said his team had practiced drill twice a day for two weeks before the competition, often as early as 6 a.m. Whenever they were together, for example while shining shoes or cleaning weapons, team members quizzed each other on military knowledge, he said.
Staff Sergeant Charles Roelens, adviser for the KU NROTC rifle and pistol teams, said the idea behind the competition was to promote discipline and team work.
"The students get to prove that they are able to form as a team, work together as a team," he said.
Iowa State University won two of the Big Eight cup trophies. One was for overall drill performance, the other for the pistol team competition.
The University of Colorado won a trophy for the rifle team competition.
Course Source available at Watson
Special to the Kansan
Rv MICHAFI MERSCHFI
The director of the Jayhawk Course Source hasn't been concentrating on just this semester's edition of a guide to courses at the University of Kansas.
"We've tried to build a foundation for the future," said Missy Kleinholz, Course Source director and Topeka junior.
"You can't just wave your magic wand and establish something like this at the University," she said. "It takes time to build them."
That philosophy helps explain why the 27-page course guide, copies of which were scheduled to be available yesterday at Watson Library, hasn't come out until the final days of pre-enrollment advising, and why it includes only 37 classes. The course guide was originally scheduled to be available at the beginning of last week.
tests and term papers, and others describe only how final grades are based.
The new Course Source lists class descriptions ranging from a paragraph to a page. Some describe texts.
To save printing costs, Kleinholz requested information only from professors teaching classes in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences with more than 50 students total in all sections, eliminating many smaller, upper-level classes.
"You have to walk a line between what would be best and what you can get."
Only professors in the college were asked for class descriptions for this edition, Kleinholz said, because the university has the biggest school at the University.
The information in the guide came from professors' syllabuses.
"The faculty criticism last time was that there wasn't enough about the course, about the philosophy of how they teach," Kleinholz said.
But despite attempts to make things easier for them, fewer than 40 of the 600 professors written to replied. Kleinholz said part of the problem was budget cuts.
"You want to serve as many students as possible for your student debt as well." Kogelkha's quote.
The guide, which is financed by Student Senate, came out last fall for the first time. Senate gave $13,500 to the guide for this academic year. As of last month, about $8,000 was left in the Course Source operating budget, Kleinholz said. The Senate Finance Committee has approved $8,588 for the 1987-88 guides.
Eric Young, Columbia, Ill., senior said he didn't think the Course Source would help him.
"I don't choose my classes by whether or not I have to write a term paper," he said. "Besides, there are other books that be 'here' where that's not in the catalog."
But Kent Oberheur, St. Louis freshman, was more impressed, and said he would use the information on his studies to help decide his fall schedule.
"I really like this. I wish I would have had it last semester," Oberheu said.
Residents, not city should initiate mall choices, group says
By JOSEPH REBELLO
Staff writer
Lawrence residents have for too long been in a position of reacting to city commission decisions on the downtown mall, instead of initiating those decisions, a group of KU professors said Saturday.
图示
The Mall Debate
Much of the discussion on a downtown mall so far has centered on what citizens don't want, and that has led to a lack of consensus between the commission and the people, said Burdett Loomis, associate professor of political science.
Loomis spoke to about 75 people at meeting at Liberty Hall organized by the Center for Women's Studies.
"The vision of politics and development in this town is so lacking, it takes your breath away," Loomis insinuosness just hasn't been there."
As a result, it has been possible for mall developers to have proposals accepted without respect to the needs of the community, he said.
Darwin Daicoff, professor of economics, said, "He builds the building, he leases the thing and he's gone. He's back in Ohio. That's his ecom-function. What does he care if one of you guys are out of business?"
The mall would drain away one quarter to one-third of the existing business of downtown merchants, he said.
Dateoff said a feasibility study conducted by the city's mall developer of record, Jacobs, Visconsi & Jacobs of Cleveland, exaggerated the trade benefits the mall would bring.
According to the study, the anticipated trade area for the mall would extend from Winchester in the north to Ottawa in the south, and from DeSoto in the east to just outside Topeca in the west. Daicoff said
What they're saying is that someone who lives just north of Ottawa will come to Lawrence and that someone living outside Topeka is going to shop in Lawrence." Daicoff said.
The developer's study indicated that building the mall would increase trade by 37 percent. But a study done for the city by a consulting firm years ago indicated that the increase would be only 18 percent, he said.
Daicoff said there was no justification for building a mall as large as what the developers propose. The proposed 365,000-square-foot mall in the 600 block of downtown is twice as large as the market justifies, Daicoff said.
"If you make the market area big enough, you can justify anything."
After the meeting, Gladys Cummings, Lawrence resident, said, "It demonstrates that the developers are aware of the benefit from a pall of this kind."
Carl Crandall, Lawrence resident,
said, "It's taken until it's time for a vote for people to say, 'Hey, wait a
bit.' But it’s never too late to do something.
Tuesday, Lawrence residents will vote on three advisory questions concerning the proposed mall.
"It's time to establish a plan of attack, to establish what we do want, instead of what we don't want. I'd like to see more of these meetings," Crandell said.
Outside Liberty Hall after the meeting, about seven people not connected with CBD also protested the mall.
The group, led by Lawrence resident Dee Tolar, held placards showing a Godzilla-like attack destroying Lawrence. On the creature's chest were the letters JVJ. "Don't feed the beast," the sign said.
Tolar said, "I think people can see developers are trying to manipulate our vote with their thousands of dollars, with their huge ads. I don't think the people of Lawrence are so stupid that they can be bought off."
Staff writer
Death penalty bill fails
By JOHN BUZBEE
Morals, not politics, caused the state Senate to reject the death penalty Friday, Lawrence legislators said.
Six state senators reversed their 1983 stand on capital punishment and voted against the bill, which was defeated 18-22 in a substantial setback for Gov. Mike Hayden. Hayden had strongly supported capital punishment in his campaign for governor last year.
But State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, who opposed the bill, said the vote transcended the political arena.
"Friday, April third, was a time when the moral and intellectual honesty of senators won out over politically insignificant members of the wonderful day in the life of Kangas."
Senators who voted for capital punishment in 1985 but against it this session were Ross Doyen, R-Concaria; Robert Frey, R-Liberal; Frank Gaines, D-Augusta; Richard Gannon, D-Goodland; Phil Martin, D-Pittsburg; and John Strick Jr., D-Kansas City.
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said, "I think it took a great deal of courage for the six students who changed their votes to do so."
Solbach opposed the death penalty
State Reps. Jessie Branson and Betty Jo Charlton, Lawrence Democrats, both voted against the death penalty. Branson said the cost of the death penalty into practice was one reason the Senate defeated it.
"it just not as cut and dried and tired as it sounds to have a death penalty."
think that most voters want people who are tough-minded and intelligent.
The bill was stalled in the Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee, which eventually passed it on to the Senate with no recommendation. Branson said that delay also helped to defeat the bill.
"It did allow time for members of
the Senate to do some soul-search
thru."
Senate President Robert Taklington, R-Iola, said the death penalty would not be brought to the Senate because it was seen as a measure of enough people changed their votes.
The Associated Press supplied some information for this story.
LEADING 2015
Winter said that since former Gov. John Carlin had promised to veto the death penalty in past years, senators who opposed it could vote for it and yet know it wouldn't become law. Polls have indicated that most Kansas voters support the death penalty.
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4
Monday, April 6, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Senate in Synchronicity
In the past term, it seemed as though the Student Senate had moved decidedly away from the adjective which describes it, the students. Attractive promises that were made were forgotten completely, money was spent foolishly and, at times, it was difficult to determine whether student leaders were working for the students or for themselves.
But with the upcoming Student Senate elections, the students have the opportunity to elect leaders who will try to bring back responsible campus government, the kind of leadership and government that WILL work for the benefit of the students. These leaders are Phil Duff and Glenn Shirtliffe, presidential and vice presidential candidates for the Synchronicity coalition.
Synchronicity has presented a sound and workable platform focused on the welfare of the students. Its goals are not "flashy, vote-getting" ones. They have not chosen goals that sound attractive to the students, yet are financially irresponsible, impractical and probably never will be allowed to be instituted at the University.
Instead, the platform Synchronicity has chosen to run on is made up of issues that have been thought out carefully and intelligently. They are issues that can be accomplished or that can get a good foundation in the coming year, so that they will be instituted in the future.
The main plank in Synchronicity's platform is a change in the structure of Student Senate. The two leaders, both long-time members of the Senate, are concerned about the unproductivity and infighting that take place at the meetings. This attitude problem, which consistently is ignored, is what prevents ideas and programs from
being implemented. A cohesive Senate, which knows who it is working for, is a must before changing and enacting programs, and Synchronicity is willing to work for that type of Senate.
The coalition also plans to take an intelligent approach to the never-ending parking problem. Where other coalitions in the past merely have mentioned the subject and decided that it was too hard to tackle, Synchronicity plans to do more than just talk. Duff, presently a member of the parking board, knows how to approach the organization and make changes in an effective way.
The group also wants to put blue phones in areas of campus where lighting is poor; raise the issue of safe sex and discuss how to combat sexually transmitted diseases; lobby the legislature to keep out-of-state tuition at a reasonable level; make improvements on Course Source; set up a judicial branch of Senate and divide campus organizations into two groups, athletic and academic, to help simplify the financing of these clubs and organizations.
These goals make up the most sensible and responsible of the platforms in the coming election. And when voting, students need to keep this in mind Yes, the "flashy" issues look great, but are they really attainable? Do they benefit all, or at least many, of the students? Are the leaders of the coalitions sincere, or are they looking for something to add to their resumes?
Many people think student government is a joke, and it is because people don't care enough to change it. They think they can't change it. But they can. Before going to vote, think the issues through. Vote for a student government that will work for you. Synchronicity is that group.
Playing Russian roulette
They might just as well point a gun to their heads and hope it isn't loaded.
Many drivers routinely ignore the issue of railroad safety. They go through crossings without bothering to slow down or look both ways. They try to race trains, either for excitement or to save time. Some even drive around railroad crossing gates.
Sound extreme? Not when you think about the many needless deaths each year from car-train collisions. But the collisions, the deaths, the pure waste will continue until drivers take railroad safety seriously.
Traffic signals can help remind drivers to be more careful and Douglas County is to be commended for its plan to erect signals at four crossings, including the crossing where four KU students were
killed March 27. But with more than 8,000 railroad crossings in Kansas alone, it would be fiscally impossible to put signals at each crossing.
Drivers need to remember to slow down or stop before a crossing and check for trains. If a train is in sight, they must remember that, especially in sparsely populated areas, it may be traveling as fast as 70 mph. Finally, people should take for granted the fact that even if a train's engineer sees something in the way, most likely there will not be enough time for the train to stop.
If this most recent tragedy teaches anything, it is that railroad crossings can be dangerous if drivers don't take the appropriate precautions. Whatever the excuse, excitement, forgetfulness or haste, it just isn't worth it.
News staff
News staff
Frank Hansel . Editor
Jennifer Benjamin . Managing editor
Juli Warren . News editor
Brian Kaberline . Editorial editor
Sandra Engelland . Campus editor
Mark Siebert . Sports editor
Diane Bulmeier . Photo editor
Bill Skeet . Graphics editor
Tom Eblen . General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Lisa Weems . Business manager
Bonnie Hardy . Ad director
Dennis Stephens . Retail sales manager
Kelly Scherer . Campus sales manager
Duncan Calhoun . Marketing manager
Lori Coppel . Classified manager
William Mannski . Production manager
David Nixon . National sales manager
Jeanne Hines . 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
Opinions
IMF's policies have harmed debtor nations.
Treasury Secretary James Baker said at the annual meeting of the IMF and the World Bank in 1985 that austerity measures alone would be self-defeating in the long run. Baker emphasized that debt crisis could be resolved through "sustained growth by the debtor countries."
The Kansan reserves the right reject or edit letters and guest shots They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Staffer-Flint Hall.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer Fhall Hlaw, Kaness, Kan 60045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and on Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage paid in Lawrence, Kan 60044. Subscriptions by mail are $40 per year in Douglas County and $50 per county. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid the student activity fees.
POSTMASTER Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118
Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045
Finding a cure for an economic disease
In the early 1980s, the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank were lending money to Latin American countries, but in trying to help them develop, the two institutions began to face a critical economic situation in that region.
Carlos Chuquin Columnist
In the past eight months, two heavy blows have been dealt to Latin America that further have worsened its economy and also raised the question of whether Latin America ever will be able to pay its foreign debt.
M. RUSSELL
Two years ago, Alan Garcia, president of Peru, announced that his country would pay its foreign debt, but in a manner consistent with the economic growth of the country. Garcia added that Peru would pay
Baker's plan prescribed programs of economic reforms and structural adjustments for the debtor countries. This would mean a greater reliance on international credit, state subsidies and price controls, measures to stimulate both foreign and domestic investment and export promotion and trade liberalization.
only 10 percent of the country's export earnings.
But the biggest blow came in August 1986. After Garcia rejected an IMF ultimatum to pay a higher percentage of Peru's export earnings, the country became inelegible to receive future loans. This decision was the kiss of death in the international financial community.
In past years, the IMF had interfered in Peruvian economic affairs. As a result, Peruvians have been hostile toward the IMF's austere measures that had deteriorated its economy and imposed extreme hardships on the poor. However, García but a stop to the IMF interference.
Six months later, Jose Sarney, president of Brazil announced that his country indefinitely was suspend the trade debt to foreign commercial banks
In the past two years, Brazil was becoming the economic star performer of Latin America with Sarney's anti-inflation program, the "Cruzado Plan." Today, Sarney is searching
for "a definitive and lasting solution" to Brazil's debt problems in negotiations with creditor banks. Brazil has a foreign debt of $108 billion.
But the IMF also is responsible for the Latin America foreign debt. In the past years, the IMF's policies on collecting from troubled debtor nations were centered in economical austerity measures and the constant devaluation of the country's currency. Also, the IMF is following a narrow, free-market approach to external imbalances in trade.
These two catastrophic events have alarmed the international financial community and have raised the question of whether the two countries ever would repay their debts in full.
The IMF is indifferent to the social and political consequences of its so-called stabilization programs. Most of the IMF programs hardly can avoid politics. National strikes, riots, upheavals and social unrest have been attributed directly to the implementation of austerity measures advocated by the IMF. Definitely,
Whether the Baker plan will have any positive effect in Latin America remains to be seen. Today, Latin America is desperately seeking a better way to battle its disease: foreign debt. A change in either the IMF's or the World Bank's policy could be the best medicine to fight the disease.
Many thanks to Bakkers
Dear Jim and Tammy Bakker, Thank you.
You know, it's amazing. Just when I thought I had run out of column ideas, just when I was at my lowest, just when I began to think that no one in the public eye would ever again do something embarrassing and ridiculous., the two of you came along and restored my faith.
PETER BROWN
Bob Hart Columnist
I must admit that I was surprised. You two really had me going with that evangelist of yours. But then, I fell for Oral Roberts, too.
Tammy, you are the stuff that television movies are made of. Can't you just see it? "She sang for the Lord by day. At night she lived her own private Hell — Angie Dickinson in 'Amphetamines and Mascara: The Tammy Bakker Story.'"
Now. I'm not making fun of drug
therapy in a very serious and very
serious context I glue it on.
But Tammy, we're talking about 17 years here. And for a good part of those years, I listened to you preach about a lifestyle that definitely did not include popping pills by the handful.
OK, so I wasn't a regular viewer. But on those nights when I couldn't sleep and happened to flip on the television at three in the morning, there you were. I always wondered why you were so much makeup, but it never occurred to me that we cover up drug-induced bags under the eyes.
And Jim! Shame on you. A good husband might have noticed, just once in those 17 years, that his wife had become a walking chemical substance. But not you, Jim. You were too busy making nice-nice with secretaries and telling me what a sinner I was. To quote Gomer Pyle, "Shame, shame, shame."
Well, guys, you're in a real pickle now, and I hope you've learned your lesson. But I did want to write and offer my thanks. The next time you and the other evangelists get together for a barbecue or an orgy or whatever it is you folks do, please tell Jimmy and the rest of the gang that I'm counting on their cooperation, too. I'll have to write another column soon.
Mailbox
Getting all the facts
Since KU's homosexual practitioners are so intent on making us "aware" of their presence, here are a few facts that they should be made aware of:
1) God has declared in His Word that unnatural sex drives and practices are a sign of judgment He forgives His disciples by taking His victory (Romans 1:37-27).
2) God plainly has stated that people who practice homosexuality will not inherit His kingdom (1 Corinthians 6:9, 10).
3) True Christians will continue to believe and confess these truths irrespective of opposition from those with differing viewpoints.
4) God has provided a way of escape from homosexuality and all other sins through repentance and forgiveness. 5) Jesus Christ (Romans 3:21-24).
Joe Vusich Lawrence resident
Note the difference
The gay and lesbian community would like for you to believe that Thursday's "Wear Blue Jeans if You're Gay" day proves that they are no different from anyone else. Under their logic, some heterosexuals will "forget" and wear jeans, which means that both groups will be in jeans and nobody really can tell which is which. On the contrary, the differences lie in sexual preferences and not in the clothing preferences.
Only a "Sleep With a Heterosexual if You're Gay" day would come close to shedding doubt on those differences. In addition, I wore jeans Thursday not because I "forget," but because I refuse to let the activities of a minority group govern the style of dress of the entire campus.
The very fact that the gay community needs to designate an entire week to express its feelings is indicative of our differences. The observation that both groups wear similar clothing does not dispel those differences. Why are they so adamant in proving their similarity, anyway? I doubt if many heterosexuals would claim that homosexuals are just like them on the basis that the gay community could "forget" and
wear khakis on "Wear Khakis if You're Straight" day. Who is kidding who?
Darin McAtee Great Bend junior
Coverage a letdown
Hey! What happened? National Orgasm Week was newsworthy enough for the front page, too bad it arrived four days later. Is this the responsible journalism that the University of Kansas is known for? We feel we have been cheated out of more than a billion celebrations! Can we catch up? Or get an extension? Next year, let us know in advance. Everyone mark your calendars and get your fair share.
Peggy Gayler Lawrence resident
Mark Tallent Hiawatha senior
Rhonda Smith Lawrence resident
Jim Strobl
Jim Strobl Lawrence resident
Tom Moran
Overland Park freshman
Mike Chapman Lawrence resident
Re-evaluate view
In reference to the Crimson Girls article Wednesday. We would like to propose a question to Barb Heck. Have you ever visited a high school basketball game? Those adolescent females enjoy high school involvement by playing, they don't incorporate the same 'dance moves' in their routine, as our own Crimson Girls.
Mrs. Heck, we also question whether you really would enjoy changing the Crimson Girls' program. You seem to be in the minority because "the men in the stands enjoy the 'burning and grind.'"
May we suggest that if you truly are offended, that you leave during that segment of halftime and return when they have finished their performance. These girls are getting involved with the University, while doing something they enjoy and presenting themselves in a ladylike manner, not as "barmaids." The Crimson Girls took fifth place out of 75 teams competing at Nationals using the same routine that they performed at halftime. Obviously, the judges were not offended!
Mrs. Heck, everyone is entitled to their opinion. This is guaranteed to us in the Constitution. We would encourage you to re-examine your opinion of the Crimson Girls because as we previously have stated, the majority of the people enjoy their performance, and the girls enjoy performing and demonstrating their talents as dancers.
Andv Solem
Andy Solem
Lincolnshire, ill. sophomore
Joey Jurden
Kansas City, Mo. sophomore
katz
Unqualified remark
Who is Barb Heck? A Lawrence resident and KU alumna? It doesn't seem to me that she is really qualified to dictate to the Crimson Girls what to wear or how to dance. And more Lawrence residents are going to form a panel to judge the appropriateness of the group's attire. As Lawrence residents, they really have no say about a campus group. As KU alumni, well those are the same people who complained last year about students standing up and showing some spirit at basketball games.
As some of the girls said in the article Wednesday, many national squads wear unitards, and they adopted their movements from those taught at a national cheerleading competition. If they can place fifth out of 7 squades in the competition, they must be doing something right. Obviously, they know more about dancing and performing than most of the rest of us. So WHAT'S THE BIG DEAL?! If Barb Heck can do better, let her be a Crimson Girl. If not, she should leave the Crimson Girls alone.
Maggie Stenz Wichita senior
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}
University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 6, 1987
5
SOCIAL REFORMATION
Deanell Tacha, a judge for the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, speaks to KU students and faculty about the U.S. Constitution. Tacha spoke to about 45 people Saturday morning in Green Hall to kick off the Jefferson Meeting on the Constitution at the School of Law.
Separation of powers remains important for U.S., Tacha says
By CAROLINE REDDICK
Staff writer
The first test of the U.S. Constitution's separation of powers occurred in 1792, when Congress investigated the executive branch after Indians defeated Gen. Arthur St. Clair in the Northwest Territory. Deanell Tacha said Saturday.
And the issue remains as vital to U.S. society today as it was in 1792, said Tacha, a judge for the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
"If I were to read it today, you'd think it happened six months ago," she said, referring to Congress' attempts to investigate the Iran-raaf affair.
Tacha spoke at KU on Saturday morning on "The Constitution; Weighing in the Balance or Blowing in the Wind?"
Her speech opened the Jefferson Meeting on the Constitution, an
all-day program at the School of Law to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the adoption of the Constitution. About 45 people attended the program.
"The genius of the framers of the Constitution is reflected in part in their conception of the three unique and separate branches of government and its system of checks and balances." Tchaa said.
"Only when all three operate co-equally, serving as checks upon and balancing each other, will the people truly be sovereign as intended by the delegates to the 1782 convention."
Tacha, a 1968 KU graduate, was KU's vice chancellor for academic affairs when President Reagan nominated her in 1984 as a circuit court judge.
Tony Arnold, Wichita senior organized the Jefferson meeting.
"I think the Jefferson meeting was intended to get people — students, faculty, staff, people in the community — involved in, thinking about, discussing and debating some of the lasting issues about our Constitution." Arnold said.
Four sessions on different aspects of the U.S. government also were on the program's agenda.
Andrea Richard, Laramie, Wyo., junior in political science, attended the meeting.
"I learned a lot," Richard said. "It was really well organized and I think beneficial to everyone. It speaks well for the University to have some celebration and discussion on the Constitution. It was really enlightening."
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Local leaders finish program
Bv PEGGY O'RRIEN
In October, 16 Lawrence leaders started school. Friday night they graduated.
Staff writer
As students they met once a month for seven months. Their course of study included sessions on "Where we are now, Lawrence, 1986." We have also learned to "The Livability of Lawrence" and "The Future of Lawrence."
Their school was called Leadership Lawrence, designed to develop and motivate Lawrence leaders. The program established the program in 1982.
"The purpose is to identify potential leaders in the community," said Debi Moore, administrative assistant for Leadership Lawrence.
"I hopefully, these people will not only run for office, but be involved in non-profit organizations," Moore said.
Lawrence state senator, with the Don Volker Leadership Award.
At the graduation ceremonies for the class of 1987 Friday night at the Adams Alumni Center, the class honored Arden Booth, former
The award was established by the 1983 Leadership Lawrence class in the memory of Volker, a Lawrence resident who was the force behind development of the program. Volker served as the first chairman of Leadership Lawrence until his death in 1982.
Booth, 75, started KLWN-AM 1320 in Lawrence in 1951. He has a farm south of Lawrence and is still an active cattleman. Booth has been on the board of directors for many organizations, including the Agriculture Hall of Fame, the Salvation Army and the Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center.
Mayor Sandra Praeger graduated from the Leadership Lawrence program in 1984, before she ran for city commissioner.
Praeger said she thought the program allowed members to gain knowledge about other parts of the community they might not otherwise get.
Praeger said the program was a learning experience. The class members, who were selected by the Leadership Lawrence Board of Directors, must make a commitment to be because attendance is essential.
Praeger said city and county commissioners used the list of people who had gone through the program to determine commitments to boards and committees.
Three of the 1987 class members are from KU. They are Robbi Ferron, director of the office of affirmative action; Phil McKnight, associate professor of curriculum and instruction; and Susanne Shaw, associate professor of journalism.
The program focuses on all aspects of the city with stress on individual responsibility for participation and leadership at the local level.
Members were sought by the board of directors or nominated by colleagues who wanted them to become more involved in the city. Their occupations ranged from business owner and manager to homemaker and dentist.
Ads not in violation, ruling says
By TODD COHEN
Staff writer
Political ads bought by the developer of a proposed downtown Lawrence mall do not violate state law as was charged by a mall opponent. Jim Flory, the Douglas County district attorney, made the ruling Friday.
The mall opponent, Tim Miller, charged on Thursday that the developer, Jacobs, Visconsi & Jacobs of Cleveland, violated a state law that required political ads to be identified as such and to list the person or group that purchased the ad. The ad also must list a group's chairman.
The ads, which appeared in
literature as political and used
literally as political and used
and its mall development partner. Town Center Venture Corp., but not a company officer.
In a letter to Miller, Flory quoted a state law that said, "‘ person’ means any individual, committee, corporal or app. trust, organization or association."
Flory wrote that "a corporation, unlike a political organization or association, is a legal entity with identifiable officers and directors. For the foregoing reason I do not believe prosecution is warranted.
"This issue has not been subject to judicial interpretation. In that regard I have been informed that such advertising will in the future contain the name of an individual officer or director of the corporation
which will more than comply with the spirit and letter of the law."
JVJ ads in yesterday's Lawrence Daily Journal-World included the name of JVJ's vice president, Don Jones.
Netter JVJ officials nor Miller could be reached for comment.
On Friday, Flory said, "The purpose of the law is that anyone who runs a political aid is identifiable. A corporation is identifiable."
Miller, a lecturer in religious studies who publishes The Plumber's Friend, a monthly newsletter that has been critical of the mail, has said, "In none of the ads does the name of any responsible individual appear."
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Are you graduating in Spring '87, Summer '87, and/or know someone who is a Fall '86 graduate? The Office of Minority Affairs is having its annual "Minority Graduation Luncheon" to honor graduating students, on Saturday, May 16, from 2 to 4 p.m. in the Kansas Room, Kansas Union. Tickets can be picked up FREE of charge for graduates in 324 Strong Hall by May 1. Parents and guests can attend for $10 each.
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6
Monday, April 6, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
A drawing of a table with two tall, skinny figures sitting at the table. One figure has a knife on its hand, and the other figure is holding a spoon. The room is decorated with a piano, a chair, and a window showing a nighttime cityscape.
In the early days, living in their squail apartment, all three shared dreams of success. In the end, however, Bob the Spoon and Ernie the Fork wound up in an old silverware drawer and only Mac went on to fame and fortune.
Intramural Softball Tournament
23
Mens & Womens Co-Rec
April 11 & 12 April 25 & 26
16 Team Limit Entry Forms in 208 Robinson
RECREATION
SERVICES
1-913-864-3546
Accident
tion today or tomorrow.
Continued from p.1
Jack Richardson, the chief enforcement officer for the state Alcohol Beverage Control division, said that the ABC was ready to assist in the investigation if Flory requested it, but that no request had yet been made.
Charles Wheeler, KU Interfraternity Council president, said no one had contacted the council about Flory's investigation.
"A lot of houses are incorporating liquor rules," he said. "It's kind of a trend
Wheeler said the council did not provide fraternities with guidelines for allowing liquor at parties or in fraternity houses. Such guidelines are the responsibility of the fraternities' national organizations, he said.
"But regardless of how strict the rules you propose are, you can prohibit liqor from being in the house. I mean, you can make up all kind of rules and regs, but there are always going to be people who try to break the rules and people who make mistakes, and that's where it gets bad."
Trent Wagner, Phi Gamma Delta historian, said he did not know whether the four students had been drinking at the party.
He said the fraternity had canceled a party it had scheduled for Friday with the Sigma Chi fraternity.
He said one accident witness who had changed his statement had explained the change to Hall's satisfaction.
"People were not in the mood for having fun. Everyone is still kind of down." he said.
Meanwhile. Hall said the highway patrol was finished with its investigation.
The witness had been driving a car northbound on highway 24-59 when the accident occurred. He first told police that a car passed him at 70 mph about a mile south of the train crossing, turned left onto the county road, drove onto the tracks and was struck by the train.
Hall said the witness later said the car he had seen was not the same car involved in the fatal wreck.
The witness, who asked not to be identified, said last week that the car that passed him on the highway was a blue 1968 or '69 Camaro with jacked-up rear wheels and a stabilizer fin mounted on the trunk.
"It was a green Plymouth Horizon, four-door, with a luggage rack on top," he said.
He said he was familiar with McDevitt's car.
Hall said that at first he thought the witness was changing his story to protect the victims, but later became confused with the witness's explanation.
"I interviewed the witness and his passenger separately, and their statements match," he said.
Falsify Continued from p. 1
I think it's a national trend. We must be living in a society that says it's OK to cheat on your taxes. If it can help you get ahead, why not? If it will help you get into KU, why not?'
— Bruce Lindvall director of admissions
"Unless something happens to change a person . . . I'm not sure there's a reason for him to change." Lindvall said. "I would like to think that (a hearing) would be such a reason."
Sixty-one percent of Americans say "it's no sin to tell a lie at least sometimes," a USA Weekend poll reported March 8. One in five students lie about their grades in school, the poll also said.
Donald Marquis, an associate professor of philosophy at KU, agreed that students take their cue from society.
"The deeper problem is the way we orient students toward competition." Genova said. The emphasis on academic achievement responds that way to meet the challenge.
Linda Jenkins, Overland Park graduate student in religious studies, advocates stronger university policies.
"The message that society gives young people is that lying is perfectly all right. Once you adopt that view, things start breaking down," Marquis said, citing the recent Iran-contra scandal.
"Somewhere we have to call a halt to it." Jenkins said. "The University has to take action."
Once individuals have reached the university level, l衡er measures are needed because their values are set. Jenkins said.
Anthony Genova, professor of philosophy, said student dishonesty was understandable because of society's high premium on success.
"If students expect to be treated as adults, they need to live up to that," Jenkins said.
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Ruth Serrao
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We have a short and long-term assignments available. So you can work a day, a week or longer and earn top pay.
Kelly Services will be on campus Tuesday, April 7 from 8:30 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. in the Kansas Memorial Union to recruit applicants with the following skills:
TAI CHI taught by MARSHA PALUDAN TUES. APRIL 7, 7-9 p.m. 242 Robinson, $3 fee AN EXCELLENT STUDY BREAK!
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1787 Signing of the Constitution, George Washington Presiding by Howard Chandler Christie
Our Constitution was born out of a cacophony of competing voices.
But today the freedom of speech that remains the hallmark of our Constitution may be threatened
The NAAAF Essay Contest is designed to emphasize the importance of free speech and open debate in a vital area.
PRESIDENT OF THE UNION
In his best-selling book, They Dare to Speak Out: People and Institutions Confront Israel's Lobby, former Congressman Paul Findley sounds an alarm: "It is clear that many Americans do not feel they can speak freely on one of the most complicated and challenging current issues. The Arab-Iraqish dispute"
Is he right? What do you think?
Full time college and university students are invited to submit a critical essay of 2,500 words or less on the subject "The Development of American Middle East Policy. Is Free Speech Threatened?"
There will be 200 regional winners of $1,000 each and 10 national winners of an additional $4,000 each.
The contest is sponsored by the NAAA Foundation, a charitable organization which carries out educational programs on Middle East subjects.
Television commentator Tom Braden serves as Honorary Chairman of the Selection Committee. Distinguished columnist Carl Rowan is Awards Chairman
Send us the coupon for details and entry forms
Entries must be postmarked by May 31, 1987
Please send me complete guidelines and entry forms.
College of University
Campus Address
Home Address
Send to NAAA Foundation, P.O. Box 19144,
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TheNAAA Foundation Essay Contest
Commemorating the Anniversary of the Constitution · 200 Years · 200 Winners
}
University Daily Kansan / Monday. April 6. 1987
7
KU & LAWRENCE CAMPUS AREA ACTIVITIES
---
Monday
9 a.m. — "Programming w/
bBASE III PLUS," a microcomputer
workshop at 204 Computer Center.
Call 864-4291 for information
2:30 p.m. — Baseball. KU vs.
Washburn University at Quigley Field.
5:30 p.m. — KU Kempo and
Karate Club meeting at 130 Robinson
Center. Club meets Wednesday at
same time.
6 p.m. - Tennis tournament at Lawrence High School "Superteam" event sponsored by Sigma Phi Epic Security. Same time tomorrow.
7 p.m. -- Native American Film Festival, a film and panel discussion about Indian education at Haskell University
7 p.m. -- Amnesty International
7:30 p.m. — “Heartland Singles Group,” a nondemonstrational, coed group whose members' average age is over 30, will meet at the Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St.
meeting in the East Gallery of the Kansas Union.
8 p.m. — Society for Fantasy and Science Fiction meeting in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union.
8 p.m. — "Memory and Hope in Our Common Life," a humanities lecture by Robert Bellah, of the University of California at Berkeley, in Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union.
8 p.m. — Student recital with Phillip Thomas, trombone, in Swarth-Ructal Hall at Murphy Hall.
7
6:30 p.m. - KU Hispanic-American Leadership Organization meeting in the International Room of the Kansas Union.
Tuesday
1 p.m. — Baseball. KU vs. Schoo of the Ozarks at Quiglev Field.
7 p.m. - Political debate on contra aid. KU Democrats vs. KU Republicans in the Southeast Conference Room of the Burge Union.
7 p.m. — "Marketing Yourself:
Resume and Interviewing."
a Women's Resource Center Workshop
in the Intelligent Room of the
Kansas Union.
7 p.m. — "Manhattan," an SUA film in Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union. $2
7:30 p.m. — "The Marriage of Figaro," an opera in Procyan-Frey Theatre at Murphy Hall. Also being performed at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow and 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday. All seats reserved at Murphy Hall box office.
8 p.m. — Lecture by Stephen Jay Gould, of the Laboratory of Comparative Zoology at Harvard University, in its faculty Auditorium at the Kansas Union
8 p.m. — "The American Tradition in Church and State; Its Meaning and Significance in Historical Perspective," a lecture by James Wood, Baylor University, at 100 Smith Hall.
O
Robinson Center. "Supreme" event sponsored by Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity and Delta Delta Delta sorority. Same time tomorrow.
Wednesday
10 a.m. — Retirees Club coffee in
\amd Lounge at Adams Alumni Center.
a music at 11 a.m.
7 p.m. - Native American Film Festival, a film and panel discussion "Indian Health and Health Care," a nightlyawk Room of the Kansas Union
Lecture Series.
11:40 a.m. — “Western Music in China,” a University Forum at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave, Zuchuang Chen, conductor of University Symphony Orchestra, will be a guest speaker.
7 p.m. — Speech by Bob Duvai, of Maranatha Christian Church in Baton Rouge, La. Duvail will discuss "Sex, Love, Dating and Other Misunderstood Words," and "Is There a Real Boogieman?" in Aderson Auditorium at the Kansas University. Duvail also will speak at the same time tomorrow, Friday and Saturday.
10 a.m. — "Managing and Leadership in Various Corporate Cultures," a lecture by Fenton Talbott in the Southeast Conference Room at the Burge Union, Part of the Executive
6:30 p.m. — Campus Christians Fellowship meeting in the Northeast Conference Room at the Burge Union
6:30 p.m. — "Auto Mechanics Boot Camp" is our season's workshop at Byron's 906, Vermont St. First in a series of three workshops. Next two workshops will be held at 6:30 m. April 15 and 22.
3 p.m. — Sand volleyball at
7:30 p.m. — "Sinai and Olympus: Two Views of the Moral Order of the Universe," a classic lecture by Lois Spatz, University of Missouri-Kansas City, in Conference Room A at Watson Library.
7 p.m. — KU Dr. Who Appreciation Society meeting in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union
7 p.m. — "Birth of a Nation," an SUA film in Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union. $2.
Union.
8
8
7 p.m. — Student Senate meeting in the Kansas Room at the Kansas
Thursday
Q
all day — Haskell Indian Junior College art display in the East Gallery of the Kansas Union.
9 a.m. — "Intermediate WORDPERFECT," a microcomputer workshop at 204 Computer Center.
11:30 a.m. — "The Musical Tradition of Latin America," a Brown Bag Lunch at 109 Lippincott Hall.
**noon** — Royal Lichtenstein Circus on Watson Library Lawn, Sponsored by St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center.
Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. Elizabeth Shields will speak on Mexico.
1 p.m. — Baseball, KU vs. Baker University at Quigley Field.
7 p.m. — "Taxi Zum Klo," an SUA film in Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union.
6 p.m. — Latin American Solidarity Rice and Beans Dinner at
7:30 p.m. — KU chapter of the National Organization for Women meeting in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union.
7 p.m. — "The American Past," with Calder Pickett, KANU FM-91.5
8 p.m. — Native American poetry reading by Joseph Bruchac in Alderdorium Auditorium at the Kansas Union.
8 p.m. — Student recital with KU Trombone Choir in Swarouth Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
All day - American Indians in Higher Education conference in the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union.
9 a.m. - Women's tennis, KU vs. University of Colorado at Allen Field House courts.
Friday
10 a.m. to 4 p.m. — First Annual Jail and Bail Event at the Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity, 2021 Stewart Road. Proceeds go to American Cancer Society. Also sponsored by
the Alpha Chi Omega sorority
10
1 p.m. — Men's tennis. KU vs.
University of Colorado at Allen Field
House courts.
3 p.m. - Weightifting at the Wagon Wheel Cafe, 507 W 14th St 'Superteam' event sponsored by Superteam and Intersity and Delta Dept. delta秀
3:30 p.m. — "Children Of A Lesser God," an SUA film in Wood-
rudit auditorium at the Kansas Union.
Also show at 7 and 3/0 p.m. a same
times tomorrow. Afternoon showings
$1, evening showings $2.
3:30 p.m. — "Gone to a Better Land," a lecture by Jerome Rose, University of Arkansas, in the Pine Room at the Kansas Union.
7 p.m. - Latin American Film Festival in Brewster Auditorium at
7 p.m. — "Sandakan 8 (brothel)," a University Film Society film in Downs Auditorium at Dyche Hall. Also at 9 and 11 p.m. today. Same times tomorrow, plus a 3 p.m. show, $2
Strong Hall. Also at 3:30 p.m. Sunday.
7 p.m. — "Opaer is My Hobby."
with James Kawan, KANU EM1 625
8 p.m. Observatory Open
House at Lindley Hall (if sky is clear) 8 p.m. - Dedicatory recital with Karel Pauker, organ, at St. Lawrence Catholic Center.
8 p.m. - KU International Folk Dance Club meeting at St. John's Elementary School gymnasium, 1233 Vermont St.
■ midnight — "Jalilhouse Rock," an SUA film in Wooldridge Auditorium at the Kansas Union. Same time tomorrow. $2.
Saturday
11
9 a.m. — "The Vintage Jazz Show" with Michael Maher, KANU FM-91.5.
8 a.m. — Track and field event at Lawrence High School. "Superteam" sponsors by Sigma Phi Epsilonaternity and Delta Delta Delta error.
10 a.m. - "The Jazz Scene" with Dick Wright, KANU FM-91.5.
sium at the Spencer Museum of Art auditorium. Alex Webb, Magnum photographer, Robert Stevens, Time magazine photo editor, and Adam Weinberg, Walker Art Gallery curator, will speak.
1 p.m. — "On the Line: The New Color Photojournalism," a sympo-
1 p.m. — Softball. KU vs. Creighton University at Jayhawk Field.
8 p.m. - Student recital with Stephen Allen, trumpet, in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
Sunday
12
1 p.m. - Master of Fine Arts thesis show featuring Sam Farmer, fabrics and jewelry, at the Art and Design Building gallery.
1:30 p.m. — "Living Composers Communication with Their Artists and Audiences," a music forum at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts, St.
1 p.m. — Softball, KU vs. Southwest Missouri State University at Jayhawk Field.
2 p.m. — "Latino," an SUA film in Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union. $2
3 p.m. — "The KU Concerts" on KANU FM-91.5.
3 p.m. — Black Student Union Gospel Choir concert in the Kansas Union gallery.
3:30 p.m. — KU Symphonic Band spring concert in Crafton-Preyer Theatre at Murphy Hall.
8 p.m. — Kronos Quartet, part of the Chamber Music Series, in Craton-Preyer Theatre at Murphy Hall. All seats reserved. Tickets on sale at Murphy Hall box office.
The Kansan calendar will run every Monday. Information for the next week's calendar must be submitted by 5 p.m. Wednesday. To submit information, call 864-4810.
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PETER SCHNEIDER
Vote to Keep Howard Hill working for Lawrence.
Howard Hill He Works for Lawrence
Howard's leadership helped bring about a University Corporate Research Park. But there is a lot of hard work left to create the economic base in Kansas to keep KU at the top. Howard Hill is committed to that task.
Fall positions available for
and Editor
Poll Adv by P&R for Re-Elect Hill Committee; Jeanne Anne Alden; Tissureair
P&R
Application deadline is April 7.
The University Daily Kansan Business Manager
Applications available
KU Needs Our Support.
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The reason is simple. They want $20 million in public money for their private project.
Money can't buy everything, and it shouldn't buy your vote.
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The University of Kansas Theatre and the Department of Music and Dance Present
Marriage of Figaro
A comic opera in four acts by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart with words by Lorenzo da Ponte after Beaumarchais" "La Falle Journée ou Le Mariage de Figaro" English translation by Edward Dent
7:30 p.m. April 7-8, 1987,
8:00 p.m. April 10-11, 1987,
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
TOUCH
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office, All seats reserves; For reservations, call 913-864-3982 VISA/Mastercard aspected for phone reservations. Partially funded by the KU Student Activity Fee
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Half price for KU Students
8
Monday, April 6, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
League seeks to aid medical indigents Native American films featured in area festival
Staff writer
AIDS, drug abuse and the increasing number of street people are problems that have brought social issues to the forefront of the nation's political agenda, the head of Kansas' social assistance agency said Saturday.
"There is a great deal of talk about welfare reform." Robert Harder, secretary of the state Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services, said.
"It is important to us as a nation that we establish some kind of minimum standard of living for people, no matter what their means of living," he said.
Harder spoke this weekend at the Kansas League of Women Voters convention at the Holiday Inn Holidome, 200 McDonald Drive. He said Kansas had fewer poor and homeless people compared to other states because of its strong financial commitment to social programs. But that could change, he said.
"The state has received $2 million in matching funds from the federal government for its medical assistance program, but the governor has used the money to maintain the status quo instead of raising expenditures for the program," he said. "More Kansans are without medical insurance everyday."
Harder was the secretary in former Gov. John Carlin's administration and agreed to stay in the position until Gov. Mike Hayden found a replacement.
The League of Women Voters is important in solving the mounting social problems confronting the state and the nation, Harder said.
"The way they research and study a problem and then develop solutions to them gains the respect of most lawmakers," he said. "It's hard to state and federal government to ignore them."
Ann Hebberger, president-elect of the league, said the state league would concentrate its efforts on developing solutions for the state's medical indigents.
"We've been trying to define what a medical indigent actually is but have discovered that it covers a variety of people who cannot afford medical insurance," she said. "Working women with children, people just off welfare who lose their benefits when they find a job and can't pay for health insurance on a minimum wage, and all the homeless and unemployed all fall under the category of medical indigents."
Hebberger said the Kansas league's efforts would tie into the league's national agenda of welfare reform and nuclear disarmament.
"The strength of our organization is at the
grassroots level," she said. "It keeps the national League of Women Voters in touch with the concerns of its members."
The rising cost of health care and the poor has sent the nation down the path of catastrophe, she said.
"It's good to bring the issues to people's attention," she said. But it's even better to have solutions. "We need to be solution oriented."
One hundred people from Kansas attended the weekend convention. The convention provided those attending an opportunity to exchange ideas, socialize and approve the league's longterm agenda.
"It gives everyone a chance to meet one another and perhaps come to a consensus on the important issues."
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, attended the convention and said the league had a very positive influence on government policy-making.
"They are very effective lobbyists," she said. "They come well prepared and with the facts. No politician can ignore them."
By LAURA BOSTROM
Staff writer
During a discussion on Native American films yesterday, history professor Rita Napier recalled an Indian boy who said he wanted to be a cowboy instead of an Indian because in the movies the cowboys always won.
Napier spoke yesterday as part of Native America Now, a collection of films that illustrate contemporary life for Native Americans. The films are considered an alternative to Hollywood's portral of Indians.
Napier spoke about Hollywood's movies, which she said often pro-
moted also images about Native Americans using them as humorless or inferior.
Those images dehumanize Native Americans and make them unreal.
The festival, which began yesterday and ends Saturday, will be shown at various sites on campus and at Haskell Indian Junior College. The
festival is sponsored by the University of Kansas, Haskell Indian Junior College, KU's office of minority affairs, the KU Indian Club and the KU Graduate Anthropology Colloquium.
The program features a film by Lawrence film makers, including Jerry Schultz, Lawrence graduate student. The film is called "Another Wind Is Moving: The Off-Reservation Boarding Schools."
Schultz, who brought the festival to Lawrence, was the superintendent at the Kickapoo Indian School in northeastern Kansas.
The week-long festival covers Indian education, health and health care, and contemporary issues films, panels discussions and lectures.
The films were selected from the Museum of the American Indian's Native American Film and Video Festival, held in New York City since 1982, and will be shown at KU and Haskell Indian Junior College.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 6, 1987
9
Candidates raise less this year
By TODD COHEN
Staff writer
Although a proposed downtown mall has sparked one of the most pivotal and heated Lawrence city commission campaigns in years, the six candidates collectively have raised almost $7,000 less than 1985 commission candidates did.
The six commission candidates in lomorrow's election have raised more than $16,000 to finance campaigns for the votes of 23,162 registered voters. In 1985, six candidates raised almost $23,000.
Commissioner Ernest Angino, who finished second in the March 3 primary, raised the most money of this year's field.
Angino has raised $3,845, about $200 more than former Commissioner Bob Schumm, the primary's winner, who collected $3,654. They were followed by Commissioner Howard Hill, $2,789; and challengers Dennis Constance, $2,611; Mike Rundle, $2,470; and Ellis Hayden, $903.
The candidates voluntarily provided the information at the Kan-
san's request. Under state law, city candidates are not required to file a report of campaign revenues, expenditures and contributors with the Douglas County clerk until Dec. 31. The county commissioner report how much money they personally contributed to their campaigns within 30 days after the election.
The candidates' success in raising money did not mirror their vote-getting abilities in the primary. Although Schumm almost matched a dollar for every vote, Constance, Rundle and Hayden received more votes than dollars raised. Angino, though, raised nearly $1,000 more than votes and Hill's campaign dollars are twice the votes he received.
Schumwon won the 12-candidate primary, garnering 3,532 votes. Angiho finished second with 2,955, Constance at third with 2,826, Rundle at fourth with 2,776, Hill at fifth with 1,929, and Haven at sixth with 1,894.
Schumm, a restaurateur, is seeking to return to the commission. He served from 1974 to 1981, when he was defeated for re-election, finishing
fifth in a six-candidate field. Angino, a KU professor of civil engineering and geology, is seeking a second term. Hill, director of KANU-FM 91.5 public radio, was appointed by the city commission to fill a vacant seat in 1983 and won a two-year term in 1985.
Constance is a house manager at Joseph R. Pearson Hall, Rundle is a secretary in the KU design department and caller for the Lawrence Barn Dance Association. Hayden is a retired baker who runs a booth in a downtown flea market as a hobby. None of the three has run for public office before.
Political action committees, which participated in Lawrence city commission campaigns this year for the first time, also contributed to the candidates. The Old West Lawrence Neighborhood Association-PAC gave $500 each to Rundle and Constance. Rundle also reported a $75 contribution from Citizens Against Wasteful Spending, a group opposed to the proposed mall.
Mizzou could lose vet school if accreditation not renewed
United Press International
M. Joseph Bojrab, chairman of the school's department of surgery, said, "I don't think they can get it all done in two years. They had five and they've wasted three."
COLUMBIA, Mo. — The College of Veterinary Medicine at the University of Missouri might lose its accreditation in two years, which could force it to close, officials say.
The school's dean, Robert F. Kahrs, said, "It's a life-or-death situation for the school."
The school has 300 students and an annual budget of $11 million.
The American Veterinary Medical Association put the school on probation because of old and obsolete equipment and buildings, significant faculty vacancies, marginal funding and few opportunities for faculty research.
The school was put on probation by the American Veterinary Medical Association three years ago and given until 1899 to get up to par.
As a result of the poor conditions, several valuable laboratory animals have died. Researchers have been forced to set up labs in condemned trailers and many researchers have found it difficult for federal grants because the school is not meeting national standards.
Kahrs said that if accreditation was lost, closure would have to follow because graduation from an accredited veterinary school is a condition for a veterinarian's license in all states.
Loss of the veterinary college could have serious ramifications for agriculture, the state's No.1
industry, because the school does diagnostic and research work for those who raise livestock. The state is second in the nation in cattle and hog operation. School officials worry that producers would relocate some operations closer to veterinary schools that can meet their needs.
University President C. Peter Magrath said the university had asked the Legislature this year for a new Veterinary College facility.
State Rep. Christopher S. Kelly,
D-Columbia, has been working
with the school to develop a legislative solution.
"This is another example of what happens to programs in your state when you're 50th in the nation in taxation per capita." Kelly said.
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Monday, April 6, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Vote leaves Kansas likely choice for waste site
By DAVID WHITE Special to the Kansan
A state Senate committee's rejection of a proposal to remove Kansas from a five-state compact means that the state is still the front-runner for getting a regional nuclear waste site.
The Kansas Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee voted 7-4 on Thursday against a motion to withdraw Kansas from the Central Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact. The motion was an amendment to a bill passed by the House that would ban the shallow low-level nuclear waste in Kansas. The committee endorsed the House bill by
a multimillion voice vote State Sen. Francis Gordon, R-Highland, said that pulling out of the compact would be premature because a host state for the waste site had not been chosen.
"At this point, we have no idea
what state will be selected for the site," Gordon said. "I think we've got time to work on this."
But State Sen. Paul Fleeciano Jr., D-Wichita, said Kansas probably would become the host state and would have little control over it.
"My intent is to continue this fight," Feleciano said after the meeting. "I think we're making a mistake."
The rejection of the amendment means that the withdrawal will not be considered again until next session. The bill was one of three the committee considered that dealt with the impact membership. The four other states in the compact are Arkansas, Louisiana, Nebraska and Oklahoma.
Raymond Peery of Atlanta, executive director of the compact, said recently that Kansas was the only state in the compact actively considering withdrawal. However, the Kansas City Star recently reported that Nebraska had considered withdrawing and that a senator in Arkansas had introduced into his legislature a proposal to withdraw.
Attorney General Bob Stephan told a legislative committee on March 18 that Kansas could and should enact a ban on below-ground storage of low-level radioactive waste. But he said the cost of withdrawing from the compact would be more than remaining in it and banning waste burial.
Peery said Kansas could face sanctions, including expulsion from the compact, if the state unreasonably limited waste storage
wetlands. velphops.
The state's entrances to the compact resulted from a 1980 federal law requiring states to open or provide for their own waste sites by 1986. Kansas and the four other states formed the compact in 1982.
States not building their own sites
must enter into compacts. Compact members receive waste only from other compact members, but states not in compacts must accept waste from all other states.
The law requires a compact to choose its site by Jan. 1, 1988. The site must be in operation by 1993.
"If Kansas should construct its own facility, the state could not prevent the disposal of all waste reported out of the state." Stephan said.
Last month, a lobbyist for the Sierra Club of Kansas told the Senate committee that the waste burial site should be in Coffey County, which houses the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant.
"Coffey County is the county that is benefiting most from the nuclear energy," said Shaun McGrath, the lobbyist. "If we store Kansas wastes there, we can mothball the wastes when they close down the plant."
McGarth's statement came after more than 3,000 people, some holding signs that said "Hell no, we won't glow," gathered in the Beloit Junior-Senior High School on March 18 to protest the waste burial.
Their main concern was a report released by Dames & Moore, the consulting firm hired to prepare a site suitability study for the five-state compact. The report listed 147 suitable sites, 109 of which are in Kansas. Several of them were near Beloit, in Mitchell County.
The March-April issue of the Kansas Sierran reported that Dames & Moore had "ruled out all of Oklahoma, left two square miles in Louisiana (one county), two counties with possible sites in Arkansas, 10 counties in Nebraska and 18 in Kansas."
Frank Wilson, senior geologist at the Kansas Geological Survey on West Campus, said some of the sites in northeast Kansas were glacial
areas and should not be considered.
illus and should not be considered. In a letter written June 14, 1985, to Barbara Sobol, secretary of the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, Wilson questioned what he called "the broad generalizations" used by Dames & Moore to select the sites.
He wrote, "Because Kansas and Nebraska have more detailed and more readily available maps, those were easier to use."
If Kansas withdraws from the Central Interstate Compact, it would have to enter into another compact or build its own waste site and accept waste from other states. One idea, suggested by McGarth, is to form a compact with North Dakota, which withdrew from a compact with South Dakota because the southern state wanted to require that the waste site be in North Dakota.
The Associated Press supplied some information for this story.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 6. 1987
11
Physician forms team for nuclear emergencies Doctor who treated Chernobyl victims will name experts to assist in event of blast
United Press International
NEW ORLEANS - The California physician who treated victims of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster has established a team of five experts that would be ready to offer immediate assistance at the next radioactive blast.
"They would be the Red Adairs of nuclear energy," said Robert Gale, director of the Bone Marrow Transplant Center at the University of California at Los Angeles. Adair is an expert at fighting oil well fires.
"There are five people in the world who have had actual battlefield
experience, who know the considerations under fire, which are rather different from the theoretical concepts." Gale said.
Gale, who recently showed rare slides of the Chernobyl aftermath and its victims to the annual convention of the American College of Physicians, said he would identify the members of his team on the April 26 anniversary of the Chernobyl explosion and fire.
The strike force will include at least one U.S., Soviet, French and Japanese physician. All are veterans of the reactor explosions, he said.
Gale said the lessons documented by the Chernobyl team would better arm his international emergency response group to anticipate the unique problems following a nuclear blast.
The chances of another such accident within the next decade are higher than 25 percent, he said.
Gale was able to travel to the Soviet Union last year through a provision in an international treaty that allows scientists to assist other countries beset by a nuclear reactor fire.
"Since there are so few people in the world who have actually had
hands-on experience with nuclear accidents, it is important to make them available to any country that might have an accident." he said.
An operations hub at the Armand Hammer Center for Advanced Studies of Nuclear Energy and Health, which Gale heads in Los Angeles, would know the whereabouts of each physician and an alternate.
"A plane would be ready to fly those people to the site of any nuclear reactor accident to give advice to the people managing the accident." Gale said.
"Most countries in the world don't have experience and the medical
resources to respond to reactor accidents, in Pakistan o Iran or wherever you like. It obviously would be irresponsible not to take advantage of that experience when and if we have to deal with another reactor accident, which is not all that unlikely."
The UCLA professor stressed that his emergency team was independent of any government affiliation.
"We're strictly a team of scientists acting as individuals," he said.
Ethics questioned in business contract
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The State Department awarded a non-competitive contract in 1985 to a firm involved in the Iran-contra affair, although an official of the awarding office was the brother of a key company employee.
A congressman and a federal ethics official are questioning the propriety of the contract, which was awarded after the department official's sister made the main sales pitch on the company's behalf.
The brother, however, said his actions were approved by State Department legal officers. The State Department legal office would not comment on the contract. The department's inspector general is investigating the contract.
The $276,186 contract was awarded to International Business Communications Inc. to create public support administration policies in Latin America.
At the time of the contract's effective date, Oct. 1, 1985, Air Force LTl Col. Daniel W. "Jake" Jacobowitz was assigned to the State Department office that hired IBC, the Office of Public Diplomacy for Latin America and the Caribbean.
His sister, Frances Jacobwitz,
was listed on an IBC document
obtained by The Associated Press as
administrator for the contract. The
document said she owl devote 80
percent of her time to the contract,
which would pay $40,000 of her $50,000
salary.
Standards of conduct for federal employees prohibit actual conflicts of interest as well as actions that create the appearance of wrongdoing.
"It could be an appearance problem," Donald Campbell, deputy director of the Office of Government Ethics, said when the circumstances were described to him.
Frances Jacobowitz did not return repeated phone calls to IBC.
A Pentagon official, speaking only on condition he not be named, said on behalf of Col. Jacobowitz that the Air Force officer was an administrative specialist who had no decision-making power over the contract or IBC's hiring practices.
Reagan hasn't received reports of POWs, 2 representatives sav
United Press International
WASHINGTON - Pentagon and National Security Council officials have for years failed to forward important information to President Reagan indicating that U.S. citizens are being held captive in Southeast Asia, two Republican congressmen charged yesterday.
Rep. John Rowland, R-Conn,
and Rep. Bob Smith, R.N.H.
expressed frustration that the
practice was continuing even
though Smith had advised Reagan
last year that he was not receiving
important evidence on possible
U.S. prisoners of war.
"The Defense Intelligence Agency just automatically tries to refute refugee reports," said Rowland, who has reviewed classified reports of live U.S. citizens and received numerous DIA briefings on the subject.
"It's part of a pattern of poor management at the White House." Smith said in a separate interview. "NSC officials have felt the president didn't need to know important details."
The NSC monitors DIA analyses of refugee reports and advises the president on the findings.
Pentagon spokesman Keith Schneider acknowledged past problems with DIA analysis of POW reports but said that increased staffing and computer capability were producing "a more comprehensive evaluation of reports."
But he said, "Any suggestion that evidence is being withheld from the president is totally withholding and categorically untrue."
An NSC spokesman did not respond to several requests for comment.
Smith, Rowland and some other Republican congressmen say that credible refugee reports of U.S. POWs suggest that at least a few dozen U.S. citizens are being held captive in Vietnam and Laos.
The administration's position is that, though it has no proof that any U.S. POWs are alive, it investigates fully every report received. The DIA has not been able to
A Pentagon task force, headed by former DIA director Eugene Tighe, found in October that administration officials were not deliberately covering up evidence of U.S. POWs but were doing a poor job of analyzing such evidence and reporting it to superiors.
resolve 153 of the 938 first-hand reports received since 1975 and is continuing to investigate them, Schneider said.
Smith and former Republican congressman William Hendon, who lost his North Carolina seat in the fall, said they advised Reagan an Oval Office meeting in January 1866 that NSC and DIA officials not presenting him with complete information about U.S. POWs.
Hendon said he resigned a previous post as a POW consultant to the Pentagon in 1983 after national security adviser Robert McFarlane refused to act on what Hendon considered a persuasive report from a North Vietnamese refugee.
Rep. Kemp to kick off campaign
WASHINGTON — Rep. Jack Kemp of New York will cap more than a year of planning today and formally announce his bid for the Republican presidential nomination.
United Press International
The campaign by the 51-year-old conservative lawmaker is a seemingly uphill struggle, but Kemp hopes to beat the odds by broadening the appeal to traditionally Democratic voters such as minorities and the working class.
However, even though the nine-term House member and former professional football quarterback has been mentioned frequently as a candidate, he has done poorly in the polls, usually running well behind Vice President George Bush and Senate Minority Leader Robert Dole.
Even if he captures the nomination, history shows an even tougher task in the general election. Not since James Garfield in 1880 has a House member gone directly to the White House.
But Kemp is convinced that he can win.
He calls himself a progressive conservative, pointing to legislation he has sponsored with minority law. He is also housing and urban enterprise zones.
"For 16 or 17 years now I've been fighting for a view of America and the cause of Western defense that I think is important for the post-Reagan era, particularly in my party." Kemp said last week.
Yet, many of Kemp's most cherished ideas are ones identified most with the conservative movement.
For example, he has long opposed abortion and said last week that he was willing to make his candidacy a referendum on early deployment of President Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative missile defense plan which is a cause that has split Republicans.
Iranian women attain new rights
United Press International
A sense of realism slowly is replacing the fervor of the religious revolutions that toppled the Shah of Iran in 1793, might be the major beneficiaries.
TEHERAN, Iran — After eight years of repression enforced by Islamic "morality squads," women in Iran are defiantly drifting back into downtown bars and wearing makeup outdoors.
The fundamentalist ayatollahs who seized power from the Western-leaning shah required women 5 years old and up, including foreigners and
When he came to power, spiritual leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini reinstated the Islamic dress code,
members of the minority Christian and Jewish faiths, to wear a veil in public. They banned the use of makeup and forbade women to visit bars.
The shah had declared war on Islam in the belief that Iran would only make progress if it abandoned its eastern ways and followed the technologically advanced West.
He banned veils, ignoring religious teachings that regard a woman's hair as a dangerous, erotic distraction.
and established "morality squads" who flogged women they considered improperly dressed and disfigured their faces if they were makeup.
But the harsh methods have been relaxed in recent months.
Iran's leaders were apparently influenced by outcries, against savage attacks by squad members, such as the squad members who spotted a newly-wed couple holding hands in a park and beat the husband to death
Khomeini later ordered President Ali Khame尼基 to make a public appeal asking the morality squads to slow down their enforcement drive.
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1) the rights we will be speaking on are:
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Monday, April 6. 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Bernie I. Vince
ATTORNEY
Gareth Waltrip/KANSAN
Bonita Yoder stands in front of her house at 608 Kentucky St. If a proposed downtown mall is approved, a six-story parking garage would be built where Yoder's house and three other houses now stand.
Homes may become garage
the downtown street system. Any other location . . . would impact negatively on traffic flow throughout the surrounding area."
Continued from p.1
Although the design and height of the garage haven't been determined yet, developers have decided that the garage would have two entrances, one on Sixth Street and the other on Kentucky Street, which would be widened to three lanes.
But even if voters say to the mall, and the city declares eminent domain to force Yoder to sell the land, she said she was ready to go to court to save her house.
"Eminent domain is not intended to take private property for private use," she said. "The mall is not for public use. It's a for-profit venture for the developer."
"He may have more money than I do, but we're on equal footing on a legal basis.
"In all candidness, I would probably make money if they took my building. I've had people accuse me of moving here for the purpose of speculation.
"But that's not my purpose."
The city has estimated that it would cost $5.9 million to purchase the entire 690 block. But city officials wouldn't reveal estimates for each owner's land.
The other residents aren't as candid about the potential financial windfall the mall would bring to them. Nor have they been as politically active. But they do have strong feelings about their threatened neighborhood.
"It would be hard to leave. We like our house," said Ronn Johnson, who lives with his wife, Donna, on the block. "We're acting as if it isn't going to happen. We didn't think it had much chance."
And because Johnson doesn't think the plan will survive tomorrow's vote, he hadn't thought much about moving. Like his neighbors, he has continued to make long-term home improvements.
Harry Warren, who moved to the block three years ago with his wife, Viki, and daughter, Vanessa, said he and his wife had two cars on similar home improvements.
"It a mixed bag," Warren said.
"We've put a lot of money into it."
Although he feels an emotional attachment, Warren said he was resigned to the fact his house may be demolished. The parking garage plan, though, doesn't sit as well.
"If they have to take my house,
it will make my house. I believe in the downward
flow."
"I'm not thrilled with the prospect of finding an ugly parking structure on the corner of Sixth and Kentucky.
It would just stick out like a sore thumb," Warren said.
Jeff Menzenbruk, who lives with his wife, Mara, on the second floor of Yoder's house, said, "I think it would be good to have a home because if this neighborhood is changed."
The city should try to preserve downtown's unique atmosphere of trees, small specialty shops and old neighborhoods. Mara said.
The Mesenbrinks said they probably would leave the city if they were forced out of their house. They had come to Lawrence from Seattle last fall to take jobs in Topeka, and then the 30-mile commute they did ended because of small-town atmosphere and old neighborhoods.
"Obviously we had an option of living in Topeka, we were chose to live in Tepeka."
A fourth house on the block doesn't have a concerned resident. Owned by Maupintour, Inc., it has been rented out occasionally since the company bought it during a search for a new office building site downtown. The company kept the house even after deciding to build in the suburbs.
Ironically, though, the house once had been slated, had the company built downtown, for demolition to make room for an employee parking lot.
High school AIDS patient dies
United Press International
SMITH CENTER — A high school junior who contracted the AIDS virus from a blood transfusion during heart surgery at the University of Kansas Medical Center died Friday.
A memorial service will be Tuesday for Cameron Beach, the Smith
Center student who died less than two months after learning he contracted the virus.
Mr. Beach had congenital heart problems and doctors said the AIDS-related complex put additional stress on his heart.
The 17-year-old youth made a rare trip to school Thursday but was admitted to the Smith County
Memorial Hospital later that night. He died at 12:35 p.m. Friday after suffering a heart attack, a hospital spokesman said.
A memorial service will be at 11 a.m. Tuesday at the Kensington junior-senior high school gymnasium. Burial will follow.
A KU student's 10-speed bicycle valued at $170 was taken sometime between March 27 and April 3 from the rear patio of a house in the 1400 block of Tennessee Street, Lawrence police said.
EDUCATION
A window of a KU student's car parked in the 2400 block of West 25th Street was broken Saturday or Sunday, and a radar detector valued at $100 was taken from the car, Lawrence police said.
"knowledge is as wings to man's life and a ladder for his ascent its acquirement. It is necessary knowledge of such sciences, however should be acquired as can profit the peoples of the earth, and not those of the world, and whose words. Great indeed is the claim of scientists and craftsmen on the peoples of the world, and whose virtuable treasure for man, and a source of glory, of bounty, of joy, of exaltation of cheer and gladness unto him."
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HOLIDAYS
nursery
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On the Record
A licensed cooperative nursery school. Parent owned and operated since 1948.
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842-0064 645 Alabama
SUA FILMS
Monday, April 6
Mona Lisa
Director:
Neil Jordan
Bob Hoskins plays a London copy of the character and is prostitute from her destructive life. However, she is not willing to play it and almost all copy Tom Teixet of 1986 is used in his performance.
7:00 & 9:30 p.m.
Tuesday, April 7
MANHATTAN
MANHATTAN
A
Director: Woody Allen
Director: Woody Allen
Wells and his beloved New York and the
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Woody tells the story of his family,
who were forced to search includes an en wille (Woody Streep)
an intellectual de Jasonen and a 17-year high school student (Mariel
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POM PON Clinic & Try-outs
APRIL 6-12
Organizational Meeting
Allen Field House
Tonight
Monday, April 6, 6:00 p.m.
followed by:
CLINICS
April 6, 7, 8, 6:00 p.m.
April 6,7,8 6-9 p.m.
TRY-OUTS
April 9
6:00 p.m.
Natural Fiber Clothing
CALLBACKS April 10, 12
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Student Union Activities is now accepting applications for INDOOR RECREATION BOARD MEMBER. Applications are available at SUA. Deadline to apply is 5 p.m., Tuesday, April 7. Please call SUA at 864-3477 for more information.
SUA
Student Union Activites Fourth Floor, Kansas Union
President Jeff Mullins Vice President Brian Kramer
Kevin Pritchard, Treasurer Kelly Donahue, Treasurer
First Class Concepts
for Student Senate
1
- To get the students their
first class options!
first class options!
- To keep the summer school program alive!
- To assist in obtaining more post season basketball tickets for students!
- To sponsor student organizations that serve KU students in a first class fashion such as crew, BSU, forensics, rugby, football, and basketball!
- To end presidential salaries and wasteful senate retreats!
- de a new tradition of first
- To provide a new tradition of first class students that show the leadership and capability of getting the job done!
"Freedom Struggle In South Africa a Speech By Solly Simelane
African National Congress Representative to the United Nations
At: Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union Tuesday, April 7 3:30 p.m.
LOVELAND SCHOOL BOARD
If you're registered to vote in Lawrence, you should know about this School Board candidate.
A. J.
Mary Loveland is a KU alumna who continues to demonstrate her commitment and dedication to KU students. When Mary served on the Alumni Association Board of Directors, she was the youngest member and thoughtfully represented the concerns of the recent KU graduates. Students can testify to her service on the Board of Directors of the Kansas and Burge Unions and her respect for the student viewpoint. She has generously offered her home and hospitality to student groups through events like the Martonboard fall dinners. She was also involved with planning the 60th anniversary celebration for Watkins Scholarship Hall.
Mary and her husband, Chuck, have hosted pre-med student mixers for KUMC faculty representatives. Chuck is also a preceptor and Clinical Process instructor every year. And the Loveland family has been actively involved at the St. Lawrence Center, where Mary serves on the Human Services Committee and was the first coordinator of religious education.
Time and again Mary has demonstrated her support for the students and the university. If you vote in Laurence on April 7, support and vote Mary Loveland for the USD 497 Board of Education.
Mary Loveland
is a candidate with broad experience in education-related and "for kid" organizations.
PTA president. Kaw Valley Soccer Association Registrar, efforts to get flashing caution lights for ALL school zones and a traffic light at 6th and Schwarz. Educational Committee for the Deerfield Addition; extensive involvement in Middle Level Steering Committee, member of Activities Subcommittee; district Task Force on Education for Parenthood. Kansas Action for Children. Vice Chancellor's Affirmative Action Com- mentant for the KU/Medical Center.
is a candidate who has demonstrated her commitment to the people of lawrence.
Meals on Wheels driver. Douglas County Rape Victims Support Services Board member..Lawrence Villages..Emergency Servicer
Paid Political Advertisement by Mary Loveland for School Board
Committee, Helen Gilles Tiller
University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 6, 1987
*Monday Sports Extra*
13
KU men's tennis team splits weekend matches
BERTO JACARIN
Larry Pascal, Dallas junior, makes a return at the net during competition Saturday against Oklahoma at the Allen Field House courts. Pascal and his partner Chris Walker defeated the Sooners' team in the No. 2 doubles match 6-4, 6-4. KU won the team competition 7-2.
By ROB KNAPP
Staff writer
The Kansas men's tennis team began its pursuit of the Big Eight Conference title with a narrow loss and a big victory.
The Jayhawks lost 5-4 to defending champion Oklahoma State on Friday but bounced back by whipping Oklahoma 7-2 on Saturday. Both matches were played on the Allen Field House courts.
"We didn't play very close to our capabilities." Perelman said.
Kansas men's and women's coach Scott Perelman said the Oklahoma State loss was especially disappointing because Kansas beat the Cowboys in Lawrence earlier in the year.
Kansas, 14-9, had won four of the six singles matches in the previous match but got only two singles victories on Friday. Senior Mike Wolf beat Frank Kaiser 6-2, 6-3 in No. 1 singles and senior Larry Pascal won 6-1, 5-7, 6-3 over Jack Salerno at No. 5.
A sweep of the doubles matches
would have given Kansas the victory,
but Pascal and Chris Walker,
6-4, 6-4 to Kairos and Dean Bobb.
Perelman said that complacency might have played a part in the loss.
"I think we got to a point where
we were a little caught up with ourselves," Perelman said. "There were guys talking about what we were going to do when we won the Big Egch championship.
The Jayhawks needed a big win to help them shake off the previous day's loss, Wolf said.
Against Oklahoma, the Jay-
bawks got singles victories from
Warren, Sven Groeneveld
and Kevin Batchy and swept the
doubles match.
Saturday's play included a rematch of last season's Big Eight No. 1 singles final, in which Oklahoma's Olivier Lorin defeated Wolf. Lorin won again, beating Wolf 4-6, 7-6, 7-6.
"We really needed to beat them that bad," he said. "One or two points for Craig Wildey and I and it would have been 9-0."
"I had him in two sets, and I let him get away," said Wolf. Wolf, who had sat out the team's last seven matches suffering from mental and physical exhaustion, said he began to tire toward the end of the second set.
Women's tennis team drops Big 8 matches
"There were about 150 people in the stands on Saturday." Perelman said, "and several of them came up to me and said it was one of the best college matches they'd ever seen. They are clearly the two best players in the region."
By ROB KNAPP
Staff writer
The Big Eight Conference tennis season is only a few days old, but the Kansas women's team already has some ground to make up.
The Jayhawks opened up the Big Eight season this weekend with back-to-back losses at the Allen Field House courts. Kansas lost 8 to Oklahoma State on Friday and 7 to Oklahoma against against Oklahoma on Saturday.
"Oklahoma State has an enormous amount of talent," Kansas men's and women's coach Scott Perelman said. "They're clearly the best team in the league right now."
The Cowgirls, defending Big Eight champions, played without regular No. 1 singles player and All-America Renata Baranski.
who is out with an injury. Tessa Price filled in at No.1 and beat the Javhawk's Trace Treps.
The only bright spot for Kansas came at No. 2 singles, where Jeanette Jonsson beat Oklahoma St. the Carlie Lynn Lycne 3.6, 6.2.
The loss to Oklahoma State, though, was perhaps less painful because the Cowgirls were the clear pick to in the conference title. Perelman said he had thought Oklahoma and Kansas would be among the teams chasing Oklahoma State.
"The Oklahoma loss was the most disappointing loss we've had all season, men's or women's." Perelman said.
"We beat them 9-6 last year," he said. "但 knew they were a lot better but I thought psychologically
we had a big edge."
Kansas began the Oklahoma match with victories at No. 1 and No. 2 singles. Tracy Treps defeated V.Jaugh Levine 3-6, 6-1, 6-4 at No. 1, and Jonsson came through with another victory at No. 2, beating Sandra McGilvroy 6-0, 6-4.
But the Jayhawks did not win another match in singles and were shut out in doubles for the second straight day.
"We are not performing well when the match is on the line," Perelman said.
singles and as Janelle Boen's partner at No 3 doubles for the first time since undergoing arthroconeus knee surgery in March.
Team captain Barb Inman returned to the lineup at No. 6
The women's team will continue conference play when it travels to Manhattan tomorrow for a match with Kansas State.
Hawkins is second at Texas
By DIANE FILIPOWSKI
Staff writer
After reviewing tapes of Hawkins' race, Rick Attig, assistant men's coach, said Hawkins led the field until he hit the last two hurdles.
Courtney Hawkins finished second in the 110-meter high hurdles Saturday and led eight members of the Kansas track team in the Texas Relays at the University of Texas at Austin.
Track
Attig said Hawkins, who posted a 13.8 finish, hit the hurdles because he was tired, and unused to the extra distance run outdoors. The high hurdles distance is 60-yards indoors and 110-meters outdoors.
Hawkins, who ran his first outdoor meet of the season, was the Big Eight Conference indoor champion in the 60-yard high hurdles in March.
Denise Buchanan posted the highest placing for the women's team. She placed third in the shot put with a throw of 51-5½.
Roger Finkemeier, women's throwing coach, said the field was competitive and Buchanman competed better than she did this time last year.
Buchanan also finished eighth in the discus with a throw of 158-31-2. Ann O'Connor, the only other women's team member to compete in the meet, finished fourth in the high jump with a 5-8 jump.
Scott Huffman finished sixth in the invention of the pole vault with a 17.2-yd.
Attig said Huffman would have won the collegiate division if he had been entered. Chris Bohanan and Pat Manson also competed in the open division, but missed the opening height of 17-2.
"I wish we would have had them compete in the collegiate division," Attig said, "but we could not justify it at the time because of the wind conditions where the event was being held."
All-America Ron Bahm also scored points for the Jayhawks with a fifth-place finish in the javelin with a throw of just more than 222 feet.
By a Kansan reporter
Kansas swimmer Glenn Trammel finished sixth in the 100-yard backstroke at the NCAA Championships in Austin, Texas Friday and became the first All-American for KU swimming since 1983.
'I didn't see anyone in the pool with more talent.'
— Gary Kempf swimming coach
Trammel finished with a time of 49.69 in the finals but his time of 49.56 in the preliminaries set both a school and Big Eight Conference record. The old conference record was held by Nebraska's Cliff Looschen, who set it in the NCAA Championship meet in 1983 with a time of 50.17.
"I was not at all surprised in
Trammel's performance." Coach Gary Kempf said. "I've said all year long that he was one of the best.
"I didn't see anyone in the pool with more talent."
the last KU All-America status belonged to Ron Neugent who finished 11th in the 1,650-yard freestyle at the 1983 NCAA Championships.
To be an All-American, a swimmer must finish in the top 16.
"He is as good as any backstroker in the country," Kempf said. "He has come a long way and has a lot of potential."
Trammel also swam in the 200- yard backstroke but failed to qualify for the finals. He finished 24th with a time of 1:50.48.
Kempf is not the first to coach Trammel. Kempf's wife coached Trammel at Topeka High School.
By taking sixth in the 100, Trammel was one of two swimmers who were sophomores that finished in the top six. There were also two seniors and two juniors that finished in the top six.
KU track teams compete outdoors
By DIANE FILIPOWSKI
Men's squad excels in distance events
Staff write
Timmons said Watcke's time
The Kansas men's track team had its first taste of Big Eight Conference competition outdoors Saturday in Manhattan at the Kansas State Pepsi Invitational.
Coach Bob Timmons said the team competed well, but would have to be patient in its attempt to improve its skills at the college and outdoor conference championships.
The Jayhawks competed against 10 teams, including the Big Eight Kansas State, Oklahoma State, Nebraska and Iowa State.
In the 1,500-meter run, Craig Watcke finished third with a time of 3 minutes, 47.61 seconds, Mike Spielman, and Jon Joslin was seventh in 3:55. 07
"It's a mystery to me why they ran so well," Timmons said, "because they had three hard workouts this week."
No team scores were kept, but Timmons said the队 performed well.
would convert approximatley to 4:04 if he had run the mile, which would be his best time.
Watchee also posted one of Kansas' three second-place finishes, finishing second in the 5,000-meter run with a time of 14:45.87.
Steve Heffernan ran the 3,000- meter steeplechase for the first time outdoors this season and finished fourth with a time of 9:20.99.
Also placing second for Kansas included the 4x400-meter relay team with a time of 3:17.20 and Sharriff Hazzaj's seven-foot jump in the high jump
In the field events, Ricky Mays finished fourth in the long jump with a leap of 24 feet and Kurt Kerns in the javelin with a throw of 196-6.
Kansas hurdlers also made a strong showing at the meet. Mike Miller finished third in the 400-meter hurdles with a time of 52.92 and Wendell Wright finished fourth in 55.31. In the 110-meter hurdles, Jim Strauff finished fifth with a time of 15.43.
Women place second in three events
By DIANE FILIPOWSKI
Staff writer
The Kansas State Pepsi Invitational on Saturday in Manhattan was the first outdoor meet that the entire women's track team competed in this season, and assistant coach Cliff Rovello said the Jayhawks did not return home disappointed.
"We didn't have any outstanding performances," Rovello said yesterday, "but I think the team as a whole did not outgrowing into the rest of the season."
Kansas competed against nine teams, including Big Eight Conference competition Kansas State, Iowa State, Oklahoma State and Nebraska. No team scores were kept.
O'Hara was fourth in the event
at time of 2 minutes, 15.81
seconds
Coach Carla Coffey said Veronda O'Hara, who usually competes in the 400-meter run, turned in the team's fifth place in race competing in the 800-meter run.
"The race was important because it proved to Veronda that she has
endurance." Coffey said. "It should help her confidence in the quarter-mile later in the season."
No Jayhawk placed first in her event, but three finished second, including the mile relay team, which finished in 46.67 seconds.
Coffey said freshman Yolanda Taylor, who anchored the relay, had a consistent meet, placing third in the triple jump with a leap of 39.3 feet, and second in the long jump with a jump of $18.10_{2}$.
Mylene Mahara] recorded Kansas' other second place finish with a time of 24.72 in the 200-meter dash.
Rovello said other solid performances for Kansas included Jaci Metzger's third-place finish in the long jump with a leap of 18-1 and fourth-place finish in the high jump with a jump of 5-6.
Other four-place finishers for Kansas included Andrea Schwartz in the javelin, 118-10; Cindy Panowicz in the 400-meter hurdles, 1.06:45; and Charla Rosenberry in the 100-meter hurdles, 14.90.
Sports Briefs
Kansas Rugby Club loses three games
The club side lost a 10-9 decision to the Kansas City Blues in Swope Park, despite three successful penalty kicks by Paul King.
The 'B' team lost to Missouri 15-10 when the Tigers scored a try in the last 2 minutes. The 'C' team lost to Missouri's 'B' team 13-10 on another score.
The Kansas Rugby Club lost three hard-fought matches Saturday, one in Kansas City's Swope Park and the others at Schenk Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets.
Next Saturday, all three teams play home matches at Schenk Complex. The club team takes on Kansas State, the host team, and the teams K-State's B'队, Kickoff is at t.p.
Hockey Club loses 5-6
The KU Hockey Club got its first taste of collegiate competition on Saturday, losing 6-5 to Washington University of St. Louis at
The Arena in St. Louis.
Center Jamie McTea scored a hat trick for the Jayhawks.
The KU team is interested in forming a league with Washington and several other college teams in Missouri and Illinois, said KU team captain Greg Lederer. Representatives from the teams will meet this summer.
The two teams played before a National Hockey League match between the St. Louis Blues and the Minnesota North Stars.
The Jayhawks begin play in the Kansas City Metro Hockey Association playoffs tonight at the Fox Hill Ice Arena in Overland Park against Fuzzy's Flyers.
Frisbee Club does well
The KU Frisbee Club's men's and women's teams were victorious at the Ultimate Fools Festival in Lawrence this weekend.
The festival was an ultimate frisbee tournament with more than 20 men's and four women's club teams participating.
Club teams, as opposed to college teams can include individuals of any age.
On the first day, the men's teams held round-robin play in groups of five to determine which teams would advance to the winner's and loser's brackets on Sunday. The women also played a round-robin
The KU women's team, Betty, beat all three women's teams Saturday including a come-front behind win against Artemis from St. Louis.
The Lawrence men's team, the Horror-Zontals, lost two of four games on Saturday, which put them in the loser's bracket on Sunday. The men lost to Springfield and the Boulder Stains, 11-7, before beating Centrifugal Force, 13-6, and coming from behind to beat the Slugg Brothers from Chicago, 13-10.
Sunday, Betty came from behind again to beat Artemis, 13-10, for the tournament championship.
The HorrorZontals beat the Slugg Brothers in a close game 15-13 to advance to the finals against the Oklahoma City Jam. The HorrorZontals won the consola
tion bracket with a 17-8 win over the Jam. In the winner's bracket, the Kansas City Dover Dogs beat Springfield 17-14 for the championship.
Soccer team wins 4-1
Of the four teams in the semifinals of the winner's bracket, three teams had players with at least 10 points.
Leigh Strom, left wing, scored all four of the Javhaws' points.
At the team's home opener March 28, the women beat St. Mary's College of San Antonio. Texas, 1-0.
Next week, the women's team plays against Rockhurst College in Kansas City.
The KU Women's Soccer Club defeated Kansas State University 4-1 Saturday at Shenk Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets, bringing its spring record to 2-0.
Right wing Pascale Haustermanns, a four-year team member, was injured in the second half while attempting to head a pass. He will be out for the rest of the season and will be out for the rest of the season.
Jackson ioins KC roster
FORT MYERS, Fla. — Bo Jackson, who won the 1985 Heisman Trophy, was placed on the Kansas City Royals roster Saturday and was expected to play outfield today when the Royals meet the Chicago White Sox in the season home opener.
"He will play." John Schuerholz, Royals' executive vice president and general manager, said Saturday at his Florida office. "We're not going to put him on the ballclub and not have him play. That would make no sense at all."
Jackson, who shocked most of the sports world last summer when he spawned a $7 million football offer from the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, is hitting 290 this spring.
"This is the first step," Jackson said at the Royals clubhouse in Florida. "It's like starting to walk again. You've got to take it, and then you can walk it. I can't wait to get to Kansas City."
Schauerholz said Manager Billy Gardner would decide Jackson's position on the team.
From staff and wire reports.
---
1
14
Monday, April 6, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Sports
Hagler will set tempo, win Superfight over Leonard in 11th
LAS VEGAS, Nev. — Once the last closed circuit TV ticket is sold tonight, Sugar Ray Leonard will be reduced to playing a supporting role to Marvin Hagler.
Leonard brought marquee value to his World Boxing Council middleweight title challenge against Hagler, making it the richest fight in the sport's history.
Leonard is responsible for worldwide interest and record ticket sales, but flagger will take over when the league starts. He will be the winner in the 11th round.
Leonard used to take command inside the ring as well as outside, but that was when he boxed for a living instead of a hobby.
Hagler will set the tempo. He can either charge Leonard like he did against Thomas Hearns in their 1983 fight, or he can open cautiously as he
Dave Raffo
United Press International
normally does. Hagler will probably take the cautious route; there is no sense running into something early in a fight he plans on winning by attrition.
Hagler will do his best to crowd Leonard, forcing the former welterweight and junior middleweight to exchange heavy blows. Leonard is prepared for this, and might do well
When Hagler shrugs off punches that toppled 147- and 154-pounders, Leonard will begin to question the wisdom of his ending a 35-month retirement to fight the middleweight champion.
for a few rounds.
Leonard wants to capitalize on his speed to nail Hagler first, then either grab or slide to the side and spin the champion.
"There's going to be a point in the fight where he says, 'Oh shoot, this isn't what I expected,' " Hagler said.
Hagler will attack Leonard's body early in the 12-round fight, concentrating more on slowing the challenger than scoring points. In the second half, look for Hagler to turn up his
From the ninth round on the fight will look like a middleweight against a welterweight, with Hagler's right jab and left follows backing Leonard to the ropes. Leonard will grow increasingly helpless until referee Richard Steele will be forced to end the fight, probably in the 11th round.
intensity as the pressure of the night begins to affect Leonard.
Leonard should finish on his feet and without feeling embarrassed. He may rock Hagler early and lead the fight in the early rounds. But Hagler, who was uncertain whether he wanted to fight again a year ago, has too much pride and put too much work into his career to let it all slip away.
Hagler will take Leonard's best punches like he did against Hearns, and wait for his opponent to make mistakes. After 35 months outside the ring, Leonard is bound to make his share of errors. He got away with most of them in his 1984 fight against Kevin Howard, although one mistake resulted in him receiving a seat he did not pay for.
Hagler will make Leonard pay for most — if not all — of his laps tonight. While Leonard should be spared a bad physical beating, the ego that brought him back for the challenge will suffer.
especially to the body area that both men have targeted in training - will make the early rounds worthwhile and produce changes that build drama in a fight.
Leonard, 30, can only win if Hagler has lost everything. Leonard does not have the same skills he showed against Wilfred Benitez. Roberto Duran and Thomas Hearns. Hagler who turns 33 next month, has also faded but the hate he built for Leonard should stem that decline for one more night.
Both have retained the spirit of a champion, and that should carry the night.
Cards crush Rovals
United Press International
MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Third baseman Terry Pendleton's three-run homer in the eighth stadium helped Kansas City win victory over the Kansas City Royals.
With the Cards trailing 2-1, walks to Vince Coleman and Ozzie Smith opened the way for Pendleton, who got the blow off Dave Gumpert.
Smith, Willie McGee and Jose Oquendo had two hits each for the Cardinals, who had 11 hits, six off Gumpert and five off starter Rick Anderson.
The Cards came back to score four more runs in the ninth.
A homer by Smith in the fourth tied the game at 1-1 after the Royals scored an unearned run in the third. A hit by White homered in the sixth.
This is a fight that cannot live up to the hype, but it will have its moments. Some good exchanges —
Greg Mathews started for St. Louis and allowed three of the Royals four hits over six innings and struck out seven.
Kansas City opens the season today against the Chicago White Sox in Kansas City while St. Louis will play in Louisville today and open their National League season tomorrow in Chicago against the Cubs.
JACKIE LARSON
Alan Hagman/KANSAN
Rough weekend
Barry Wolff, right, Cleveland, Mo., sophomore, fights for the football with a University of Missouri defender, worn and his teammates on the KU 'C' team to lost Missouri's 'B' team 13-10. See story page 14.
Play ball
Royals open season today against White Sox
The Associated Press
Lefthander Danny Jackson, 11-12 a year ago, is scheduled to pitch for the Royals in the 1:35 p.m. opener. Richard Dotson, 10-17 in 1986, is the scheduled starter for the new-look White Sox, whose many changes include caps that sport a big "C" for the first time since 1950.
KANSAS CITY, o. — Sunny skies and temperatures in the 60s are predicted for today when the Chicago White Sox and Kansas City Royals open the 1987 baseball season at Royals Stadium with high hopes for improvement over 1986.
Both teams head into 1987 with different managers than those they had a year ago. Jim Fregosi, after replacing the fired Tony LaRussa on June 22, watched his White Sox finish 72-90. Mostly punchless except for Harold Baines, the Sox finished last in the American League in run production, hitting, extra-base hits and slugging percentage.
In charge of the Royals is Billy Gardner, who moved up from third base coach for Dick Howser three days into training camp. Howser will be watching from the sidelines. How-
ser, who guided the 1985 Royals to the World Series championship, is batting a malignant brain tumor that was diagnosed during last summer's All-Star break.
KC
R
Just one year after winning their first World Series championship, the Royals dropped to 76-86. Their major weakness, like the White Sox, was offense. Outfielder Danny Tartabull, obtained in a trade with Seattle, will be asked to help pick up the load.
But in left field for the Royals will be a husky e- football player named Bo Jackson, likely to be this year's most closely watched rookie. The 1985 Heisman Trophy winner, who spurned a guaranteed offer of millions from the NFL's Tampa Bay Buccaneers, was told on the next-to last day of training camp that he had won a spot on the major league roster.
"After I told him he made it, I told him I feel very good about this and hope his talents and efforts will help us win 110 games this year," said Royals general manager John Schuerholz.
"I guess I was the only one who didn't have any doubts about me," said Jackson, who hit 207 in 25 games with the Royals last September. Prior to signing a contract with the Royals last summer, Jackson's baseball experience had been limited to 89 college games with Auburn University. He butled the Royals this spring by driving in 11 runs.
"In all my years in baseball, this is one of the most remarkable things I've seen," Schuerholz said. "Although Bo's very talented and a gifted athlete, and has amazing physical skills, he has such limited experience in baseball. The progress he has made is the most remarkable I’ve ever seen. He’s shown the ability that he can play at the major league
Jackson's big bat will be needed in the Royals offense, which last year finished next-to-last ahead of only the White Sox.
level."
"People underrate me. Some do not like me." Jackson said. "Some are jealous of me. But it doesn't matter to me, because I'm not trying to impress the media, the fans or anything like that. I just want to live up to my potential."
The White Sox' starting pitching seems solid. But rightfielder Baines may again be asked to carry a big part of the offense. Baines, although hammered by a knee injury, led his team in 11 offensive categories and hit more than 20 home runs for the fifth straight season. Baines' first injury caused him to undergo off-season arthroscopic surgery.
"I never had an injury before, so I have no idea how they re supposed to react," Baines said. "It's frustrating. It's real frustrating."
'Huskers sweep 4; KU woes continue
By DAVID BOYCE
Frustrations continued to mount for the Kansas baseball team this weekend.
The Jayhawks lost four games to Big Eight Conference foe Nebraska over the weekend, and the first game against Nebraska on Saturday was a perfect example of their troubles.
Baseball
Kansas entered the ninth inning with a 11-8 lead only to have Nebraska score seven runs that gave the Cornhuskers a 15-11 lead.
The Jayhawks started a rally in the bottom half of the inning, but Scott Seratte was called out at second base by the hidden ball trick. The second baseman faked a throw to the pitcher and hid the ball under his arm, and he tagged Seratte out when he left the base.
Coach Marty Pattin had seen enough and his argument with the umpire after the play got him ejected from the game with two outs remaining.
Pattin, who has not won a contest since he was informed his contract would not be renewed, would not talk with the press after Sunday's loss in the second game.
The only bright spot in the first game was Hugh Stanfield breaking Steve Jelzt' all-time stolen base record, stealing his 66th in the first.
This was the second weekend in a row the Kansas baseball team lost all four games against Big Eight competition.
Last week the Missouri Tigers swept the Jayhawks in Columbia and this week Nebraska took all four games at Quigley Field.
The Jayhawks began Sunday by completing Saturday's second game that was suspended by darkness. Kansas lost that game 7-4.
By losing both games on Sunday, 11-8 and 6-4. Kansas has now gone 12 games without a victory, which includes 11 loses and a tie. Kansas overall record is 8-16-1 and 0-8 in the Big Eight.
Kansas will play a make-up game against Washburn today at 2 p.m. at Quigley Field.
In Sunday's second game, although Kansas only collected four hits, it was tied with Nebraska at 4-all entering the last inning.
But once again, the team faultered in that last inning. Two errors in the inning allowed two unearned runs, which made the final score 6-4.
Nebraska took the lead in the second by scoring two runs off starter Scott Taylor, who pitched well for five innings before being taken out in the sixth. Taylor allowed four runs.
"I threw pretty good until the sixth," Taylor said. "I was mainly trying to throw change-ups to keep
them off-balanced because Nebraska is a good fastball hitting team.
Kansas cut Nebraska's lead in half when firstbaseman John Byrne connected for his team-leading seventh home run.
"He throws a pretty good split-finger fastball and I was set for some trouble."
The Jayhawks tied the game in the third on a RBI single by Serate and took a 4-3 lead in the fourth, Rocky. Helm was walked with the bases loaded and Hugh Stanfield was hit by a pitch, which forced in a run.
But like in their last few games, the Jayhawks found a way to lose.
“It’s hard,” Byrn said. “We seem to be doing everything physically right, but we are coming up just short.”
In Sunday's first game, Nebraska jumped out to a 7-0 lead after 1 innings.
Kansas then scored four runs in the bottom of the second to trail by three.
The Jayhawks were aided in that innning by four wild pitches from Nebraska's pitcher John Kohl. KU triple also had a two-run triumph in that innning.
Kansas was never able to get any closer. Nebraska scored single runs in the fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh innings.
While Nebraska is increasing its lead, the Jayhawks only were able to manage two runs in the bottom of the sixth.
The Jayhawks entered the ninth inning trailing 11-5 but mounted a small rally.
Catcher Joe Pfister started the inning with a walk and then Darrel Matthews hit a double, but Pfister was easily thrown out at the plate.
The next four hitters reached base and two runs scored, but the play at the plate for the first out cost Kansas needed run. The final score was 11-8.
The surprise hitting star in the four game series was Smith, a walk-or junior college transfer who went 6-for 12 over the weekend.
Sunday's games
NEBRASKA 11, KANSAS 8 (1st game)
Nebraska 340 111 100—11 11 3
Kansas 040 002 002 — 8 9 3
Kohi, Spurgeon (8) and Pettengil, Renko, Henry (6) and Boeswen H. Leroko (1-10) SV-Spurgeon B2-Nebraksa, Pettengil and Limon, Kansas, Matthews, Boeschen, Smith and Estes B3-Kansas, Smith, HRs-Nebraksa, Kister, Sirak
NEBRAKSA 6, KANSAS 4 (2nd game)
Nebrakaus 200 101 -2 -6 11
Nebraska 200 101 -2 -6 11
Goumen and Petenellii, Taylor, Murre, Mornes (7) and Pattin W.-Gwogen, LMurre (1-3), 2bS-Nebraska, Crowk, Kansas, Serate, 3bNome, HFtRsNebraska, Sirak, Kansas, Kannay.
DOS
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DONALD G. STROLE
Attorney at Law
• D.W.I.'s & Tafrika
• Fake I.D.'s & other alcohol offenses
• Family Law & other legal problems
16 East 13th St. 842-1133
MICROTECH COMPUTERS
FOUNTAIN XT only $799
IBM Compatible, 256K Memory, Dual floppy drives.
Monographic/parallel card, monochrome monitor, AT Keyboard.
MSDOS 3.1 & software, 1 year warranty. Students & Faculty only
FOUNTAIN AT complete system $1495
6 & 10 MHz, 512K memory, 1 2 meg drive, Hard disk controller.
Monographic/parallel/cock, AT Keyboard, monochrome monitor.
MSDOS 3.1 & software, Students & Faculty only.
Holiday Plaza 25th & Iowa 841-9513
$ 6
HAIRCUTS!
Regular Price $7.50
Walk-ins Welcome!
CLASS ACT HAIR STYLING
841 New Hampshire
749-4517
$ 6
TAU KAPPA EPSILON'S
ST JUDE'S
KU
1987
ST. JUDES
KU
1987
REGIONAL SOCCER CUP
April 10—12
23rd & Iowa
HZR 106
Lite BEER
Cimets
Connects HZR 106 all Hits Lite BEER
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
Are you a baseball fan? If so, than Rotisserie
League Baseball is for you. For more informe
n about rotisserie leagues, visit:
www.rotisserieleague.com
Masalah anda adalah masalah kami.
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Resort Hotels, Cruiseshelle, Airlines, Amusement Parks, NOW accepting applications. For more in information and an application, write National Service, F. O., Box 804, Hull Head, S.C. 29383
15
University Daily Kansan / Monday. April 6, 1987
Student Union Activities is accepting applications for the Kansas Kansan Memorial position. Applications can be picked up at SUA, fourth floor of the Kansas University, beginning March 30. Deadline to apply is m - t. *Tuesday*.
GREEKS
Legacy.
THE GREEK ANNUAL
WANTS YOU!
For more information on how to become the 1987-88 Editor of next year's edition of the ALL GREEK YEARBOOK. Leave a message to write to:
LEGACY
Post Office Box 3954
Ivyhawk Station
Attention: Dian Schmortz
Doug Schmortz
University Community Service Scholarship Award application deadline is 5 p.m., Monday, April 20 at the SUA office. 864-3477, four floor of the Kansas University.
Student Government, not Student Politics.
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ENTERTAINMENT
M Your Request is Lawrence's Best and Most Afl-
M D. J. Sound and Lights for Any Occasion 149
Lave the Hottest Party in Town. Rent A Hot Tub.
*all Tub to-Go* 841-9601
LIBERTY HALL
7:30 & 9:30
BARGAIN NIGHT
WHAT HAPPENED TO
KEROUAC?
Metropolis Mobile Sound. Number i with a bultl!
DJ Extraordinary Weddings. Dances, Parties.
Proms. Booking graduation parties now Hot
Spins for Maximum Party Thurst! 841-7083
FOR RENT
1 bdmf furnished & 2 bdmf unfurnished with
bakery available now at Southridge Plaza Ap
Peoria, IL 60475. (800) 239-1500.
southridge
unpredictable yet beautiful living
Southridge Plaza Apts.
LEASING
for fall
1 & 2 bedroom
apartments
10 month leases
water & cable paid
pool
1704 West 24th
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
842.1140
2 Bedroom apartment for summer bachelor, nice.
close campus, DW, balcony, water paid. $239.00
$189.00
3 bedroom apartment available June 11. Close to town and campus, includes洗衣和 dryer $450. Utilities paid. Other apartments available 841-4144
Spacious 2 bedrooms
Laundry facilities
Waterfed fine
breakfast
10-12 month leases
4kidm, 2 full bath, large kitchen, living room.
3kidm, 1 full bath, large kitchen, living room.
Master Craftsmaster Place. Next to Veski
Master Craftsmaster Place. Next to Veski
4 Bedrooms available this summer in large named house, 3 blocks from campus (128 per per room) and 2 bedrooms in smaller house.
8 Bedrooms, 3 Bathrooms. Adjacent to campus
no pets. Call 842 8917
Apartment for summer and tennis courts Call 914-786-3900
Apartment for summer and fall at University Terrace Apartments, 1657 W. 9th. 1 Bedroom for summer, June and July only $190 unfurnished.
Bedroom for summer, June and July only $230 unfurnished.
furnished $360, plus all utilities. 1 Bedroom for summer, June and July only $250, unfurnished $320 plus all utilities. 2 Bedrooms for summer, June and July only $250, unfurnished $320 plus all utilities. Central air, on bus line, large rooms, gas heat. See at Apartment 415, 1657 W. 9th or 914-786-3200. If no
Aspen West now leasing for Summer. Energy efficient, 1 and 2 bedrooms. 3 Blocks west of Iowa on 15th. Private patios/decks, ceiling fans, no pets. 48-month, 49-128. Open house Saturday.
Excellent location: 2 bedroom apartments in four-plex, carpet central, air equipped kitchen, and low utilities. Available June 1. $110. At 1104 Tennessee and 1314 Ohio. Call 842-4242.
DON'T DELAY! Sublease: 3 story, 3 BR,
Glenhaven apartment. Campus 1 block. Micro-
Fireplace, washer/dryer, more. Great opportu-
nity. Will negotiate. 841-5797
Experience student cooperative living at Sunflower Tower. Enjoy a private room and group work-sharing, meals, and other facilities. Rooms include classroom and fall. Call 789-6871 or come by 1406 Tennessee.
Female. No smoker needed to share co-ead house for summer. *B4 86923 or 849723*
Female roommate wanted for this summer and next year to share a 2 bedroom apartment at the University.
For Rent: August 1 or June 1 through June 1, 1988
Furnished second floor 2 bedroom apartment.
For two girls $95 and for three girls $35 plus 1/2 water
price. Waterproof furniture.
Phone 844-793-0 a 9 m. 3 h. or 7 m. 9 n. p.
Phone 844-793-0 a 9 m. 3 h. or 7 m. 9 n. p.
Great 3' BH house. Sublease for a summer
Nice for 3 people! very large br. Call 749-3553
Suitable for 6-10 people!
Available date: 11/23; 2 bedroom houses, 2.2
bedroom apartments, and 2 sleeping rooms
LEASE NOW FOR FALL Roomy 2 BR apg. good location; fireplace, garage, laundry. No pets. Lease & refs. Req. Couple pref $300 mo 443 7736
in older house. Spacious, wood floors, fireplace,
washer; dryer $350; moe plus gas & electricity.
Will discount for summer pet-sitting. Anne,
499-7387
MIRODWIRKOW AP7 FOR SULSEABLE 1841 WORKING FORM Available May 1, 2015 after 3 p.m.
Modern Split Level 2 Bedroom Apartment available for the summer months. It includes 11/2 baths; study left, spacious living room, and kitchen; dining room; and high calli rooms. D住 at 841-283 after 5 p.m
Most sublease for Summer *Short walk to camp*
.2bm bfern town, Call 841 8281
Reserve your apartment now just two short blocks away from the city center. Parnished with some utilities and off street parking, you can afford it.
Reserve your room now! For summer and/or fall
Furnished with most utilities paid. Shared cooking
and bath facilities just 2 short blocks from
homes with off street parking. No pets.
841-5000
Roommates desired for nice house 2 / 1/2 blocks
south of Windsor. 811-9600 evening; 8423-8129 day
night.
Rooms available for summer and the 1987-88 academic year in the Christian living community "Komuna" at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, information come to 1284 Oraud or calls 843-4933.
Space舱, 2 hpr机, to sub-room for Summer with option to rest in fall. Available. Covered in plastic. 799-6012 799-6012
Studio available for summer in super apt, complex great maintenance, recreation facilities and laundry availability I will assume part of expenses. Call 842 9609 after 6:30 p.m.
SUBLEASE. Furnished 2 BR apt. 1.1/2 bath, CA
room. $750 per month or 94.517 per
10 day lease. 8376 or 7960 or 8147寿
福
SUBLEASE for Summer. Available June 1, 2
Bedroom apt, with pool, balcony, and fireplace
bedrooms. $250 per month.
SUMMER SUBLASE Spacers 3 bedrooms
pool, tennis courts, basketball and tennis courts
morning pool
SUMMER BULESELE extra clean, furnished
Kansas City. Tanglewood Apartments.
Call 749-807-0017
Sublease for summer, studio at Hanover Place Call 749-3400
offers
apartments--all near KU!
Completely furnished
Consider:
- Custom furnishings
- Energy efficient
- Affordable rates
- Variety of floorplans
- Designed for privacy
- Many great locations
- Professional management
CAMPUS PLACE—1145 Louisiana
841-1429
SUNDANCE—7th & Florida
TANGLEWOOD—10th & Arkansas 740.2415
OPEN DAILY 1-5
Sublease for Summer: Brand new 3 bedroom rental with south door. Swimming pool very microwave, dishwasher, fireplace. WD hookup. Management charging $600 - we rent for $550 and management charging $600 - we rent for $550.
Sulphate for summer. Tangweedel, 2 bedroom apartments. Low quality. Low utilities. Call 49-2438.
Sublease for Summer. Furnished one RR with bilt used as second BR, $35 plus electricity, close to town. 65% APR.
Sublease. Trailride one bedroom apartment Pool. Free gas, water. Available mid-May
Sublease Available mid May 1 I back from cam-
sels in October 25 I back from Cam-
sels to open back in summer. 749 067
Located among 70 acres of rolling hills and trees, you'll enjoy the convenience of being close to campus and area shopping.
Location
Meadowbrook offers a selection of spacious and comfortable studios, 1,2, or 3 bedroom apartments, and townhouses to fit your lifestyle
Sul-lease Apt, May 18, 1 bedroom with loft, furnished, wateraid, water #84. 919-533
Lifestyle
Summer Sublet 2 Bedroom Townhouse; Pool, near
business; 814-7049 early fall; 814-1887 latent
sublease for summer: 2 bdmr, furnished apartment,
Tangille Land; Call 749 1916.
RESERVE YOUR
UNIT NOW...
FOR SUMMER OR FALL
**Summer Sublease:** 3 bedroom Apartment with 2 baths, a. c., d. w., Pool. Close to Campus: 841-6967
**Summer Sublease:** three or four person furnished apartment bordering campus. Available in mid-winter.
Summer Sublease. 3 Bdr. Apr. Rent May to April, Please call 749-3689.
meadowbrook
Summer Sublet Large 3 BR Townhouse. AC Neal pool, bar line, bank. Rent negotiated.
HEATHERWOOD
VALLEY
NOW LEASING
FOR FALL
--in town
- Short term leases
- Lowest utility bills
- Gas heat. C-A. D-W
- Gas heat, C-A, D-W
- FF refrig, Disposal
- Quiet location
For more info. call between 9-6, Mon.-Fri., 843-4754
AMENITIES
**Summer Sublaterse** 2 Bdr. Apt. near downtown
Low utilities. Spacious $72.90. Call 841 5797.
**Summer sublaterse for on campus** 2 Dkm apartment.
Balcony, wr. pr., low utilities. 843 4726 or
842 4728.
Summer sublance 3 bedrooms in new 4 bedroom
Suite, Avail. May 19th, Summer Terrace,
Available May 19th, Summer Terrace,
Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the amenities of Naismith Hall. Applications for fall semester are now being accepted while space remains
NAISMITHHALL™
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
913-843-8559
Summer sublease: 3 bedrooms in 4 bedroom apartment with dine 2 baths, and dishwashers.
since two bedroom apartments available
conditioning and washer/dryer included $50 a
month.
Wanted: Persult to Subtel bedroom in apartment from end of May to August. Call Tamar at 842-3534
FOR SALE
1978 Kawasaki LTD 1000 Custom and high performance extra (too numerous to mention). Must be pre-owned.
1922 Honda Mopel Express SR Excelente call,
000 miles: $300, but willing to negotiate. Call
50-70% of Coach Airline Ticket. Credit cards only.
Ask for the Midnight Express, 728-315-8111.
Datsun 210 Sedan 21D, Stereo $69, 6K miles,
Truck with $100 Excellent Condition.
After 6.28.2127
BAND EQUIPMENT - 2 Bass bins 49 x 12 x 19
EV drivers $60 per pair, 7 band EQ $25, Yamaha SK20/ organ/w and case and stand $40, Ruck $84,663 rows.
condition code: $50. Call Mark, #44, 365 weekdays.
condition code: $50. Call Mark, #44, 365 weekdays.
74 Honda 450, all stock, a classic $450.00 O B.O.
842-338, Dave
CPA EXAM Study Material Best CPA Reviews
in Stock. CPA Review Services require only
$489 - $495.00 or e-mail info@cpa-review.com
For Sale. Bicycle 19" 12 speed Trek, 2 years old,
excellent condition, with pump and front bag.
$255 Panzo, Schleifer full sized upright, Mahogany,
$300 Bike for kids, $622, nice, with hand shell,
$755 Call 842-8650
Blue Muskhi 12 Speed Touring Bike • new tires,
excellent condition. Askking $170搭價 1976
Kawasaki KZ8 400 over 5,000 miles. new tires, ex-
cellent condition. Askking $500. askking $500
(motorbike) 843-456-000 or 843-290-000
Commodore 64 computer. Includes keyboard, mouse, optional software, and accessories.
Daznet 3020
Daznet 3020
Fender Acoustic/Electric Guitar $130. Univox
Electric Guitar/Case, 50 watt Musicman
Amplifier. Banex Flanger. All $250. Good Condition.
842.3142
MAD'S COMICS. Comic Books, Playbys, Penhouse, etc. 811 N.Hamphshire.
For Sale - one gold Holton Trumpet and One
Silver Professional Holton Trumpet. Ask $125
and $300 Call 841-4702, ask for Bob or leave
message.
Povey's best horn with tweeter pack, list $125
selling $60 every 3. Mongo mount assms $750
using $50 everything.
Blanche 12 Speed bicycle, 21 inch frame, excellent
condition. Runs on all surfaces for 10
days. 12 Speed Tapered Bike
Drum set 3, piece new cymbals, 4 rotos tama-
$450.00 O.B.C. Play come B-42335, Dave.
Dog House: extra large, insulated. $65 00 841-4478.
Barb.
New IBM PCBJ Amber Screen and Modem. Hook up with KL terminal and work right at home (or in the office).
New Sell 1085 BMW KI60RT Warranty till 10/88
New Pirelli Phonions, Tail Shield, Tail Heel
Gear, Reynolds Rack with trunk Cornbat seat
Gear, Reynolds Gear with $250.00. Make offer
452-3134. Leave message
Men's 12 Speed racing style bike. Excellent condition. 75, Daune, 843-9633
Have fun in the 'mort' sun! Moped for sale-Must sell a Dane at 841-361-208 or best offer. Call Dane at 841-361-208.
Racing Bike Tunturi 22 lbs, 23 in. with lock. Cycle computer more富 $00 fee $864-913
SLR Camera: (New) Tele lens and Flash, all for $70.00 841 6456
Venkatesh VYTII Alpha System Writhing
Venkatesh VYTII Alpha System Writhing
841-5900
Schwin Mountain Bike, 16 speed, and Schwin Mountain Bike, 18 speed, like Brand New. Low, height: +44-80 cm.
Current TV KVM contact Mirey regions
431-6060
Subscription Bike Roles, Telecom and Software
1908 Datsun 200 XS $2600 O. B O 1908 Toyota Corolla SRS $200 4B0 O. B 842-8462
AUTO SALES
872 Cutlass Supreme: AT, TP, PS, Till. AM/AM
Good Condition. Good Condition.
Call 841-9971 before 5 p.m.
Must Sell. 1782 Chevette, 4 cylinders, Automatic
Hatchback 87,000 miles, 4 new radial tires, Air conditioning, Break lining (recently paid $90)
$130 (Firm). 841-5533
TREK 490 Bicycle In great condition! What a Bargain! Call Paul: 833-694-664
New engine, new everything *Dependable Suzuki*
*Racing*, new transmission, 1974, must drive to appreciate
*005*, 841-363-6141.
Nice Toyota Starlet $21. Airborne, 5 speed, good condition
Need assistance $2490 Call Alan or McNell
Must sale $2 Bontiac Firebird, 70,000 km, good condition, stern tape equalizer $3,700 negotiable. Delivery only. (800) 415-6900.
LOST-FOUND
1977 Dodge Coll-4 speed, air. depressible $600
Phone: 844-6352 after 6.
Found: Keys: 5 keys on ring with a hook. Found near 13th & Albion, Call Mary. 864-6620
977 Volkswagen, Rabbit, Restored, beautiful
body, rebuilt engine, 40 miles/gallon, new
battery/tires, long life highway car, free gas for 100
miles, test drive in Lawrence, 669-2287
Hoch Auditorium Thursday. Call Tim: 814-754-
Lent: 2 Keys and a Jahyawk pendant key Ring.
Key Ring is $199.00.
2 Bdm Townhouse for summer special rate,
laundry facilities, swimming, tenni U K; U bus-
ing facility.
CAMP COUNSELORS Wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterskating, gymnastics, archery, swimming patents, camping, crafts, dramas, OR riding. Also Kiteboarding, maintenance. Salary $79 or more! Hire & Mary Seperse, 1765 Nile Mild, IL 60093, 312-444-2444
Found: Ladies Times with black band in front of
Mach Auditorium. Third Class. Ticket Register.
AMILIES CROSS-LIVES INHURT - Summer
Bradley, Cassette Newsletter (1966) 944-4444 Ext. 153
Are you好 with children? Would you like to be
children? IRELI PARENTS 708 Move Ave. 213
Ambulance Route 213
CAMPUS DIRECTOR, FACILITIES PLANNING
The University of Kansas, Lawrence campus, is seeking applications for the position of Campus Director. The director manages all capital improvement projects for the Lawrence campus in accordance with the plan. A professional degree in architecture and design is required.
Letter of application with resume must be received by April 30, 1987. Send to Mr. Allen Wierich, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 60405.
Send to: University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 60405.
equal opportunity affirmative action employee
a plan. A professional degree in architecture and
Knights Pizza has immediate openings for (5)
hard working, responsible driver drivers. Must be 18 years old or older and have own car and insurance. Starting pay $3.50/hr. plus commission and tip. Applicant in person 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. daily. Apply online at Knights Pizza 214 Yale Road, Equal Opportunity Employer.
Children's Counselors, Activity Instructors, WSI,
Bus Driver, Cook, Kitchen Manager, Kitchen
Help, Dishwashing, Maintenance, Nanny for
Dishwashing, Pizza Box, P.O. Box 211,
Boulder, CO 80030 (306) 442-4527
Computer Graphics Consultants need office manager! Must have bookkeeping and computer experience. If you can think for yourself and take a joke we want you. Detailed job description available. Drive to 950 W. 6th Street. Drummer Needed for establishment call 800-273-1420.
GOVENMENT JOBS. $16,000 $49.250. yr. For current
GOVERNMENT JOB 877-607-4000 or www.goven-
ment.jobs.com
Housecleaner Needled. Weekly. Will Pay $7.00 Hr
Call 843-4618. 2 p.m.
Our "Nanny Network" of over 500 placed by us in CT, NY, NJ, and Boston. One year committee reviewed our programs; we board, airfare. All families prescreened for your satisfaction. Many families for you to choose from Contact Helping Hands in. at 203-843-1742. www.nancynetwork.org/business/ncbs.com NBC's Today Show & Hour Magazine
NANNY POSITIONS. Care for children in one of three locations on board, $200-$290 per week. Attend school even one year commitment. Non-smokers preferred. Email interview LA PETITE MERE | 312-754-6800.
NANNY POSITIONS AVAILABLE. Good salary
Families Dallas, Texas Call 9-498 (214) 567-3000
Nasith Hall is taking applications for a full time cook position Schedule is Tuesday Saturday. early shift If interested step by application EQ/M/F/H/AA
Nammy Finders, Inc. looking for nannies. Position available nationally. Good salaries, great benefits. Must make 1 year commitment P.O. Box 4032, Chapel Hill, NC 27515
NEED AMBITIOUS, HARDWORKING PER- FACILITY in Lawrence. Must have all city and state licensing qualifications and have two years supervi- day care experience. Mail 844-6211-9-5 for
Personal care assistants new/nummer. Morning:
7:12 and evening, weekends 9 to 18 (740 622)
6:30 and 8:30 (740 528)
Part-time delivery person needed. Must have own car Call Pekin Restaurant 749-6003
STUDENT - WORK-STUDY POSITION - on campus. Prepare resume, and complete job open and distribute daily mail, answer phone, type, and assist in various duties. Must be eligible for a Bachelor's degree or equivalent. To start immediately. Come to 122 Carrollton Drive, Chicago, IL 60609.
Summer Employment Lawn care lawn care internships for female applicants welcome. Send inquiries to fix
Taking applications and interviewing sharp,
energetic bartenders & cocktail waitresses,
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---
16
Monday, April 6, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Campus Elections
Bottom Line emphasizes experience
By LISA A. MALONEY
Staff writer
The bottom line is that students deserve experienced Student Senate leaders who will get the job done, say Jaskran Krakow and Stephanie Quincy Bottom Line presidential and vice presidential candidates.
"It's not a beer-and-chips job," Quincy said last week. "It's not just cutting ribbons.
"The Senate has a budget of $12 million and is responsible for the bus service. Hilltop child care, Rape Victim Support Services, KU Crew, KJHK-FM and the University Daily Kansan."
Krakow said, "These are the type of things that enhance the quality of student life. Senate has been looking for ways to enhance student life, and for it to become anything less is a rip-off for the students."
If student organizations continue to grow, the Senate may have to go to a matched-grant plan, where the Senate would match the amount organizations had been able to raise on their own, the two said.
In addition to expanding study hours in Watson Library, Krakow said he and Quincy would ask the Senate to have regular "town meetings" so students could voice their concerns. A grade appeals board is another project that students have asked for, he said.
"The problems we've heard about parking are just horror stories." Krakow said. "Until the student body president and vice president take the problem under their wings and deal with the parking problem as a problem, it won't get solved."
Another plan is to get an ex officio seat on the Lawrence City Commission for the student body president, who would not have a vote but could voice student concerns, Krakow said.
Krakow, Prairie Village junior,
has three years of Senate experience,
including two terms as a Nunemaker
senator. He now is chairman of the
Student Senate Executive Committee
and has been the chairman of the MEMS
Senate Executive Committee and the
director of the Associated Students of
Kansas.
Quincy, Iola junior, is a holdover senator. Her three years of Senate experience include serving as StudEx chairman, University Affairs committee secretary and as a University Council member.
The Bottom Line coalition is the only full coalition on the ballot, with 51 senators running for senator. Krakow said that more than half of the candidates had served Senate terms before.
Mike
Jason Krakow and Stephanie Quincy
First Class promises to 'trim the fat'
By LISA A. MALONEY
Running as a "new blood and trim-the-fat" coalition, the First Class presidential and vice presidential candidates, Jeff Mullins and Brian Kramer, say they have a fresh approach to student government.
Staff writer
"We are willing to put our issue of classes against any other issue." Mullins said last week. "We think it will come out on top. The main thing students at this University want is classes."
Their plan, which has created some controversy, is to fully finance student groups that now receive only partial Student Senate financing and some departmental financing, such as the KU forensics team. The used to open more classes.
"We're not promising that we're going to get every class open." Mullins said, "but this will free resour-
ces."
The two also would encourage the Associated Students of Kansas to continue lobbying legislators in Topeka, he said.
“Our issues are basic,” Mullins said. “I mean, cutting a Senate retreat to save $1,700 is so easy. We can afford it. It’s going to work, for we will be able to achieve.”
In addition to having the Senate retreat in Allen Field House, Mullins and Kramer plan to give up their $400 and $50 monthly salaries if elected. The money will go into a general Senate fund and may be used to buy 100 postseason basketball tickets, Kramer said.
"We're pretty sure we can sell all those tickets to the students." Kramer said. "If Senate is not willing to take that risk, we will."
Mullins, a Leavenworth sophomore, was president of his high school student council, debated for two years and participated in his high school's Student Congress in Topeka for two years.
Kramer, a Northbrook, Ill., freshman, has served as a Nunakerem senator this semester and was one of two 1986 National Debate Tournament champions. He has debated for four years.
Mullins said that because the First Class coalition included students from a variety of student organizations, including the Black Student Union, KU crew team and football players, the students would have a voice in Sepate.
"We feel we have these people with fresh ideas that won't come in with the previous biases of past senates," he said.
Brian Kramer and Jeff Mullins
Synchronicity seeks to represent all
Staff writer
By LISA A. MALONEY
Synchronicity presidential and vice presidential candidates Phillip Duff and Glenn Shirtlife want to see the "student" put back into student government.
"We have responsible issues, and we're going to represent all the students: the graduate and the undergraduate, the Greek and the independent," Shirtlife said last week.
In addition to reorganizing completely Student Senate rules and regulations, creating a Senate judicial branch and developing a long-term financing plan for student groups, their platform includes propelling a new waiver for graduate teaching assistants and more campus lighting.
Parking will continue to be a problem, Duff said. He said a survey
commissioned in the fall by the University of Kansas didn't adequately examine the residence hall parking problem.
"Six hundred more spaces next year is not going to do it," Duff said. "It's not a question of what Parking Services is going to do about parking. We need to make sure that what is being done is fair to the students."
Shirtliffe said he and Duff wanted to delegate more responsibility to small groups of senators to help reduce partisan fighting between coalitions. If Senate could work together as one body, instead of as several small factions, it could be more productive, he said.
"A more businesslike attitude is going to do it," Shriftle said. "There are some times the Senate takes five or six hours when one or two would do, with a little direction from the chairman."
Duff, Columbia, Mo., senior, is serving his fourth term in Senate and now is chairman of the Student Rights Committee and a member of the University Parking Board. In the fall semester, he was the assistant director for Course Source and a member of an ad-hoc Senate parking committee.
Shirlte laiffe, Gloucester, Canada, graduate student, has had seven years experience with student government, including four years on various committees at Carleton University in Ottawa, Canada. Now a graduate senator, he was Elections Committee chairman and a member of the Minority Affairs and Student Rights committees in the fall.
"If students knew that $28 of their money and $1.2 million was at stake, they'd realize that they have 1.2 million reasons to vote," Shirttliffe said.
IUF
Glenn Shirtliffe and Phillip Duff
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"Jesus said to him, I am the way, and the truth, and the life; no one comes to the Father but through Me." John 14:6
7:30 p.m. Wed. Parlor C Main Union
Student Senate elections will be Wednesday and Thursday. Polls will be open from 8 a.m. to 7:15 p.m. Wednesday, and from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday Students may vote at Strong, Wescoe, Learned, Fraser or Summerfield halls, or at the Kansas or Burge unions. If weather permits, polls will be outside these buildings.
posters frame frames postel posters frame frames postel frames postel frames postel
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Presidential and vice presidential candidates for both coalition are Jason Koehler, Stephanie Duncan, Bottom Line Jeff Mullins and Brian Kramer, First Class Paul Duff and Glenn Shiftler, Synchrony
Senatorial candidates according to school coalition are
Business - two seats available
Del Metri Hyundai - First Class
Brent Mitchell - First Class
Chevy Malibu - First Class
Maryon Wacka - Bottom Line
**Architecture** – two seats available
Patrick Duff – Sychnichonics
Bottom Lane
Michael H. Killen
David Morris
Bottom Line
Davon Morris
D - Off campass - five seats available
Dawn Abrahamham - Bottom Line
Krystyn Anderson - Bottom Line
Kevin Elliott - First Class
Kevin Elliott - Synchrony
Kevin Fossland - Bottom Line
First Class
Jennifer Hornbauer - Synchrony
Allen Levine - Synchrony
Sarah McColeley - First Class
Michael McKinnon - Synchrony
Chuck Munson - Synchrony
Rob Neyer - Synchrony
Frank Partnoy - First Class
Michael Partnoy - First Class
Terry Wyer - Bottom Line
Engineering — four seats available
Biomedical Engineering
Moschill Joseph Bottin Class
David Carr – First Class
Tim Craig – First Class
Bob Lowe – Second Class
Renee McGhee – First Class
Boston Wilson – Second Class
Wilma Zanelli – Buttin Class
Education - two seats available
Jennifer Ashen - First Class
Kim Coulter - Bottom Line
Chris Dallon - Bottom Line
Social welfare – two seats available Tim Greenwell – Bottom Line Stacey Walsh – Bottom Line
Non traditional — one seat available
Joe Cunningham — First Class
Helen Goldhall — Bottom Line
Ruth Lichthoff — Synchronicity
■ *Journalism* - two seats available
■ *Finance* - two seats available
■ *Debt Management* - Syndromity
*Sancte Kenman* - First Class
*Ferrari* - First Class
*Michelle Parada* - Syndromity
*Michela Parada* - Syndromity
■ Fine arts - two seats available
■ Business - Bottom Line
Kirkland & Board - Kirkland
Tom E. Huffman - Syracuse
Tam W. Huffman - Syracuse
Line Hoehweg-Syracuse - Syracuse
Line Hecht-Schwinger - Syracuse
- Residence at large - one seat available
Amy Baker - First Class
Jon Gregor - Synchronity
Koss Nigro - Bottom Line
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liberal arts & sciences (juniors and senior
college of Liberal Arts and Sciences) - 1 oats
Franklin Barber - Synchronicity
Brett Bouer - Independent
John Cassell - Bottom Line
First Lady - First Lady
Dra Debavenport - Synchronicity
Jeff Devell - First Class
Cheryl Garrett - First Class
Gregory Gault - First Class
Jim Kile - First Class
Amy Lacey - Bottom Line
Lionel Lacey - Bottom Line
Andy Morrison - Bottom Line
Susan Myers - Bottom Line
Pete Dewey - First Class
Jane Foster - Bottom Line
Jennifer Follock - Bottom Line
Amy Handles - Bottom Line
Neil Hancock - Bottom Line
Brad Wasserman - Bottom Line
Nunemaker (freshmen and sophomore in ICS are available on Campus) Class Loretta Bass - Bottom Line Mara Bouger - Bottom Line Mara Bouger - Debby Bergstrom - Synchronity Cotter Brown - Synchronity Cotter Brown - Synchronity Brian Center - Bottom Line Kelly Dundee - First Class Mark Flannigan - Bottom Line Jay Gerber - Bottom Line Susan Hardy - First Class Jennifer Hedrick - Synchronity Jane Hutchinson - Bottom Line Scott K. Blau - Synchronity Tracy Leonard - Synchronity Brad Lehmart - Bottom Maren Malekev - Bottom Line Joanne Mirable - Synchronity Alex Moeschel - First Class Daniel L. Pennington - Bottom Lake Kevin Prichard - First Class Dawn Marie House - Synchronity Anne Russell - First Class Joe Schwartz - Bottom泳队 Don Simm - First Class Ben Strong - Bottom泳队 Michelle Snurt - Bottom泳队 Ranger Tempin - Bottom Jeff Weirath - First Class Stephen Wilburr - First Class
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David Korber — Bottom Line
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details. page 2
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Tuesday
April 7, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 127
(USPS 650-640)
City, downtown owners await mall decision
Editor's note: This is the second in a two-part series that examines the effects of Lawrence's proposed downtown mall.
By TODD COHEN
Staff writer
Like the Kansas River a few yards to the north, the 600 block of downtown Lawrence has been quiet and calm lately.
However, the rest of the town has been like a river eddy, swirling, raging currents all drawing closer and closer together around the block.
The political tides peak today as Lawrence residents vote on a three-question advisory referendum asking whether the city should continue to pursue construction of a mall in the 600 block of Massachusetts and Vermont streets.
Political observers have said if the citizens vote against the mall, the downtown mall idea would die.
But if the mall is given a green light, and voters give the mall final approval in the fall, the 24 owners and 32 businesses in the 600 block will enter a lengthy, complicated period of condemnation and relocation.
The owners, however, don't act if they are in the center of a controversy. The blue "Keep Downtown Downtown" signs that flooded the other downtown blocks are absent.
Neither a "Save the 600 block" campaign nor a call for an onslaught of bulldozers has occurred among the owners.
Michael Lechtenberg, owner of Electric Supply Company, 616 Massachusetts St., said it was evident that Lawrence suffers from a "duck syndrome."
"The way I see it, we have a whole bunch of ducks down here," he said. "It doesn't matter how the election turns out of the pack and lead us around."
of the pack and read us all at home. Lechtenberg said he didn't get involved in city politics. Each new city commission changed the plan, he said, and the duck syndrome probably would prevail again this time.
Hannes Zacharias, city management analyst who has worked on the project for the city, said. "The deviseer was a lot longer than the political time line."
Dale Kring, owner of Parsons & Kring Floor Covering, 634 Massachusetts St., said he supported the mall promotion but avoided getting involved because his efforts would be misinterpreted.
"Naturally, I'm not pleased much about moving. This would be one heck of a job to move," he said, surveying the rolls of carpet in his showroom and warehouse.
But people would think he only wanted a share of the money the city would pay for each property owner's land and to relocate all the businesses, Kring said. He said that might create a bad image.
Lawrence and the developer,
Jacobs, Visconsi & Jacobs, are prepping the block for construction of a $55.7 million mall
Almost $60,000 of public money and 14 years of work have been put into preliminary studies for a mail project, according to city reports.
The stock was declared "blighted" in August 1986. This was the first step before the city could claim "eminent domain" and force the land owners to sell. Zacharias said.
The city estimated that acquiring the block's 48 lots of land would cost $5.9 million. It also has been estimated that the relocation of the 32 businesses in the block would cost $656,000.
Lynn Goodell, city community development department director, said the city would pay to move the stores, including a possible subsidy to help re-establish the businesses.
The city also might pay for new signs and stationery, Goodell said. For the Lawrence National Bank, the
See BLOCK, p. 9, col. 1
CITY HALL
SIXTH STREET
DEPARTMENT
STORE 1
TWO FLOORS
PARKING STRUCTURE
DEPARTMENT
STORE 1
MALL SHOPS
ENCLOSED MALL
MALL SHOPS
MALL SHOPS
DEPARTMENT
STORE 3
ONE FLOOR
OPERA HOUSE
UNIVERSITY
OF HAMPSHIRE
BUILDING
NEW HAMPSHIRE STREET
SEVENTH STREET
LIBRARY
VERMONT STREET
ELDRIGE HOUSE
MASSACHUSETTS
STREET
KANSAN GRAPHIC
Residents decide mall issue today
By TODD COHEN
Staff writer
Four Unified School District Board of Education members also will be
After a long campaign dominated by talk of a downtown mall, the polls opened at 7 a.m. today across Lawrence for citizens to elect three city commissioners and vote on a three-mess question referendum.
The results could have a profound effect on Lawrence for years to come. Depending on the results of the referendum, Lawrence will either continue to pursue a downtown mall, or give it up. However, it also is possible that theaters will not deliver a clear mandate to the city commission.
The referendum questions are:
No.1: "Shall the following be adopted? Massachusetts Street and Vermont Street shall not be closed or vacated from Sixth Street to Eleventh Street."
A yes vote would support keeping the streets open. It also would be a vote against the current mall proposal because the mall would close both Massachusetts and Vermont streets between Sixth and Seventh streets.
Question No. 2: "Shall the following be adopted?" The City of Lawrence, Kansas shall spend public funds, be she state, federal or local, for the purpose of assisting in the building of an enclosed shopping mall in the central business district of Lawrence, Kansas."
A yes vote would permit the city to spend public money to help finance the mall construction.
Question No. 3: "Shall the following be adopted? None of the streets in the central business district of Lawrence, Kansas shall be vacated for the purpose of constructing an enclosed shopping mall."
A yes vote would support keeping
See VOTE. d. 6. col. 3
Co-advising causes trouble for some
By KIERSTI MOEN
Co-advising for pre-professional school students was meant to be foolproof but has confused some students, advisers and deans.
In the co-adapting system, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences freshmen and sophomores who want to enter professional schools may see academic advisers both in the college and in the professional schools.
The college requires the pre-professional school students to have a college adviser sign their enrollment cards. But co-advisers in the professional schools also have an option to sign cards after advising students about meeting the schools' requirements.
This policy confuses some students about which adviser's signature is required, advisers say there were to go but don't understand why.
"It's kind of a hassle seeing both advisers. I don't see why a liberal
arts person has to sign it just because you're in the school," said Harlan Harper, a Topea sophomore and plans to major in social welfare.
Harper was waiting to see a social welfare adviser yesterday because he wanted to avoid conflicts in his schedule. he said.
Ra Willis, director of undergraduate admissions in the school of social welfare, said she had received complaints of incidents complains about advising.
"Initially, a lot of students are confused, and they ask, 'Why do I have to run around here?' "Willits said.
Willits said pre-professional school students often were upset about the rules for advising until they understood the system.
Mary Wallace, assistant dean of journalism, said she did not fully understand the system and that some journalism advisers also were unsure about signing pre-journal students' enrollment
cards.
James Carothers, associate dean of liberal arts, said the coadvising system was meant to prevent discrepancies in students' classes if they should change their minds about entering a professional school or be denied admission to that school.
Although he did not think the system was perfect, the college has no plans to change it, Carothers said.
Joe Van Zandt, advising coordinator in the college, said he was unhappy with the policy that allow co-advisors to sign enrollment cards.
"It seems like a mistake in retrospect," he said. "It has provided some confusion for all of us, and we wish we hadn't done it."
Van Zandt said although he saw problems with the co-adviser's optional signature, he liked the principle of co-advising itself.
Pre-professional school students need to see a college adviser in
their freshman and sophomore years to make sure they meet their long-term goals. Van Zandt said.
"There are ways of achieving a job goal that don't hang on a major," he said.
Van Zandt said he thought many professional school advisers treated students who are interested in the professional school as seriously devoted. Students aren't always so devoted, he said.
Students who change their minds about entering professional schools or are denied admission, often are left with many classes that don't conform with the college's requirements.
When they decide to graduate from the college, after all, they often need extra time to meet the college's graduation requirements, Van Zandt said.
Edwyna Gilbert, associate dean in the college, also thought preprofessional school students benefited from seeing a college adviser.
Method may cut acid rain pollution
Bv PEGGY O'BRIEN
City hall career ends for Longhurst
Staff writer
Changes in the method of burning coal in the boilers at the Lawrence Energy Center may reduce the amount of nitrous oxide, commonly called acid rain, emitted by the plant.
The new technology, which was developed in part by the Electrical Power Research Institute, will be of major importance if it does prove to reduce levels of nitrous and sulfur oxide emitted by coal-burning power plants. Lane said.
And if the technology proves beneficial during the next two years, coal-burning power plants across the nation will be able to adopt the process.
The Lawrence Energy Center will be the first generating plant in the country to receive new technology that could prevent acid rain.
"Nitrous oxide is the last major air pollutant produced in plants around the country that hasn't been effectively controlled," said Dennis Lane, associate professor of civil engineering
Modification of the burners will take place this month, and the developments made by the EPRI will be tested to see how effective they are at
the power plant, northwest of Lawrence, is reasonably clean, according to Dan Wheeler, acid rain contact for the Environmental Protection Agency in Kansas City, Kan.
Wheeler said that the Lawrence plant was not a serious contributor to acid rain, but some U.S. plants would benefit from the research.
See KPL, p. 6, col. 5
By JOESEPH REBELLO
"Longhurst," the poster reads. "Leadership for Lawrence."
Staff writer
David Longhurst sits in his cluttered office on Massachusetts Street, a pencil sticking behind his ear. Behind him is a campaign poster that he's about to put away forever.
Longhurst looks at the poster indifferently, as if it is something from the distant past. It is going to be in a box, along with other campaign literature and moved out of his office, he says.
And with that, his career as a once popular but frequently controversial city commissioner will come to a close.
Tonight, almost four years after he was elected to the commission with the highest number of votes. Long-awaited by city hall meeting as a commissioner.
Somehow, between 1983, when he was elected to office with the most votes, and March this year, when he lost a bid for re-election in the city primary, Longhurst went from being Lawrence's most popular commissioner to one of its most resented
ones.
On March 3, Longhurst's bid for re-election was destroyed when voters rejected him in the city primary. Longhurst fell short of his bid to make the ballot by three votes.
“When I made the decision to run for re-election, I supposed I would do well,” he said. “I thought I would have been a very lightly stunned when I didn’t make it.”
And for a few days after his defeat, Longhurst tried to understand what had gone wrong. Finally, in what he called an act of self-defense, he concluded that the people had gone
KA
Alan Hagman/KANSAN
Before entering politics, David Longhurst transformed a basement printing shop into a successful business Longhurst owns and operates House of Usher Printing, 833 Massachusetts St.
A political maverick
In 1983, Longhurst won the cu,
elections with 6,090 votes. But Jack
Rose, a former city commissioner,
cautioned him. "Do your job right
and you'll never get re-elected."
That warning, he says, was cast aside in the euphoria of his victory. Things had to be accomplished in the end. "It was going to be," he was going at them single-mindedly.
Longhurst and two other members of the new city commission that came into office in 1983 were memorialized at a memorial efficiency to the commission, he said.
They made quick decisions, they were united, and they restored a sense of faith in the commission.
"We really turned things around." he said. "We set the tone that things were going to happen, and by God, they were going to happen right."
"I think in my year as mayor the attitude at City Hall was changed." Longhurst said. "It was more important not to subject the city to our personal whims in deciding policy, and to make policy in the best interests of the city."
"He had a strong tendency to go off or his own instead of consulting other commission members," said Nancy Shontz, a former commissioner who served with Longhurst for two years.
But of the five members of the commission, Longhurst was the most impulsive and the least tactful in political issues affecting the commission.
"That sometimes put the commission in extremely embarrassing post-
See LONGHURST, p. 10, col. 1
In 1983, for instance, when Gov. James Blanchard of Michigan remarked that the best thing about Kansas was its Holiday Inn, Longhurst wrote an angry response to him that told him to stay away from Kansas.
INSIDE
Disappearing act
I will do it. I'll do it.
I will do it. I'll do it.
I will do it. I'll do it. I'll do it.
I will do it. I'll do it. I'll do it.
The head of circulation for the University libraries estimated that more than 50 percent of the books checked out were overdue, but said that most overdue books eventually were returned. See story page 3.
Go for the goal
The KU Hockey club upstet Fuzzy's Flyers 3-3 last night in Overland Park and advanced to the championship game of the Kansas City Metro Hockey Association tournament. See story page 11.
1
2
Tuesday, April 7, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Around the World
Parliamentary election in Egypt marred by violence and arrests
CAIRI, Egypt — A parliamentary election in Egypt yesterday was marred by opposition charges of government-inspired fraud and that reportedly left one person dead, injured and hundreds in custody.
The ruling National Democratic Party was expected to retain its comfortable parliamentary majority in the elections for a new 448-seat People's Assembly, the Egyptian parliament.
The elections were called two years before schedule to end challenges to the legality of the Assembly, which is expected to
U.S. checks security at Moscow embassy
nominate President Hosni Mubarak for re-election in October.
An alliance between the fundamentalist Muslim Brotherhood and the Labor and Liberal parties, calling for Islamic law in Egypt, was believed to have a good chance of replacing the right-of-center New Wafd Party as the leading opposition force.
In the last elections, only the National Democrats and the Wafd met a legal provision that a party must win 8 percent of the national vote to gain admission to the Assembly.
MOSCOW — Two members of Congress, assessing damage from the Marine sex-spy scandal, conducted a surprise, late-night "spot check of security arrangements" at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow, an embassy spokesman said yesterday.
Rep. Dan Mica, D-Fla., chairman of the House Foreign Affairs International Operations subcommittee, and senior Republican member Olympia Snowe of Maine
started the 90-minute check of security arrangements and Marine positions about 11 p.m. Sunday, the spokesman said.
At least two Marines usually are on duty at that time of night and the embassy tends to be deserted. It was under those conditions that two Marines charged in the scandal are alleged to have permitted Soviet agents into the compound and secret embassy rooms to plant bugs and other spying devices.
Reagan rebuffs acid rain issue at summit
OTTWA, Ontario — President Reagan hailed Prime Minister Brian Mulroney's risky push for free U.S.-Canadian trade yesterday, but concluded their third annual summit by rebuffing demands for a firm commitment to reduce acid rain.
Winding up a 24-hour visit dominated by the acid-rain issue, Reagan read a speech to Parliament that promoted a free-trade agreeable model of production in a model for a world economy threatened by protectionism.
But in capping what was dubbed in advance as "a summit without drama," Reagan and Mulroney again were unable to agree on how precisely to resolve the environmental problem that has been the No.1 source of tension in their relations.
Reagan, in a last minute addition to his speech, moved to sweeten the outcome by agreeing to consider Mulroney's proposal for a formal treaty on acid rain.
His speech in the House of Commons was applauded for its commitment to free trade and principles of free enterprise. But Reagan was interrupted by a shout of "No way!" from left-wing members of Parliament when he declared that his Star Wars anti-missile system "supports and advances the objectives of arms control." He was heckled again minutes later when he decried the situation in Nicaragua, where Canada opposes U.S. support for the contrais.
Despite 11th hour maneuvering, the low-key summit endured largely the way U.S. and Canadian officials had predicted: without any kind of showcase announcements or agreements.
Across the Country
Death toll reaches 3 after bridge collapse
AMSTERDAM, N.Y. — Rescue workers recovered two more bodies yesterday from a rain-snow canyon where an interstate highway bridge collapsed, plunging at least four vehicles 80 feet into the swirling water and killing at least three people.
Up to 400 feet of the New York State Thruway bridge collapsed
Sunday near Amsterdam, which is 35 miles west of Albany. At least three cars and a tractor-trailer plummed into Schoharie Creek
Rescuers located two vehicles and one body late Sunday, and a third vehicle was spotted this morning with the bodies of two men inside.
1 exaco considers bankruptcy protection
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. — Texaco Inc. is prepared to file for bankruptcy protection as a result of its legal battle with Pennzoil Co., but Texaco's chairman said yesterday that he is confident he can avoid taking such a drastic sten.
Texaco Chairman Alfred DeCrane also told a crowded news conference that the Supreme Court decision had not increased the pressure on his company to reach an out-of-court settlement with
Pennzoil in their high-stakes legal battle over the acquisition of Getty Oil Co.
DeCrane said that Texaco investigated the bankruptcy option after a Houston jury in November 1985 found the company guilty of derailing Pennzoil's agreement to acquire Getty and awarded a record $10.53 billion in damages, before interest, to Pennzoil.
Texaco purchased Getty for $10.1 billion.
From Kansan wires.
Weather
LAWRENCE FORECAST
From the KANSAN Weather Service
WEATHER FACT: The average high temperature for April is 61 degrees and the average low is 42 degrees.
Sunny Day
Partly cloudy skies will remain today as the high reaches 63 degrees with mild westerly winds. Tonight, clouds should begin to dissipate with northerly winds and a low of 39 degrees. Tomorrow, skies will be highs in the low to mid-60s.
Partly cloudy skies will remain today as the high
OMAHA 59 / 37
LINCOLN 58 / 38
CONCORDIA 60 / 37
SALINA 61 / 38
WICHITA 60 / 39
TOPEKA 62 / 37
KANSAS CITY 61 / 40
COLUMBIA 62 / 41
ST. LOUIS 61 / 42
CHANUTE 59 / 38
SPRINGFIELD 59 / 38
TULSA 64 / 43
DES MOINES 58 / 39
"Freedom Struggle in South Africa a speech by: Solly Simelane
Representative to the United Nations
African National Congress
At: Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union Tuesday, April 7th, 3:30 p.m.
GLASSTHOMSON
GLASSTHOMSON
SANDOW
MODERATOR
PANEL DISCUSSION
Catch the Fever of the New Music Movement Philip Glass Virgil Thomson Gregory Sandow
A meet the Composer/Mid-America Arts Alliance Program
Panel Discussion
"Living Composers Communicating With Their Musicians and Audiences"
This Program is made possible by the support from the Kansas Arts Commission and, the National Endowment for the Arts, through their participation in the Mid America Arts Alliance, a regional arts organization and Meet the Composer, Inc
1:30 p.m.
Sunday, April 12, 1987
Liberty Hall, Lawrence
1. 30 p.m.
The Kronos Quartet in Concert
8:00 p.m. Sunday, April 12 1987
Crafton-Prever Theatre • Tickets
on sale in the Murphy Hall
For Reservations, call 913/864-3982
Free and Open to the Public
Presented by the University of Kansas Concert and Chamber Music Series
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 7, 1987
3
Local Briefs
County ends investigation of KU deaths
The Douglas County District Attorney's office has closed its investigation into the possibility that four KU students killed in an accident on March 27 may have been sold alcohol illegally. The truth is when their car was struck by a train on County Road 1900N.
Students receive Mellon Fellowships
Three KU students have each received a Mellon Fellowship in the Humanities, a national award intended to encourage students to pursue a career in higher education.
The investigation, conducted by sheriff's detective Mike Suitt, did not find sufficient evidence of an illegal action, said District Attorney Jim Flory.
Anna Creese, Lawrence graduate student; Michael O'Rourke, Lawrence senior; and Michael Sind, Overland Park park, were among 1,222 students in the United States and Canada nominated for thehips. In the United States, 122 students received the award.
The fellowship includes a $9,750 cash stipend and pays tuition and fees for one year at any U.S. or Canadian university, with the opportunity to renew the scholarship.
KU debater chosen as country's best
A KU student, John Culver,
Overland Park senior, was
selected as one of two outstanding
debaters in the country at the
National Debate Tournament last
month at Illinois State University.
Culver and his team partner,
George Lopez, Wichita junior, tied
with another KU team, Steve Ellis,
Wichita senior, and Barry Pickens,
Winfield sophomore, for fifth
place honors at the tournament.
KU was of three schools to
have two teams win top awards.
Baylor University won the tournamen
Applicants sought for SUA board post
*Student Union Activities is accepting applications for an indoor recreation board member.
Craig A. Colbert, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, was elected for the position March 1 but has resigned.
The person selected will organize tournaments and work with students interested in specific games.
Applicants can obtain and return application forms at the SUA office on the Kansas Union's fourth floor. The deadline for applications is 5 p.m. today.
Each applicant will participate in five-minute interviews beginning at 5 p.m. tomorrow.
Applications due for financial grants
Area health and human service agencies have until Friday to apply for 1987-88 financial grants from the United Fund of Douglas County.
Application forms already have been mailed to agencies that received money last year. Other groups may pick up applications in Room 211 of the United Way office, 70 Massachusetts St.
From staff and wire reports
Campus and Area
House passes bill giving scholars credit
By JOHN BUZBEE
TOPEKA — The state House yesterday passed a bill to give National Merit Scholars from Kansas a tax credit if they work in the state after they leave school.
Staff writer
The bill, which would allow National Merit Finalists to deduct school loan payments from their state taxable income, would be just a small Band-Aid in an effort to plug the state's brain drain, legislators said.
"I think it helps only a few people," said State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence. "I would be more excited about measures that help more students. We have some very fine scholars who have to borrow money for graduate school who are not National Merit Scholars."
Gov. Mike Hayden pushed for the bill to encourage the best and brightest Kansans to work in the state, whether or not they went to college here
State Rep. Joe Knopp, R-Manhattan, proposed an amendment to give the credit to students from other states who went to Kansas universities, Charlton said.
"I would rather do more for more students, but I guess every little bit holes" Charlton said.
Charlton and State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, who both voted for the bill, also supported the administration, which was narrowly defeated.
"What I would like to see are more incentives for National Merit Scholars to attend Kansas schools, as well
as come back to Kansas," Branson said. "I think we do have a piece missing there."
But the state's financial woes would prevent more beneficial plans, she said.
"If we put more into attracting National Merit Scholars to our universities," she said, "we would be pooling more brains and more creative ideas for economic development."
Supporters of the plan say it would be a boon to economic development in the region.
State Rep. John Solbach, D
Lawrence, voted against the bill
The bill now heads to the Senate, but State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., RLawrence, said the Senate probably wouldn't have time to consider it.
The bill would allow for annual $2,000 deductions, up to $16,000 total, from taxable state income for college graduates who graduated from a Kansas high school after 1982. The deductions would be available for 10 years for the National Merit Scholarships after they leave school if they work full time in the state. It probably also would apply to self-employed workers. Charlton said.
Winter said the state should focus on economic development and better higher education to stop the brain damage that he probably would support the bill.
"The tax credit clause is woetly inadequate," he said. "It's trying to bail out the boat with a teaspoon, and it doesn't matter less we focus on the other two areas."
Overdue books nothing new to libraries
By LAURA BOSTROM
Staff writer
ИН THE
КЛЮСОР
ОРГАФКИ
Library books have a talent for disappearing.
And students usually scramble when an overdue notice demands the return of books that have been misplaced or out of order. Seats of cars and cluttered bedrooms.
Most people don't respond to the renewal date printed inside their books, said Kendall Simmons, head of circulation for the University libraries. She estimated that more than 50 percent of the books checked out were overdue.
Unpaid fines can put a hold on processing of transcripts, enrollment and graduation, and usually the only way out of a fine is to pay it.
Most overdue books are returned before transcripts are held. A five-day overdue notice brings most of the books back, Simmons said, and that doesn't work, the library sends a 20-day notice and suspends the offender's borrowing privileges.
Students can check out regular circulating materials for four weeks, while KU faculty and Ph.D. students can check out materials for four months.
After the checkout period, the user has a 30-day grace period to return the book. On the 31st day, a $5 fine is charged.
Photo Illustration by Alan Hagman/KANSAN
A KU student worker processes returned books at Watson Library. Approximately 50 percent of books checked out of the library are returned overdue.
Money generated by library fines goes into the University's general fund. Since July 1, 1986, $32,185 has gone into the fund.
Since the library is supported by the state of Kansas, any money generated by fines goes back into the general fund, said Keith Ratzloff, KU associate controller.
Once returned, the books are stacked by call number before being returned to circulation. Simmons estimates that on an average day, it takes about 48 hours to reshelve the books.
"Other times we have them stacked on the floor." she said
Though Simmons did not have an estimate of the daily book flow, she said between 11,000 and 16,000 books were checked out a month. That
number escalates to 30,000 as students prepare reports and papers at the end of each semester.
out each year, Simmons said. KU libraries contain more than 2 million books, periodicals, microforms and other materials.
About a million things are checked
Pattie Armbrister, head of circulation for the Lawrence public library, said that as a town, Lawrence was pretty good about returning books.
U.S. society is individualistic, writer says
By PAUL SCHRAG
Staff writer
Broken marriages and apathy toward national elections are results of our society's emphasis on individualism and disregard for the common good, a well-known sociologist and writer said last night.
Robert Bellah, co-author of the 1985 best-seller "Habits of the Heart," said U.S. citizens needed to apply the lessons of history to today's problems to rescue society from the crippling effects of individualism.
"The loss of memory and hope has left us adrift in the present," he said. "I think of ourselves as self-created from a past and almost without a future."
the basis for restoring society's hope for the future, Bellah said. Memory can be restored by forming communities of interpreters who understand the past and its meaning for today.
people at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union was the last presentation of the Humanities Lecture Series at the University of Kansas this academic year.
"It is out of the application of the past to the present that we find hope to deal with the difficulties tht face us."
Reviving society's memory can be
Bellah is professor of sociology and comparative studies at the University of California at Berkeley. He teamed with four others to write "Habits of the Heart," a critique of U.S. society. In 1985, the book became the first sociological bestseller since the early 1960s, said Robert Antonio, professor of sociology.
Robert Shelton, associate professor of religious studies, said much of Bellah's work has dealt with the sociology of religion.
Bellah's lecture to more than 100
Centuries of religious experience have shown the validity of Bellah's view that individualism undermines the common good, Shelton said.
"There's no question that we have fallen into an individualism that is rootless and is insufficiently attached to community," Shelton said. "We can't possibly get a sense of who we are as individuals without interaction with others."
"Our ticket sales are up 30 percent over last year," said Rosalie Stolpe, manager of the Travel Center, 160 W. 23rd St. "We're getting more calls every day. People are getting their nerve back. They're taking chances."
"It's relatively quiet abroad right now," she said.
People thought it was safer to stay home and travel in the United States. But the numbers are up again, going to people in the travel industry.
Cheryl Farrer, director of the passport office at the Lawrence post office, said applications for passports increased by 30 percent over last year.
"It's definitely because there has been less terrorism." Farmer said.
Stolpe said the reason for the surge was the decrease in terrorism.
She said requests for passports in March had increased by 50 percent over requests in March of 1986.
"Most of our requests are from students," Farmer said. "On the applications they mostly fill out that we supply to Europe. A lot go to Germany to study."
Paid for by the Mike Rundle for Lawrence Committee Neva Enterkin, Treasurer
At the University of Kansas, 220 students signed up for the 1987 summer study abroad program, as compared to 160 students in 1986.
"Many students dropped out of the summer program last year after the bombing of Libya," said Mary Eli. "This was a vector of the study abroad program."
"There were 800 terror attacks last year, and 738 this year," Moos said. "That isn't much of a difference, but we don't hear about it in the news because not so many of the attacks have involved Americans."
Moos said more attacks were against Germans and French than against Americans.
Felix Moos, professor of anthropology and a specialist on terrorism, said world terrorism had decreased only slightly.
[Paid Pol. Adv.]
The number of U.S. citizens traveling abroad dropped dramatically last year after the U.S. bombing of Libya and the nuclear accident in Chernobyl.
Mike Rundle supports planning that is open to the public. Planning that listens to different points of view.
THE MALL:
HOW DID WE GET
HERE FROM
THERE?
Gwin said the French and Spanish programs had more applicants than English students.
"Americans have a short mem ory," he said.
MIKE RUNDLE
City Commissioner
That was not an accident. The planning of our major projects is out of touch with the people.
She said the KU study abroad office was kept aware of political situations in the various program countries and international Student Exchange Program.
Overseas traveling increases this year
TUESDAY
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Wed. Special: 75° watermelons 11 a.m.-3 a.m. $1.00 cover
the Sanctuary
7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 843-0540
In four years, the City Commission's mall plan has gone from bad to worse.
3y ROGER COREY
We live with new projects for a long time. Let's get them right.
She said the study abroad program in Great Britain had increased from 25 students in 1986 to 30 this year. The program set a record with 37 students.
"We made it clear the directors were insured by the University," Gwin said. "We developed a guide to support students both the director and the students."
"The students are learning to deal with conflict better," Gwin said. "They are learning how to act in emergency situations."
Staff writer
"Fifty students applied for each program and we could only take thirty-five," Gwin said.
Intramural Softball Tournament
Mens & Womens Co-Rec
23
April 11 & 12
April 25 & 26
16 Team Limit
Entry Forms in 208 Robinson
RECREATION SERVICES
1-913-864-3546
4
4
Tuesday, April 7, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
---
Fast revives message
The divestment battle, dormant for almost two semesters, has begun once again with a dramatic, attention-grabbing tactic.
Michael Maher, Roeland Park senior, began a hunger strike March 31 for divestment. Maher has said he will not eat until he receives letters from at least 50 alumni, asking the Kansas University Endowment Association to divest from U.S. companies doing business in South Africa. As of yesterday, he had received a few letters.
Maher and other KU activists once drew attention to the divestment issue through protests, a few that ended in arrests of some students. The students have appealed to the Endowment Association and to KU administrators, but their angry cries for divestment have been ignored for the most part and have become muffled sobs.
Now, some of these students
The problems in South Africa have not gone away. They still exist, just as they did in fall 1985, when the divestment movement peaked at KU and university students across the country protested for divestment.
have added a new twist to an old issue. The protesters are appealing to alumni with a personal tactic. Alumni can have a strong voice in the operations of the University and the Endowment Association, because their money, funneled through the Endowment Association, helps to support the University. It is too bad that a student has to go to such extremes to be heard.
Most of us will never know what criteria fraternities base their decisions on when rushing new members, but hopes are being renewed that it has nothing to do with being a lightweight or a heavyweight.
KU alumni and friends should use that voice to help the students who wish to make a statement against the morally repugnant system of aparthied in South Africa.
The movement at KU has returned. But this time, a life is on the line.
Cheers to a dry rush
Last week, the Interfraternity Council voted unanimously to adopt a policy that would forbid beer from rush parties. The measure is expected to gain formal approval at the council's next general assembly meeting April 22. Under the terms of the policy, fraternities found to be in violation of dry rush would be fined $500 or 10 percent of the fraternity's rush budget.
Opinions
The reasons for the unanimous decision stem from the practical, legal and responsible considerations in rushing new members.
Many fraternities have witnessed the escalating costs
of liability insurance for alcohol-related accidents The costs of a single lawsuit, which could cause a house to close down, make the risk of supplying beer at parties very high.
The decision also indicates that fraternity members are making a more serious effort to comply with the state's drinking law that bars liquor from being served to those under 21.
More importantly, however, is the added degree of responsibility that the fraternities are encouraging in choosing new members for their houses. Prospective participants in the greek system will be more likely to see that fraternities are more than tavern substitutes, and participants will be able to judge rushees in a more rational manner.
Cheers to a dry rush.
Learning from Baby M
Superior Court Judge Harvey Sorkow's decision in the Baby M case did more than affect the lives of William and Elizabeth Stern and Mary Beth Whitehead. It could set the stage for future cases.
Sorkow's ruling has set a precedent in an uncharted area that could be the basis for future decisions. Surrogate motherhood has become a reality, and now legislators on both the national and state levels need to consider how to regulate the practice.
Even before the Baby M decision, which gave custody to Stern, the biological father, some states realized the effect that surrogate motherhood would have on the society, so they started action on regulatory bills.
hiring surrogates have been introduced and are under consideration in New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Missouri, California and Wisconsin.
Bills to limit the practice of
Proposals that would ban altogether the practice are being considered in Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Minnesota and Rhode Island.
Sorkow's ruling said surrogate contracts are legal under New Jersey law, and in his 121-page opinion he urged legislators to put laws on the books that would prevent future disputes similar to the Baby M case.
Legislators need to take a close look at legislating surrogate motherhood and make sure the laws are fair to all parties involved so that there won't be a repeat of the Baby M case.
News staff
News staff
Frank Hansel ... Editor
Jennifer Benjamin ... Managing editor
Juli Warren ... News editor
Brian Kaberline ... Editorial editor
Sandra Engelland ... Campus editor
Mark Siebert ... Sports editor
Diane Bulmeier ... Photo editor
Bill Skeet ... Graphics editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Lisa Weems ... Business manager
Donnie Hardy ... Advertiser
Denise Stephens ... Retail sales manager
Kelly Scherer ... Campus sales manager
Duncan Calhoun ... Marketing manager
Lori Copple ... Classified manager
Jennifer Hainski ... Production manager
David Nixon ... National sales manager
Jeanne Hines ... Sales and marketing adviser
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Media need to get back to the basics
I was recently told by different people in the journalism school that I'm "over cynical."
It happened in one of my classes, when I accused the mainstream media of being more concerned with profits than with quality reporting. I
Christian Colbert Columnist
My idea of strong reporting entails more than just a reporter serving as a purveyor of information. We're already drowning in a sea of information, nine-tenths of which is drivel. A good reporter should be ready to challenge and refute, rather than be used as a tool of the government and politicians to spread propaganda, as so often happens.
An excellent example of the type of reporting I'm criticizing is the recent information that reporters were fed
It's as if the reporters covering the story trusted the Pentagon completely to provide them with accurate estimates. Let me remind those of you who aren't aware, the CIA is not responsible for the same CIA that has been providing us with inflated estimates of the Soviet military buildup for decades.
by the Pentagon involving estimates of Soviet military expenditures. Without verifying any of the information, the story made front pages across the country and was presented as fact.
added that if students wanted to get a job on a big newspaper, they had better abandon any idealism they thought they were in, either conform or starve out there.
If the Syrians hadn't broken the Irangate story, would we still be revering the Reagan administration? I think so. It appears that for the last six years, the one thing the media have been successful at doing is reinforcing the propaganda of this administration by not challenging the information it feeds them.
By conforming, I mean that journalists today had better be prepared to accept frivolous, repetitive and useless work, and to purge themselves of independent thought.
If contemporary media are not falling us, why then, did a Syrian magazine have to break the Irangate bomb? Why not? It would not there for the U.S. press to notice.
Or, why have the media failed to adequately inform U.S. citizens about what is really happening in Nicaragua? Many U.S. citizens falsely believe that Nicaragua is a totalitarian government installed by the Soviet Union because of the media's failure to challenge or refute Reagan's characterizations of what's
happening there
Sound Orwellian? If Parenti is correct, then our democracy is a struggle. It's even more tragic when you consider that our society is increasingly becoming a corporate military society where independent thought is liberated and more military equipment and profit are the driving forces.
Why have the media failed to fulfill their watchdog role? I believe the root of the problem lies, in part, in the profit motives of the big conglomerates. It's not good business to support a staff of investigative reporters. That takes time and money. Perhaps it's also not good business to expose the truth when the truth indicts the powerful people who have a vested interest in the status quo. It could be that U.S. citizens have become so accustomed to frivolous news that they probably would not enjoy quality journalism.
Perhaps the reason so many U.S. citizens lack sound judgment and elect presidents like Reagan is that mass media are failing to do their job.
Writing in this month's Columbia Journalism Review, William Boot is critical of journalists who "got caught up in the Reagan euphoria and came across more like the obsequious courtiers who praised the emperor's 'garrants.'"
Boot believes the "press has much to answer for in not having made the naked truth about the emperor more known" before the Iragate scandal.
In his book "Inventing Reality: The Politics of the Mass Media," Michael Parenti's main thesis is that "the press does many things and serves many functions, but its major
role, its irreducible responsibility, is to continually recreate a view of reality supportive of existing social and economic class power."
I'm not saying there are no quality journalists working today; not at all. There have always been good journalists whose work has reflected their personal values and moral outlook. But they are so overwhelmed by the rest of the pack and condemned by the public that their voice is small, very small.
I think journalists should start re-examining the profession and consider whether they are doing their job to provide a public service or if their only motivation is to merely collect a paycheck. If it's the latter, then the people will continue to be as frivolous as the news we give them.
Am I "over-cynical?" I can't answer. However, I'm certain that I'd rather criticize what's wrong, even if that means being called "over-cynical" or anything else, then silently acquiesce and contribute to the madness and confusion of contemporary life.
Spy case may not be so serious
WASHINGTON — Admittedly, I've never been a U.S. Marine or a sailor either, for that matter. But it was interesting to note that both guards accused of spying at the American Embassy in Moscow were enlisted men.
Dick West (JPI Commentary)
Stand now and repeat after me:
"My, how things have changed."
Distributed by King Features Syndicate
It used to be that non-commissioned officers in the Army were told nothing about what was going on, secret or otherwise. I'm not sure commissioned officers, or Gentlemen by Act of Congress as we used to call them, were all that hep, either.
They were left, along with everyone else, to figure out for themselves the meaning of the bonehead orders that came down from on high. Hence, the question of whether two soldiers may have done more damage than a spy ring headed by one Navy radioman never arose.
There is no doubt, however, that some of my Army buddies would have allowed beautiful Soviet women to work their wiles on them.
Perhaps the State Department did the wise thing in insisting that all Marine guards at its Moscow Embassy be replaced.
It was hardly their fault if the Marines, as with most servicemen since time immemorial, were young and unmarried. The bonehead part was expecting such a policy to work in the first place.
"You should see the place," they may have reported. "Green striped scoevers and blue plaid drapes. You have straps and plaids gone together."
It has been reported that the two guards admitted to "sensitive" floors female Soviet nationals employed by the Embassy.
Therefore, rather than closing down embassy communications equipment, the State Department perhaps should first have examined the color scheme.
Did it ever occur to U.S. brass hats to wonder whether the Soviet women were merely curious to see what the Americans had done with the rooms? Why did American officials automatically assume some sort of hankypanky was going on?
The Soviet women may simply have been interested in seeing for themselves whether the slipcovers matched the draperies.
THE GOOD NEWS IS
HE SPOKE HIS FIRST
WORDS. THE BAD
NEWS IS THEY WERE
"SURROGATE MA-MA."
Mailbox
You tell voters to support the advisory questions. But how should they vote on each question? What does a "no" vote on question two mean? Does it mean that the voter doesn't want a mall? Or that they don't want to spend an unlimited amount of taxpayers' money for a mall? Or that they want some other kinds of downtown development — a single department store, a group of village-like shops? Or that the question is poorly worded and too broad to understand?
Your editorial in the April 1 Kansan is the soul of inconsistency. Is it perhaps your "April Fools" joke? First, you endorse three candidates for City Commission, two of whom are vehemently opposed to the building of the 600 block mall. Then, in the next paragraph, you urge support of building that mail. Have you thought about these issues?
Finally, your editorial equates a mall with "progress." I guess that must make Overland Park the most progressive town in Kansas. Is it progressive to encumber taxpayers with $20 million in debt to build a privately owned store? Is it progressive to block Massachusetts and Vermont streets; thus funneling bridge and downtown traffic through a beautiful and historic residential district? Is it progressive to widen those residential streets which will encroach on a city park and pool
An April Fools' joke?
complex? Is it progressive to bring in three department stores and 90 national retail stores (malls are 95 percent national chains) when many retail areas in Lawrence are unoccupied?
I hope the voters spend more time than you did researching these questions.
Pat Kehde
coordinator. University Information Center
Yes sir, thank goodness there are still a few of us left who want to keep this nation safe and tied to its puritan roots. We are called to save the souls of the youth who promote the wearing of unitards and dance as if they have Lucifer himself in them!
But let us not concentrate only on the Crimson Girls, let's look at the heart of American pastimes. How about the men's swim team? Now that little loincloth can provoke many a lewd thought in the minds of our innocent females. And along that line, can't we do something about the basketball players' jerseys? All of that underarm hair nauseates me.
Welcome to the Plains states, brothers and sisters. It is here that the good Lord motivates our fellow Americans to come to the aids — well, make that the sides — of our countrymen.
But why stop there? Maybe we can re-establish censorship, book burn-
Aiding countrymen
ings and even a dusk-to-dawn curvet for those under the age of 21. And we can do it all in the name of morality to protect the delicate minds of our young people here at the University of Kansas in preparation for the real world. . .
Katie Hannigan
Tulsa, Okla., freshman
Alumni too powerful
It's bad enough that our Crimson Girls cannot wear the uniforms of their choice, but look at the reaction that caused this decision. Apparently, several complaints were submitted by horrified, money-giving alumni of the University. Their actions will now cause a group of students, who perform at games played by students, for students, to change their attire.
It's too bad a certain few can control what happens with a snap of their fingers. When people like Barb Heck, who know absolutely nothing about the Crimson Girls, can carry so much weight, only bad things can happen. In Austin, Texas, complaining alumni at the University of Texas caused the dismissal of a football coach who had just one substitute quarterback in Dallas, the students at Southern Methodist University do not have a football team to cheer for because of outside interference.
Vince Wondrack Lawrence sophomore
BLOOM COUNTY
UH...
GOOD
MORNING
OFFICER...
HOWDY BOY! SAY,
THAT WOULDN'T BE
ONE O' THEM FANCY
KADAR DE TECTORS,
WOULD IT, BOY?
THIS? UH... WHY.
NO... ACTUALLY THIS!
15 A. ER... AN OFFICIAL
CAPTAIN KIRK SUB-5PACE
COMMUNICATOR ...
VEAH... THAT'S RIGHT !
by Berke Breathed
UH. HELLO?
STARFLEET COMMAND?
COME IN. PLEASE.
HELLO?
THE ROAD KING
4-2
NO
ANSWER.
OWNEBAGO
NO ANSWER.
MUSTA BROKE BACK THERE WHEN YEW WAS DOIN' WARP 70.
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 7, 1987
5
Diet can reduce cancer risks
By JENNIFER WYRICK
Staff writer
Today, scientists think most cancers may be related to lifestyle and environment. But the good news is personal cancer risk may be reduced by dietary habits.
Last night at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, Charis Ross, a University of Kansas dietician, spoke about nutrition for cancer risk reduction. Ross defined the importance some foods play in cancer reduction and gave some protective factors to follow.
Ross said it was important to eat a liberal amount of high-fiber foods because they exercise the gastrointestinal tract and keep the tract strong and healthy.
Dairy food consumption should be kept moderate because of its high fat content, Ross said. And protein consumption should not be much higher
People in the United States need to reduce red meat intake because the meat can become carcinogenic, or
cancer-causing, if it remains in the intestines too long. Ross said red meat should be substituted with fish, poultry and other lean meats.
"Empty calories" like rich desserts, sweets, oils, fats and alcohol should be sparsely consumed or not consumed at all, she said. These foods provide plenty of calories, yet afford little protein.
Ross cited research from The American Cancer Society listing several healthy habits to follow to reduce the risk of cancer.
The Society said to eat more cabbage-family vegetables, which includes broccoli and cauliflower. Studies show that these vegetables protect against colorectal, stomach and respiratory cancers.
Also, the Society said a high-fiber diet may protect against colon cancer. Fiber is found in whole grains, fruits and vegetables.
Choosing foods with Vitamin A may help protect against cancers of the esophagus, larynx and lung, the
Society said. Fresh foods with betacarotene like carrots and peaches are the best sources of Vitamin A, not vitamin pills.
In addition, Vitamin C may protect against cancers of the esophagus and stomach. This vitamin is found naturally in many fresh fruits and vegetables like grapefruit and tomatoes.
Obesity is also linked to cancers of the uterus, gallbladder, breast and colon, the research said. Exercise and lower calorie intake may help prevent gaining weight.
"People need to maintain their ideal body weight," Ross said. Women can calculate their ideal body weight by taking 100 pounds for the first five feet of their height, and then adding five pounds for every inch after that.
Men should take 106 pounds for the first five feet of their height, and then add six pounds for every inch after that to calculate their ideal body weight.
Hunger strike gets small response
By a Kansan reporter
Eight days after he began a hunger strike for divestment, a KU student has received a small number of letters urging the Kansas University association to sell its stock in companies that do business in South Africa.
Maher has not eaten since March 30. He is protesting KU's investments in South Africa, a nation that practices a governmental policy of racial
Mike Maher, Roeland Park senior,
westerday in his usual spot in the
Hallway at Hollyford.
segregation
Maher says he will not eat solid food until he gets at least 50 letters from KU alumni urging the Endowment Association to divest from companies with South African ties.
Only a few letters have come to Maher's house, but he said he was not worried.
"Wednesday was our first day for publicity," he said. "It's reasonable."
Todd Seymour, president of the Endowment Association, said yesterday that he knew about Maher's strike from newspaper stories, but
that he had no response.
"I would have no comment whatsoever, because I don't know what he's trying to accomplish," Seymour said.
Maher said that letters from alumni would influence the Endowment Association.
"These are people who, even though they have graduated from KU, still have an interest in KU." Maher said.
"KUEA has shown that they don't really care about moral issues, so we have to deal with them on dollar terms."
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Drug abuse can affect your physical, emotional and social health. Why do people turn to drugs? How did we become such a drug-centered society? What can you do if you or someone close to you has a drug problem? Health educators are available to discuss substance use and abuse.
IT'S STRESS...I GUESS!
biology class for a date are all forms of stress. No one can escape stress, but you can learn to cope with it effectively. The better you perceive an experience as challenging, instead of threatening, you can help diminish the distresses of college.
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Learn about good health in the relaxed atmosphere of your home! Stop by the Department of Health Education for brochures and pamphlets on nutrition, stress, exercise, "Safe Sex", drug and alcohol use, women's health concerns the health concern of your choice. All literature is free and available to you, the student.
SAFE SEX
Any person who chooses to be sexually active should also choose to remain sexually healthy. Body fluids can be good carriers of germs, and these germs, when passed through sexual contact, can cause disease. You can limit the spread of disease by knowing what is safe - and what is not safe.
Seeking a tan is a personal decision. However, good sense and simple measures should be used when working or playing in the sun. Remember to use sunscreens, avoid treadspeakers and stay out of the sun's direct rays, especially between 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. A program on the risks is available.
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ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT SYNDROME CONTINUES TO CLAIM VICTIMS
On page 12A of the March 22nd Journal-World can be found an advertisement devised and paid for by the Keep Downtown Downtown Committee. As this group of admittedly distinguished citizens considers "public funding for downtown redevelopment" an acceptable response to a phenomenon which many of its members think threatens their respective businesses, it wants the public to assume $20.3 million of the fundamentally flawed 600 block downtown mall's $55.7 million cost of construction. However, when calling for publicly-funded economic development downtown, these congenial entrepreneurs flagrantly misuse their considerable capacity to analyze, proclaim and influence.
Because capitalism was designed to liberate the individual by giving to, in Adam Smith's words, "Every man, as long as he does not violate the laws of justice... (the right) to pursue his own interest his own way, and to bring both his industry and capital into competition with" like-minded folk; those now advocating publicly-funded economic development should be emphasizing how large shopping malls work against our freedom and national health as their existence involves both the irresponsible consumption of natural resources and disproportionate concentration of wealth and power.
Instead of calling for a return to Adam Smith's and Thomas Jefferson's capitalism, local economic development ideologues--who are among the most fortunate victims of this insidious Economic Development Syndrome--want the public to help pay for the de facto destruction of our beautiful downtown. Because most of this country's governing bodies squander public funds on comparable economic development schemes, the suffering and number of this Economic Development Syndrome's less fortunate victims, who need and deserve public assistance, have substantially increased.
While economic development ideologues brazenly continue picking public pockets:
1. A federally financed agency in Princeton, N.J., notes that our woefully inadequate high schools now graduate some 700,000 functional illiterates every year.
2. Millions of children, who would mentally and physically benefit from professionally-operated day care centers in their neighborhoods, now frequently can be found languishing before that electronic outhouse, the television set.
3. The governing apparatus continues to pass over the thousands of homeless children who, according to a piece in the Journal-World's March 16th issue, "often suffer abuse, need medical care and do not attend school... whose development is being delayed as a result of the family being homeless."
5. Many of the more than one million teenage girls impregnated each year, according to Newsweek's February 16th issue, bear "babies likely to have low birthweights, which in turn increases the risk of health and developmental problems... (because they) usually do not have access to any prenatal care... (and) do not know about nutrition."
4. This country now has a higher infant mortality rate than most of the nineteen other leading industrial nations with the infant mortality rate for black children being nearly twice as high as that for white children.
The aforementioned groups are just a few of those whose legitimate needs remain unmet when our governing bodies occasionally refuse to discriminate between the private and public sectors. Because publicly-funded economic development milks the citizenry for the benefit of an allegedly independent few, it is inherently unacceptable. Wendell Wilkie put it this way,"The Constitution does not provide for first and second class citizens."
William Dann
2702 W. 24th Street Terrace
PAID ADVERTISEMENT
6
Tuesday, April 7, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
I don't believe you heard me right stranger. I said I'd like to buy you a chicken leg!
In the Old West, vegetarians were often shot with little provocation
Anti-mall groups have promoted a "yes, no, yes" vote and the pro-mall groups have promoted a "no, yes, no" vote.
all of downtown's streets open, and would be a vote against the mall.
Vote
The candidates for city commission are:
Continued from p. 1
- Commissioner Ernest Angino, KU professor of civil engineering and geology. Once a strong mall supporter, Angino has said that he would wait for the referendum's results. He also supports the proposed south Lawrence trafficway.
■ Dennis Constance, house manager of Joseph R. Pearson Hall. He opposes the mall, and has said that the current commission has neglected neighborhood issues. He said the trafficway plan needs further study, and should be moved to the city's eastside.
Commissioner Howard Hill, director of KANU radio. He was a strong mall supporter, but has said he would wait for the referendum results. He has promoted economic development
Ellis Hayden, a retired Baker. He opposes the mail, and said no tax money should be used to pay for the mall or a trafficway. He said the trafficway has too many access routes should be financed by a user's fee.
issues, and often mentioned that Lawrence has gained jobs and had no tax increase since 1983. He supports the trafficway.
Mike Rundle, a secretary in the KU design department. He opposes the mall and thinks the trafficway needs more study. He said the road should link the city's new industrial park and North Lawrence. He also has promoted neighborhood, preservation and environmental issues.
KPL
Bob Schumm, a former city commissioner who owns two restaurants and a video entertainment company. He opposes the mall, and calls for the city to open a department store instead. He supports the trafficway, but says it has it too many access points. It could become another 23rd Street, he said.
Continued from p.1
eliminating acid rain produced by coal-burning power plants.
Although researchers are hopeful about the discovery, it remains in the testing stages. EPRI will monitor emissions for at least two years to determine how effective the new system is, said Hal Hudson, KPL Gas Service's director of corporate communications.
"Research and development projects are undertaken to find things out, and sometimes they don't work," Hudson said. "We can't make any promises now about the end results, but it is expected and hoped that the new process will reduce emissions of nitrous oxides."
During the past 20 years, KPL has invested almost $400 million in environmental protection systems at its three coal-fired power plants. The Kansas Electric Utility Research Program is also helping finance the $4 million test project.
Wheeler said that a plant's ability to produce steam that generated electricity at lower temperatures
would help the environment. Lower temperatures mean lower emittance of nitrous oxide.
Hudson said that installation would begin this month, but that the changes would go into effect until June or July. The changes were scheduled to be made when the plant was to be closed for spring maintenance.
Modifications will be made to burners in the boilers in unit five, the largest and newest unit in the plant.
"It a matter of concern to every one concerned with clean air." Hudson
The fourth and fifth units have limestone scrubbers that remove sulfur dioxide. Unit four was the first commercial unit in the United States to use the limestone scrubbing system.
The other three units at the plant burn natural gas, which is the cleanest burning fuel.
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If you're registered to vote in Lawrence, you should know about this School Board candidate.
Mary and her husband, Chuck, have hosted pre-med student mixers for KUMC faculty representatives. Chuck is also a preceptor and Clinical Process instructor every year. And the Loveland family has been actively involved at the St. Lawrence Center, where Mary serves on the Human Services Committee and was the first coordinator of religious education.
Mary Loveland is a KU alumna who continues to demonstrate her commitment and dedication to KU students. When Mary served on the Alumni Association Board of Directors, she was the youngest member and thoroughly involved in her work. She can testify to her service on the Board of Directors of the Kansas and Burge Unions and her respect for the student viewpoint. She has generously offered her home and hospitality to student groups through events like the Mortarboard fall dinners. She was also involved with planning the summer programs.
Time and again Mary has demonstrated her support for the students and the university. If you vote in Lawrence on April 7, support and vote Mary Loveland for the USD 497 Board of Education.
is a candidate with broad experience in education-related and "for kids" organizations;
Mary Loveland
PTA president, Kaw Valley Soccer Association Registrar...efforts to get flashing caution lights for ALL school zones and a traffic light at 6th and Schwarz. Educational Committee for the Deerfield Addition. extensive involvement in Middle Level Steering Committee, member of Activities Subcommittee, district Task Force on Education for Parenthood.
is a candidate who has demonstrated her commitment to the people of Lawrence;
Meals on Wheels driver..Douglas County Rape Victims Support Services Board member...Lawrence Villages...Emergency Services Council Fund Raiding and Special Events Committee.
Paid Political Advertisement by Mary Loveland for School Board Committee. Helen Gilles Treasurer
African National Congress' representative to the United Nations, is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. today at Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union.
The KU Hispanic-American Lead
Resource Center workshop, is scheduled for 7 p.m. today in the International Room at the Kansas Union.
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AIRCRAFT HELPING A MISSILE CHARGE
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday. April 7. 1987
B.
Robin Tice, left, a member of the St. Louis women's ultimate team, Armetis, swings a pass by Ruth Jacobson Kansas City, Ks., junior. The KU women's ultimate team, Betty, defeated St. Louis and captured first place.
UNITALES
Ken Wicker, left, Overland Park junior, and Dave Smith, right, Kansas City, Kan., senior, battle for the disc with one of the Boulder Stains.
Rites of fling
XEN
Darry Gholston, St. Louis senior, cuts loose with a battle cry during the HorrorZontals 17-8 thrashing of the Oklahoma City Jam.
BROADSIDE DISC
The Zontals and team dog, Jagger, gather in a circle, hands joined at the disc and sing their own rendition of "Home on the Range' before doing battle with the Slug Brothers.
Flying frisbees fill the air at the Ultimate Fools Festival
E
every year when the weather warms, signaling the beginning of spring, people celebrate the earth's renewed life and energy
the rites of spring in many different ways.
- the rites of spring - in many different ways.
Traditionally, celebrants are said to have spring fever. Silly, delirious fools even have their own day on the first of April.
This weekend, more than 350 men and women from across the country celebrated April Fools' Day at the Palm Beach Country Club.
The festival is an annual Ultimate Frisbee tournament in Lawrence, sponsored this year by the RU
Under clear skies, the Lawrence women's team,
Betty, beat all three of the women's teams, from St
Mary's.
Saturday, 20 men's and four women's teams met at Shenk Complex at 23rd and Iowa streets to play the game.
"It a mixture of basketball, football and soccer."
"It Mark DeCoursey, Overland Park senior." "But it's a lot faster and a lot more fun. There's more spirit to the game."
The Lawrence men's team won two and lost two, beating Centrifugal Force from St. Louis and the Slugg
DeCoursey, who was a bystander this weekend, said he had played ultimate on a Kansas City team called Gange Green.
Ultimate basically is non-contact Frisbee football, except players cannot run with the Frisbee. The object is for a team of seven players to advance the Frisbee down the field into another football into the end zone to score a point.
If the Frisbee touches the ground, it is a turnover and the defensive team continues play until a point is scored, as in soccer.
Ultimate also combines aspects of basketball. Once
a player catches the Frisbee, he must stop as soon as possible and pass it, pivoting on one foot.
But ultimate's most unique aspect is the sportsmanship with which it is played. There are no referees or officials.
"The spirit of the game is when if someone wants to cheat, you let them," said Mark Cerney,ystander and member of the Lawrence HorrorZontals "If they win the fair game, then let them go ahead. It's only a game."
Players make their own calls based on a small book of rules and what is called "the spirit of the game."
Joan Isbell, a member of the Babylon Sisters from Boulder, said competitiveness sometimes ruined the NHL.
"Teams work so much to win that they're not enjoyng themselves enough," she said. The spirit of the game is an attitude that carries over into everyday life.
"Ultimate is a recreational activity and, for most people, a lifestyle." Isell said. "A lot of people say ultimat
Doug Bradley, member of the tournament champions, the Dover Dogs from Kansas City, defined ultimate as total escamism.
"During these two days we don't think about anything else, work or school," he said. "We don't have the time to do it."
A Lawrence team won each of the tournament divisions.
The Bettys's won the tournament with a come-from-behind 13.10 win over Artemis from St. Louis. Betty was one of the four finalists.
The HorrorZontals on the loser's bracket with a 17-8 thumping of The Jam from Oklahoma City. The
In the men's finals, the Dover Dogs beat Springfield,
17-14. to win the tournament.
PUMPKIN
Photos by Gareth Waltrip and Alan Hagman Story by Tim Hamilton
The HorrorZontals psych-up before each game by performing a ritual they call the Bukamaru psych circle. The Zontals got their feet together before their game against the Jam.
17
8
Tuesday, April 7, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Scholars waiting for Fulbright selections
By CAROLINE REDDICK Staff writer
Some KU graduate students and faculty are checking their mailboxes daily hoping to receive an acceptance letter for a 1987-88 Fulbright-Hays scholarship.
"I jump every time the phone rings," said Mary Elizabeth Gwin, director of the office of study abroad and Fulbright adviser. "We should be hearing any day now who's been selected."
Fulbright-Hays scholarships are an exchange program between the United States and about 95 other countries, Gwin said. Scholars interested in participating write a proposal on what they would do if they were given the money to study abroad for a year. The proposals are reviewed by the U.S. Board of Foreign Scholarship and recommend the best proposals to them, where the final decisions are made. The scholars who are accepted spend a year in another country researching, lecturing, or doing both.
At least two KU faculty members already have been chosen to receive 1987-88 Fulbrights.
"They get full travel costs, all tuition, room and board, and a stipend that usually covers some extra travel," Gwin said. "They're also treated like royalty when they're in these countries because they're really high-powered scholars."
Bezaeleel Benjamin, professor of architecture and architectural engineering, recently was notified that he had received a 1987-88 Fulbright lecturing award. He will be on a year's course of advance in the field of architecture, nineteen years at the Technion, a technological insti tute in Haifa, Israel.
"What excites me about this Fulbright is that it is a teaching one," Benjamin said. "I like to teach, and seeing that it is the only School of Architecture in Israel, I think it will be very exciting, very challenging. I expect I will meet some exceptional students.
students here at Kansas as well," he said.
"Of course. I teach exceptional
Stephen Grabow, professor of architecture and urban design, also received a Fulbright grant. Grabow will spend a year as a visiting research scholar at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen, Denmark.
Gwin said the Fulbright program was first proposed to Congress in 1946 as a way to allow other countries to repay some of their World War II costs.
"Some of the countries paid off their debt early, but still supported the Fulbright program," she said. "For instance, in Germany, they want Americans to come. They're in a position where they want to court Americans to come over there and see how friendly they are, and just to promote an exchange of ideas.
"The principal purpose is to promote cultural understanding and try to foster ties between the United States and other countries in all areas of study, from the sciences to performing arts," Gwin said.
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Marie Willis, program assistant in the KU Center for International Programs, said that five KU faculty members received 1985-86 Fulbright awards. Three KU graduate students received Fulbright awards the same year, said Gale Carter, a secretary in the office of study abroad.
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University-Community Service Scholarship Award
As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20, 1970 in the saving of furniture, art objects, and invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present the Kansas Union with a gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarship/awards from the interest on the gift.
Qualifications
- Regularly enrolled students at the University of Kansas at the time of application (spring term) and at the time of receipt of the award (fall term).
- Service to the University and/or the Lawrence community.
Applications
- Applications available at SUA office, Kansas Union,
864-3477.
- Applications must be received by 5:00 p.m., Monday, April 20, 1987 in the SUA office, Kansas Union. Interviews to be held 5:30 p.m., Wednesday, April 22, 1987.
- Scholarship, financial need and references will be of minimal consideration in application reviews.
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LAWRENCE, KS
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday April 7 1987
9
Voters give opinion today on proposed downtown mall
Continued from p. 1
city would have to pay for new checks.
After relocation, Zacharias said the city would pay $255,000 to level the block, which was more than 500,000 square feet.
Legal fees of $195,000 also would be added.
After eminent domain is declared, the owners have to sell to the city. But they don't have to accept the city's offered price, Zacharias said. If the city and owners cannot agree on a price, the city files suit for condemnation, which allows the city to take the property and proceed with development while a court determines the price.
Even then, both the city and owners have the option of appeal.
Jim Pearson, Manhattan assistant city attorney, said six owners were still in court seeking an agreeable price although their land was plowed the previous year and sits beneath a new downtown Manhattan mall that will open in October.
Charles Hedges, who appraised the block for Lawrence, said his estimates were likely to change. In the interim between the appraisal and actual purchase, owners either make
building improvements to increase the value of their property and let it deteriorate because the building is doomed anyway.
"The problem with appraisal on a certain day is that the next day, the appraisal can be obsolete," Hedges said. "You don't know what the final figures are going to be until the last day."
Zacharias said, "There are possible challenges all the way through it."
However, appraisal challenges are not certain. Hedges, who owns Hedges Real Estate and Insurance, said he worked on a sewer project for Lawrence involving 51 land owners, and no one challenged the city's offer.
JVJ estimates that total cost of the mall would be $29,280,000, including city utility, street and traffic work collection of a $1.6 million parking garage.
JVJ would pay $35,387,330 for the mall's actual construction. After it was built, JVJ would pay an estimated $76,000 to rent the property. In return, the mall would also would pay $100,000 annually to help support the parking garage.
said last month that construction could start next year and that the mall could open in 1899.
How the city would raise $20 million was not certain except that the city wouldn't use direct taxation, Zacharias said. A feasibility study to determine the best way to raise the money was delayed by the city commission until after today's vote.
Don Jones, JVJ vice president.
"We have no money. We're just in the middle of the process here," he said.
The city would probably use some sort of bond and property tax increment financing, he said. Property tax increment financing is the difference between current property tax value in the 600 block and the tax value after the mall is built. Other land owners' taxes would not rise.
The city would like to use sales tax increment financing, but state law stands in the way. Another barrier is that some Lawrence legislators refuse to introduce a bill to change that state law.
Also yet to be determined, Zacharias said, was the final, actual cost, the impact on and integration with adjacent neighborhoods, traffic and pedestrians, facade, basic layout of mall shops, commitments from three
department stores and installation of city utilities.
Once built the mall would encompass 360,000 square feet in floor space. In comparison, Topeka's White Lakes Mall has 492,000 square feet. In Overland Park, Oak Park Mall has 1,189,000 square feet, and Metcalf South mall has 594,336 square feet.
But not one square inch will be built unless the citizens say yes.
And the owners in the block are awaiting their answer.
But, Longhurst says, what really led to his demise at the primary was his role in the downtown mall debate
"There were downtown merchants who said I had a personal reason to advocate any policy downtown. I was charged to loss no matter what I did," he said.
Longhurst, who was an outspoken supporter of the mall, was invariably identified as the villain, he said.
"If I had been politically astute, I would have voted the same way and said the same things differently," he said.
But, according to some city com-
munities, you wouldn't have been David Lloyd West.
directness," Angino said. "He had the courage to stick to his guns, and when he was on the losing end, he never held any grudge."
Shontz said, "He has a way of impressing the listener with sincerity and presenting arguments that are very convincing. And somehow, once you've heard him, it's hard to put the argument in another perspective."
"His style was forthrightness and
Former Mayor Mike Amyx said, "He gave out a very positive image of the community. The one impression David gave me more than anything else was the image of being a real go-getter. He put every bit of his energy into everything he did."
taken away his innocence, but not his business drive.
That energy, Longhurst said, is now going now to be directed toward the moon.
Besides, he said, the extra time he will have will allow him to do the things he loves to do — jog a few miles everyday, read a few science fiction novels and, most of all, be with his family.
Until now, Longhurst had been able to set aside only Sunday as the day he spent with his family, which includes his second wife, Nancy, and his son, John. That, however, may change now.
Property owners affected by mall proposal
"I can almost physically feel a burden being lifted," he said. "I have neglected my business for four years. I put myself under so much pressure. All of a sudden, all that tension is gone. That's exhilarating."
LOTTERY CASE
FERRIS BUELLER'S DAY OFF SPECIAL ADVENTURE LAND VIDE
Sources: Douglas County Clerk's office, Douglas County Register of Deeds office and the Lawrence Community Development department. City lots are 170 feet by 50 feet. OFC 640 OF MASSACHUSETTS STREET - Owen Towers
K and Juanta F Marsh, Lawrence / 623 - M&M Office Sponsors
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Lets 39% less 76" - John E. Sullivan, 615-264-7720
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600 BLOCK OF VERMONT STREET - Owners/Tenants
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Lot 6 N(40) - Larry D. and Harriett D. Johnson,
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Lots 9, 11, 13, 15, 17, 19 and adjacent vacated
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Stephan calls for disqualification
DONALD G. STROLE
TOPEKA — U.S. Magistrate G.T.
Van Bebber yesterday began study
on a motion by Attorney General Bob
Stephan to have Topeka attorneys,
Marge Phelps, Shirley Phelps and
Fred Phelps Sr., disqualified from
representing Marcia Tomson. Tomson brought suit against Stephan alleging sexual harassment.
An aide said Van Bebber did not plan to rule on the motion until he
The Associated Press
determined whether correspondence submitted to him by Stephan was pertinent to the case and should be turned over to Tomson's attorney.
The magistrate ruled earlier that Stephan had to disclose to Tomson's attorney letters exchanged between him and former Attorney General Vern Miller of Wichita. The magistrate said the correspondence was no longer privileged under the attorney-client relationship that once existed between Stephan and Miller.
In support of his case, Stephan said the three Phelpses had personal knowledge about an alleged meeting in March 1858 to arrange settlement of a previous lawsuit brought by Tomson against Stephan, and could testify about the meeting.
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10
Tuesday, April 7, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Four years marked with success and controversy
Continued from p. 1
wrong.
They just didn't vote for the best man.
Other commissioners were appalled that Longhurst had acted without consulting them.
Longhurst said his response to them was: "I would not say or do anything unless it was the right thing to do. If this commission isn't happy with the things I'm doing, I'll step aside. But if you are, then get out of my way.
"People don't want politicians to be honest," Longhurst says. "If you tell it like it is, you're going to get fired. I don't have any patience for that."
Leader. not follower
That impatience for protocol and rules for the sake of rules dates back more than twenty years, beginning at the late 1980s, before it secured for a tour of duty in Vietnam.
Longhurst, born in Pennsylvania before moving as a child with his family to Corrales, New Mexico, dropped out of college at the University of New Mexico in 1964 and joined the Marines.
In 1966 he left for a tour of duty in Danang, Vietnam. A recruiting officer told him that with his brains, a quick series of promotions was in the cards.
But in Danang, Longhurst never
went on a dangerous mission. He encountered no enemy deadlier than boredom.
Because of his tendency to be sassy with his superiors, he said, he spent much of his time cleaning toiletis. There were no promotions.
"In the Marine Corps, you're not supposed to think or have initiative, and there's a very good reason for that," he said.
Returning to the United States in 1967, Longhurst had no desire to go back to school. Nor did he care much for going to work for another person, prompting him to start his own business.
His parents since had moved to Lawrence. Longhurst used the basement of their home to set up a printing shop he called House of Usher. Longhurst said he'd always be a fan of Edgar Allan Poe, author of the horror story titled "The Fall of the House of Usher." But he named his business after his mother, whose maiden name is Usher.
For the first few years, it was a business he ran alone. Income went as low as $200 a month. But in 1973, the business prospered. It has not stopped growing. Today, he said, the House of Usher employs 22 people.
Making foreign policy
It was with that record as a successful businessman that Longhurst ran for city commissioner in 1983. In
On his first night on the commission, Longhurst was elected mayor by the commission members.
his election campaign. Longhurst promised to promote business and economic development in the city
Almost immediately he began to do the things that would earn him both praise and scorn.
In 1883, a group of Soviet athletes visited Lawrence, and a banquet was held in their honor. Longhurst, who attended the banquet, found himself sitting next to an athlete who knew no English.
Since Longhurst knew no Russian, communication between the two was limited to nervous smiles, nods and an occasional grunt, he said.
Finally, desperate to get his Soviet guest to understand him, Longhurst pointed to his then 13-year-old son, and gestured that the boy was his son.
The Soviet athlete understood. He pulled out his wallet, took out a picture of a young boy and gave it to Longhurst. The boy, he gestured, was his son.
There was no trouble communicating after that. Longhurst said.
It was an electric moment. Longhurst remembers. Suddenly the Soviet athlete was a parent much like himself, not a national enemy.
"We understood each other," Longhurst said. "All of a sudden he wasn't that alien."
The excitement of being able to communicate with the athlete led
Longhurst to call on President Reagan and then-Soviet leader Yuri Andropov to meet in Lawrence to see if they could iron out their differences.
"It was crazy," Longhurst said.
"But I was sincere."
Domestic dissent
That began Longhurst's four-year association with the idea of superpower peace, culminating with his trip to Moscow in February at the invitation of the Soviet government
It also began his association with a kind of politics that some Lawrence residents considered so liberal as to be abhorrent.
"There are many who think the city shouldn't have a foreign policy," said Ernest Angino, a colleague of Longhurst's on the city commission and a candidate for re-election. "There were many who didn't approve of his trip to the Soviet Union. I have a feeling his timing was just wrong."
In March 1986, the city commission, with Longhurst's prodding, passed an ordinance restricting the sale of handguns. The ordinance was in response to the 1985 suicide of a KU student, who killed herself with a handgun she had bought only a few hours earlier.
The public furor resulting from his initiative, Longhurst said, was something he'd never seen before.
confiscate every firearm in the state," he said. "You shouldn't be able to walk into a store and buy a gun the way you would a toaster."
Many Lawrence residents disagreed. For several weeks during the commission debate on the ordinance, Longhurst's son received phone calls from people who told him they were going to kill his father.
That controversy, Longhurst says,
significantly damaged his chances for
a Senate run.
Despite his apparently liberal positions on superpower peace and the handgun ordinance, Longhurst could sometimes appear to govern from
"My God, you'd think I'd asked to
In 1895, he argued against community development funds to the Council on Community Services, a welfare group that had been conducting studies on shelter and nutrition needs for the homeless. As a result, the group was forced to disband.
"David has been the most outspoken opponent of funding human services on this commission," said Caryn Mirriam-Goldberg, then the group's coordinator. "I just wish his peace efforts extended to those in need in our own community."
the other side of the political spectrum.
Fall positions available for
The University Daily Kansan Business Manager
and Editor
Application deadline is today. Applications available in 200 Stauffer-Flint or 119 Stauffer-Flint
ACE
The Association of Collegiate Entrepreneurs is having an informational
informational
activities for summer and fall.
meeting regarding
New members are welcome!
time: 6:30 p.m.
place: 507 Summerfield Hall
date: April 8,1987
CONTRA AID & NICARAGUA
WHERE IS THEROAD LEADING?
TUESDAY, APRIL 7
7:30 p.m.
PIONEER ROOM BURGE UNION
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IMPORTANT NOTICE
STUDENT SENATE ELECTIONS
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday. April 7. 1987
11
Sports
Stanfield sets record in KU loss
By DAVID BOYCE
Staff writer
Once again, the Kansas baseball team entered the last inning with a lead, only to lose the game, while Hugh Stanfield broke another record.
Stanfield bridge Joe Heeeney's KU all-time at bat record on his final trip state. Stanfield has been at bat 570 times since retiring the old record of 693 set in 1984.
"Records are something I don't think about, but they do tell me that I have been a good player," Stanfield said
Earlier in the season, Stanfield set the KU all-time hit record with more than 200 hits and the all-time stolen base record with 66 steals.
Baseball
Yesterday, Kansas started the ninth leading 4-1, but Washburn University battled back and scored three runs. The Ichabods tied the game and eventually won it in the tenth. 5-4.
But records were the last thing on Stanfield's mind after the game, when he got the pass.
The first time, Thursday against Wichita State, the Jayhawks went into the last inning up, 8-5, but allowed their opponent to score eight runs to win the game.
Then, in the first game against Nebraska on Saturday, the Jayhawks went into the ninth leading 11-8. The teams scored seven runs to win, 15-11.
In yesterday's game, Washburn scored only three runs in the ninth, but it was enough to send the game into extra innings.
The Jayhawks were sailing along during the middle to late innings with a 3-1 lead that increased to 4-1 after eight innings.
Relief pitcher Mike Andress entered the game in the fifth and allowed only two hits in four innings of work. Andress had retired five straight batters at the end of the eighth.
Andress did not enter the ninth
iming. Instead, Coach Marty Pattin
decided to go with Craig Stoppei
in the ninth.
"I wonder how they are going to lose the game today," replied one fan.
- Stopple immediately ran into trouble when Brian Soderberg started the inning with a bunt single.
"Oh, the bunt single. This game is over," the fan said.
The next batter grounded out to second baseman David Smith, who made a diving stop on the play. Sodderen went to second.
Soderberg scored on a single by Aaron Waltrip. Waltrip moved to second when Stoppel walked Ron Minian.
The big blow came when Washburn's No. 3 hitter hit a two-run double down the right field line.
That was Stoppel's last batter. Pattin brought in Tom Bilyeu, who recorded the final out of the inning.
Washburn won the game in the tenth on an RBI single by Jay Monholton.
Kansas will play a doubleheader against the School of the Ozarks at 1 p.m. today at Quigley Field.
Despite the loss, some players on the baseball team performed well.
Both Andress and starter Bret Morris combined eight innings of work and allowed only one run between them.
David Smith, who made several fine plays on the infield, went two-for-three at the plate. Scott Seratte and Pat Karlin also collected two hits.
WASHBURN 5. KANSAS 4
Washburn 100 000 003 1= 13 13
Kansas 011 010 010 0-9 4 2
Jesop, Stremming (8) and Montonion. Morris,
Andress, (5) Stoppel (8), Bliyeau (9)
and Boesen. W-Stremming, L-Bliyeu (0-2), 2Bi-
Montonion, Middendorf.
Leonard surprises Hagler, steals title
The Associated Press
LAS VEGAS, Nev. — Sugar Ray Leonard returned to the ring in spectacular fashion last night after a three-year layoff and upset Marvelous Marvin Hagler to become middleweight champion.
Leonard won the 12-round bout on a split decision and became boxing's 10th triple champion.
Leonard circled and impressed judges with flurries in the late rounds in one of the great comeback stories in boxing history, although some thought the aggressive Hagler had an edge.
Judge Lou Flippo scored it 115-113 for Hager let judge Dave Moretti saw it 115-113 and JoLo Guerra had it 118-110, both for Leonard.
"I see myself taking him out," Leonard said of a dream he had in the days before the fight. Leonard couldn't take him out, but he did what the oddsmakers gave him little chance to do.
Hagler, losing for the first time in 38 fights, dating to 1976, was a $2^{1/4}$-1 favorite.
I made a comeback that was the greatest accomplishment of my life.'
Sugar Ray Leonard middleweight boxing champion
The only belt Leonard will get is the World Boxing Council belt. The International Boxing Federation didn't sanction the fight and will declare the title vacant. The World Boxing Association has stripped Hagler of the title.
"He, to me, is still the champion," the jubilant Leonard said in the ring after the fight as a sellout throng of 15,366 in an outdoor arena at Caesars Palace cheered him on.
Leonard, fighting for only the second time since his last undisputed welterweight title fight in February 1982, came out circling and made Hagler miss badly in the first four rounds. Then in the fifth, Hagler landed some head shots and hurt Leonard with a left to the head.
"I didn't want the belt. I just wanted to beat him."
Throughout the fight, the stalking Hagler seemed to land the harder shots. But Leonard, looking tired from the sixth through 10 rounds, never quit fighting. He landed several combinations although they seemed to lack sting.
In the 11th round, Leonard went flat-footed and outpuncted Hagler with several flurries to the head, followed with a beautiful hook to the
Throughout the fight, Hagler trapped Leonard on the ropes, only to have Leonard flurry to get free.
body and a hook to the head.
Both men went at it toe-to-toe in the final round. On a couple of occasions Leonard circled his hand in the air to lead cheerles for himself. Hagler hurt Leonard with a left to the head, but then the bell sounded.
"I beat him," Hagler said. "I beat him, and he knows it.
"I told you about Vegas. They stole it. I stayed aggressive, and I won the fight."
Leonard said, "I made a comeback that was the greatest accomplishment of my life. It was an impossible task. I prepared myself for one year, so it was a case of a young guy coming back against a young guy."
Leonard will be 31 on May 17;
Hagler will be 33 on May 23.
Their ages weren't really in question. The questions being asked were whether Leonard could overcome
inactivity and if Hagler had slipped badly.
Many observers thought Haguen had showed signs of slowing down during his 11th round victory over Mugabi on March 19, 1906 in Las Vegas.
Howser goes to park for Royals first game
Another question raised concerned Leonard's eyes. He had retinal surgery on the left eye in 1962 and a surgical procedure on the right in 1984.
The eyes were never a factor last night.
After the fight, Leonard indicated he might fight again.
"It depends on the contract," he said.
The victory gave Leonard a 34-1 record with 24 knockouts as he became the seventh welterweight or former welterweight champion to win the middleweight title. One of the first six was Leonard's namesake, Sugar Ray Robinson.
71
Afternoon bash
L. A. Rauch/KANSAN
Howser sat in the box seats with Royals officials, including club president Joe Burke. Before the game, a prayer was said for Howser, who is recuperating at his Kansas City home. He underwent his third brain surgery last summer in California on March 20.
John Baker, Boonville, Ind., freshman, prepares to crash into a blocking sled as Jan Quartless, U offensive line coach, yells commands. The Kansas Jayhawk football team was practicing
A team spokesman said that any visit by Howser to the ballpark was a suprise because he only went when he felt he was up to it.
Howser resigned as Royals manager Feb. 23.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Former Kansas City manager Dick Howser, who has undergone brain surgery three times for a cancerous tumor, attended part of the Royals home opener yesterday against the Chicago White Sox.
Baines, White Sox ruin Royals opener
United Press International
The biggest damage to the Royals came on an error by shortstop Buddy Biancalana that let in two runs.
United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Chicago White Sox opened 1987 the same way they spent much of 1987, playing in a one-run game.
Harold Baines drove in two runs and Richard Dotson was credited with the win in his first start on Opening Day, leading the White Sox to a 5-4 victory over the Kansas City Royals.
The White Sox played in 52 one-run games last year and Chicago Manager Jim Fregosi expects another season of close contests this year.
"We're just not used to playing unless it's a one-run game," he said.
"And we're going to play in a lot of one-run games since I don't see us bomb-squaging anyone."
Fregosi was referring to Chicago's apparent lack of hitting. The White team had a batter who hit 30 last year and six in their nine batters but less than 250.
The White Sox got only eight hits yesterday, but worked the hits into five runs, and made a loser of Kansas City left-hander Danny Jackson. The White Sox scored four runs, two unearned, in the second inning on three hits, and wiped out a 1-0 Kansas City lead.
its hiting techniques yesterday afternoon behind Anschutz Sports Pavilion as part of spring outouts
The introduction of Howser in the fifth innipred prompted a standing ovation from the Royals Stadium crowd. Howser arrived after the game started and left before it was over.
Jackson got three ground-ball outs in the first inning, but walked Carlton Fisk, and opened the second. Greg Walker followed with a single and, after an out, Tim Hullett singled to tie the game. Ozzie Guillen's single loaded the bases for Ron Karkovice.
Dotson gave up more hits, allowing eight over six 1-3 innings, but the Royals were unable to bunch them like the White Sox.
Karkovie hit a soft line drive at Biancalana, but the ball skittered off the shortstop's glove. Chicago scored two runs on the error, and led 3-1. The White Sox got one more run on an infield single by Baines.
"It was nice to win the first one," Dotson said. "The first time out, when it counts, is always exciting — whether it's today or Wednesday (the second game)."
After the second seventh-inning hit, the White Sox went to Bobby Thigpen, who was greeted by a two-run double by Kevin Seitzer, cutting the lead to 5-4. Thigpen stopped the next five batters before yielding a leadoff single in the ninth to Ed Hearn.
"I saw him pitch better in spring training than today," Fregosi said. "But he had good velocity and arm speed. He just didn't have the changeup."
Thipper got the next two outs, but walked Seitzer and Fregosi made another change, this time going to Bob James. James earned the save, and just one pitch, getting Danny Tartabt to fly out and end the game.
About the only mistakes Dotson made were a George Brett home run in the fourth inning and two singles in the seventh.
"And getting those four runs helps. I felt like I could be a little less perfect."
Seitzer wound up 3-for-4 in the game, opening the day with a triple off Gary Redus' glove. He scored the first Kansas City run of the year when Tartabull followed with a single.
Chicago's four-run uprising in the second was backed by a run-scoring double by Baines in the seventh that chased Jackson.
Jayhawks advance to final game
By ROB KNAPP
Staff writer
OVERLAND PARK — Pete Roe and Kevin Tobin scored two goals apiece and Andy Solem played a strong game in goal, propelling the KU Hockey Club to a 5-3 upset over Fuzzy's Flyers last night at the Foxhill ice Arena in Overland Park.
The Jayhawks advanced to the finals of the Kansas City Metro Hockey Association tournament. In the championship at 8,13,14 PM, Monday
Kansas, 8-8-1, held off a late rally by the first-place Fuzzy's team and beat them for the third time this season. The Jayhawks finished the regular season in fourth place.
"It was our best first period of the year," team co-captain Greg Lederer said. The 'Hawks scored only once in the first period, but their offense control of the game's tempo and the defense kept Fuzzy's out of the net.
Kansas broke on top early when center Craig Sherman had a two-on-
The Kansas defensemen frustrated Fuzzy's early in the game. When the Flyers began to penetrate the Jay-Cheek defense, Solem stopped every shot.
one break and passed to Pete Rode on the left side. Rode slipped the puck past Flyers goaltender Bill Smith, and the Jayhawks led 1-0 with a little over two minutes gone in the game.
Kansas opened the second period with another quick score when defenseman Kevin Tobin beat Smith with an open shot from the blue line.
Each team had a power play opportunity in the first period, but neither could convert, and the period ended with no further scoring.
The Jayhawks seemed to have the game under control as they went up 3-0 with 14:04 remaining in the period. Fuzzy's could not clear their own end, and wing Ian Fitt took the puck before the goal. Sherman made a feed near the goal to Rode, who scored his second goal of the game.
But Kansas began to tire in the
second period. Lederer said, and switched to shorter shifts in order to rest its players.
Fuzzy's began its comeback late with a goal by Matt Tullio. Tullio's shot from the point bounced off defenseman Brian Farrell and skidded past Solem.
Kansas needed only 27 seconds to score on its first power play chance in the third period. Tobin got his own rebound on the right side of the goal, skated around a fallen Flyer and scored his second goal of the game, giving the Jayhawks a 4-1 lead.
Fuzzy's made it 4-2 when Craig Herr scored on a two-on-one break.
The Flyers had an opportunity on the power play with 8:35 left, but Solem made one of his many sprawl-injuries and kept the Kansas lead intact.
"Tonight was one of those times when the magic is with you," Solem said.
[Image of two hockey players in motion, one with a stick and the other with a helmet]
Fred Sadowski/Special to the Kansan
Kevin Tobin, KU Hockey Club defenseman, heads for the goal with Fuzzy's Craig Herr close behind. KU won 5-3 last night at Foxhill Ice Arena in Overland Park and advanced to Monday's championship game.
12
Tuesday, April 7, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Sports Briefs
Softball team opens conference in Columbia against MU Tigers
The Kansas softball team opens its Big Eight Conference season today on the road with a 2:30 p.m. doubleheader against Missouri in Columbia.
Kansas has not played since Wednesday, when it swept a doubleheader from Wichita State at Jayhawk Field. The Jayhawks,
Women's tennis team to play Kansas State
15-13, have won five of their last eight games.
The Tigers are 7-2.
In their other action against a Big Eight opponent, Kansas beat Oklahoma Stae 6-0 at the Sooner Invitational in Norman, Oklahoma.
The Kansas women's tennis team continues Big Eight Conference play today with a 1 p.m. match against Kansas State in Manhattan.
Kansas State has a 5-6 record going into the match.
The Jayhawks have an 11-9 overall record and an 8-8 mark in the
spring season. They are 0-2 in the Big Eight after losses to Oklahoma State and Oklahoma over the weekend in Lawrence.
Men's golf team places 10th at Houston
The Kansas men's golf team turned in one of its best performances of the season Thursday through Saturday at the All-American Intercollegiate tournament in Houston.
honors.
The Jayhawks finished 10th with a three-round total of 948 in the 24-team field that Kansas Coach Ross Randall said was one of the most competitive on the collegiate circuit.
Randall said even though the Jayhawks dropped from second after the first day to sixth after the second day and eventually finished 10th, he was pleased with how the team played.
Oklahoma State, the defending NCAA runner-up team, won the tournament with a three-round total of 877. Todd Hamilton of OSU shot a 211 and top individual
"Wegained some recognition for ourselves," Randall said. "It wasn't luck either. We played well at the right times."
Brian McGreevy led the Jayhawks with an 11th place finish and a 220 total. John Bruning shot a 226, Rudy Zupetze shot a 234, Clay Devers finished with a 229 total and Steve Madsen shot a 234.
Women's golf team faces Big Eight teams
The Kansas women's golf team will have had its first opportunity to face four Big Eight Conference teams yesterday and today at the Suzie Maxwell-Berning Invitational in Norman, Okla.
The Jayhawks are competing against Iowa State, Kansas State, Nebraska, sixteenth-ranked Oklahoma, and four Texas schools in the 12-team field at the tournament.
Student Union Activities is now accepting applications for INDOOR RECREATION BOARD MEME
Applications are available at SUA.
Deadline to apply is 5 p.m., Tuesday, April 7.
Please call SUA at 864-3477 for more information.
Student Union Activites Fourth Floor, Kansas Union
New Navy secretary to reconsider sports
WASHINGTON — James Webb, nominated to replace John Lehman as Navy secretary, said yesterday he would reconsider the decision that allowed Napoleon McCallum to play with the Los Angeles Raiders.
Webb said he would also reconsider a promise to 7-foot-1 senior David Robinson that, because his height was the only duty, his active duty would be cut.
Robinson, considered one of the best centers in the college ranks, was promised to have his usual five years of experience, but with three years of reserve duty.
However, Webb suggested he would not grant any waivers during his trial.
Competition for Naval Academy slots is intense, he said, adding, "If you want to be a professional athlete.
you're denying a future officer his or her right to study at the Naval Academy. . The Navy and Marine Corps deserve candidates who understand that being an officer is a 24-hour-a-day job."
SUA
Webb said he intends to examine both cases but he does not know the background of Robinson's case
"I do intend to examine both of those (cases) with the idea that if you make a five-year commitment knowingly, you should unhold it," he said.
Asked about whether a commitment, be it formal or informal, should be kept in Robinson's case, Webb said, "I would have to examine the nature of the commitment. If it was a formal commitment by the Department of the Navy in the contractual sense, then it would not be abrogated. It would not be fair."
Umpires return after agreement
NEW YORK — Major league umpires went to work on opening day yesterday after their union reached a last-minute labor agreement with the American and National Leagues.
United Press International
The four-year contract was completed about 10 a.m. EDT, less than three hours before the opening pitch against the baseball season was thrown in Toronto.
now must be ratified by the Major League Umpires Association.
"It's a good, reasonable and fair contract," said A. Bartlett Giamatti, president of the National League.
Both sides praised the deal, which
Richie Phillips, lawyer for the umpires' union, said, "We feel this agreement recognizes the great contributions umpires have made to the game of baseball."
The agreement was reached after a 22-hour bargaining session.
Legal Services for Students
Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE!
- Advice on most legal matters
- Preparation & review of legal documents
- Notarization of legal documents
- Preparation & review of legal documents
- Many other services available
8:30 to 5:00 Mon. thru Friday
117 Burge (Satellite) Union 864-5665
Call or drop by to make an appointment.
Funded by student activity fee.
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Jayhawk Bookstore R. JOHNS, LTD.
ALTERNATIVES
looking for an alternative to typical student housing? Then explore the Naismith Hall alternative. Naismith Hall features a top-notch fitness center, luxurious pool and patio, semi-private suites with weekly maid service, a computer center and so much more. When you tour Naismith Hall you'll see why it's the talk of the campus. Also, consider the super social calendar, cable TV lounges on each floor, great menus, private parking and easy access to classes. Fall/spring semester leases are available only while space remains. So arrange your tour today and explore Naismith Hall, the best alternative.
Makati
CHIMPANZEN
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE • LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 • 913-843-8559
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Become a member of the prestigious ZOO CREW and earn as much as $2,000! Be a marketing representative/ambassador; SELL "Friends of the Zoo" memberships to visitors at the Kansas City Zoo. The work is hard but a lot of fun. Applicants must be ambitious, friendly, have good communication skills, and be willing to work weekends.
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Student Union Activities is accepting applications for the Percentile rank member position. Application form available at SUA fourth floor of the Kansas University, beginning Monday, March 10. Deadline to apply is 5 weeks before the event.
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Events of the Week
Tuesday, April 7
Rabbii Friedman
"Jewish Freedom and the Passover Observance"
7:00 p.m.
Wednesday, April 8
Big Brother/Big Sister Ice Cream Party 6:30 p.m. Hillel House 940 Mississippi
Saturday, April 11
KU/K-State/Mizzou
Hillel Party
8:00 p.m.
149 Pine Cone Drive
Note: Reservations for Passover Saterd due by April 9th.
For more information call Hillel, 749-4242.
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ENTERTAINMENT
At Your Request is Laurence's Best and Most Atfordable D. J. Sound and Lights for Any Occasion
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 7, 1987
13
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Have the Hottest Party in Town. Rent A Hot Tub.
Call Tub-to-Go. 841-2691.
Metropolis Mobile Sound. Number One in dances! DJ I'Extraordinare. Weddings, Dances, Parties, Proms. Bring graduation parties now. Hot Spins or Maximum Party Thirst: 814-7083
Has Your Barrel Been Lost?...Broken?...Stolen?
BARREL
REPLACEMENT
NIGHT
One Night Only Sale
on HAWK Glasses
ONLY $3.50
Full of Beer
TONIGHT ONLY!
Open at 7 p.m.
(Due to Election)
It Could Only Happen at...
THE HAWK • 1340 OHIO
FOR RENT
2 bdm furnished & 2 bdm unfurnished with balcony air conditioning. 2 bdm furnished and cable owned. No pets. Call 859-1690. 2 bdm Townhouse for summer special rate. Residents swimming, tennis, U.K. bus. Call 859-2497.
2 Bedroom apartment for summer sublease. nice, close campus, DW, balcony, water paid; $300 per month.
3 bedroom apartment available June 1st. Close to town and campus. Includes washer and dryer. $450. Utilities paid. Other apartments available. 841-4144
4-Bdrm, 2 full bath, large kitchen, living room
Brand new furnished apartment. Sublease sun-
master: Mastercraft Campus Place, Next to Yello
Sub Cheap) 841-317
4 Bedrooms available this summer in large furnished house. 3 blocks from campus. $100 per person. Call (855) 269-7600.
Apartment for Sublet: Spacious 2 bedroom, 2
bathroom, pool, and tennis courts. 841-789-868
8 Bedrooms, 3 Bathrooms. Adjacent to campus
No pets. Call 842-8971.
Apartments for summer and fall at University Terrace Apartment, 1607 W. 9th; 1 Bedroom for summer; June and July only $190 unfurnished, furnished; June and July only $240 unfurnished, furnished $260, plus all utilities. 1 Bedroom for fall, 10 month lease. August-1 June 1; furnished
Bedroom for fall, August 1 June 1 $310 furnished,
$290 furnished, plus all utilities. Central air, on bus
route, large rooms, gas heat Come at see
at the room, w/ or 84-3230 If no answer call
nw 84-1433
Available mid-May for summer sublease. Studio near campus. Water paid. Unidem call. Design
Aspen West now leasing for Summer. Energy efficient. 1 and 2 bedrooms. 3 Blocks of west on Iowa 15. Privately patios/decks, ceiling fans, no pets 78.49. 129-188. Open house Saturday, 11:3 p.m.
Beauty, eh? 2 Two Bedroom Apartment, Five minutes to Fraser. Low Utilities. Lease for Summer with Fall option. Leave message. 842-1029 **DON TELLY** Delay! Sublease: 3 story. 3 BR. Glennhaven Apartment Campus 1 block Micro. Great opportunity. Great great opportunity. Will negotiate. 841-5767
Excellent location; 2 bedroom apartments in
Tampa, FL with beautiful outdoor space and low utilities. Available June 14th AT184
5607 NW 29TH ST Tampa, FL 33610
IF YOU LIKE SPACE & QUIET
WE HAVE IT AND YOU
CAN STILL WALK TO CAMPUS
Spacious 2 bedroom
Laundry facilities
Waterbed fine
Swimming pool
10-12月 lease
Experience student cooperative living at Sunflower House. Enjoy a private room and group work-sharing meals, and other facilities (rooms or bike rides). Call 749-7681 or come by 146 Tennessee
Female. Non-smoker need to share co-ed house for summer. B46 86428 or B42-0727
Female roommate wanted for this summer and next year to share a bedroom apartment at Chelsea's West Village.
For Rent August 1 or June 1 through June 1, 1988
Farmed second floor 2 bedroom apartment for:
two girls $65 and for 3 girls $45 plus 1/2 water
bedroom for 2 girls $40
Phone 847-609 7-99 or 7-9, p. 7 or p. 9.
For Rent. Large rooms in private home (Basement). 5 minutes from KU & one block from bus route. Share kitchen. Private entrance $100.00 plus $40 bonus will include. Buc炉, 623-847-938 or 843-949-984
FREE 20" Color l.v. for summer subasing a Spacious 1 bedroom apartment with balcony and outdoor patio. $1750
Nice for 3 people. I very large br. Call 749-3895.
Have a duplex adventure this summer! Need female students to subtle spacioses great location. Rent negotiable. Call 841-5598.
Homes, bedroom Apartments, Sleeping Room
Houses, bedrooms, apartments and hotels
Bedroom apartments, and sleeping rooms
Bedroom apartments, and sleeping rooms
LEASE NOW FOR FALL Roamy 28 bpt ample,
fireplace, fireguard, garage and more from $499.
For more info call 516-537-1060 or www.rosewood.com.
BEST VALUE!
Large size 1, 2, 3 bedroom apts, on bus route. All have gas heat, appliances, carpet and drapes. Extra baths, balconies, carports are options. Room for a guest room for your dollar, then come see us a 2166 W. 26th or call 843-6446.
Gatehouse
MEDAWR00KO APT FOR SUBLEASE 2
DBHM iPhone, near pool Available May 1
IBM
LIKE CATS? For summer. beautiful apartment in old house Spacious, wood floors, fireplace, washer/dryer $300; mo. gas & electricity for summer kit-supplying Anne. 498-3078.
Modern Split Level 2 Bedroom Apartment available for the summer months. It includes 1 1/2 bath, study loft, spacious living room, and kitchen, with additional living hall utilities. D住院 at 841-381 5 after p. 16
Reserve your apartment now! Just 2 short blocks from university 1, 2 and 4 bedroom apartments. Furnished with some utilities paid and off street parking. No pets. 841-5500.
Must sublease for Summer. Short walk to camp
pus: 2 bdrm. townhouse. Call 841-8281
Location
Located among 70 acres of rolling hills and trees, you'll enjoy the convenience of being close to campus and area shopping.
Lifestyle
Meadowbrook offers a selection of spacious and comfortable studios, 1, 2, or 3 bedroom apartments, and townhouses to fit your lifestyle
RESERVE YOUR
UNIT NOW...
FOR SUMMER OR FALL
15th & Crestline 842-4200
meadowbrook
Reserve your room now! For summer and/or fail
Furnished with most utilities paid. Shared cooking
and bath facilities. Just 2 short blocks from
walking off with street parking. No pets.
841.350
Rooms available for summer and the 1987-88 academic year in the Christian living community “Komona” at Ecumenical Minstrel Ministry. Information come to 1204 Orread or call 843-4833.
Share Rent, utilities, and duties. Nice house,
close to campus; dryer, private room,
office, and kitchen of our dorms and offices.
Spacies. 2 BHP kit to sub-lase for Summer with option to rest in fall. Available June 1st. Covered w/zip. $400-$500. See www.careers.ca
Studio available for summer in super apt. techno-
greast, great maintenance, recreation facilities and
laundry available. I will assume part of expenses.
Call 042 9696 after 6:30 p.m.
SUBLEASE. Furnished 2 BR apt. 1/2 bath.
Near campus $300 plus availability. May 15
or May 24.
SUMMER SUBLEASE extra clean, furnished.
Room room apartment at Tungsten Apartments.
Sublease for summer, studio at Hanover Place.
Call 749-5440
Sublease for Summer. Brand new 3 bedroom suite with large deck. Swimming pool, garage, microwave, dishwasher, fireplace, WD hookup. Management charge $400. We rent for $500 and charge $150 per month.
Sublease for Summer. Furnished one BR with lift
to campus, 749-8285, plus electric, close to
campus, 749-8285.
Sublease for summer Tangweedel, 2 bedroom
apartment with low lattitudes. Low utility.
Clean furnished Call 649-8288
AMENITIES
Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the amenities of Naismith Hall. Applications for fall semester are now being accepted while space remains
NAISMITH HALL
Sublease: Trailridge one bedroom apartment Pool Free gas, water Available mid-May 749-028
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
913-843-8559
Sublease for summer: 2 dkm. furnished apart
nant, Tanglewood. Call 749 1916.
tableau for summer. One large bedroom in two
bedroom apt. Mall's Old English Village,
London.
Sublease Available mid-May 1; block from camp put. New Mastercraft 2 bedroom apartment in Upper East Side. Call (800) 253-7644.
MASTERCRAFT
offers
Summer Sublease. Near campus, great for summer camps or school trips. Possible redible power bank. Call 414-7941 at 5:00 p.m. (Saturday)
CAMPUS PLACE-1145 Louisianna 841.1429
apartments--all near KU!
1
sub-lease Apt. May 18, 1 bedroom with loft, fur nished, wateriped. 841-5193
Summer Sublease. One bedroom luxury apartment has washer/dryer, microwave, access to jacuzzi. Option to renew lease.$350.00.824.5168.
Summer sublease: 3 bedrooms in new 4 bedroom townhouse; 2 baths semi furnished 8412 plus 1u. Utilities. Available May 19. Sunrise Terrace,
Completely furnished
- Custom furnishings
Summer Submit 2, 2 Bedroom Townhouse, Pool,
Bedroom Suite 2, 9 early afternoons, 841-1387 (mind
trap 5) afternoon
SUNDANCE—7th & Florida
941.5255
- Many great locations
- Professional management
TANGLEWOOD—10th & Arkansas 749.2415
Summer Sublease: 3 bedroom Apartment with 2 baths, a c. d., w. pool. Close to Campus: 841-6597 Summer Sublease: three or four person furnished bordering campus. Available in mid-floor apartments.
Consider:
Wanted: Person to Submit bedroom in apartment
Broadway, Call Tatam at 843-8544 for further
information.
- Variety of floorplans
Summit Sublet Large 3 BR Townhouse.AC
Near post, bin, bus cann. Rent negotiable.
FOR SALE
Green Saab. Mint condition. Brand new.
169 ask for a negotiable. Must sell $250-749-268-
561.
1978 Kawasaki LTD 1000 Custom and high performance extra too number to mention. Must be owned by a licensed dealer.
- Designed for privacv
- Energy efficient
Summer Sublease 2; Bdr. Apt. near downtown
Low utilities. Spacious. $72.90. Call 841 5797.
- Affordable rates
1822 Honda Moped Express SR Excellent condition, 600 miles; $300, but willing to negotiate. Call
Datasun 210 Sedan; D2. Steroid; 64K miles,
owner new, clutch $150. Excellent Condition.
For more details contact us at (718) 352-2960.
50-70% Offer Airline Ticket. Credit cards only. Ask for the Midnight Express, 738-315-14. 74 Honda 450, all stock, a classic $450.00 O.B. O. 842-326, Dave
BAND EQIFIMPMENT 2 Basis bats
BAND KANE II 3 Basis bats, Yamaha
BAND KANE II care stand and $401 Rud. 864-6848
Bianchi 12 Speed bicycle, 21 inch frame, excellent
condition, $10. Call Mark, Rud. 864-3453 weeks
condition, $150; Call Mark, 864-3634 weekdays
Bike Sale for $15; Fuji Espress Excellent Condi-
tion; New/Used Vans
Blue Nushiki 12 Speed Touring Bike new tires,
excellent condition. Asking $70 negotiable.
eBay
CPA EXAM Study Material. Best CPA Review
$199. $492. $592. after f. p. m. 811-8800.
$391. $492. $592. after f. p. m. 811-8800.
Dog House: extra large, insulated $65.00 841-4478.
Barb.
Drum set 3; piece new cymbals, 4 toto rings,
$450.0 @ B.O.C. Play. 842.338, Dave.
For Sale. One gold Holton Trumpet and One
Silver Professional Holton Trumpet. Ask $125
and $300. Call 841-4702, ask for Bob or leave message
Have fun in the sun! *Mouton* for sale Must-sell a Dance at 841-361-2987 or best offer *Call Diane at 841-361-2987* after 5 p.m.
Fender Acoustic/Electric Guitar; $130. Univox Electric Guitar/Case, 50 watt Musicman Amplifier, Ianax Flanger. All $250. Good Condition. 842-3142
MAX'S COMICS. Comic Books. Playbots. Penthouse, etc. 811 N. Hampstead.
ALM-LONG GOOD USED FURNITURE
Monday Friday - 10 a.m. p. saturday. 10 a.p. 32 E. 78 7900
SUNFLOWER
TRAVEL
SERVICE
704 MASS
842-4000
SPECIAL YOUTH FARE
CHICAGO—BRUSSELS $469 Round trip
Nice as nite typewriter, Smith-Cerona Memory
Disks have a size of 128MB. Need casel
immediate calls. Battery at 748-794.
NOTES now available for variety of classes
Enhance learning and grades. Call 643-312-02
www.note.com/teaching
CHICAGO
198 Round trip
Depart May 29 or June 11
Space is limited!
Call today for details.
Bed Load Bef, IBM Electric Typewriter, KORG DW8000 Synthesizer, 6 cubic feet, Refrigerator
Must Sell 1085 BMW KIORT Warranty titt 10/88 New Pirinelli Carpentry, Tail Shield, Heated Seat, Handrails and Ramp with trunk Cornbat seal Bel Helm Storage $295.00 - Make offer 54:31:34. Leave message
New IBM PCBr. Amber Screen and Modem. Hook up with KU terminal and work right at home in the office.
Povey a best horns with twitter packs. list $1200
Call 826-799-4900 to mount amp support 827
Call 824-799-4900. Leave message
SLR Camera. (New). Tele lens and Flash, all for $120.00, 49%
Racing Bike Tunturi 23 lbs. be5 with Lakko. Cyclo computer more first $350 takes .84-2813.
computer more first E30k takes 864-381.
BCA'20 R5 "电话 2300 contact Mike Reynolds
TREK 100 Bicycle. In great condition! What a Bargain! Call Paul: 843-6844
AUTO SALES
1983 BMW Great condition. Must sell. Leaving town, will take any call. Ask John, evenings on 4pm.
1984 Volkswagen GTL, Alpine System, Pirelli
Humps great. excellent condition Call Leailles.
1977 Dodge Cull-4 speed, air. Dependable $600
Phone 814-6125 after 6
1980 Datum 200 SX $2500 O.B.O 1880 Toyota Corolla SRS $2500 O.B.O 842 -8426
Volkswagen Rabbit, Restored, beautiful
tourist car with 3.8L engine, long life highway car free for gas for 10 years, long range,
82 Cutlass Supreme: AT, PT, PB, TAU, TAM/AF
Male, Males, Males, Good Condition
Calibration 841 977-0199 before 8 P.M.
car seat! 1872 Chevette, 4 cylinders, Automatic Hatchback 87,000 miles, 4 new radial tires, Air conditioning, Break inlay (recently paid $90) $1300 (Firm). B41-5533.
79 Ford Mustang; V-8. 302 4 Speed, Stereo.
Custom Wheels: 842-104. Price Negotiable.
New engine, new everything! Dependable Subaru with other tires, hard and simple. 1e74, must upgrade!
Must sale: $2 Pontiac Firebird, 70,000 loup,
stored, statero节能 $3,700 negotiable
$1,800 for one year.
CAMP COUNSELORS Wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teacher, camp counselor, sailing, water skiing, gymnastics, nautical activities, camping, crafts, dramatics, camping, crafts, dramatics, OR riding. Also kitchen assistant, maintenance. Salary $190 or less.宿舍地址:1765 Maple Nfd. IL 60093. 312-486-2444
Nice Toyota Starlet 82. Air霖, 5 speed, good condition. Ask #2490 $440. Call An Alm or Cell
Are you good with children? Would you like to be paid to live with a California family and help with children? HELP 1 PARENTS 770 Meno Ave. 219, Minoa Park, CA 94055 (412) 322-3816
Children's Counselors, Activity Instructors, WSL
Bus Driver, Cook, Kitchen Manager, Kitchen
Maintainer, Maintenance Nanny for
(need) Mountains Sunrise P.O. Box 211,
BOO 8030 (8036) 432-4557
HELP WANTED
LOST-FOUND
French interpreters wanted for simultaneous translation in a Grain Storage and Marketing university. June 8-July 24, 1967. Translation expemse. Must have College degree or college be enrolled at KSU Contact Merle Brookman at (913) 322-6164 April 12, 1967. KSU Renal Opportunity Internship.
Found: A women's gold watch near the Chi-O
Fountain Call Brian Riordan 1749 290 to claim it
Found: Ladies Timex with black band in front of Hoch Auditorium. Thursday Call; Tm 843-8743.
Lost leather black wallet with important documents. Call J. Losada at 842-5630.
Group leader needed for June and July for seven week course in Grain Storage management for marketing of grains. Participants will have supervisory experience and be sensitive to backgrounds. Conversation skills in French.
Cheekers Pizza has openable openings for (5) hard working, responsible delivery drivers. Must be 18 years old or older and have own car and insurance. Starting pay $3.50/hr. plus commission Cheekers Pizza in Jersey 2:00 p.m. 6 p.m. daily Cheekers Pizza in NJ Yale Road. Equal Opportunity Employer
GOVERNMENT JOURS. $16,000 or yr25%. New
instructions 807-6000 Ext. R974 (for current
federal list)
Computer Graphics Consultants need office manager. Must have bookkeeping and computer skills. You can think for you and take a joke we want you. Detailed job description available. Designag. 8141, 1510, 1414 W. 6th Street.
Computer graphics consultants need office manager. Must have computer experience a must. If you can think for you and take a joke, we want you. Call 8141, 1510, Designag. 1414 W. 6th.
Spanish, and English required. Responsibility includes traveling to and from airport confirming travel arrangements, driving limos, airplanes, and bus tours.
chromium and lower availability Contact Media
191210 367824 13.18.1977 KSU Equal
Opportunity Employer
Housecleaner Needed. Weekly, Will Pay $7.00 Hr.
Call 833-4618, 2:6 p.m.
Join our "Nanny Network" of over 500 placed by us in CT, NJ, NY, and Boston. One year commitment is free for new members, board and board, airfare. All families pre-screened for your satisfaction. Many families for you choose: From Contact Helping Hands, Inc. at 203-843-7442, or from NBC Today Show & Hour Magazine.
NANNY POSITIONS. Care for children in one of our daycare centers, board, $20-$30 per week. Attend school. One year commitment. Non-smokers preferred. Call for interview. LAYETTE MERE
Cassette, Newservice (918) 941-7232 tama-campusDIPLOMATICS PLANNING The University of Kansas, Lawrence campus, is seeking applications for the position of Campus Director, where she will manage all capital improvement projects for the Lawrence campus in accordance with the Plan of Institutional Planning. A professional degree in architecture and a proven ability to supervise a staff of professional advisors is required. Experience in facilities planning administration in an institution of higher education is desirable. Applicants must have resume must be received by April 30, 1985. University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas, 60045 (918) 864-3175. The University of Kansas is an Associate Professor of Management at University Drummer needed for established band. Good
AIRLINES CRUISELINES HRING! Summer
Travel. Pay. Travel. Call for Guide
Cassette. Nest. Book online.
www.cruiseonline.com
NANNY POSITIONS AVAILABLE: Good salary
miles Dallas, Texas Call 9-43 p. m. (214)
866-754-3030
Naisim Hall is taking applications for a full time cook position. Schedule is Tuesday-Saturday, early shift. If interested step to EOE/M/F/IAA
Nanny Finders, Inc. looking for nannies. Position available nationally. Good salaries, great benefits. Must make 1 year commitment P.O. Box 4033. Chapel Hill, NC 27515
NEED AMBITIOUS, HARDWORKING, PER-
FORMANCE and MEMORIES in the facili-
ty facility in Lawrence. Must have all city and state licensing qualifications and have two years supervisory experi-
ence. Call 844-621-619 or www.
needamitious.com.
Part-time delivery person needed. Must have own car. Call Peking Restaurant, 749-0603
Drummer Needed for established band. Good Money! 'Great times' Call Gavr; 549-2382
Personal care assistants new/nummer. Morning's 7:12 and evening, weekends 9:30 to 11:49 749-0288.
STUDENT WORK-STUDY POSITION: on-campus publisher helps seek 10 h/week/week to open and distribute daily mail, answer phones, type, and assign in various duties. Must be eligible for study at the university. Provide experience. To start immediately. Come to 329 Carruth to complete application by 4/8/78.
Summer Employment Lawn care, wood
fence, landscaping, and garden work.
Female applicant welcome. Send inquiries to
x4530.
Faking applications and interviewing sharp, energetic bartenders & cocktail waitresses; experience preferred. Thr. 11 H, Fr. 11 S, Sat. 12 A4, Sun. 13 F, Mon. 14 G, Grill. 7, Massachusetts in the Eldridge.
The Department of Mathematics is now accepting applicants for undergraduate or post position Math 6023 and Math 6024 in Fall work 10-15 hours per week under the supervision of a math teaching assistant, instructors must have at least two years of experience equivalent. $4.00 an hour Contact Marlinr Person for applications and interview. Room 809.
Forced to have sex on a date or whilepartying? RVS helps victims cope with sexual assault. Contact RVSS through HEADQUAITBERS at 841-2345 or through KU Information at 844-3066.
Wanted Nanny/Mother's helper, female, in affluent Northern New Jersey town, close to NYC for a full-time job in an energetic and have driver's licence. Use of car. Good pay. Summer or permanent. (201) 90-393-8470
The Mathematics Department is now accepting applications for the position of undergraduate teaching assistants. Applicants must have a bachelor's degree in mathematics; completion of Math 123 or the equivalent; communicate well in the English language; have undergraduate standing and grade point average of at least B plus; Will assist in lecture classes, grade homework and bable grade some exams. Stu
Will assist in lecture classes, grade homework assignments, and help grade some exams. Student monthly, 40% time, August 15 to December 31. Advanced coursework may be obtained. Course materials may be obtained from the Math Dept. Room 217 Strong Hall Further information, con- tents 218 Stright Philomonty. 25-E. Strong EOE/A
PERSONAL
ALEN LEVINE the right choice for Off-Campus
Senator said for by Synchronicity
Come to the Templin Hall Casino Party: Saturday, April 14. It'll bring a date for the gambling
Burge April 21? Want to go to a security formal?
HAPPY 22nd
BIRTHDAY
BRAD
I love you.
Kimber
Lynn
BUS. PERSONAL
Q
Be creative in gift gifting. Fulfill your fantasy with beautiful Bou迪 Portraitr for all occasions. Call Mika or Grace at Photos Plus, 749-3706.
Celebrate with a song. Send an 'I am a Jayhawk' messy box balloon bouquet. Other tunes available on our website: Halls Mall, Hall 749-3411, Ballons n' more.
HAS SPRING BREAK
LEFT YOU BOKE?
Paid Summer Internships
— must be hard working
— $400 per week
For interview call 749-7377
Most reasonable rates in town for all your photo needs especially graduation, education, and portraits. Call (800) 254-7011.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY TARYN!
GELAYSANH27W" For writes for KS/MO info. PER-
KASEN030-018 Mailed discreetly (confidentially)
9400-6128 Mailed discreetly (confidentially)
HEADCHEE, BACKACHE, ARM PAIN, LEG
INjury. Rehab in various locations to
complete quality care practice Dr. Mark
K.
Need music for your wedding? Call Jean, 843-3794.
Gives piano and voice lessons over summer.
Hare and Used Records. Buy, Sell, or Trade.
Quartzville's 811 New Hampshire
Jay, Don't Let Danny and Larry go. Hawk Todd. S are you missing your underwear latex!
SERVICES OFFERED
Love
AUTO TINTING. Best scratch resistant solar
insulation warranty. PROT-TINT of
Lawrence 811-728-3677.
CHIMSON SUN PHOTO is looking for young
professionals to join our team. We are
providing 10% off direct cost on new calls
and email offers.
Mom and Dad
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving U.S. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841 7349
*Graduates and undergraduates, money for college*
*tuition. (Source: U.S. Bureau of Statistics*
*Sources. (1) 784 0299; (2) 8604 NA121;
BU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES. Ekphertechnik
and Photography for Art & Design Building,
$60.00. Avt & Design Building,
MALE TRATS EXPLAINED Learn hundreds of
trading basics for the TRATS exp. Explain
TRALTEX EXPANSION, how to use WORST.
Risk Management.
---
Wild Wednesdays
Haircuts $5.00
with Cindy only at
Guys & Dolls
2490 Iowa
841-827
---
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A. $/hr (cours
schools) 190 % bursa $ /hr : 821.0099
MUSIC" "MUSIC" "MUSIC" "MUSIC"
Red House Audio 8-track studio, P.A. and Lights,
Mobile Party Music, Maximum Audio Wizardry.
Call Brad 749-1275.
Need money for college? Let us match you with Scholarship and grant money for which you can qualify. For more information write Student Center, 1410 SW Cheshire Drive, Tapeka, Kansas 69600
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
(Overland Park) ... 913-649-8278
Styretimes. All ladies dresses can be made here and styles from the latest fashion magazines, I have you covered!
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion Transportation provided 841.2306
TUTORING MATH STAT. $8.00/HR CALL
OCT 17
HARPER
1101Mass.
Suite 201 749-0123
TYPING
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Affordable and affordable typing and wordprocessing.
1-1-1 TRIO Word processing, Responsible
Conscientious, Reliable. Call 842 3111 for service
24-Hour Training, 13th semester in Lawrence
History, dissertation; paper to campus or
university.
A3 professional typing Term papers, research
issues and publications. Includes IBM
Electronic Typewriter 841.326
www.iambm.com
A-2 Word processing Service. Quality resumes,
word documents, CDs and other files.
File storage available. 845 1850 until 9/30.
Dependable professional experienced
TRANSCRIPTION also standard; k847$^a$
**T** **T** **R** **A** **C** **T** **R** **O** **P
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, maps, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter quality
printing, spelled corrected. 842-7247
AAA TYPING? Great ttyping, low prices! 842 1942
after 4:00 p.m., any time weekends
Accurate affordable typing by former Harvard
Callery Mrs. Nancy Matilla, 941-1219
JEANETTE SHAFFER T typing Service
TRANScription also, standard tape B43#"7"
DISSERTATION THESSES LAW
JEANETTE SHAFFER T typing Service
but will return KEEP WATCHING THIS AD
AAA TYPING has low cost word processing/document storage starting at $119/pgL Call 842.1942 after 4 p.m. weekdays, any time weekends. Campus pickup available
Experienced typist: dissertations, term paper; 842-2102 after 6.15 p.m. M/F or SAT/Sun.
**COLUMN ONE**
For professional typing/word processing, call
1-800-469-1069. Spring special $120, page, double
store.
GOOD IMPRESSIONS Typing/Word Processing/Typewriting Squares 'tagger' Typeset 'typewriter' B64-748 844-748
Experienced Typist Dissertations; theses, term papers, etc. Reasonable Rates. Call 842-3203
GUARANTEED PERECT typing done on word
Located near Lawrence hospital. Call 843-7597
Resume Service-written 10, copies ONLY
$80-$749 - 2193 after 5 p.m.
KU SECRETARY will do your typing and word processing. Fast, accurate, quick turnaround. Knowledge of MS Office. Quality typing; excellent editing, grammar, spelling, punctuation skills. Fast, reliable typing.
Smart Ward Processing includes editing and抄写 checking. Very reasonable rates. Foster, 749-2740
ACT NOW PAPER 1 $1/50 Resumes 15 WRITE LIFEHINE 843-3469
THE WORD DOCTORS: Why pay for typing? Word processing text, transcription: 843-3147
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editting, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes HAVE M.S. Degree 841-6254
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing service, Microsoft Word, theses, letter printing, etc. 843-750-1269
WANTED
Typing: very reasonable rates, will also assist with spelling punctuation and form. Call 842 9629 8260
Female Deposit $157.00 Summer only or into file
841.109 840.106 Anytime Tursis/thor or leave
Part-time housecleaners wanted for Spring and Summer. Day or evening hrs. If you are a meticulous cleaner, Buckingham Palace needs your calls. Talc 842 6064
Needed: Ride to and from Chicago DEAD shows;
Ride to and from Baltimore $1 and $drawn
call. Call Richard B844414 7872862
Roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom Apartment. Quit, non-smoker $150 and half utilities.
- Policy
Roommates: For 2.3, 4. bedroom apartments and
Calles: CJ 81, 841, 219.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Roorman Wanted. Mained apartment in older house, close to KU and downtown, spacious woods, FP, W.D. W. must like cats (eat 4) $715 plus 1/2 gas and electricity. Anne. Nnry 3578 after 4.
Wanted: Roommates for summer $38 DPR Burcl on Bus Route B. W bus D $150. utilities paid 842-7927
Wanted to buy Chevy T1/2 ton pickup v Van HAL.
Wanted to buy Kia Rondo v 842-318 ask for Marquee please leave a message
Wanted 2 female roommates for next fall to share a 2 level space three bedroom house. Nice furnished, fireplace, swimming pools, and lots of extras. On bus route B1 843-6541.
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Tuesday, April 7, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Amy McGill
Danny Ray/KANSAN
Diana Dickerson, a 1986 K graduate displays examples of marsupials from the KU Museum of Natural History. Dickerson left April 2 for the island of Tasmania to begin a two-year study of the pouched mammals.
Student leaves KU to study marsupials
By ILL JESS
Special to the Kansan
While most KU students slave over term papers and study for finals, Diana Dickerson is halfway around the world in Casamania, an island just south of Florida.
Dickerson, a 1986 KU graduate, left Los Angeles on Thursday for the University of Tasmania to begin work toward a master's degree. She will study marsupials, animals that carry their young in pouches.
Although she originally planned to concentrate her studies on wallabies, small relatives of kangaroos, Dickerson said last week that her professor in Tasmania would like her to study the sugar glider instead. The sugar glider is an Australian version of the North American flying squirrel.
"They're beautiful creatures," Dickerson said. "There really is a need to start studying their behaviors."
"I'll really be interested in what he finds out," he said.
Robert Timm, assistant professor of systematics and ecology, and assistant curator of mammals at the Natural History Museum where Dickerson worked until March, said that not much was known about the sugar glider and that it was of real interest to mammalologists.
Dickerson has been studying the sugar glider since late December, but she said she still did not know much about the animal.
Her studies will include research and field work, she said. One aspect of the sugar glider that she said she found in her study was its scent-marking behavior.
"A lot of animals do it," she said. "They rub against things to mark their territories. The sugar glider leaves a musky scent. It's really an important aspect of their behavior patterns."
Dickerson became interested in marsupials through her KU studies. She began as a biology major, and decided to specialize in zoology. She
then specialized further into systematics and ecology and mammalogy before finally beginning her studies of marsupials
Timm said that Dickerson's job at the museum also played a part in her study of marsupials.
"Her job helped develop her know-ledge of marsupials." Timm said.
Dickerson said she chose the University of Tasmania because the university had a strong program in music.
"It's not very populated and there is lot of bush and wild land," she said.
The University of Tasmania, with about 8,000 students, specializes in the studies of marine life and marsupials.
Dickerson first contacted the university in the fall of 1985. To be accepted there, she first had to be approved by the chairman of its zoology department, who also will be the professor in charge of her studies. She then had to send transcripts, and be accepted by the school and the department.
Finally, the Australian government had to approve her entrance into the country and she had to get a visa and a passport.
"They even checked my police record before giving me a visa. They don't want any 'illegals' coming into the country," she said.
Dickerson was accepted to the university in September, but was not accepted by the country until January.
"The process was incredibly long," she said. "When I think about it, if I had known all that I would have to go out and see her wonder if I would have done it."
Dickerson said she planned to study for two to three years in Tasmania.
"Australian students get a free education, but foreigners have to pay a yearly fee. It doesn't matter if you're there all year or three months, you still have to pay the same fee," she said.
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If your summer break leaves you with time to spare, make the most of it by earning extra money at Kelly Services.
we have a short and long-term assignments available. So you can work a day, a week or longer and earn top pay.
Kelly Services will be on campus Tuesday, April 7 from 8:30 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. in the Kansas Memorial Union to recruit applicants with the following skills:
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President Jeff Mullins Vice President Brian Kramer
Kevin Pritchard, Treasurer Kelly Donohou, Treasurer
1
First Class Concepts for Student Senate
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- To assist in obtaining more post season basketball tickets for students!
- To keep the summer school program alive!
- To sponsor student organizations that serve KU students in a first class fashion such as crew, BSU, forensics, rugby, football, and basketball!
- To end presidential salaries and wasteful senate retreats!
- To provide a new tradition of first class senators that show the leadership and capability of getting the job done!
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SPRING!
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Details, page 2
Wednesday
April 8, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 128
(USPS 650-640)
Three mall opponents win City Commission seats
Former Lawrence City Commissioner Don Binns, left, waits with newly elected City Commissioner Bob Schumm and Schumm's wife, Sandra, for final election results at the Douglas County Courthouse, 11th and Massachusetts streets. Because Schumm received the most votes in yesterday's election, he will serve a four-year term
By TODD COHEN Staff writer
Staff writer
Former Lawrence City Commissioner Bob Schumm was swept back into office in an election yesterday that also saw two incumbents defeated by two opponents of a proposed downtown mall.
Schumm, Mike Rundle and Dennis Constance claimed the top three spots in the hotly contested election, which had been dominated by arguments over a proposed downtown mall. All three winners had opposed the mall project.
See stories, photos page 3
Constance said, "Lawrence is on the verge of a very important phase of its history. Let's get on it. I'm ready tonight."
Voters rejected the re-election bids of commissioners Ernest Angino and Howard Hill, Angina, a KU professor of civil engineering and geology, finished fourth, 483 votes behind Constance.
Hill, director of KANU, KU's public radio station, finished a distant fifth. Ellis Hayden, a retired baker who also had opposed the mail, finished sixth.
Rundle said of Angino, "He didn't seem to have full respect for his constituents, telling people naive and talking down to people."
Angino, who attended his last commission meeting last night, said, "If the public wants a change, they get a change. They get what they want. They get what they deserve."
Hayden said he was happy and content despite his sixth-place finish.
City Election Results
"For being 63 years old, I ran as
CITY COMMISSIONER
BOB SCHUMM 7,517 21.8%
Mike RUNE 6,172 12.9%
DENNIS D. CONSTANCE 6,143 17.9%
ERNEST E. ANGINO* 5,560 16.4%
HOWARD HILL* 4,713 13.7%
ELLIS R. HAYDEN 4,940 11.7%
Industrials important
ADVISORY REFERENDUM
Shall the following be adopted?
*Massachusetts Street and Vermont Street shall no be closed or vacated from Sth Street to Eleventh
be closed or vacated from Sixth Street to Eleventh Street *
Yes 9,910 78.4%
No 2,696 12.6%
Shall the following be adopted?
"The City of Lawrence, Kansas, shall spend public funds, be they state, federal or local, for the purpose of assisting in the building of an enclosed shopping mall in any business district of Lawrence, Kansas"
Yes 3,055 24.4%
No 9,518 75.6%
Shall the following be adopted?
"None of the business district of Lawrence, Kansas, shall be vaulted for the purpose of constructing an enclosed shopping mall!"
Yes 8,775 70.0%
No 3,757 30.0%
MARY CLEMONS
U. S.D. # 497 SCHOOL BOARD
SCIENCE INSTITUTE BOARD
MARY LOU WRIGHT* 7,087 18.6%
MAGGIE CARTAR* 7,015 18.6%
MARY L. LOVELAND 6,152 18.4%
HARRIET SHAFFER 5,579 14.8%
ROBERT PALMATEE* 5,571 14.8%
SUSAN MAFCFE 3,258 8.7%
CURT HALL 2,878 7.7%
*Indicates incumbent
fast as I could." Hayden said.
The results broke a long Lawrence tradition that the top three finishers in the primary also win the top three spots in the
general election. Schumm, Angino and Constance were the top three finishers in the March 3 primary
Last night, Rundle jumped from his fourth-place primary finish to second, besting Constance, who had finished third in the primary, and knocking Angino, who finished second in the primary, down to
Rundle said, "I certainly did not think the odds were in my favor."
The new commissioners will be sworn in at Tuesday's city commission meeting, replacing Hill, Angino and David Longhurst. Longhurst was defeated by three votes in the primary.
Still on the commission are Mayor Sandra Praeger and Commissioner Mike Amyx, whose terms expire in April 1989.
Schumm and Rundle will serve four-year terms, and Constance will serve a two-year term
Schumm, who owns two downtown restaurants, had served on the commission from 1979 to 1981 and has soundly defeated for re-election.
In his first bid for office since his defeat, Schumm won the support of groups on both sides of the mall issue.
Schumm attracted attention when he called, in the first candidate debate, for the city to seek a free-storing department store rather than a mail. He stuck to his position despite charges by the mall's developer that his ideas were unrealistic.
Schumm was the only candidate to be endorsed by both the Old West Lawrence Neighborhood Association-PAC and the Commerce's political action committee. Jobs for Tomorrow.
Rundle, a secretary in the KU
design department and a caller for the Lawrence Barn Dance Association, concentrated on neighborhood issues and opposed the mall in his first bid for public office.
Constance, house manager of Joseph R. Pearson Hall, also was in his first campaign He had worked on and emphasized neighborhood issues.
Constance and Rundle, both residents of Old West Lawrence, also were endorsed by OWL-PAC.
Mall opponents, who flooded the Douglas County Courthouse to watch the results come in, cheered
and congratulated each other and candidates when the final tally was announced.
Steve Lopes, president of OWL,
announced, "OWL-PAC is here to
stay. We're not going away."
A woman in the crowd yelled, "I can't believe we did it."
Lopes said of the defeated incumbents, "I think it's the incumbents failing to keep in touch. They didn't see this coming. This is an evaluation of them, and they flunked."
However, Duane Morris, chairman of Keep Downtown Downtown
Committee, which had supported the mall, said the incumbents were defeated solely because of the strong anti-mall vote.
"I don't think it relates to anything else that has happened in the city," he said.
Nancy Hambleton, former commissioner and co-chairman of Jobs for Tomorrow, said incumbents offered from having voting records.
"Everyone looks so pure when you're coming in with no voting record," she said.
Law says workers must prove eligibility
By BENJAMIN HALL
People who apply for jobs this summer will find they have to prove that they are citizens or can work legally, Lawrence and KU personnel administrators say.
"Effective June 1, we're going to have to verify that anybody we hire is eligible to work in this country." The director of personnel, said recently.
Under a new federal immigration law, universities and all other employers will be responsible for verifying that each person they have hired since Nov. 6 can work legally. Employers who fail to do so could be fined or imprisoned beginning in 1988.
The law will be an extra burden for employers and employees, although officials disagree about the extent of the burden.
"Very quickly people will get used to the idea that they're going to have to do it," he said.
He said student employees probably would be included in the ruling, but the court did not.
alization Service might change some aspects of the law before a 30-day comment period ends April 20.
'T there's a long list of possible acceptable documents.'
David Lewin K/1 director of personnel
KU director of personnel
"This is a complicated issue to which we don't have a lot of answers." Lewin said. "We're trying to assess the changes. We're trying to minimize the additional workload this would create."
Employers will have 24 hours after hiring a new employee to check documentation. The University of Kansas is working on verification procedures to distribute campus-wide. Lewin said.
He said employees could establish their identification and work eligibility with a passport; state-issued identification or a driver's license and a social security card; birth certificate and state-issued identification or a driver's license; or a document from the Immigration and Naturalization Service.
"There's a long list of possible acceptable documents," Lewin said. KUIDs would qualify as identification.
But the new procedures shouldn't be a problem an immigration service officer can anticipate.
Ted Moss, acting assistant director for investigations for the immigration service's district office in Kansas City, Mo., was on campus last week to discuss the new law with Lawrence and KU personnel administrators.
"The employers were not upset about the law per se," Moss said. They were just worried about the raiders. "They didn't know how to fill out the forms."
The immigration service probably will mail a new verification form to 8 million employers next month, Moss said.
"It should be no problem," he said.
"Most everybody who's allowed to stay here and work here has some documentation to say so.
"Congress is saying that if you take the jobs away, it will decrease illegal immigration."
Illegal aliens are living and working in western Kansas. Wheita and other residents of the city are
But Ray Hummert, director of personnel for the city of Lawrence, said employees, not employers, should be responsible for proving they could work legally.
"I think employees are only now understanding what their responsibilities will be," he said. "I think we should let our congressional delegation know about the burdens that will be placed on employers."
The new laws also will confuse potential employees. Hummert said.
"Employers are going to be askin for this information, and the employe-
Hummert said verifying the city's 200 summer employees would be the city's greatest burden.
JOHN WILSON
INSIDE
Girl Scouts show college class the importance of sign language
The KU men's baseball team continued to struggle yesterday, losing two games to the School of the Ozarks. The Jayhawks have lost 10 straight and are winless in their last 15 games. See story page 13.
Still struggling
The girls, members of Girl Scout Troop 734 of Lawrence, used sign language yesterday to take the scouting oath in front of about 30 KU students in a beginning sign language class.
The classroom was still as three mall girls dressed in green solemnly pleaded for the school to stay closed.
Jan Simpson, 9, told the class afterward that she had learned sign language to earn a badge.
Their mouths were silent, but their hands were moving.
By CAROLINE REDDICK
Staff writer
"I thought it was fun," she said. "I don't know why. It was just fun, something to do. It's pretty easy to learn."
Heather Beyer, 10, said, "I thought it was fun because, like Ellin said, what if we run into somebody who's deaf? We could talk to them a little."
The leader of the Girl Scout troop, Lynne Renick, said she had asked Ellin Siegel-Causey, assistant professor of special education, to teach the troop's members sign language to them.
"The more they can talk to people, the better. And that's just one step in that direction," Renick said. "I hope they would have more tools to talk with people."
Siegel-Causey teaches the class that the girls signed in front of. It's a graduate-level course, but Siegel-Causey said she accepted students from any level because of the importance of communicating with deaf people.
"We're talking about people, and we all have special needs," she said. "Let's deal with each other as people, and one way to do that is to learn their language.
Siegel-Causei teaches signed English, in which the word order is exactly like English. She said a course offered through the music therapy department taught American Sign Language, in which the
word order and syntax are different from English.
"The total communication approach is what I teach, and it relies on everything," she said. "They learn to speak, read lips, sign, and use facial expressions, gestures and body language. That tends to be the way most young kids that are deaf will learn in the public school system."
Jennifer Stiles, Hutchinson senior,
said that she took Siegel-Causey's
course because she wanted to get a
master's degree in preschool education
for the deaf.
"It takes a while to get used to reading someone," she said. "Everybody has different hand positions."
"But I think deaf people should be included in our society, too. They have to learn spoken language in order to fit into our society, so why shouldn't we learn sign language to accommodate them somewhat?"
By TIM HAMILTON
GTAs to get refunds from taxed stipends
University of Kansas officials announced yesterday that the University would refund money withheld for taxes on fee waivers from graduate teaching assistants' paychecks in March and April.
The announcement came a little more than a week after the Graduate Student Council Executive Committee released a letter criticizing the University's interpretation of the Tax Reform Act of 1986 and the implementation of the tax on fee waivers.
In the letter, GradEx also called for a refund by April 15 of the taxes withheld.
Near the first of the year, the University determined that fee waivers for GTAs constituted compensation and were subject to taxation.
In March and April, amounts ranging from $5 to $150 were withheld by the University comptroller from the paychecks of 690 GTAs.
Vickie Thomas, University general counsel, said the fee waiver taxation issue hinged on the definition of compensation. Fee waivers could be considered scholarships or fellowships.
She said the University decided that fee waivers were taxable as income after consulting the American Council on Education, the Council of Graduate Schools and the
Board of Regents about the statute.
About 10 days ago, she received information from the Council of Graduate Schools that said the Internal Revenue Service wouldn't define what was considered compensation and what wasn't. Thomas said.
"But we've continued to collect information, and recently we decided that it is possible that fee remission doesn't constitute compensation." Thomas said.
The University confirmed that information with sources at the National Association of State Universities and Land-Grant Colleges, she said.
Keith Nitcher, University director of business affairs, said that because of the uncertainty surrounding the tax law, the University's best available advice recommended the refund.
"The merits of withholding, the merits of refunding and the merits of the taxation have yet to be decided," Nitcher said.
Richard Augustin, assistant comptroller, said his office began last week, when the refund seemed imminent, to compile the names of GTAs who were taxed and the amounts withheld from each.
Augustin said that the refund checks might be sent out with the May paychecks and the majority of the refunds would be less than $35.
Bill may let Regents sell bonds for books
By CHRISTOPHER HINES
Staff writer
TOPEKA - Kansas public universities soon may be able to take the initiative to improve the quality of higher education despite continuing legislative budget cuts, a state senator said yesterday.
"We see no increase in revenues from the state," said State Sen. Norma Daniels, D-Dalley Center. "We need to provide the Regents institutions ways that they can, on their own, raise money."
Daniels drafted a bill that would allow the Board of Regents to issue
1
bonds to pay for books, laboratory equipment, computer hardware and software, and other educational materials. The bonds would be sold to the public and repaid by increasing tuition at each Regents school.
The money collected would be used to supplement what the state allocates for educational materials and resources. The state's contribution, Daniels said
"The purpose of the bill is to increase the amount of money spent by consumers on transportation."
See BONDS, p. 6, col. 3
2
Wednesday, April 8, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Around the World
Germany accepts responsibility for Holocaust, chancellor says
BONN. West Germany — Chancellor Helmut Kohl told Israeli President Chaim Herzog yesterday that the Nazi extermination of six million Jews never would be purged from history and that the German people accepted responsibility for the Holocaust.
"The period of genocide is the darkest chapter in German history." Kohl said during a luncheon speech. "We Germans have to live with the terrible truth that in the days of National Socialism, the subjected to unaspiring suffering at the hands of Germans."
At a private meeting with Herzog and in the luncheon speech.
Kohl said that Herzog's visit, the first to West Germany by an Israel head of state, was a milestone and historic landmark.
The chancellor called on Germans to remember the crimes committed by Germany under the occupation to forget them or belittle them.
"We Germans accept our responsibility for what was done to the Jews by Germans in the name of Germany during that disastrous epoch," he said. "The suffering inflicted upon the Jews by Germans under the Nazi regime can be expunged neither from Jewish nor from German history."
Across the Country
Reagan cautious of security in Moscow
WASHINGTON — President Reagan, responding to the escalating Marine sex-and-spy scandal, said yesterday that until he was assured that the U.S. building was secure, the United States would not move into its new embassy in Moscow and the Soviets would not move into their new building in Washington.
had revealed a deep breach in security at the most sensitive U.S. diplomatic post. He asked former Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird to investigate.
Two hours after the State Department lodged a formal protest with the Soviets over the "violation of sovereignty" at the U.S. Embassy, Reagan said the scandal involving Marine guards
Appearing on short notice in the White House briefing room, the president said that Secretary of State George Shultz would go forward with his April 13-16 trip to the Soviet capital for talks with Soviet Foreign Minister Edward Shearndaz, despite concerns about the security of communications between Moscow and Washington.
Challenger defeats Mayor Reardon in KC
KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Challenger Joe Steineger upset four-term Mayor Jack Reardon in yesterday's election and immediately pledged to take the city forward
leadership.
Unofficial vote results showed Steineger received 18,122 votes, compared with 16,434 for Reardon.
Reardon, 43, who underwent heart-transplant surgery on Feb. 18, conceded the race about 9:20 p.m. He said he would do all he could to help the city have a smooth transition to Steiner's
Steineger, 53. a longtime president of the Turner school board, became Reardon's challenger in the general election after finishing second to the incumbent last month in a 10-candidate primary field.
Washington re-elected as Chicago mayor
CHICAGO — Mayor Harold Washington capitalized on his overwhelming support among the city's black voters to defeat two challengers yesterday and become the first person in a decade to win a second mayoral term.
Vrdolyak's 427,524 votes, or 42.5 percent.
With 89.6 percent of the city's 2,900 precincts reporting, Washington had 526,749 votes, or 52.4 percent, to Democrat Edward
"We celebrate tonight not the victory of one candidate but a mandate for a movement," a jubilant Washington told thousands of supporters after singing "Chicago."
Washington is the first mayor since the legendary Richard J. Daley to win a second term.
Safety board investigating bridge collapse
FONDA, N.Y. — The National Transportation Safety Board began an independent investigation yesterday into the New York Thruway bridge collapse, while heavy rain slowed the search for more victims of the disaster.
Three bodies have been recovered and at least four people, including three utility workers returning from a bowling tournament in Syracuse, were missing because of the Sunday collapse that sent vehicles plunging 80 feet into the rain-snowbob Schoarbie Creek.
The findings will be sent to the Federal Highway Administration, which can penalize states for construction or inspection errors, a spokesman said.
From Kansan wires.
Weather
From the KANSAN Weather Service
LAWRENCE FORECAST
Skies will be sunny today as the high should reach an exceptionally pleasant 70 degrees with winds from the west. The great weather should continue overnight and into tomorrow with a low tonight of 40 degrees and
WEATHER FACT: A record seven inches of snow fell on this date in 1938.
starry skies. Tomorrow, skies will be sunny with a high in the low 70s.
DES MOINES
69 / 40
OMAHA
66 / 39
LINCOLN
64 / 40
CONCORDIA
65 / 39
TOPEKA
70 / 39
KANSAS CITY
69 / 40
COLUMBIA
66 / 40
ST. LOUIS
63 / 32
SALINA
69 / 39
CHANUTE
75 / 40
SPRINGFIELD
69 / 39
WICHITA
73 / 41
CHANUTE
75 / 40
TULSA
75 / 45
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Across From The Hillcrest Theatres 642-0526
Spring Cleaning Sale!
April 7-10
9:30-4:30
Reduced prices on art books,
note cards, posters & post cards.
Spencer Museum Book Shop
SUNRISE PLACE
9th & Michigan
Featuring: Luxurious two bedroom townhouse living
- Prices start from $385
- Energy efficient
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- Swimming pool
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City Elections
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 8, 1987
3
Darcy Chang/KANSAN
VANIAH
Rita Schmidtberger, Lawrence resident, checks to make sure all of the ballots are in before they are tabulated. Yesterday's city elections drew a 55.5 percent vote turnout, the highest in 15 years.
CANADA
Darcy Chang/KANSAN
Susan Bailey, Lawrence resident, listens to a live radio broadcast at the Douglas County Courthouse as she awaits results from the second wave of ballot counts.
Angino, Hill lose election, plan to enjoy other pursuits
By PAUL BELDEN
Staff writer
Ernest Angino and Howard Hill may not be city commissioners anymore, but they don't plan on slowing down.
Angino and Hill finished fourth and fifth out of six candidates for Lawrence City Commission in yesterday's election. Bob Schumm, Mike Rundle and Dennis Constance were elected to the three open seats on the commission.
Angino and Hill both ended four years on the city commission. Angino was elected to a four-year term in 1983, and Hill was appointed to the commission in 1983 to fill a vacancy and then won a two-year term in 1985.
After learning of his defeat, Hill said, "I've been thinking about all the things I have to do and want to do, and I can't work them all into a schedule that excludes the city
commission, much less one that includes it."
Hill said he might lobby the new commission on issues that affected the University of Kansas and would spend time with his family.
"I've got one daughter, Melissa,
"who is 15, and another, Tiffiney,
who is 13. So in three years and
five years, if our plans progress, they'll
be entering KU. So these are
precious years to me."
Angino, a KU professor of civil engineering and geology, said he would finish an oceanography book, which was interrupted by his election to the commission in 1983. He also said he would seek work as a water-science and water-technology consultant.
"I can assure you that if I publish the book, I'll be making more than the $2,000 a year the city commission pays," he said.
Not that he enjoyed hearing the
"Nobody likes to lose. I mean, come on, don't kid yourself. You don't run to end up last," he said.
election returns.
Angino especially didn't like the appearance of being defeated primarily because of his support for a proposed downtown mall. The three referendums on the mall were overwhelmingly defeated in yesterday's election.
"It's disappointing if everything on an election for a city the size of Lawrence hinges on one issue," Angino said. "When commissioners, be they the new ones or the old ones, make a thousand decisions a year, to be judged on one issue is unfortunate. But so be it."
"Do I think it's healthy? No, I don't think it is healthy. But I'm not saying that they did it on that basis. It's clear that they wanted a change, and they had a change."
city's voters to a pendulum
"You know, the pendulum swung four years ago, and it swings now, and who knows two or three years what will happen?" Hill said.
He said he thought the commission had done its job well the past four years.
Angino and Hill agreed that tough decisions faced the new commission.
Hill likened the mood of the
future. These are critical times ahead, regardless of who is on the commission."
Angino said he thought the downtown area already was sick.
"I do think that downtown Lawrence is in serious trouble. And it's my humble opinion that they're in serious trouble now," he said. "And they're not as viable and as strong as people would have you believe."
"I think that downtown is extremely healthy," Hill said. "How healthy it is in the future depends on how well the city plans for its
With those warnings, Angino and Hill took their leave of city government and went home to their families.
City voters reject downtown mall in referendum
Staff writer
By TODD COHEN
Lawrence voters overwhelmingly rejected a proposed downtown mall three times in yesterday's city elections.
More than 55 percent of registered voters turned out to vote on a three-question advisory referendum — saying yes twice to prohibiting the closing of downtown streets for a mall, and no to public financing of an enclosed downtown mall.
The mall project, which was developed by Jacobs, Visconsi & Jacobs of Cleveland, is now in the hands of the new Lawrence City Commission, which must interpret yesterday's results. The referendum is not binding on the commission.
But mall opponents and supporters agreed last night that the current mayor, Michael Masterson,
And JVJ officials had said before the election that no mall could be built downtown without public financing or the closing of some streets.
JVJ had proposed a $55 million, 360,000-square-foot mall in the 600 block of Massachusetts and Vermont streets. The proposal asked that the city close both streets and pay $20 million to help finance construction.
Question No. 2, which asked whether the city should spend public money to help finance construction of an enclosed mall, was defeated 9,518 votes to 3,065, or 75.6 percent of voters to 24.4 percent.
Question No. 3, which asked whether the city should prohibit the closing of any downtown streets for a mall, was approved by 8,775 votes to 3,757, or 70 percent of voters to 30 percent.
In February, residents opposed to the street closings formed Citizens for a Better Downtown and collected 4,400 signatures to call for a public vote on the street closings. The commission put CBD's proposed question and two others on the ballot.
Minkin and Pat Kehde, and a large crowd of mall opponents watched election results at the Douglas County Courthouse, 11th and Massachusetts streets. They cheered and applauded loudly when an election worker posted final results.
"I think that's a pretty substantial margin. I'm really pleased and surprised." Kehde said.
Last night, CBD's organizers, Phil
Minkin said, "I thrilled. It was overwhelming. I never believed it."
Mall supporters accepted the defeat but charged that JVJ had hurt the mall by launching a big advertising campaign.
on public financing, said of JVJ, "I don't think they listened to the concerns of the people at all."
Duane Morris, chairman of the Keep Downtown Downtown Committee, which had promoted a yes vote
Richard Zinn, who has represented JVJ and its local partner, Town Center Venture Corp., refused to comment last night on the vote.
Steve Lopes, president of the Old West Lawrence Neighborhood Association, which had endorsed antimal commission candidates, said, "We want to give special thanks to JVJ. The best thing to happen to us was for JVJ to buy those ads."
Nancy Hambleton, co-chairman of a political action committee formed by the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, said Lawrence residents tended to resent well-financed groups or people.
Mall issue big draw for voters
By JOSEPH REBELLO
Staff writer
Encouraged by pleasant weather and determined to have their say on a proposed downtown mall, more than half of Lawrence's registered voters turned out in yesterday's city elections.
Of 23,162 people registered to vote in Lawrence, 12,962, or 53.5 percent.
That turnout is the city's highest in almost 15 years, Douglas County Clerk Patty Jaimes said.
"This has been an unprecedented election, where there has been a lot of controversy," said Steve Lopes, president of the Old West Lawrence Association and spokesman for its political action committee.
Turnout in the 1st Precinct, 1st Ward, in the area monitored by Lopes' group, was 295, or 55 percent of the registered voters. The ward lies between Sixth and Michigan streets and the Kansas River.
Yesterday, members and volunteers of the Old West Lawrence PAC spent all afternoon monitoring voter registration in the committee's area. Loops said.
The city's highest turnout was in the 6th Precinct, 2nd Ward, in West Lawrence, where 710 people, or 71 percent of those registered, voted.
Voting was lightest in the 4th Precinct, 2nd Ward, at Allen Field House, where only 69 people, or 7.5 percent, registered voters, went to the polls.
Yesterday, poll volunteers Carolyn Hemphill, Sonya Cooper and Dick Mutally sat inside the field house, a dollar placed on the table for whoever could come closest to guessing how many students would vote.
Mulally, who guessed 75, won the dollar.
"Let's face it, the students aren't interested." Hembill said.
But at each of the other polling centers, more than 25 percent of registered voters showed.
Burdett Loomis, associate professor of political science, said the high turnout was due to the issues on the ballot more than the candidates for city commissioner.
Henry Johns, who was defeated in the March city commission primary, said, "The issue of the current plan for the mail was extremely unpopular. We had a group of people from out of town come in and tell us we had to do things their way."
Johns said the group, Jacobs, Visconsi & Jacobs, of Cleveland, the city's developer of record for the proposed mall, had incensed Lawrence residents by running expensive advertisements promoting its mall proposal.
"That type of arrogance angered the people," Johns said "They said, 'Wait a minute. This is our town.' That's why you see those numbers. That's what got the people out."
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Wednesdav April 8. 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Cast your ballots
In the last Student Senate election, 3,523 students voted for president and vice president. That's almost 14 percent of the students enrolled at this University. Considering that the Senate is in charge of $1.2 million of the students' money, would you trust only 14 percent of the student population to decide how that money was going to be spent, and more importantly, whether that money was going to be spent wisely?
That is only one big reason why it is imperative that students go out and vote today and tomorrow. There are many other reasons as well. The Senate has instituted some worthwhile programs at the University. The Vietnam Memorial, Student Legal Services and SecureCab are just a few of the successful projects to come out of previous senates.
Student Senate, contrary to popular opinion, is not a make-believe organization. It is a real organization, deciding on real issues and playing with real money — the students' money. Students, therefore, need to be concerned about where their money is going and how it is being spent.
Benefits and limits to bill
Voting does not take much time or effort. Booths have been set up in many places on campus for the convenience of the students. It is not too much to ask to take five or 10 minutes out of the day to vote when so much is riding on the outcome of that very ballot.
Agnes T. Frog's defeat turned into a victory for Lawrence last week when the Senate joined the House of Representatives in overriding President Reagan's veto of a $88 billion highway bill.
The Lawrence victory came in the form of $7.2 million that will be used for a proposed southern Lawrence trafficway. Agnes T. Frog had become the fictitious spokesman for people opposed to the trafficway. Opponents argued that the bypass would harm the Baker Wetlands, a wildlife refuge that is home to the endangered Northern Crawfish frog.
While the override will benefit Lawrence, it did not come without a price. An amendment to the bill allows states to increase the speed limit on rural stretches of highways to 65 mph.
The increased speed limit will have to be accepted. However, state officials still have
to make vital decisions. The bill allows each state to set up where the 65 mph speed limit will be in effect,
In everyone's best interest, it would be wise to confine the 65 mph speed limit to rural and less conjected areas, in the hopes that it will save lives.
Many people already exceed the 55 mph speed limit when they are driving on the nation's highways. Let's hope with the increased speed limit, people will pay extra attention and care to their driving. Drivers need to exercise caution, instead of continuing the practice of exceeding the speed limit.
The thought of getting home faster will be appealing to a lot of people, including KU students, but just because Congress has legislated drivers to push the gas pedle a little harder doesn't mean they have legislated drivers to think less when they drive.
A victory for humanity
It may have been a big loss for Gov. Mike Hayden, but Friday's 22-18 defeat of a bill that would reinstate the death penalty in Kansas was an important victory for humanity and justice.
Hayden said he was disappointed that senators defeated the bill when Kansans overwhelmingly favored restoring capital punishment. But the senators showed courage in taking a stand different than that of the majority. A good lawmaker does not blindly follow the will of the majority.
The rights of the minority must be protected, especially in a matter of life and death.
In 1985, a nearly identical Senate, gaining only one new member since then, passed a similar bill by a 24-16 vote. The difference this time appeared to be the lack of a certain veto by the governor, which served as a safety net for senators in the past. Because the bill's passage surely would reinstate capital punishment, the issue turned into one of conscience instead of politics.
There were differing reasons why senators were opposed to capital punishment. Some were concerned by the high cost of the system at a time when the state is experiencing budget problems. Others were worried about mistakes in the judicial process which could lead to the death of an innocent person. Still others were alarmed at statistics which show that blacks are much more likely to receive the death penalty than white defendants.
Any one of these should have been enough reason to stop the reinstatement of "the ultimate penalty."
Whatever the reason, senators showed a deep regard for human life, an awareness of the gravity of the issue and a lot of courage.
News staff
News staff
Frank Hansel . Editor
Jennifer Benjamin . Managing editor
Juli Warren . News editor
Brian Kaberline . Editorial editor
Sandra Engelland . Campus editor
Mark Siebert . Sports editor
Diana Dullmeier . Photo editor
Bill Skeet . Graphics editor
Tom Eblen . General manager, news adviser
Business staff
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Jinie Hardy . Ad director
Denise Stephens . Retail sales manager
Kelly Scherer . Campus sales manager
Duncan Calhoun . Marketing manager
Lori Coppel . Choreographer
Jeffrey Luminski . Production manager
David Nixon . National sales manager
Jeanne Hines . Sales and marketing adviser
Opinions
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words and should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. Guest shots should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The
The Kansan reserves the right reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
The University Daily Kansan (USP5 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, *118 Stauffer Flint Hall,* Kansas, Kan. 6045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and on Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage paid in Lawrence, Kan. 6044. Subscriptions by mail are $40 per year in Douglas County and $50 per county. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid monthly activity fees.
POSTMASTER. Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118
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Teen-age suicide not to be taken lightly
Every successful person rises to his own level of incompetence. Ronald Reagan was a good light bulb salesman for General Electric, but he is incompetent as president. Bruce Willis and Don Johnson, popular television stars, are flops at singing. And Mike Royko, a successful columnist whose columns I usually admire, is a failure as a counselor for suicidal teen-agers.
Gil Chavez
Columnist
In his column that appeared in the Kansan on March 25, Royko displayed a total lack of competence at his new job. If we can take his column at face value (much of what Royko writes seems to be exaggerated or made up), then we know his secret to handling suicidal people. First, make it clear that you don't give a damn. Then make them feel worse than they already do by telling them that they are self-pitying, vain wimps.
then forget it. It's not your problem anyway.
If this does't cure them, tell them about some guy who survived the loss of his family and his legs, but who hangs on because he has two grandsons to live for. If that doesn't work,
Royko's comparison of the old man and the girl lacks any appreciation for what it is like to be a teen-ager. The man is old enough to know that the only thing more futile than a life of total misery is a life cut short by suicide. But there are a lot of teenagers who don't think the way, who cannot see past tomorrow. They are filled with hate for this wonderful world, which, for them, seems as empty as death and considerably more painful.
I'm not saying that things weren't tough on teen-agers and young adults when Royko was young. But he has been a big boy for a long time and things are very different, grimly different now.
Royko says it's nonsense to think that teen-age suicides are a national crisis. But they are, and they have been for a long time. Since 1960, the mortality rates have decreased for every age group except one, 14-to-24-year-olds. This age group's death rate has skyrocketed. Suicide is its third most common cause of death.
There is a reluctance to admit that society is destroying its youth. People would prefer to believe that they have a good time, like "Happy Days."
But growing up isn't like that.
Many adolescents are abused or abandoned by their parents. Others run away and support themselves through prostitution. Droves of them die in drug overdoses, traffic accidents and murders. And some are so driven to succeed that failure is a death sentence.
And it's getting worse. My mother has encountered children at the school where she teaches who have attempted suicide. These weren't acts of vanity, but serious attempts to end what seemed unbearable.
When I was 18, I didn't think I'd make it to 19. It wasn't because I didn't want to, but so many people I knew weren't making it that I didn't see any reason why I would. Sooner or later, I thought, I'd be run over on the street, or blown away by a nut with a gun. And if these things didn't happen, we'd all be nuked into oblivion.
In the years since then, a car did come around a corner and toss me like a broken doll to the pavement. And I did meet a nut with a gun, but he didn't shoot me, though he seemed to really want to. (I am still waiting to be nuked.)
But these things didn't make me feel that life had no future. When I was a teen-ager, it was what I saw happening to others that sometimes led me to despair. I resplained when I
saw the world crushing my friends, when I tried to ease a friend's terrror after she had been assaulted twice, when I heard that an old friend was beaten to death, or that another was incinerated in his car.
There are more examples, but they would only belabor the point. It's easy to become buried in the trash when you put up you during your adult education.
The transition from being a child to an adult is dangerous. For many who won't behave, it seems that their backs must be broken before they will act like adults. Afterwards, they're much less caring, much more callous and they make it clear they don't care about anybody else.
Royko assumes so much in his arrogant, ignorant view of the world. He needs to stay with something simple that he can deal with, such as Ronald Reagan. It would have been hard for him to accept that girl. And it would have been such an important thing for her — even if she was only looking for attention.
From my education as an adult, I have learned that justice is too much to ask from an unjust world. But I can wish; and I wish that someday Mike Royko is a knotted old man in some old folks' home, and a young nurse shows him the same amount of kindness he showed that girl.
Distributed by King Features Syndicate
The Miami Herald
CONGRESS
DETO
Q: Why did the lame duck cross the highway (bill)?
Battling worth of the media and the ministry
A couple of Sundays ago, ABC's Sam Donaldson and the Rev. Ferry Falwell got into a brief, but illuminating, snarling match on the issue of accountability, which is a long word for the short question: Are you worth your keep?
Arnold Sawislak UPI Commentary
Donaldson noted that some people believed that television evangelists are taking advantage of the poor and using their donations "to line your own pockets and live high on the hog."
"I can only speak for Jerry Falwell and only God can speak for the rest, as far as I'm concerned," Falwell replied. "I receive nothing from this ministry except salary and I've been here 31 years."
Donaldson asked, "What is your salary, Reverend Falwell?"
Without a pause, Falwell
replied: "My salary is $100,000." Then he asked, "How much do you make, Sam?"
Donaldson: "Well, I make quite a bit. Reverend Falwell."
Falwell: "You make more than I do."
Donaldson: "But then again, I don't make it from people who send in $10 and $15 and $20 a week. I make it from a money-making corporation, which, of course, can cut me off any time."
Fallwell: "You do, indeed, Sam, and might I add you a lot less accountability than most of the proachers you're criticizing."
God knows Donaldson needs no help from this corner, but Falwell's comment, which appears to suggest that unlike a clergyman, the TV newsman is not responsible to his audience, begs rebuttal.
In truth, Donaldson operates on the razor's edge of an accountability system known as TV ratings, which purport to reflect the pleasure and preferences of a gigantic
"congregation." And while Donaldson may have a nice long-term contract, he can be jerked off the air at the drop of a couple of rating points.
'I can only speak for Jerry Falwell and only God can speak for the rest, as far as I'm concerned," Falwell replied.'
Compared with members of Congress, who have from two to six years to please their constituents and assure their livelihoods, TV preachers and TV newsmen are in the category of lion tamers and
high-wire walkers.
But no one seems to worry more about accountability, or how to avoid it, than members of Congress. They will go through the most absurd gyrations to avoid being put on the spot — framing parliamentary situations so they can cast votes both for and against controversial propositions — and otherwise passing the buck on every possible occasion.
The recent congressional pay raise was a prime example of what is referred to in semi-polite company as CYA. Having long since dodged responsibility for proposing pay levels, Congress, or at least not only a law, to vote against a salary increase and still get the money.
So now, members of Congress are going to get a 16 percent pay raise and be able to say they were against accepting it. That is a bit of hypocrisy worth the combined attention of the Rev. Falwell and the reporter Donaldson.
BLOOM COUNTY
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KEEP YER PANTS ON.
I PUSHED CRUISE CONTROL.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 8. 1987
5
Scientist says tales of Darwin are wrong
By KJERSTI MOEN
Staff writer
The traditional image of Charles Darwin is incorrect, scientist and writer Stephen Jay Gould said in a lecture last night in the Kansas Union.
He especially emphasized Darwin's methods of reconstructing history from natural objects and phenomena.
Gould's speech was the last of three in a lecture series called "Contemporary Thinking About Science." The Committee on the History and Philosophy of Science and the division of biological sciences sponsored the the series.
"Darwin has become a saint because he was one of the world's greatest thinkers," he said.
"We can't see him as he really was the great, quirky systematizer." Gould told about 600 people who packed a hot Woodruff Auditorium to hear his speech "Darwin and the Science of History."
Gould, a professor of geology and goofy at Harvard University, is regarded by some as a great thinker himself. He also is curator of invertebrate paleontology at Harvard's Museum of Comparative Zoology.
Darwin is Gould's hero. Last night, Gould spoke warmly of the importance of Darwin's contributions to evolutionary theory.
Gould sometimes has made controversial contributions to theory scholarship and in the natural sciences, especially within evolutionary biology. He has published widely read books of popular science, such as "The Panda's Thumb," "Ever Since Darwin," "The Flamingo's Smile" and "The Mismeasure of Man."
After appearing on the cover of Newsweek and being interviewed by Time, People and Rolling Stone Gould also has become a media hero.
Charles Darwin, a 19th-century English evolutionist, was a radical innovator and systematologist, not the gentle, mild old man that traditional myths claim. Gould said.
By studying the habits and structures of earthworms, orchids and coral reefs. Darwin could draw geneticalusions about the past, Gould said.
"The entire corpus of Darwin's wings is one long argument for the orchids"
Darwin inferred the unknown from the known by studying single objects' imperfections and numerous objects' common characteristics. Gould said.
The panda's thumb, different types of coral reefs and human facial expressions all have been objects of scientific studies that resulted in inferences about the past, he said.
Gould's audience responded to his speech with occasional laughter, but when the time came to ask questions, he would come up with any that interested him.
"I wish more people had a basic understanding of the concept of science in history. Some understanding of our biological background and part in evolution is important to all of our society, both present and future." Welch said.
However, many were enthusiastic about the speech afterward.
"I enjoyed his speech. He was very articulate," said Bill Whelon, a Kansas City, Mo., resident who came to Lawrence to hear Gould speak.
David Huet-Vaughn, Leawood senior, said, "It's interesting to see how Darwin could figure out what the causes were of bizarre things in nature."
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Four Movies
Two Days
$9.95
(Higher Weekends)
Videoxpress
1447 W. 23rd
Open 9 a.m.-10 p.m. Daily
SUNTANNING
EUROPEAN
SUN SAFE WORK
Video Player Four Movies Two Days
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
Mom always said, "Don't go out without clean underwear!"
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Change into KU boxers! You won't need an excuse to show these off!
Great for swimsuits coverups, jogging, or party gags!
25th & Iowa • 841-6232
ORCHARDS GOLF CLUB 843-7456 • 3000 W. 15th St.
As seen on David Letterman & Good Morning America.
Jayhawk Bookstore
Spice! oh so nice.
lunch Alternative!
$3.75
Wednesday
I
Ranchera Especial
All served with chips & sauce and non-alcoholic beverage.
Gutierrez Restaurant & Club
Fine Mexican Dining
2600 Iowa Street
842-1414
Autiérrez
Restaurant & Club
Autiérrez
Restaurant & Club
OPEN SUNDAY
MICHAEL J. FOX
---
BASILIER
There's no such thing as an overnight success.
Brantley Foster took two weeks.
THE SECRET OF MY SUCCESS
* A RASTAR PRODUCTION * A HERBERT ROSS FILM *
* THE SECRET OF MY SUCCESS *
* HELEN SLATER * RICHARD JORDAN * BARCLAY WHITTON *
* SCREENPLAY BY JIM CASH A JACK EPPS, JEAN AND AJ CAROTHERS *
* STORY BY AJ CAROTHERS * MUSIC BY DAVID FOSTER *
* EXECUTIVE PRODUCER DAVID CHASMAN * PRODUCED AND DIRECTED BY HERBERT ROSS *
PG-13 PARENTS STRONGLY CASTTURED ©
LAUREN MORRIS MAY 6 IS HOUSEBOUND NO. 24013 LA PALO ALTA, NY
A UNIVERSAL PICTURE
* A RASTAR PRODUCTION * A HEBBERT ROSS FILM *
* "THE SECRET OF MY SUCCESS" *
* HELEN SLATER * RICHARD JOSER * MARGARET WHITTON *
* SCREENPLAY BY JIM CASH * JACK EPPS, JR. AND AJ CAROTHERS *
* STORY BY AJ CAROTHERS * MUSIC BY DAVID POSTER *
* EXECUTIVE PRODUCER DAVID CHASMAN * PRODUCED AND DIRECTED BY HEBBERT ROSS *
PG • 13 PARENTS STRONGLY CAUTIONED ©
LAUREN MAYER MAY BE INSPIRATIONAL FOR CHILDREN UNDER 13
A UNIVERSAL Picture
- OPENS APRIL 10TH ·
6
Wednesday, April 8, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Larson
"Again? You just had a glass of water 12 days ago."
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LAWRENCE SCHWINN CYCLERY
1601 W. 23rd
842-6363
The Southern
Hills Mall
"So much of the research and technical resources have fallen way behind. To meet the competitive world out there, our students need to have access to the latest and best materials."
Continued from p. 1
APRIL 9,10,11,&12,1987
Bonds
FOUR BIG SALE DAYS!
The Senate yesterday referred Daniels' bill to the Senate Ways and Means Committee, where it will be studied and possibly amended.
Under the bill, each Regents school would set up a committee composed of students, faculty and administrative officers to adopt a plan to set priorities for spending the money.
The bill sets no limit on the amount
much increased revenue. We need to come up with some innovative financing."
Winter said that if students were willing to pay for part of the budget increases, it might induce state lawmakers to increase faculty and employee salaries.
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R Lawrence, said the bill represented an attempt by concerned lawmakers to increase the money spent on higher education. He said it could send a signal to the Legislature.
that the Regents could raise, but it does state that 20 percent of the total would go to the University of Kansas
Money collected from the bonds would have to be spent during a five-year period and repaid in 20 years. The bond market is down, Daniels said, which means the interest on the bonds will be low.
"So often, tuition increases at the universities are used to offset expenditures for other state agencies," Winter said. "It's like a student putting a quarter in a gumball machine and receiving 10 cents worth of gum."
But Mark Tallman, legislative director for Associated Students of Kansas, said the bill should be amended to allow students at each Regents school to vote on the tuition increase.
Winter and Daniels agreed that the prospect of the state's increasing university budgets looked bleak.
Daniels said, "in the coming years,
the state is not expected to collect
Kansas may be the first state to have such a plan if the bll is approved by the Legislature, she said.
"I think it's a very innovative approach," Daniels said.
On Campus
"Managing and Leadership in Various Corporate Cultures," a lecture by Fenton Talbot, is scheduled for 10 a.m. today in the Southeast Conference Room at the Burge Union.
■ "Western Music in China," a University Forum, is scheduled for 11:40 a.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. Zuzhuang Chen, conductor of the University Symphony Orchestra, will be the speaker.
A Campus Christians fellowship meeting is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. today in the Northeast Conference Room at the Burge Union.
The KU Doctor Who Appreciation Society is scheduled to meet at 7 p.m. today in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union.
- "Internships, the Job Market, and Utilizing the Placement Center," a forum for personnel majors, is scheduled for 7 p.m. today in the International Room at the Kansas Union. It is sponsored by Sigma Psi. "The ASPA Convention and You," a lecture by Ann Fink, will be after the forum.
■ "Indian Health and Health Care," part of the Native American Film Festival, is scheduled for 7 p.m. at Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union.
Bob Duvall, of Maranatha Christian Church in Baton Rouge, La., is scheduled to speak at 7 p.m. today in Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas
Union.
- "Sinai and Olympus: Two Views of the Moral Order of the Universe," a classics lecture by Lois Spatz, is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. today in Conference Room A at Watson Library.
ORCHARDS
- "Historical Aspects of Gorbachev's Reform in the USSR," a history discussion, is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. today in the Pine Room at the Kansas Union.
苹果
GOLF CLUB
NOW OPEN!
3000 W. 15th St.
843-7456
Joe Suggs, Manage
Joe Suggs, Manager
Legal Services for Students
Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE!
- Advice on most legal matters
- Preparation & review of legal doc
- Notarization of legal documents
8:30 to 5:00 Mon. thru Friday
117 Burge (Satellite) UB46-5665
- Many other services available
Call or drop by to make an appointment. Furged by student activity fee
WEDNESDAY SPECIAL
BORDER BANDIDO
ALL YOU CAN EAT $3.59 5-9 p.m. All you can eat from our wide selection:
EAT
Funded by student activity fee
- tacos
- taco salad
- taco burritos
- burritos
- enchiladas
- refried beans
- refried beans Spanish rice
- Spanish rice
- tostada
- chili conqueso
- salad bar
1528 W. 23rd 842-8861
Across from Post Office
THE JAYHAWK COURSE SOURCE IS NOW AVAILABLE IN THE WATSON LIBRARY
COMMENCEMENT The University of Kansas
Degree Candidates and Faculty:
Order caps, gowns & hoods Now
All participants, including faculty doctorate, law, Master's, and Bachelor's candidates, wear traditional regalia during the commencement ceremonies.
Candidates and faculty members may order caps, gowns, and/or hoods by mailing in the order form from the graduation mailing, OR by visiting Booth 1 on level four of the Kansas Union between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. on any weekday until Friday, April 24. Beginning Monday, March 30th.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 8, 1987
7
S. African protester criticizes Reagan
By IOHN RUZREF
Staff writer
Despite U.S. citizens' opposition to apartheid, the Reagan administration's policy of constructive engagement continues to prop up the South African government, an official of the African National Congress said yesterday.
Shuping Coopage, speaking to about 60 people in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union, praised U.S. voters for electing local, state and congressional officials who oppose South Africa's political system of racial discrimination.
"You have set a very good example," he said. "Today, very few officials can stand up and say, 'Yes, I support apartheid.'"
Coapoge is an observer with the African National Congress' mission to the United Nations, which recognized the mission in 1974 after kicking out the South African government.
The Reagan administration wants the ANC to expel the communists from its ranks and end its violent struggle to overthrow the government. Coapoge said.
"ANC embraces all anti-apartheid forces from the extreme left, maybe to the extreme right," he said. "The ANC has no right to tell anybody what political, or rather, what ideological stand to take."
The administration's policy of constructive engagement is responsible for the state of emergency and news blackout, he said.
Also, recent reforms in the South African government, such as allowing citizens of Indian and mixed-race descent to have some political power,
haven't changed apartheid's corner-stones, he said.
"Let Both她 the elections," he said. "Let the status quo stay as it is. Any change would be fooling the world."
The ANC wants a one-man, one-vote, non-racial democracy. he said.
ideal democracy, he said. "It's a long, hard struggle," he said. "We don't see any short solutions. But it would be nice if it was short. That's why we are pushing for economic sanctions."
On the Record
Someone skateboarding in an apartment complex swimming pool undergoing repairs in the 2400 block of West 25th Street caused $1,000 damage sometime Saturday or Sunday, Lawrence police said.
An unknown person or persons entered an apartment in the 2900 block of West 15th street sometime between Friday and Sunday, rum-maged through belongings and left Playgirl magazines and posters inside the apartment, Lawrence police said.
A men's 10-speed bicycle valued at $450 was taken sometime late Saturday night or early Sunday morning from a Naismith Hall bike rack. Lawrence police said.
Snow skis, bindings, an orange case and a set of blue ski poles were taken Saturday night from a car parked in the 1000 block of Hilltop Road, Lawrence police said.
SERVICE QUALITY
DON'S AUTOMOTIVE CENTER
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841-4833
1008 E. 12TH
TACO GRANDE
Special
Tacos 3 for $1.15
regularly $.50 a taco
Sanchos &
Burritos $1.15
regularly $1.40
Wed. & Sun.
11 a.m. to 11 p.m.
Two locations:
1721 W. 23rd
and
9th & Indiana
PHILIP VIRGIL
GLASSTHOMSON
GREGORY
PHILIP VIRGIL
GLASSTHOMSON
GREGORY
SANDOW
MODERATOR
PANEL DISCUSSION
Catch the Fever of the
New Music Movement
Philip Glass
Virgil Thomson
Gregory Sandow
A meet the Composer/Mid-America Arts Alliance Program
Panel Discussion
"Living Composers Communicating With Their Musicians and Audiences"
1:30 p.m.
Sunday, April 12, 1987
Liberty Hill Lawrence
This Program is made possible by the support from the Kansas Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts through their participation in the Mid-America Arts Alliance, a regional arts organization and Meet the Composer, Inc.
Don't Forget
The Kronos Quartet in Concert
8:00 p.m. Sunday April 12, 1987
Crafton-Preyer Theatre - Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
For Reservations call 913/864-3982
Free and Open to the Publ
V
mww
Presented by the University of Kansas Concert and Chamber Music Series
ACE
Association of Collegiate Entrepreneurs is having an informational meeting regarding activities for summer and fall. New members are welcome! time: 6:30 p.m. place: 507 Summerfield Hall date: April 8,1987
WEDNESDAY
75¢
Watermelons
4 p.m. - 3 a.m.
$1.00 cover
THURS: 75° Pitchers 4 p.m. - 3 a.m. $1.00 cover
7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 843-0540
the
the Sanctuary
CLASEN-MORSE CHEVROLET
Heartbeat OF KU
WE'RE OFFERING YOU AN EXCITING REWARD FOR GRADUATING
Thursday, April 9
8 p.m., Mabee Theater, Rockhurst College
CLASEN-MORSE CHEVROLET 92nd & METCALF OVERLAND PARK, KS.
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Offered to graduating seniors or graduate students. CALL OR COME IN FOR DETAILS.
Tickets $8/$6
Call 926-4127
PIZZA DELIVERED 842-0600 FAST PIZZA SHOPPE
We'll make it possible to own your new Chevrolet car or truck you've always dreamed of!
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Rockhurst College
- LOW DOWN PAYMENT
Presented by
This program is made possible by support from the Missouri Arts Council.
University-Community Service Scholarship Award
Applications
- Scholarship, financial need and references will be of minimal consideration in application reviews.
- Service to the University and/or the Lawrence community.
Qualifications
- Applications must be received by 5:00 p.m., Monday, April 20, 1987 in the SUA office, Kansas Union. Interviews to be held 5:30 p.m., Wednesday, April 22, 1987.
- As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20, 1970 in the saving of furniture, art objects, and invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present the Kansas Union with a gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarship/awards from the interest on the gift.
- Applications available at SUA office, Kansas Union, 864-3477.
- Regularly enrolled students at the University of Kansas at the time of application (spring term) and at the time of receipt of the award (fall term).
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST N FREE
DELIVERY
842-1212
1601 W.23rd Southern Hills Center
EVERYDAY TWO FERS
2—10” pizzas with 2 Toppings & 2 Cokes
$9.50 Value for only $8.00
Delivered Free No Coupon necessary
HOURS
Hours We Deliver
Mon.-Thurs. - 11a.m.-2a.m.
Fri.&Sat. - 11a.m.-3a.m.
Sunday - 11a.m.-1a.m.
During
Lunch
8
Wednesday, April 8, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Organizations budget is in red
By a Kansan reporter
Approval of three groups' capital equipment requests helped push the Student Senate Finance Committee's $65,000 student organizations budget more than $14,000 into the red last night.
David White, committee member,
said, "I think that giving these three
groups these major items of capital
equipment is setting a precedent.
"We denied other groups computers, but we turned around and gave the crew a shell, the rugby team a scrum machine and the table tennis
team a robot."
But Kevin Elliot, committee member, said the deficit easily could be made up with money from the Senate's unallocated account.
The committee had budgeted $65,000 for student organizations but approved allocations totalling $79,489.
The committee's recommendations will go before the full Senate for approval at 7 p.m. today.
Kansas Crew requested and received money for a $12,400 racing shell, and the table tennis club received money for a $645 pingpong
ball throwing machine. The rugby club received $5,530 for a scrummage machine, used in blocking practice, to replace the team's old one.
The committee also set six other student organizations' budgets at the
The six groups and the amounts recommended by the committee were: KU Cricket Club, $562; Student Health Advisory Board, $1,309; Women for Educating KU, $245; Expressions, a dance group, $440; Malaysian Student Association, $305; and Engineering Students Council, $2,320.
CUR AND USE RUSTY'S COUPONS
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LET'S KEEP COACH BROWN IN LAWRENCE Join the cause! Order your t-shirt Now!
Larryville
Home of the
HAWKS
I wish to order:
__ med 100% cotton T-shirt
__ lg 100% cotton T-shirt
__ xl 50/50 cotton T-shirt
I have enclosed $8.00 for each t-shirt
Mail to:
Mail to:
Udd
1114 Mississippi Suite 5
Lawrence, KS 60645
or call 841-5589
Marianne Williams
You shouldn't have to spend the best years of your life waiting for your jeans to look this good.
With Lee* Frosted Riders" you get the same worn look and character as jeans two or three years old. The difference is you don't have to wait two or three years to get it.
SPECIAL: 31.99
Shop Thursdays Til 8:30 P.M.
Sale Prices Good Thru Sat., April 11th
Lee Frosted Riders. Because life is too short to wait for your jeans to grow old.
Frosted Riders Lee
Lee
Weavers Saturday 9th & Massachusetts
delivers Yello Sub delivers 841-3268
Natural Fiber Clothing
SMA
For Men, Women, & Children
Bob Duvall, who has a prophetic travelling ministry, will be hosted by Maranatha Christian Ministries, April 8th thru 12th. Bob and his wife Uinda travel extensively throughout the United States teaching how to practically apply your faith, preaching on the issues of the day on the college campuses, and encouraging the body of Christ.
NATURALWAY
BOB DUVALL
Some of the topics he will be speaking on are:
820 MASS.
841·0100
Saturday
9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
no or few topics he will be speaking on are:
1) Sex, love, dating and other misunderstood words.
2) AIDS: America in Dile Straits.
3) The Androgenous Male of America.
4) Witchcraft: American Style.
5 is there a term "Boogie Man"?
W
7:00 p.m. April 8-11
10:00 a.m. April 12
Kansas Union, Alderson Room
Maranatha Christian Church
8 Round Town Mall
2859 Four Wheel Drive
FOR A REALLY GOOD TIME CALL 864-3982 KRONOS QUARTET
KRONOS QUARTET
A M&D America Arts Alliance Program Presented by The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Chamber Music Series
David Harrington, Violin John Sheria, Violin
tank Duit, Viola Joan Jeanrenaud, Cello
Xora Ohrenstein, Soprano
8:00 p.m.
Sunday, April 12, 1987
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Program
String Quartet No. 8
String Quartet No. 3
Quartet (1965)
Phen Glass
Autis Sallinen
Peter Scullhorpe
Aulis Sallinen
Crabtree Molar
Philp Glass
String Quartet No. 6
Bela Bartok
VISAMasterCard accepted for phone reservations
$10 & $8, KU and K-12 Students $5 & $4,
Senior Citizens KU and Other Students $9 & $7
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved For reservations:
call 913.864.3982
MAAAA
HALF PRICE FOR KU STUDENTS!
ACCOMMODATIONS
PASCAL RICCIARDO
AND
AMELIA CALCIO
The finest accommodations on campus are found at the foot of Mount Oread in Naismith Hall. Naismith Hall is just minutes from classes and features front door bus service. But that's just the beginning. One tour of Naismith Hall will show you accommodations that surpass any other student housing. Consider a semi-private suite with weekly maid service, or a fitness center and private pool. And if that's not enough, then consider great menus, a computer center, cable tv lounges on every floor, private parking and even payment options. Now is the time to arrange for the best accommodations at KU, as waiting lists are now forming for the fall semester. The accommodations of Naismith Hall—you'll love the difference.
T
NAISMITHHALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE • LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 • 913-843-8559
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 8, 1987
9
Leave school for less.
Fly Braniff and get a 15% Student Discount on any fare, to any destination in the U.S.
and Mexico. One of the best parts about going to school is getting those long vacations! And Braniff is now offering Student Discounts on The Best Low Fare In The Air. There is no membership club to join, so you'll automatically save 15% on our Everyday Low Fares or even lower Two-Day Advance Purchase Fares. To be eligible, you must be a student between the ages of 18 and 26. Proof of age (Student I.D. and Driver's License) is required upon purchase of ticket.
Fly Braniff to: Acapulco, Baltimore, Boston, Chicago Dallas/Ft. Worth, Detroit, Ft. Lauderdale, Kansas City Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Mexico City, Miami, New York Oklahoma City, Phoenix, San Antonio, San Diego San Francisco, Seattle, Tucson, Washington.
For reservations call your Travel Agent or call toll-free 1-800-BRANIFF.
BRANIFF The Best Low Fare In The Air Believe It!
Mexico travel subject to government approval.
$ \textcircled{c} $ Braniff 1987
10
Wednesday, April 8, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Juniors, seniors to get juco credit
By PAUL SCHRAG
Staff writer
Juniors and seniors who take classes at junior colleges no longer must submit petitions to the College of Education or receive KU credit for those classes.
The College Assembly passed a motion yesterday that eliminated a rule granting no credit for junior college classes that students take after completing two years, or 64 hours, of work.
Many students submitted petitions to be exempt from this rule in recent years, said Pam Houston, assistant to the dean of the college. Many of those students had been forced to take junior college classes because of class cutbacks caused by the college's financial limitations, she said.
A student's last 30 hours of credit must be earned at KU, as a unit.
In other action, the assembly ordered the committee on undergraduate studies and advising to study the effects of enacating a grading system in the college that would allow professors to give letter grades with pluses and minuses.
Stephen Shawl, professor of physics and astronomy, proposed the motion he said a plus-minus system performs more accurately.
that it allows grades to be more meaningful," Shawl said. "Students get grades that are more fully consisted of the quality of work they have done."
"It is more fair to the student in
The schools of architecture and urban design, education, fine arts, journalism and social welfare currently use a plus-minus grading system.
Shawl's motion ordered the committee on undergraduate studies and advising to report on the plus-minus system to the assembly no later than the first assembly meeting of spring 1988.
Also at the meeting, Robert Lineberry, dean of liberal arts and sciences, told the assembly that the college's problem of enrollment increases was likely to get worse before it improved.
"It itremains a very real possibility that gridlock will occur at some point in the freshman orientation process," he said of the situation this summer.
"The crush of freshmen and sophomores has caused countless problems for the college. It has made us appear to be the farm club of professional schools. There is scarcely any problem of the college that is not exacerbated by over-enrollment."
He said the college needed to avoid becoming the only academic school with open admission in the University.
MUSTARD SEED
STUDENT FELLOWSH
"For by grace you have been saved through faith; and not by your own doing; it is the gift of God." Eph. 2:8
STUDENT FELLOWSHIP
7:30 p.m. Wed. Parlor C Main Union
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1987
REGIONAL SOCCER CUP April 10-12 23rd & Iowa
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Two bedroom apartments for one to four KU students which feature:
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• On campus location
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• Covered parking
• Furniture rental
• Laundry facilities
• New vending area
Choose your space NOW on an individual contract for fall/spring semester!
University of Kansas Department of Student Housing
On the KU Campus
1603 W. 15th
843-4993
On the KU Campus
1603 W. 15th
Burial ban approved by Senate
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — The Kansas Senate voted against pulling the state out of the Central Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact yesterday but approved a ban on burial of the waste in Kansas.
The Senate defeated 21-18 an amendment that would pull Kansas out of the five-state compact. The proposal was an amendment to a bill prohibiting "below-grade disposal" of the low-level waste.
However, the burial ban itself passed 39-0 and returns to the House for consideration of Senate changes.
Feleciano and Martin pointed to a study performed by a New York consulting firm that was to identify possible locations for the compact's waste dump, which said 75 percent of the suitable locations were in Kansas. Geological Surveys has criticized the study as serious flawed.
“This is the single most important issue the state of Kansas has ever faced.” State Sen. Paul Feleciano, D-Wichita, said during debate. “We need to pull out of this compact. There are other options we can pursue but we must pull out.”
State Sen. Phil Martin, D-Pittsburg, sadd with withdrawal was important to prevent Kansas' being treated unfairly by the terms of the compact.
Commonwealth
Commonwealth
1030 Magazine Theatre
Granada
NICE GIRLS DON'T EXPLODE
MAR 24TH 7:15 - 9:20
DAILY 7:15 - 9:20
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May. Feb. Jul. Sep. Jan.
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DAILY 7:30 - 9:40
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THIS TEXT IS ONLY FOR THE CONTENT OF THIS PAGE.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 8, 1987
11
Natural Fiber Clothing 820 Mass. 841-0100
Novices become skippers after training in sailing club
By JERRI NIEBAUM
With a fleet of 12 boats and two sailboards, KU's sailing club soon will set sail at its summer retreat on Lake Shawnee, just east of Tooea
Staff writer
The 2-mile long and half-mile wide lake will be spotted with white sails as soon as the water is warm enough or sailors to get their wet.
"It's the perfect opportunity to learn how to sail," said Jeff Ward, Lawrence graduate student and the club's vice commodore.
But beginning sailors probably will get more than just their feet wet, club members say. The club, sponsored by Student Union Activities, encourages non-sailors to join and learn to sail with hands-on training.
Ward is one of about five senior skippers in the 30-member club. He and other experienced sailors will each a series of Saturday learn-to-skill classes to new members and non-members after warm weather poses water temperatures sufficient.
For $55 the first semester and $25 for later semesters, beginning sailors will learn how to rig boats and maneuver them. After a few lessons, each new member will race solo against other new members.
The race course forces new sailors to sail in all directions — with, against and perpendicular — to the wind. It also forces many of them to try their hand at righting a capsized boat.
"We capsized a couple times, and it was really invigorating, that cold water. he said. "I shivered all the home and jumped in a hot shower."
Warner Janof, Bethesda, Md. senior, joined the club two years ago, after Ward, Janof's neighbor, took him on a sailing adventure in the early spring.
Janof stayed in the club that summer and learned how to sail without getting his feet wet.
"The satisfaction was really intense when I could skipper a boat by myself," he said. "I could get
anywhere I wanted to on the lake."
NATURAL WAY
in addition to completing the racing course, new members must pass a written test covering sailing jargon and techniques to obtain their skipper ratings.
The ratings enable them to check out a key to a supply shed at the lake so they can use the club's eight single-sail, one-person boats on their own.
The club has more advanced ratings for members who are able to sail its four larger boats.
While they wait for warm waters, club members meet at 7 p.m. every Wednesday in Parlors A and B of the Kansas Union. Interested students and faculty members are encouraged to attend.
Tomorrow's meeting will be a workshop where persons can become certified in cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Next week's meeting will be a workshop on avoiding and surviving hypothermia.
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a member of the World's Largest Firm of Management Consultants and Certified Public Accounts, is pleased to announce that the following University of Kansas graduates have accepted positions as members of the Firm. We wish them continued success.
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12
Wednesday, April 8, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
STUDENT SENATE ELECTIONS TODAY
IMPORTANT NOTICE HERE'S HOW TO VOTE
VOTE FOR (2) CANDIDATES
CANDIDATE
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correct
no good
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(VOTE to the left of the name you've chosen)
SAMPLE
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8657 1000 800 4830 26427 10043
1983 by National Computer Systems Inc.
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(VOTE to the left
of the name
you've chosen)
SAMPLE
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NCP Team Office 148208 164271 50431
(1983) by National Computer Systems, Inc.
To vote, you must
bring your student
ID to the poll!
All polls open 8:00 a.m.-7:15 p.m. Polling Places Are:
Kansas Union Burge Union Learned Hall Wescoe Fraser Summerfield Hall Strong Hall (Look for outside polls)
- Any Student can vote at any polling place with a valid KUID. All Students elect the President and Vice-President (including Graduate Students and Law Students)
- All Students elect Senators by school Note: Freshmen and Sophomores in LA&S vote for Nunemaker Senators. Juniors and Seniors in LA&S vote for LA&S Senators
- Students living in Residence Halls vote for a Residence-Hall-At-Large Senator.
- Students living off-campus in non-affiliated private accommodations vote for five Off-Campus Senators.
- Non-Traditional Students (students over 24 years of age; married students; students who are parents; students who commute ten or more miles per day; and/or Veterans elect a Non-Traditional-Student Senator.
- Mix'n Match - You do not have to vote for slates of candidates. Choose the students who you feel will best represent you, regardless of their affiliation.
VOTE
Any questions or problems please call 864-3710
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday. April 8, 1987
Sports
13
'Hawks drop two, still winless in 15 games
Kansas 2
Fred Sadowski/Special to the KANSAN
By DAVID BOYCE
Staff writer
The Kansas baseball team played good baseball for two games yesterday at Quigley field, but not good enough to keep its losing streak from reaching eight games.
The Jayhawks are winless in their last 15 games, having lost 14 and tied one.
Kansas lost twice, 8-7 and 3-2, to School of the Ozarks, an NAIA team that came in with an 11-15 record. losses drop Kansas' record to 8-20.
Kansas started out looking like it would end the losing streak. After the Bobcats scored one run in the first, they scored six in the bottom of the inning.
KU shortstop Scott Seratte tags out School of the Ozarks' Bobby Hoeft and the ball to first base to try for a double play. KU second baseman
But starting pitcher Steve Purdy had trouble in the second as School of the Ozarks scored four. Pattin then brought in Craig Stopnel.
Stoppel, who gave up the tying run in Monday's 5-4 loss to Washburn, came back yesterday and pitched a solo pitch. He suffered his first loss of the season.
The Jayhawks started the sixth with a 7-6 lead when the Bobcats scored the last two runs of the game.
OZARKS 8, KANSAS 7 (1st game)
Ozarki 141 102 - 0 9 4 8
Kansas 610 100 - 0 7 8 2
Kansas 610 000 | 8-2 8
Hammontree, Hancock (2) Joe Winckin (6)
and Porter, Purdy, Stopell (2) Henry (6)
and Pattin W. Hankin, L-Stoppel (2-1) SV-Winn,
2Bs-Ozarks, Murphy, Rydel, Kansas,
Senier, 3Bs-Ozarks, Murphy
OZAKS 3, KANSAS 2 (2nd game)
Ozarks 110 010 0—3 7 1
Kansas 000 002 0—2 5 2
Aarellans, Storm (6), Winnick (7) and MuralpHy; McLeod and Pattin. WArellanes, L.McLeed (22); SV-Winnick (28s-Ozarks, Battalgia. 32s-Ozars, Picard 24)
David Smith looks on. Seratte's defensive play was not enough to hold off the Bobcats, who won the game 8-7.
"We find ways of losing," Pattin said. "I wish I had some answers."
"We are making too many mental mistakes. I can accept physical mistakes, but not mental."
In the second game, School of the
Ozarks scored single runs in the two first innings and added another in the fifth off of starter Mike McLead, who pitched a complete game and took
The Jayhawks tried to mount a
comeback by scoring two runs in the bottom of the sixth.
In the seventh, Kansas was down to its final out, trailing 3-2, when David Smith was hit by a pitch.
But Kansas' leading hitter, Hugh Stanfield, ended the game by grounding out to the shortstop.
Helm followed with a infield hit,
sending Smith to third.
Smith then stole second and Rocky
KU misses out on two junior college recruits
By ROB KNAPP
Staff writer
College basketball teams will begin signing their high school and junior college spring recruits today, and at least two players on the Kansas recruiting list probably will sign with other schools.
Ray said. "They deserved him."
Mike Bell, a 6-foot-7-inch forward from Lon Morris Junior College in Jacksonville, Texas, will sign toronto Jerry Ray, Lon Morris assistant coach.
"OU recruited him from day one."
Bell was recruited by Kansas, Alabama, Purdue, Texas and several other schools, but Ray said the choice was a clear one.
Kansas at one time had shown some interest in Keith Jackson, a point guard from the College of Southern Idaho, a junior college. He will sign tomorrow with Southwest State University. Southern Idaho coach Fred Trenglek
Jackson led Southern Idaho to the National Junior College Athletic Association.
"KU called two weeks ago and said they were coming in, and I never heard from them after that," Trenkle said.
Kansas, which signed four high school recruits in the early signing period this fall, is still in the hunt for
a pair of guards from Midland Junior College in Midland, Texas.
Daron "Mookie" Blaylock and Lincoln Minor both said yesterday that they wanted to visit several schools, traveled Kansas, before making a decision.
"KU is still very high on my list," Minor said. He said he hoped to have time to visit Kansas, Ohio State, Auburn and the University of Miami of Florida before deciding which school to attend.
Blaylock and Minor were the shooting guards in a three-guard offense that Midland used on the way to a 32-4 record. Midland was the runner-up to Southern Idaho in the NJCAA tournament.
Blaylock said he had narrowed his choices to Kansas and Oklahoma. He is scheduled to visit Oklahoma this fall and will visit Kansas some time after that.
Blaylock averaged 19.6 points a game and had 71 three-point baskets, 161 assists and 115 steals in 33 games.
Minor averaged 16.1 points and added 140 assists and 97 steals in 35 games.
Both were selected to all-conference and all-region tournament teams. Blaylock was named most valuable player in the Region 5 tournament and made the NJCAA all-tournament team. Minor was a
member of the Region 5 all-tournament team.
Another player still considering Kansas is Marvin Branch, a 6-foot-10-inch center from Barton County Community College in Great Bend. Branch averaged 20 points and 12 rebounds a game this season.
Kansas coach Larry Brown and his assistants were recruiting yesterday and were not available for comment.
"He's probably getting a lot of pressure around here to stay close to his house."
Branch will visit the University of Pittsburgh tomorrow and plans to visit Kansas and UNL soon, Barton County coach Dan McGovern said.
Rookie powers Cards
United Press International
CHICAGO — Rookie Jim Lindeman, who grew up near Wrigley Field, returned home yesterday and helped the St. Louis Cardinals reverse more than 65 years of Opening Day frustration against the Chicago Cubs.
Lindeman, a native of Evanston,
Ill., delivered a two-run single in a
five-run third inning, helping the
Louis Cardinals to a 9-3 victory over
the Cubs. Playing in front of a sellout
crowd of 38,240, Louis St. posees
in nine opening Day games at
Chicago, dating back to 1921
John Tudor also had a two-run single in the inning as the Cardinals took advantage of 11 walks, seven by loser Rick Sutcliffe.
"I figure with our lineup. I'm going to get a lot of opportunities to drive in runs," said Lindman, who also threw out a runner in his first major league start in rightfield. "I had about 30 people here at the game watching me so it was a big thrill."
Tudor survived a shaky start, going the first five innings for the victory. Bill Dawley hurled four shots—one one-hit relief to earn his first save.
"The only thing I contributed today was my two-run single," said Tudor, who gave up three runs in the first half of Saturday's win. He gave us a real lift.
Sutlifee. 5-14 a year ago, couldn't explain his wildness that led to his exit in the third inning.
"Physically, I felt fine. I just couldn't get the ball over." Sutcliffe said. "I tried to challenge the hitters and I just didn't get it done today."
The Cardinals sent 11 men to the plate in the third, knocking out Sutcliffe St. Louis loaded the bases on a strike by Willie McCoy. Jimmy Herr and a walk to Jack Clark
Lindeman followed with a two-run single and Tony Pena walked, again loading the bases. One out later, Tito Aguilar scored on a three-foot scoring Clark to the score 3-3.
Tudor followed with a two-run single to right, scoring Lindeman and Pen.
Leonard enjoys win and ponders future
United Press International
LAS VEGAS, Nev. — Sugar Ray Leonard owns the boxing world, if he still wants it.
Leonard's 12-round, split-decision victory over Marvin Hagler Monday night was an "I told you so" win for the new World Boxing Council middeweight champion, but he is unsure whether he wants to try for an encore.
Considering how sharp Leonard was after a 35-month layoff, he has plenty of time to make up his mind.
"Let me enjoy my performance tonight," Leonard said after winning the title.
He flew home to Potomac, Md., yesterday morning and had X-rays taken of his right hand at Johns Hopkins University Medical Center in Baltimore. Otherwise, Leonard felt little pain after the greatest
triumph of his storied career
Mike Trainer, Leonard's attorney, said the three-time champion would take a week or two to decide if he should fight again. Leonard retired in 1982 after surgery to repair a detached retina in his left eye, and quit again after defeating Kevin Howard in May 1984.
"In a week or two Ray will
cover everybody at once what
he's getting into."
"Talking to Ray I did not get the impression he was ready to get up this morning and do roadwork." he said. "I have no indication he's going to do anything different than he said he would — he wanted to come back and fight Marvin Hagler, one fight."
If Leonard fights again, Thomas Hearns is the likely opponent. Hearns recently won the WBC light heavy-
See LEONARD, p. 14, col. 1
Sports Briefs
Tennis team beats K-State women 7-2
The Kansas women's tennis team lost only one singles and one doubles match yesterday on its way to defeating Kansas State 7-2 in Manhattan.
The Jayhawks, 12-9 overall and 9-8 in the spring season, take on Colorado at 9 a.m. Friday at the Allen Field House courts.
Kansas 'Barb Imman and Jeanette Jonsson both won straight set victories 6-0, 6-0. Jonsson defeated Annika Emelt at No. 2 singles and Inman defeated Debbie Duthie at No. 6.
Christine Kim, Susie Bergland and Marie Hibbard also won their singles matches. Tracy Treps, No. 1 singles player, lost to Lena Svensson in three sets, 6-3, 6-3, 6-4.
The No. 2 doubles team of Kim and Hibbard and the No. 3 team of Inman and Janelle Bolen earned the team's other two victories. Treps and Jonsson lost at N. 1 doubles in three sets.
The Jayhawks are 1-2 in the Big Eight Conference.
IOWA CITY, Iowa — University of Iowa officials said yesterday that it would be at least three weeks before a special committee completed its probe into allegations of improper payments to former Hawkeye running back Ronnie Harmon.
The Iowa panel is investigating allegations that sports agents paid Harmon more than $54,000 from 1984 to 1966 to become their client.
The committee will try to determine whether the allegations are true and, if so, whether anyone else connected to the school was involved.
Information post filled
The Athletic Department today announced that Jeff Cravens had been named assistant sports information director.
Cravens, 24, has been a graduate assistant in the office since Aug. 1. He filled a vacancy created when Dick O'Connor left the position in January to enter private business.
Harmon inquiry continues
Cravens, who is from Emporia, graduated from KU with a bachelor's degree in journalism in December 1986. ___
HOUSTON — Los Angeles Dodgers Vice President Al Campans, calling it "the saddest moment of my entire career," released a statement last night apologizing for his nationally televised statement that blacks lacked the "necessities" to become baseball managers.
Campanis had made the remarks Monday night on the ABC program "Nightline".
"Last night, I appeared on Mr. Koppel's television show to commemorate the memory and contributions of a man I deeply respect, admire, and love. Mr. Jackie Robinson." Campanis said in the statement. "During the course of that program, I made some statements regarding what I perceive to be the reasons why there are no black managers or general managers in major-league baseball today.
"My statements have been construed as indicating a belief that blacks lack the ability to hold such positions. I hold no such beliefs. However, I, and only I, am responsible for my statements and for my inability under the circumstances to express accurately my beliefs."
From staff and wire reports.
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14
Wednesday, April 8, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Leonard
Continued from p. 13
weight title, making him a three-time champion as well. Hearns, however, skipped over the 160-pound division and is willing to come back down and put his 175-pound belt on the line in a rematch against Leonard.
Leonard, 34.1, stopped Hearns in 14 rounds in 1982 to unify the weight-tier title. The winner of Leonard-Hearns II would become the first man to win championships in four weight classes.
Hagler, 62-3-2, is also sure to ask for a rematch.
"I don't know how you can top last night." Trainer said. "If something crazy comes up, some mountain can be lost, can't climb, he might come back."
Hagler, who had not lost in 11 years, said he felt cheated by the
"I feel I am still the champion," he said. "They took it away from me, and against Sugar Ray Leonard of all people.
Correction
Because of a reporter's error, the Kansas incorrectly reported that the Kansas softball team would play yesterday against Missouri. The teams will play a doubleheader against the Tigers at 2:30 p.m. today in Columbia, Mo.
"I've never seen a champion lose on a split decision. This leaves me with a bitter taste."
Hagler's handlers were especially upset with the scoring of judge JoOJ Guerra, who gave Leonard 10 rounds and had him a 118-110 winner. Dave Moretti scored it 115-113 for Leonard, then Filippo had it 115-113 for Hagler.
"This official here, JoJo Guerra,
should be put in jail," said Pat
Patrelloni, Hagler's co-manager.
Petronelli and his brother Goody also complained about the fight's 12-round distance instead of 15. They think Leonard, who dropped to the canvas immediately after the bout, did not have lasted three more rounds.
Trainer said Leonard took a smaller percentage of the closed circuit money to secure the 12-round distance.
"I said 12 rounds was a deal-breaker," he said. "I told them we had to have a 20-foot ring, 10-ounce gloves with thumb locks and 12 rounds."
Hagler was guaranteed $12 million plus a percentage of the closed circuit money. Leonard, 30, was guaranteed $11 million for the outdoor bout at Caesars Palace, plus the closed nights in the Washington, D.C., area.
"Fifteen rounds is the championship distance, none of this 12-round stuff." Pet Petronelli said. "Twelve rounds is junior distance. Marvin needed 15 rounds, especially with Sugar Ray Leonard."
Law
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For more information on how to become the 1987-88 Editor of next year's edition of the ALL GREEK YEARBOK, Legacy, please write to
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include your phone number
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Please include your telephone number
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Sunflower House 1406 Tenn.
1 bdmf furnished & 2 bdmf unfurnished with
baliow available on at Southbridge Plaza Apa
186, bdmf furnished & 2 bdmf unfurnished
2 bdmf Townhouse for summer special rate,
laundry facility, swimming, KU. B-Usa.
4 Bedrooms available this summer in large run
alongside a links from campus $150 per person/month
or up to $235 per person/month.
749-0871
Private rooms with shared housework and meals
Inquire Now For Summer and Fall Spaces
Available mid May for summer sublance. New
near campus. Water paid. Unsupervised Call.
**SCHEDULE:** 10AM - 4PM Mon - Fri
Aspen West now leasing for Summer. Energy efficiency, 1 and 2 bedrooms. 3 Blocks west of Iowa on 15th Private gatto/decks, ceiling fans, on patio. 15th Private gatto/decks, open door Saturday, 10:30 AM, 499, 1288, open house Saturday, 10:30 AM.
Apartments for summer and fall at University
Terrace Apartments, 1602 W. 98th I. Bedroom for
summer; June and July only $190 furnished;
furnished $260, plus all utilities. 1 Bedroom
furnished $260, plus all utilities. 2 Bedroom
furnished $260, plus all utilities. 1 Bedroom
for 10 month leave. August 1-June 1 furnished;
furnished $260, plus all utilities. 2 Bedroom
furnished for秋夏. August 1-June 1 furnished;
$290 furnished, plus all utilities. Central air,
bus route; large rooms, gas heat. Come see At-
town. Large rooms, gas hot. 98th or 812rd. If m
phone call 843-1421
Beautiful large 2 Bedroom in old Renoloved house 1 block from KU. Lida 749 1917, 842 2525
Beauty, eh?七房2 Bedroom Apartment. Five minutes to Fraser Low Utilities. Lease for Summer with Fall option. Leave message. 842 1028
DONT DLY! Subway! 3 store room. Great opportunity. New Kitchen. Close Kitchen. Black Micro. Fireplace teacher driver, more Great opportunity. Will征聘者. 841-3797
SAVE TIME
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Call or stop by.
6600 College Bvld.
Overland Park, Ks.
GREAT PLACES (913) 345-8777
Excellent location; 2 bedroom apartments in four pleas. Pl carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, and low utilities. Available June 1. Summer Rate $275. Regular Rate $141 at 108 Temple and 1341
Female. No smoker needed to share co-ed house for summer. B4 8942 027 or B4 8942 027
Female Roommate needed from May 20 August 20. Furnished Tangweled Apartment Large bedroom. Great bargain for $175 a month. Call Hali 748-4098
romale roommate wanted for this summer and next year to occupy a 2 bedroom apartment at an upper floor of the building.
Under New Ownership & Management
PINECREST
All new carpeting, cabinets,
and windows
COME TAKE A LOOK!
Several 2:BR's
Airflow dispensing, counters and windows
Cabinet TV
block to bus route
Laundry facilities
Gas heat, very energy efficient
Leaving now and for tail
Pinecrest
749-2022
749-2022
2563 Redbud Lane
BLOCK E. OF IOWA ON BOMFURNiture by Thompson-Crawley
FOR ENTRY LARGE ONE HEDRON APARTMENT, clean, identically located next to the stadium. Rent includes heat, water, and cable television. Available May 20. $380 mo. Call 814-5962
For Rent. August 1 or June 1 through June 1, 1988
Furnished two bedroom 2 floor apartment for
two girls $95 and for three girls $45 plus 1/2 water
and electricity. 8-hour room, m-3 p. m. 3 p. p. 7 p. m.
Battery. 844-909-6348 m-3 p. m. 3 p. p. 7 p. m.
For Rent: Large rooms in private home (Base-
ment): 5 minutes from KU & one block from bus
route. Share kitchen. Private entrance to bus
route. Battery. $490 per room. Call 842-342-9
843-904罗
FREE 12' x 10' v. t. for summer subluebing. A spacious 2 bedroom apartment with balcony and dishwasher. Great location. Call 843-6534. A great 2 RH house. Sublue now or use for a larger space. Phone 212-790-2985.
southridge
university natural living
comprehensible communal living
Southridge Plaza Apts.
LEASING for fall 1 & 2 bedroom apartments
10 month leases water & cable paid
poor
1704 West 24th
Lawrence, Kansas 60044
842-1160
University Daily Kansan / Wednesdav April 8. 1987
YX,Z0
IF YOU LIKE SPACE & QUIET WE HAVE IT AND YOU CAN STILL WALK TO CAMPUS
Spacious 2 bedroom
Laundry facilities
Waterbed fine
Swimming pool
10-12 month leases
VILLAGE SQUARE
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Have a duplex adventure this summer! Need help navigating the duplex, greater. Rent notebooks at www.notebooks.com.
female student to sublet spacious duplex great location. Rent calligraphy Call 814-508-3987. Houses, Bedroom Apartments, Sleeping Rooms, 1.2 and 3-bedroom apartments; and, sleeping room
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY NOW LEASING FOR FALL
- Short term accepted
- Lowest utility bills
- in town
- Gas heat, C-A, D-W
FH refrig, Disposal
Large three bedroom apartment, close to camp and downtown for summer sublease. Available May 15. Free rent through May. $335.00 month Call 843763 or 841127
LEASE NOW FOR FALL. Rooms 2 BRI good location, fireplace, garage, laundry. No pets. Free parking. Please call 617-804-3591.
Berkley FLATS
843-2116
11th & Mississippi
- Over 40 New Units
* Great Location
- walk anywhere
- Laundry facilities
Laundry facilities Furnished Units
Available
- On KU Bus Route
1123 Indiana
Furnished by
Thompson-Crawley
SHORT LEASES AVAILABLE
MIDROADOORW BAPT FOR SUBLEASE B
HDRM, fireplace, near pool. Available May 1
9.
LIKE CATS? For summer, beautiful apartment in old house. Spacious, wood floors, fireplace, washer dryer $650; mo plus gas & electricity trunk account for summer sip-sling Anne. 749-3578
Reserve your apartment now just 2 short blocks
from the pool. Partner with some utilities paid and off street
phone lines.
Modern Split Level 2 Bedroom Apartment available for the summer months. It includes 11/2 baths, baths left, spacious living room, and kit shed with a large half-duplex. Half utilities At duke 841 at burlington 28 after p. 59.
Most suitble for Summer. Short walk to camp.
2 bfmw. btown. Call 841 4281.
AMENITIES
Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the amenities of Naismith Hall. Applications for fall semester are now being accepted while space remains.
NAISMITHHALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
913-843-8559
Reserve your room now! For summer and/or fall
Furnished with most utilities paid. Shared cooking
and bath facilities. Just 2 short blocks from
garage with off street parking. No pets.
841-5600
Roommate needed for summer and 18:30 school
year $11/month on bus route 2 every townhouse
in the area.
Roommate 2 Idem apartment Near campus
Summer room $150 fail Not Sublease
749-183-676
Rooms available for summer and the 1987-88 academic year in the Christian living community "Krononia" at Ecumenical Church Ministries. Information come to 1294 Oraud or call 843-9433.
Share Rent, utilities, and duties. Nice house,
choose to campus, wadsher/driver, private room
and office.
Sparacies 2 BPH brt. to sub-lease for Summer with option to reserva late. Available June 11. Covered waterfront.
Studio available for summer in super apc, techni-
gical great maintenance, recreation facilities and
laundry available I will assume part of expenses.
Call 842-896 after 6 p.m.
SUMMER SUBLEASE Two bedroom Apt 789-282 Mid-May New and close to campus
SUMMER SUBLEASE extra clean, furnished,
two bedroom apartment at Tanglewood Apart
house.
Sublease for Summer. Furnished one BH with lift used as second BH. $E35 plus electricity, close to house.
Sublease for summer, studio at Hanover Place.
Call 749-5440
Sublease for summer: Tanglewood, 2 bedroom
Cairncrest - to campus; 1 level, Low utility
Meadowview - to campus
Sublease Available mid-May 1. book from cam-
sellercraft 2 aircraft & room spartner
Close to open airport
Sublease for summer. 2 bdmr. furnished apartment, Tangallew. Call 749-1916.
Sublease for summer: One large bedroom in two bedroom apt. Mali's Olde English Village,
Location
Located among 70 acres of rolling hills and trees, you'll enjoy the convenience of being close to campus and area shopping.
Lifestyle
Meadowbrook offers a selection of spacious and comfortable studios, 1,2, or 3 bedroom apartments, and townhouses to fit your lifestyle
RESERVE YOUR
UNIT NOW...
FOR SUMMER OR FALL!
meadowbrook
15th & Crestline 842-4200
Sub-lease Apt; May 18, 1 bedroom with loft, furished, water paid, 841-5195
Sublease one bedroom apartment. Available May 20-31 July; may rent free. $345 month. Peppertree Park. Call 749 6751. Leave message.
Sublease for summer. One bedroom, adjacent to campus. Call 841 6853.
Sublease for summer, studio at Hauser Place Call 749 6440.
MASTERCRAFT
offers.
apartments--all near KU!
- Custom furnishings
- Energy efficient
- Affordable rates
- Variety of floorplans
- Designed for privacy
- Many great locations
- Professional managers
- Professional management
CAMPUS PLACE—1145 Louisiana
841-1429
841.5255
TANGLEWOOD—10th & Arkansas
740 2415
Sublease for summer; Furnished 2 bedrooms, full bath, A/C. Close to campus, near open bars in the building.
Summer Subset 2, Bedroom Townhouse, Pool,
Ground Floor 0478 early call 841.1287
(3D advance) 3-D afterparty
Summer Sublease: 3 bedroom Apartment with 2 baths, a c. h., d. w. pool. Close to Campus: 841-5697
Summer Sublease: three or four person furnished apartment bordering campus. Available in mid-floor.
Summer Subnet Large 3 RB Townhouse. AC
Near pool, bus line, campus. Rent negotiable.
Summer Tenants wanted for very nice 4 bedroom house 2 miles from campus near bus route. Microwave, Dishwasher, beds, and some other furniture supplied $150 per month plus 1/2 discount.
ment has washer/dryer, microwave access, juicer option. Innorescue to remove tissue $50.00, 82-3168. Innorescue to remove tissue $95.00, 82-3168. townhouse; 2 baths半 furnished $41 plus 1/4 utilities. Available May 19th Sunrise Terrace.
Summer Submarine 2 Bdr. Appt near downtown
Low utilities. Spacious 875.00 $ call 841-7597.7
Summer Sublease. Near campus, great for summe-
r summer travel. Possible possible re-
sidence. Call 841-3744 at 5:00 p.m.
EDDINGHAM PLACE
- Exercise Weightroom
- AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- Swimming pool
- 10 or 12 month contract
- On-Site Management
841-5444
- Fire place
- Satellite T.V.
- Free Showtime
Open Daily 3:00-5:00 Saturday 9:00-12:00
Professionally managed by Kuwait Valley Management
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Very nice two bedroom apartments available summer/fall, low utilities, fully carpeted, air conditioning, and washer/dryer included. $130 a month. Call 749-2189.
Person to Submit apartment for summer. Water
Tamal. Call Tamar at 842-3534 for further information.
80 Datsun 120 Sedan 2D; 2. Sterge, 56 KILLE, one
owner, new car clutch $1200. Excellent Condition.
Very good condition.
1974 WV Bug. Shiny in inside and out. New engine guaranteed by Metric Motors. $750.00 or 81-600-4660
1978 Kawasaki LTD 1000 Custom and high performance too extra number. Must be registered. Keep ready.
50.70% Off Airline Ticket Credit cards
ask for The Midnight Express. 783-3515
FOR SALE
56% off Olin Airline Fiction (excludes
30 days of free airfare) - 315-824-3155
74 Honda 450, all stock, a classic $450.00 O B
(includes a 90-day $200.00 credit).
BAND EQUIPMENT - 2 pair Bass bins 49 x 19 x 15"
EV drivers 62 pwr, band EQ bags 82 Yamaha
SK20 Organ w/ case and stand 4545 Honda 664-683
Biancen 12 speed bicycle, 21 inch frame, excellent
Bianco 12 speed bicycle, 21 inch frame, excellent condition. $150; Call McKell, 864-3453 weekdays
1981 Green Saab Mint condition Brand new
price negotiated Mint sell $260 749 285.
Sold by HAMBURG FOR SALE
Dog House: extra large, insulated $63 00 841-4478,
Barb.
Branch Sport, 100 lm to spice Blue Arrow White Wheeler. For sale at: BRANCH SPORT BASE FOR SALE. For Sale 25. Fuji Espense. Excellent Condition. $899.00. (713) 648-5622. branchesportbasis.com
Blue Nissan 12 Speed Touring Bike • new tires,
$850 or 845-849 or 845-849
845-840 or 845-849
Drum set: 3 piece, new cymbals, 4 rotos tama-
$450.00 EO. Come play. B42.3366. Dave.
CPA EXAM Study Material. Best CPA Review materials with cassette tape; requires only 9 hours of study time. B1-886-7450.
For Sale One gold Holton Trumpet and One
Silver Professional Holton Trumpet. Ask $125
and $300. Call 841-4702, ask for Bob or leave
message.
Harmen-Karden STEREO Amp. $435, *S.* Reflector TELEOSPE, mahogany tripod, lenses, filters. B/O. PARK with men's, l'Men. $20. 864-5120. 841-6668.
*leading Edge PC4, G64 K. 2 K,DD, color system; speed CPU, DOS 2.11, BASIC, LE Word PROCEDURE $12.00 . Also, bad medium modem ($E0), LXR 50 printer game port ($E3), TUR-85 keyboard (*4*) (*81), BIOS (**81**)
*** MOTHBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
2013 E. PARKS SCHOOL 6 p.m. Saturday 10 p.m.
312 E. IRELAND 749-804-2500
MAX'S COMICS. Comic Books. Playbys. Pen-
house, ed. 811 New Hammett.
save fun in the sun! Moust for sale must sell a
package or best offer
June at 841 2018 9 p.m.
New IBM PCB, Amber Screen and Modem. Hook
up your PC. Work right at home. $600.00. Call 824-649-6601.
Nice as he cell typewriter, Smith-Corona Memory
Nice as he cell typewriter, Smith-Corona Memory
nce cash immediately! Call Bytel at 79-498-3150
Must Sell 1965 BMS KW10RKT Warranty till 10.08.
New Pirelli Newpirells Tail, Shield Heated Gryp, Reynolds Rack with trunk Cornbat seat
Eurostar ESCA $259.00. Make offer 42-3134. Leave message
NOTES now available for variety of classes,
such as English, Math, Biology and Jawahir
Jawahir Study Services. We're here to Help
Peavey a best horn with tether pack. int $1250
Peavey a best horn with tether pack. int $275
Mishiko a mini mono monitor BQ 429 3806
BQ 429 3806
Racing Bike Tunturi 23 lbs 1s. with lock Cyclo
computer more $190拿券> 844-283-1
Single Bed Lefl, IBM Electric Typewriter, KORG
for digi cops, ORG 749-888-2001, Refrigerator
for digi cops, ORG 749-888-2001
RCA 25" Color TV $200 contact Mike Reynolds
843-409-2611
TREK 40 Bicycle In great condition! What a Bargain! Call Paul: 834-684
*THE WITHERS for sale. Silver-Heated 223 C cor-
lation, $1500 each. Silver-Solar Corona Green
condition, $1500 each.
AUTOSALES
tire/ires, long life highway car: free gas for 100
miles, test drive in Lawrence, 696-2267
1939 Triumph Spifire Convertible 50,000 miles
Exceeded condition $150,000 6Firm. Call 841-094-104
*The price shown is for the vehicle
1977 Volkswagen Rabbit, Restored, beautiful body, rebuilt engine, six galls in galvanized bass, chassis.
1980 Datam 200 SX $260 O.0 B.0 1980 Toyota Corolla
SRS $250 O.0 B.0 842-8426
82 Cullas Supreme - AT, PB, PS, Till AM/FM
82 Cullas Supreme - AT, PB, PS, Good Condition
Bullet 841-7967 before 5AM.
Bullet 841-7967 after 5AM.
New engine, new everything! Dependable Subaru with extra tires and clean and simple. 1974, must have a four-wheel drive.
1983 BMW Great condition. Must sell Leaving town, will take call. Nack, evenings on 4/7.
79 Ford Mustang - V-8, 302 4 Speed, Stero,
Custom Wheels: 824-1034, Price Negotiable.
Must Sell! 1787 Chevette, 4 cylinders, Automatic Hatchback 87,000 miles, 4 new radial tires, Air conditioning, Break lining (recently paid $90) $130 (Firm) 841-5533
Nice Toyota Saratell $249. 82° Air,霖.5peed,good condition. Amount $2400 Call Al ormn Llew.
LOST-FOUND
HELP WANTED
Found Laden Times with black and white in front of Found Laden Times with black and white in front of Last leather black wallet with important items from last time.
we love you with children! We would like you to be a
child in our school. **HELP A PARENTS** 730 Melano Ave, 219
Broadway, New York, NY 10024
CAMP COUNSELORS Wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach: swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterskiing, gymnastics, scuba diving, water polo, patents, camping, drama, dramas, OR riding, skiing, or live, maintenance. Salary $10 or more plus life, maintenance. Salary $20 or more plus life, Seagel, Suger, Nlid. IL 6093, 312-444-244
ARLINGS CRUSSELINES HIRING! Summer Career: Good Way Travel. Call For Guide.
Found: A women's gold watch near the Chi-O fountain. Call Brain at 749-7302 to claim it.
Children's Counselors, Instruction Activators, WSI.
Bus Driver, Cook, Kitchen Manager, Kitchen
Bakery Manner, Maintenance, Nanny for
(need) Chef, Kitchen Manager, P.O. Box 711,
Boulder, CO 80306 (300) 432-4597
Computer graphics consultants need office manager. Bookkeeping and computer experience a must. If you can think for yourself and take a chance, you will call: 841-1510, Designation, 1414' 6th.
Drummer Needed for established band. Good Money! Great Tune! $499,999
Exchanging private room and bath for evening and weekend help with blind grandmother. Flexible. Preference given to older student in care giving or nursing. Accepts 600 or 650 or leave message morning at 841-1123.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16,940 $04-259/yr. New
Hiring Call: 807-687-4000 R-7984 for visas
or foreign education.
French interpreters wanted for simultaneous translation in a Grain Storage and Marketing office at KState University June 8-July 12. Must have college degree or be enrolled at KSU Contact Merla Brookman at (913) 523-6164 or Merla Application deadline April 14, 1971. KSU Instructor:
" our *Nanny Network* of over 500 places, in CT, on Boston and one year commitment to exchange rooms, room and board, airfare. All families for your satisfaction. Many families for you to choose. Contact Helping Hands Inc. at 203-843-1474, www.nancynetwork.com, or featured on NBC's *Today Show & Hour Magazine*.
Housecleaner Needled, Weekly, Will Pay $7.00 Hr.
Call 843-4618, after 6 p.m.
Naisimith Hall is taking applications for a full cook position. Schedule the Tuesday-Saturday interested step by Naisimith Lobby and fill out an application EOE/M/F/HAA
Group leader needed for June and July for seven course week in Grain Storage and Marketing for professionals from countries. Must have experience of people with different culture background. Conversation skills in French, communication required. Responsibilities include: collecting fleets; activities outside classroom and 24 hour education; confirming travel arrangements, driving bus, car; collecting fleets; activities outside classroom and 24 hour education; confirming travel arrangements, driving bus, car; collecting fleets; activities outside classroom and 24 hour education; confirming travel arrangements, driving bus, car; collecting fleets; activities outside classroom and 24 hour education; confirming travel arrangements, driving bus, car; collecting fleets; activities outside classroom and 24 hour education; confirming travel arrangements, driving bus, car; collecting fl
Nams Finlunds, Inc. looking for nominees. Position
requires Master's degree in Finance or related.
Must benefit I may commit P.O. Box
78060, New York, NY 10024.
NANY POSITIONS AVAILABLE Good salary
in Dallas, Texas. Call 9:49 m. (214)
845-2577
Part-time delivery person need. Must have own car. Call Pekin Restaurant. 749-0003
Phoneworkers for benefit concert. Fun company working conditions. Evening hours, no ex postage.
Personal care assistants new/nummer. Mornings
weekdays, weekends in 11 to 79.0468.
841.2927
Student Draftsmans Needed. Architectural detailing on campus projects including preparation of construction plans, safety codes, construction and fire safety codes. Preparation of drawings on campus site planning project.
Faking applications and interviewing sharp, energetic bartenders & cocktail waitresses; experience preferred. Thr. 11-5 Pri. 11-2 St. 12-7 Dr. 12-9 Ski. Gr. 17, Grth. 22, Massachusetts in the Eldridge
Summer Employment Lawns care wood
applicants. Send resumes to the
applicant's email address. Seed invoices to Ixus
Seed.
The Department of Mathematics in now accepting applications for undergraduate for the position of Math Tutor. Please submit work 10-15 hours per week under the supervision of a math teaching assistant. Applicants must possess at least a Bachelor's degree equivalent. $4.00 an hour Contact Marilyn J. Strong, F-25, High School, AA/OE
The Mathematics Department is now accepting applications for the position of undergraduate teaching assistants. Applicants must have a strong background in undergraduate mathematics and be equivalent; communicate well in the English language; have undergraduate standing and outgoing personality with ability to assist others. Will assist in lecture classes; grade homework assignments;
assignments, and help grade some exam. Students monthly, 4% weekly, August 15 to December 31, 1987, total payment to the Math Dept. Applications may be obtained from the Math Dept. 217 Strong Hall. Further information, contact Philip Montgomery, 25 E. Strong, BOEAM/
The University of Kansas Budget Office has a position opening for a continuous half-time student assistant in the preparation of the University's budgets and other financial reports, do word processing, typing, spreadsheet preparation, and data analysis. The position requires junior, senior, or graduate student status, and good written and oral communication skills. Desirable applicant will be planning to stay in the department for at least 6 months per month for a half-time appointment. Closing date is April 15, 2018. Start date is flexible. For information call Jana Hinz, Budget Office, 894-1336 (817) 279-5670 or email j.hinz@uks.edu. Per quarter月
Wanted Nanny/Mother's Helper, female, in af. Northern New Jersey town, close to NYC
Is a fun and good child with children, energetic,
and have drivers' skills. Good pay
Summer or permanent (120-931-8003)
Wanted Part-time kitchen utility help, Call Frank
Sheldon, Lawrence Country Club, 841-2660
PERSONAL
ALEN LEVINE the right choice for Off-Campus
Senator paid for by Synchrony
Busy April 25' Want to go to a security selection? Sophomore girl tired of present formation? Reply to Box 411, Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kansas 66045
Come to the Templin Hall Casino Party® Saturday, April 14 at 8. Bring a date for the gambling game.
Dearest HY! YOU ARE the fresher who arrived at the Bahamas on 13th, and aspires to become a corporate attorney, please write me my resume and send your resume JD J29 James St. 301, Newark NJ N7102
Forced to have sex on a date or while parting* RVHS helps victims cope with sexual assault. Contact RVHS through HEADQCARTERS@u14.843-2454 or through UK INFORMATION Center at 864-3506
Hey RU KAddies. All Stock 97 has begun. peace
Honey RU Kaddies. All Stock 97 has begun. peace
Honey RU Kaddies. All Stock 97 has begun.
She hung 'laut together to
Kendale You Trumpt Dude! Best wishes for a happy B-Day, Love, Les and Kiel.
Congratulations Molly Wanstall. The New Panhellenic President. You'll Be Great!! Love, The Alpha Chi Omegas
Mark. When you are not so self absorbed, consider a Toldo Foley Jewelry I am.
Mark. You are just the "Max" I'm looking for. Mam I be your date? Rachel
OLLIE NORTHI I am really忙 by remembering
again and again and again, NANCY HEAGAN
To my loving wife, Toumy G. I very happy
friend of mine, the love of my life
I love her husband, Judeg.
lex & Steve. The marines have landed. Thanks
or the rescue. Call 4 2821. reward! Hirenda &
Marcus.
To My Acalfahalaya Baby. I could really tell you to the gaters. Your Little Jambalaaya
To the best half of D=N. Congratulations on the newest most handsome TREE around you (too P.S.) I'm proud of you! Together we'll make it work! I love you! Dummy
GLEASIAN/HEXI Write for KS/MO into PEH/
9010-0218 Mail encrypted confidentially
9010-0218 Mail encrypted confidentially
BADACHE, BACKACHE, ARM PAIN, LEG
BADACHE, BACKACHE, ARM PAIN, LEG
complete quality chiropractic care Dr. Mark
DEWEY
Call or drop by Headquarters.
We're here because we care.
841:243 1419 Mass
Most reasonable rates in town for all your photo
work. Call Photo Plans, 719-824-3560,
portfolio mirrors. Call Photos Plus, 719-824-3560.
Be creative in gt fitting. Fulfill your beautiful Bound Portraits for all occasions. Call
HAS SPRING BREAK LEFT YOU BROKE? Paid Summer Internships
— must be hard working
— $400 per week
For interview call 749-7377
BUS. PERSONAL
SERVICES OFFERED
AUTO-TINTING: Best scratch resistant solar
film for lifetime warranty. PROTINT of
the film for life.
We're always open.
New Connexion, 300 Elm, Elm. Lawrence
New York, June 16, eighty by appointment
Hair styling at New York, six by appointment
April and May. $8 cuts and sets, $3 permis
and $4 per cut. Or trade, or Trade Quillan's 911 New Humphrey.
Need music for your wedding? Call Jean, 843-3701
Give piano and voice lessons over summer.
total membership through 5-31-87
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749
CHIMSON SUN PHOTO is looking for young
photographers to take advantage of
15% off direct cost. No lot fees. Call
(212) 876-3494.
FOR
WOMEN
ONLY
$37.50
- 5 Levels Aerobics
- Body Toning Classes
- Tanning
- Weight Equipment
- Whirlpool
Hours:
M F F 8:30-8:30
S u n 4:00-4:00
Sun 10:00-10:00
501 Kasid Westridge Shopping Ctr. 834-4040
Body Shapes
"Graduates and undergraduates, money for college is available. Contact College Scholarship Sources. (913) 764-0299 or 1-800-USA-1221 Ext. 7079"
KI PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ekchakron
processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W services.
PASSOVER $6.00 Art & Design Building,
Room 206, 864-4767
MATH TUORIST FOR 1976, M.A., $6/hr (cours
above) 199, $1/hr; 843.9032
Red House Audio 4-track stack, P.A. and Light
Mobile Party Music, Maximum Audio Wizardry
3D Studio Pro Xtreme, Audio Fusion
WE'RE YOUR AUTHORIZED
APPLIANCE SERVICE
REPAIR SPECIALISTS MIDWEST APPLIANCE SERVICE
Metcalf South Mall 95th & Metcalf, O.P. Ks.
(913) 341-6688
PRIVATE OFFICE Obgyn And Abortion Services
Overland Park . (913) 459-6878
Need money for college? Let us match you with
Scholarship and grant money for which you can
qualify. For more information write Student
Center, 1340 SW Cherry Drive;
Topeka, KS 66044
... All ladies 'dresses can be made here in town. You choose your favorite designs or styles from the latest fashion magazines. I will make them for you. Call Sue. 814-349
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841 236.
TUTORING MATH STAT. $8.00/HR CALL
MUSTST
TYPING
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing.
1-1-1 TRIO Word processing. Respondible. Conscientious. Reliable. Callable 842-3111 for service. 24-Hour Typing. 13th semester in Lawrence. Dissertations, papers. Close to campus.
24-Hour Typing 13th semester in Lawrence
Quality best and fast service 841-5000
Best quality best and fast service 841-5000
A1 professional typing. Term papers, Theses.
Dissertations, Resumes, etc. Reasonable IBM
Electronic Typewriter. 842.7246.
A-2 Word processing Service Quality resumes, papers, dissertations. Reasonable rates. File storage available. 841-180 until 9 p.m.
AAA TYPING has low cost word processing document storage starting at $19.91 ($p.c. Buy 8412942 after 4 p.m. weekdays, any time weekends). Campus pickup available.
- 8-hour unit with a pH
AAA TYPING! Great pricing! Buses 182,192
499+ i-port i-ports internet services
professional typing/writing processing, call
Myra (414) 100-8900, Spring special $10, double
page.
Absolutely Fast Typing. Dependable and experienced work. Requires 50 hours per a.m. and at 18:99 after p.m. Accurate affordable typing for former Harvard secretary Call Mrs. Nancy Mattila, 841-1219
JEANETTE SHAFFER typing System
TRANSCRIPTION also; standard tape: 843-8877.
DISSERTATIONS. THESES. LAW
OF TORTURE, but will return. KEEP WATCHING THIS AD
Experienced Typeist Dissertations, theses, term papers; etc. Reasonable Rates. Call 812.3303
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, termes, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailings list. Letter quality
printing, spelling corrected. 842-7247
Experienced typist 10:35, dissertations, term paper 842/351 after 6:15, p.m. M-F or Sat/Sun 842/351 after 6:15, p.m. M-F or Sat/Sun
Resume Service-laswritten 10 copies ONLY
$89-749-2193 after 5 p.m.
GOOD IMPRESSIONS Typing/Word Processing Typesetting Paper Pages Typeset Typewriter 841-0038
THE WORD DOCTORS. Why pay for typing? Word
processional translation, BEAKEY
GUARANTENED PERFECT typing done on word processor. Located near Lawrence Hospital. Call
processing Legal, transcription 843-3147
writing Legal, transcription 150-550 pg. $15
WITNESS LEGAL, transcription
KU SECRETARY will do your typing and word processing. Prepare resumes for job positions in favorable rates. Monica Buccari 2:49 a.m. on ftr. Quality training: excellent editing, grammar, spelling, punctuation skills. Fast, reliable.
TOP-NDITCH SERVICES professional wordpress
technique. Design, implement, thesis, letter
printing quality. 843-906-7120
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes Have M.S. Degree. 841-6254
Typing very reasonable rates, will also assist with spelling punctuation and form. Call 842 2629 8263
WANTED
Cellmate(s)! Wanted: 1 or 2 for summer or for new year, 1 person gets TWO room updates via email.
Female Deposit $157.00 Summer only or into fall
841-1905 Rows Anytime Tuesdays/Thurses or leave
Part-time housekeepers wanted for Spring and Summer. Day or evening hrs. If you are a meticulous cleaner, Buckingham Palace needs your talents. Call 842 6264
Roommate Manted: Beautiful apartment in older house, close to KU and downtown, spacious, wood floors, FP, WP, Must like cats (2) $17 plus electricity and电iane. 749-357 after 4
Roommates. For 2,3,4. bedroom apartments and houses. Call JC. 841 2194
Roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom Apartment. Quint, non-smoker $100 and hail utilities.
Roommate Wanted now to share very nice Townhouse. $150 rent plus 1/3 utilities. Call evenings. 841-1125
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wanted 2 female roommates for next fall to share a 2 level spacious three bedroom townhouse. Nice furnished, fireplace, swimming pools, and lots of extras. On bus route B. 842-6544.
- Policy
Wanted: Roommates for summer. BR3 Duplex on Bus Route B W: $150. utilities paid 842.7972
Want to buy Appleworks version 1.2 or 1.3 only.
Call 843.4644 after 5:00.
Wanted: Female roommate not smoker to share
spacious 2 bedroom apartment next fall. Close to
campus and downtown. $150 plus 1/2 utilities. Call
*981-3981*.
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Wednesday, April 8, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Double Coupons
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Big tan on campus
HILTON PARK
Details, page 2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
April 9,1987
Vol. 97,No.129
(USPS 650-640)
FARRELL
Inverted
vws McCauley of Lawrence executes a maneuver that skaters call an invert. McCauley used the base of the stand in front of Lippincott Hall to practice yesterday. McCauley is a member of the Heartland Skate Club.
Senate approves pay raise for state university faculty
By CHRISTOPHER HINES
Staff writer
"I think the vote will send a clear signal to the house that the Senate supports higher education in Kansas," said State Sen. Wint Wint Jr., R-Lawrence, who drafted the salary increase amendment.
Gov. Mike Hayden recommended a 2.5 percent faculty salary increase as
TOPEKA - Without one vote of opposition, the state Senate yesterday overrode a committee recommendation and approved a 2.5 percent salary increase for state university faculty.
"The salary increase gives our faculty some degree of equity with that of university faculty in other states," he said.
Winter proposed the amendment during full Senate discussion on a fiscal year 1988 expenditures bill for Board of Regents institutions. The Senate Ways and Means Committee had recommended a 2.5 percent faculty salary increase for only half a year, but Winter's amendment raised it to 2.5 percent for all of fiscal 1988.
The bill now goes to a conference committee, which will hammer out differences between the House and Senate versions. The House, during a recent wave of budget cuts, approved a 1.5 percent salary increase beginning Jan 1, 1988, or an annual increase of only 0.75 percent.
part of his 1988 budget proposals, and has said he would stand firm on that figure.
Winter's amendment provide some senators an opportunity to voice their support for Kansas higher education and Hayden's recommendation.
I think the vote will send a clear signal to the House that the Senate supports higher education in Kansas.'
R-Lawrence
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr.
State Sen. Jeanne Hoferer, R-Topau, said the quality of the state's higher education system was one of the biggest about Kansas, but that could change.
"We have to support the governor on this issue," said State Sen. Michael Johnston, D-Parsons. "He is doing the necessary minimum to keep good faculty in the state."
"We in Kansas can hold our heads high among other states and be proud
of our institutions of higher learning," she said. "But if we don't do something for faculty morale, they could slip through our fingers like grains of sand."
Some senators opposed Winter's amendment in a preliminary vote, but when a final roll call vote was completed, a voted yes. Four senators abstained
State Sen. Frank Gaines, D-Augusta, said the Legislature often financially overlooked public primary and secondary schools for the more attention-grabbing state universities.
"The strength of our primary and secondary schools is the key to guaranteeing the quality of our students when they reach the university level." said Gaines, who voted for the amendment. "We need to look at all the education bills together to find out how much we spend and where to give Kansas education equity at all levels."
The Regents bill, now amended,
eventually will have to be approved
by the House, which has consistently
faculty salary increases this
session.
But State Rep. John Solbach, D-Dawrence, said there was hope for House approval of the salary increase if an adequate coalition of Democrats and Republicans could be formed.
Suburban mall still a possibility
Staff writer
By TODD COHEN
Hours after Lawrence voters soundly rejected a 3-year-old downtown mall proposal, surburban mall developers already are appearing on the city's horizon, several city leaders said yesterday.
supported the mall, was defeated in the primary
In Tuesday's city election,
Lawrence residents rejected the
downtown mall project on three separate
referendum questions by margins of 78 percent to 21 percent; 75
percent to 30 percent; and 70 percent to
30 percent.
Three anti-mall Lawrence City Commission candidates also rolled to easy victories Tuesday, unseating two incumbents who had supported the mall. A third incumbent, who
"That's a very clear message," Lawrence Mayor Sandra Praeger, a downtown mall supporter who remains on the commission, said yesterday. "The downtown issue is dead."
Praeger said that the commission, now with a majority opposed to the mall, soon would bring the current 600-block mall project to an end.
Joel Jacobs, chairman of the Urban Renewal Agency, a citizen committee which was to help with the creation of the URA meetings had been cancelled.
But Praeger said talk of a mail in
laws would not die with the
GREATNESS.
developed by Jacobs, Visconsi & Jacobs of Cleveland.
Praeger anticipates that within 30 days, developers will ask the commission to change zoning laws to permit construction of a suburban mall.
Praeger said the commission probably would reject suburban mail rezoning requests. However, she said she was afraid the developer could successfully challenge the zoning in court and have the city's laws overturned.
Hames Zacharias, city management analyst, said it was possible the city could violate anti-trust laws by not developing a downtown mall
BSU retains its revenue code status
Staff writer
Rv LISA A. MALONFY
The Student Senate defeated 27-12 a motion to take away revenue code status for the Black Student Union at its meeting last night.
See MALL, p. 6, col. 3
"It is unfortunate, in a term of extremely responsible actions, that the Senate chose to drag its reputation through the mud on this issue," said Jane Hutchinson, Nunemaker senator.
Before the meeting, Kelly Milligan,
student body vice president, said he
would consider out of order any
motion to remove BSU's status.
In addition, granting status to BSU was the same as granting a contract, which the Senate cannot break, he said.
The Senate cannot reconsider anything that has been passed by the Senate and signed by Brady Stanton, student body president, Milligan said. Last week, Stanton signed the code bill granting status to RSU.
Woody Browne, liberal arts senator who made the motion to take away status, said that BSU did not
Michael Foubert, graduate senator, cited the Affirmative Action complaint that three BSU members filed against Foubert and two other Student Senate Executive Committee members.
At that point, Milligan gave control of the meeting to Betsy Bergman, who accepted Browne's motion for debate.
deserve status and that a majority of senators agreed with him.
Details of the complaint have not been made public, but Foubert and the other two senators have said it
related to StudEx's Feb. 28 decision to deny BSU revenue code status. That decision was reversed by the full Senate on March 25.
Vernelle Spearman, BSU's adviser, expressed no surprise when the motion was overturned after almost two hours of debate.
"I think that it's been a rather long, arduous and painful process for both those who favor status for the Black Student Union and those who oppose it. I'm hoping that this is finally the consensus of the Student Senate," she said.
INSIDE
INSIDE
Hugh Stanfield, Kansas' leading hitter with a .380 average, is excelling in both academics and baseball. He has earned a degree in communications and has broken KU career records in hits, at bats and in stolen bases.
Investigators for MCI have asked U.S. Sprint officials to help investigate phone code abuse in Lawrence," because several U.S. Sprint codes also have been abused.
Hitting home
Libraries losing power, dean says
Phone abuse
Bv BENIAMIN HALL
"And we're taking steps now to cancel as many as one-quarter of our periodical subscriptions," he said. "That will seriously inconvenience every professor who's engaged in research and who's teaching. That can't be escaped."
KU faculty and students soon with feel the effects of their libraries' deteriorating buying power, the dean of libraries said yesterday.
Jim Ranz, the dean, said the libraries' buying power had declined by one-third in the past two years.
Staff writer
The libraries lost about $843,000 in net buying power in the past two years, Ranz said.
Ron Francisco, professor of Soviet and East European studies and chairman of the University Senate library committee, said yesterday that KU already was the country's single largest borrower in an inter-library loan program.
"With this sort or reduction, it's going to be very difficult for most professors to do research," he said. If library financing doesn't improve, University of Kansas faculty and students won't be able to keep up with developments in their fields of study. Banz said.
Under the loan program, KU's libraries borrow copies of publications from other university libraries.
A 3.8 percent state budget cut this year cost the libraries about $8,500. But the decline of the dollar's power has hurt the most, Francisco said.
"We're going to have many situations when faculty and students aren't going to be able to get their required materials." Francisco said.
The University libraries would run up a $900,000 deficit next year if they tried to maintain current periodicals and book acquisitions. Francisco said.
Forty percent of all the University's library expenditures go overseas. Overseas acquisitions have been more expensive since the dollar's decline against other currencies, he said.
"The dollar continues to decline against the world's major currencies, at least the countries from which we buy books," Francisco told the University Senate Executive Committee on Friday. "There isn't a lot of optimism among library people that things will get better."
Francisco also told SenEx that other universities eventually would tire of sending loan materials to KU.
SenEx member Sharon Brehm, director of the college honors program and professor of psychology, said, "If that would shut down, it would stop most researchers dead in their tracks."
"People like the University of Illinois are going to say, 'Forget it. It costs us money to send you those things if you're not going to acquire them on your own,' " Francisco said.
The University probably will add money to the library's budget if the Kansas Legislature votes to release 75 percent of excess fees generated by enrollment increases at KU, acting executive vice chancellor Del Shankel told SenEx.
Student Senate has supported a plan to charge students a library fee, student representative Michael Anderson told SenEx. But the Board of Regents has said the University couldn't charge a fee for what was supposed to be a state responsibility.
Francisco said yesterday that the University needed to establish a library contingency fund, which would be financed either by the state or through endowments. The fund would collect interest and dividends when the dollar was strong and release money to the library when the dollar was weak.
10
Alan Hagman/KANSAN
A hospital ambulance staff member dresses the "wounds" of tornado victims in preparation for a drill at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Members of Alpha Chi Omega sorority and Lambda Chi Alpha, Acacia and Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternities participated in the drill yesterday afternoon.
Students play victims during mock tornado
Staff writer
By JENNIFER WYRICK
Injured people with various gruesome wounds were strewed about the Lawrence Memorial Hospital grounds yesterday after noon.
Ambulances raced to the scene to rescue victims of a tornado that touched down east of the hospital and ripped through the Veterans of Foreign Wars building and the water works plant.
The staged event was part of the hospital's semi-annual emergency tornado drill. About 15 KU students played the part of victims
But after the two-hour incident ended, the victims pulled the fake wounds from their bodies, and the hospital went back to its normal
The students were members of
The hospital ambulance staff put simulated wounds on the victims, who were given explanations of their injuries and told to act as if they really were in pain, said Jim Murray, ambulance service training officer.
the Alpha Chi Omega sorority and theLambda Chi Alpha, Sigma Alpha Epsilon and Acacia fraternities.
Kathleen Flanagan, Overland Park senior, had a piece of metal "lodged" in her abdomen and also was in severe shock. She was taken to surgery immediately after being admitted to the emergency room.
About 2 p.m., ambulance workers began transporting the victims from the ambulance service area
See TORNADO, p. 6, col. 3
1
2
Thursday, April 9, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Around the World
Reagan accused by Soviet Union of fabricating embassy spy crisis
MOSCOW — The Soviet Union said yesterday that President Reagan fabricated the embassy security crisis to undermine next week's visit to Moscow by Secretary of State George Shultz.
With only five days left before Shultz arrives for crucial talks on prospects for an intermediaterange missile agreement, the visit appeared firmly enmeshed in the U.S. Embassy sex-and-spying scandal.
U. S. Ambassador Jack Matlock met yesterday with senior foreign adviser and former Soviet Ambassador to Washington Anatoliy
The Tass news agency said the two men "had a frank conversation during which they discussed the present state of Soviet-American relations" and the visit by Shultz, who said in Washington yesterday that the United States is unset about the embassy scandal.
In Washington, President Reagan ordered Shultz to raise in Moscow the charges that Soviet
agents, with the aid of two U.S. Marines, had entered sensitive areas of the U.S. Embassy in Moscow.
In Washington, congressional leaders called for tougher security at U.S. diplomatic posts around the globe and one warned Shultz to tell the Soviets next week, "Enough of this nonsense."
Reagan also decreed that the new U.S. Embassy, under construction since 1979 and still years from completion, remain unoccupied until it is deemed secure. Under a requirement, certain U.S. Embassies in Washington cannot be used before the U.S. Embassy.
Concerned that the Marines' sex-for-secrets scandal could hint at similar security difficulties elsewhere, lawmakers suggested several immediate actions to halt the spill of U.S. intelligence, including the indefinite suspension of construction of embassies in Soviet-bloc countries.
IRA holds funeral after two days of clashes
BELFAST, Northern Ireland — A saint Irish Republican Army guerrilla was buried yesterday in a ceremony delayed twice in two days by clashes between mourners and police, who sought to prevent an IRA gun salute at the funeral.
Thousands of IRA supporters marched through Roman Catholic neighborhoods to bury Laurence Marley, 41, slain last week by Protestant gunmen. The mourners, whose numbers swelled to 5,000 as they paraded through the
rain, occasionally battled riot police as they carried the coffin to the cemetery.
Marley's family tried to bury him Monday and Tuesday, but each time whisked his coffin back to their home when clashes erupted between 1,000 mourners and 1,000 police officers. The police officers were assigned to prevent the gun salute usually given to slain IRA guerrillas by masked IRA gunmen at the gravesite.
Across the Country
Webster says he was warned about North
At a daylong hearing before the
WASHINGTON - FBI Director William Webster testified yesterday that he was worried that Lt. Col. Oliver North had been running an unauthorized "freewheeling" operation for a long time before the Iran arms scandal was disclosed
Senate Intelligence Committee, Webster disclosed that he had received an FBI memo Oct. 30, 1986, that recommended that information be withheld from North because he "might be involved in a future criminal probe by a special prosecutor" examining U.S. activities in Central America.
Committee passes $1 trillion spending plan
WASHINGTON — The Senate Budget Committee approved a $1 trillion spending plan yesterday aimed at shrinking the federal deficit with a mix of program cuts and an $18.5 billion tax and revenue package.
The plan is an alternative to the
$1.02 trillion spending proposal offered by President Reagan, who wants to increase military spending while trimming the deficit with domestic spending cuts, sales of government assets and new fees for people who use federal lands and waterways.
South Bronx buildings collapse; six dead
NEW YORK — An apartment building and a grocery store collapsed yesterday after an explosion in the South Bronx, killing at least six people, injuring 24 and trapping more in an avalanche of rubble, officials said.
natural gas explosion at about 3:45 p.m.
Police and firefighters using axes, poles and shovels found the bodies of a man and a young boy buried beneath heaps of bricks and splintered lumber that tumbled down in the collapse, which was believed to have been caused by a
Police dogs sniffed through the crumbled building in search of more victims, and found the body of a man who was the sixth person confirmed to have died in the collapse, Assistant Fire Commissioner John Mulligan said.
The bodies of the man and young boy were found close to one survivor, Norberto Luna, who was stabbed in the waist beneath two floors of rubble.
From Kansan wires.
From the KANSAN Weather Servic
Weather
LAWRENCE FORECAST
degrees. Tomorrow will continue to be partly cloudy with a high in the low to mid 60s. . . WEATHER FACT. . . The record precipitation for this date is only 3/4 of an inch, recorded in 1896.
Today will be sunny and warm with a high near 74 degrees. The winds will be out of the south at 5-15 mph. Tonight will be partly cloudy with a chance for thunderstorms by early morning and a low near 45
DES MOINES
70 / 44
OMANIA
70 / 41
LINCOLN
70 / 41
CONCORDIA
70 / 42
TOPEKA
73 / 43
KANSAS CITY 72 / 46
COLUMBIA
71 / 46
ST. LOUIS
70 / 46
SALINA
71 / 43
WICHITA
72 / 44
CHANUTE
71 / 43
SPRINGFIELD
72 / 44
TULSA
76 / 50
--during the month of April, choose any Mountain Bike and get a complete flat tire repair kit which includes:
THE LOVE IN THE STOCKING COUPONS
FERRIS BUELLER'S
DAY OFF
IN THE HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER
MON — THURS
VCR and 2 MOVIES FOR ONLY 499
With This Coupon
Expiration Date: April 30,1987
Across From The Hillcrest Theatres 842-0526
FERRIS BUELLER'S SPECIAL AGRITURE LAND
FREE STUFF!
>
Let's face it, this is not a perfect world. The Deficit. Taxes. Scandals.
Flat tires. These are serious problems without easy solutions. Except
Reg. Now
Mt. Zefal Pump $13.95 $0.00
Repair Kit 1.50 0.00
Spare Tube 1.50 0.00
Tire Levers 2.95 0.00
Handlebar Bag 9.95 $0.00
$31.85 $0.00
We've done our part, now go out and tackle the deficit.
UPTOWN BICYCLES
A
1337 Mass.
749-0636
Mon.-Sat.
9:30-6:00
[ ]
The University of Kansas Theatre and the Department of Music and Dance Present
The Marriage of Figaro
A comic opera in four acts by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
words by Lorenzé da Ponte after Beaulach
'a la Felle Journée ou La Marriage de figure'
Pont sur la route de Pigeon
English translation by Edward Dent
7:30 p.m. April 7-8, 1987.
8:00 p.m. April 10-11, 1987
Crafton-Freeman Theatre
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office,
all seats reserves; For reservations, call 913-864-3982
VISA/Mastercard aspected for phone reservations.
V
RIGS
Half price for KU Students
DIZZA SH/ITTLE
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST - FREE DELIVERY
1601 W.23rd
Use these Coupons
or ask for our
TWO-FER Special
SOURCES ON T
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST - FREE
DELIVERY
$2.00 OFF
842-1212
Any 3 or more pizzas
ADDRESS
DATE :
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
--will
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FAST + FREE
DELIVERY
842-1212
Any 2 or more pizzas
$1'00 OFF
$1'00 OFF
--will
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FAST - FREE
DELIVERY
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
842-1212
Any Pizza Ordered
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE DELIVERY
50¢ OFF
Any 1 pizza
842-1212
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ADDRESS
DATE
--will
SUNRISE PLACE
9th & Michigan
Featuring: Luxurious two bedroom townhouse living
- Prices start from §385
- Energy efficient
- Free cablevision
- Free cablevision
- Within walking distance to campus
- Swimming pool ·
We are open for show
Monday—Saturday 1:00—6:00 p.m.
Please stop by our office or call
841.1287
841-1287.
Student Senate Lecture Series
Presents
"The Daniloff Affair And
Soviet Relations in Perspective."
MONDAY APRIL 13, 1987
3:00 p.m. Hoch Auditorium, Free Admission
DANILOFF
Godfather's Pizza Coupon Specials
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}
}
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 9, 1987
Campus and Area
3
Local Briefs
House panel gives approval to 65 mph limit
TOPEKA — Less than a day after the Kansas Senate approved a bill to increase the speed limit on rural interstate highways to 65 miles per hour, the House Transportation Committee yesterday endorsed the measure and sent it to the floor for debate.
The committee approved the bill on an unrecorded voice vote after State Rep. Rex Crowell, R Longton, chairman of the panel, said he realized an increase in the speed limit probably would result in a higher death toll on the state's roadways.
The measure would give Gov. Mike Hayden the power to increase the speed limit on rural interstates to 65 mph, effective May 1. The change would affect about 600 miles of highways, Interstates 35, 70 and 135 and the Kansas Turnpike.
TOPEKA — The House yesterday sent the governor a bill that would ban underground burial of low-level radioactive waste, rejecting an attempt to send the bill to a conference committee.
House passess bill on waste burial
In sending the measure to Gov. Mike Hayden on a 125-0 vote, the House also approved of Senate changes in the bill. The Senate passed the bill Tuesday on a 39-0 vote. Hayden endorsed the bill earlier this week.
The bill was prompted by the search for a regional disposal site by the Central Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compack Kansas is joined in the compack of the Oklahoma obraska, Oklahoma and Louisiana.
The bill also would prohibit the storage of low-level radioactive waste in an inactive salt mine at Lyons.
Kansan names top fall staff members
The Kansan Board yesterday named Jennifer Benjamin, Lawrence senior, as fall editor of the Kansan and Bonnie Hardy, Topea senior, as fall business manager.
Benjamin now is the Kansan's managing editor, and Hardy is the ad director. The board made its selections after interviewing candidates yesterday.
Clarification
In Tuesday's Kansas, the Ultimate Fools Festival was reported to have been sponsored by the KU Frisbee Club and JKH-KFM 91. Student Union Activities, which sponsors the KU Frisbee Club, also was a sponsor of the tournament.
From staff and wire reports.
Abusers of codes sought
By JAVAN OWENS
Special to the Kansan
U. S. Sprint officials have been called in to help MCI investigators in a two-week investigation of code abuse in Lawrence.
Jerry Slaughter, investigator for MCI Southwest in St. Louis, said that Brian Bales, of U.S. Sprint in Kansas City, Mo., was called in because investigators had determined that Sprint codes also were beaten abused.
He said students who had abused U.S. Sprint or MCI access codes would face prosecution if they didn't understand the unitarity within the two-week period.
"We want to reiterate the fact that students still have a chance to come in without facing any criminal action," he said.
"We have found several U.S. Sprint codes that have been abused on and off campus," Slaughter said.
Investigators will conduct interviews in room 222 of All Seasons Motels, 2309 Iowa St., today and Friday and from Monday through Thursday next week. The room will be open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Students who confess to abusing access codes will have to pay back $M.
Slaughter the abuses could be traced to the spring semester of 1986. Students who abused codes then are not exempt from facing criminal charges, because the statute of limitations on the crime is two years.
Jim Flory, Douglas County district attorney, said he would cooperate with MCI and U.S. Sprint investors against abusers of access codes
"There is a great likelihood that people will be charged," Flory said. The important factor is that people can contact the lawyer by talking to the investigators now."
Slaughter said the investigation was going at full speed. An investigation also is under way in Topeka, where Slaughter received a search warrant to check on stolen MCI codes. He said he was investigating a link with the Lawrence area.
Although only 25 students have come in, investigators have received numerous calls, and many abusers have been identified, Slaughter said. But he said he was sure many more students would come in as the end of the investigation neared.
He said he could not calculate how much the two companies had lost from code abuse in the last year. He added that other codes that had been abused.
"We have a lot of students identi-
tally that have not come in yet."
Slater
"The figure is mounting every day." Slaughter said. "We have a number of codes that is above and beyond our initial expectation."
DOROTHY MURRAY
Class untangles mysteries of auto work
By PEGGY O'BRIEN
Staff writer
Sandy Herd, Lawrence resident, removes the oil plug from her car as Byron Edmondson assists her. Edmondson owns Byron's Autohaus, 906 Vermont St., and teaches an auto mechanics class sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
Sandy Herd jacked up her red '76 Chevy Nova. Lying on a car, she rolled underneath the car, unscrewed the oil drain plug and watched the old oil flow into a drip pan.
She found her oil filter, unscrewed it and replaced it with a new one. Then she replaced the oil.
"oh God, I hate this," Herd said last night from under her car at Byron's Authaus, 99 Vermont St.
Herd, Lawrence resident, is a student in the Automechanics II class sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center and taught by Byron Edmondson, owner of the garage. Last night was the first of three sessions, which cost $20.
Edmondson began the class with a warning.
"There's no way I can make you mechanics in three weeks, but I can make you more familiar with your own car." Edmondson said.
Class members, five women and one man, hoped to become more comfortable and knowledgeable when dealing with mechanics.
Herd said she felt a responsibility to learn more about her car so she could feel more comfortable taking it to a garage.
Edmondson, who doesn't believe in fixing things that aren't broken, said mechanics don't always know all the answers. He often is puzzled by variations in foreign cars, which are his specialty.
The students learned the basics of a tuneup, which should be done every 15,000 miles or once a year.
Edmondson said.
The words "distributor," "points," "carburator," "compression," "rings" and "fuel injection," among others, lost their mystery as Edmondson showed the class actual parts and explained their functions.
The class learned how to change oil, check spark plugs and measure compression, the basics of a tuneup. Edmondson explained the importance of maintenance in lubrication and cooling systems.
Edmondson encouraged the class to take care of their cars.
because once something inside the engine went wrong, repairs got expensive, costing more than $200
As the novice mechanics messed around under the hood, Edmondson checked their work.
"Ya'll don't need to be in this class. Everything's in good shape," Edmondson said.
Elizabeth Blanchard, graduate assistant at the women's resource center, said the class was one of the center's programs to help women. This is the third year the center has sponsored the class.
"Part of the mission of the
Last night they learned how to handle parts of their cars.
program is to teach women how to handle all parts of their lives," Blanchard said.
Blanchard said students who took the class in the past were enthusiastic that they finished the course, while others were intimidated by their cars.
With the oil change completed successfully, Herd said she felt better already.
"I like knowing what things are. I don't particularly want to do it all the time." Herd said.
Smallest circus brings big name to KU
Priest contributes humorous commentary to Royal Lichtenstein performances
Staff writer
By JERRI NIEBAUM
Students are invited to Watson Library's lawn at noon today to forget about school and pressures and play and reflect with the Royal Lichtenstein Circus from Santa Clara, Calif.
The five-member circus is named the Royal Lichtenstein because, as the world's smallest circus, the 15-year-old circus wanted a big-sounding name. But the name has nothing to do with the tiny European country.
The Rev, Nick Weber, a Jesuit priest, started the circus "to survive." Survival, he said, means living "above and beyond."
Weber acts as ringmaster for the group, which performs magic tricks, animal stunts, acrobatics, juggling and acting. Weber wouldn't say what animals or what acts would perform today.
"Our whole show works on surprise," he said.
While the audience is being surprised by circus stunts, Weber talks.
Yesterday, he was purposely vague about the subjects of his discussions and the missions of his circus. He wants people to watch and listen without any preconceptions, he said.
"We invite people to wonder about what we are," he said.
The Rev. Vincent E. Krische, director of the St. Lawrence Catholic Center 1631 Presbyterian said, said she wanted to saunter made people laugh and then reflect.
"His commentary is really quick
and Krische said. 'You can laugh,
but you can't laugh.'"
Krische said Weber's ministry was the circus.
"The circus provides a moral commentary on the state of affairs today," he said.
he was in town.
Yesterday afternoon, Weber gazed at Lawrence's new Catholic Center, which was an empty lot the last time
The Catholic Center is sponsoring the circus, which has been coming to the University of Kansas off and on about 10 years. It was last here in 1984.
Weber made an unlikely looking priest while he waited yesterday in front of the center for the circus crew to find electric cables. He wore $v$
'T the circus provides a moral commentary on the state of affairs today.'
— The Rev. Vincent E. Krische director of the St. Lawrence
Catholic Center
yellow T-shirt, jeans, black leather boots, and his blond hair fell to his shoulders under a blue baseball cap.
The cables are used to provide electricity for the three trailers that the circus members travel and live in.
Weber's interest in the circus started when he was a child.
"My parents took me to the circus when I was five, and I never recovered," he said.
He remembers thinking that the circus was utterly useless, which he made it said like God. Like art, he,God, is useless but essential to life.
Weber grew up in the Roman Catholic Church, which he said drew him in when he was in sixth grade.
"I was drawn to the religious order that was teaching me," he said.
But Weber didn't want to stand behind a pulpit and wear a white collar. In 1971, with a master's degree in drama from San Francisco State University and a background of teaching high school and college drama, he started the circus that now tours 40 states in three-year cycles.
"There are no answers and every one can make believe," he said.
Is there ever a "holy war"?
"HOLY WARS"
Is there ever a "holy war"? Most are/become unholy acts and alliances. The Crusades or 30 Years War are not times of pride. Some wars are fought with words as deadly as bullets (Mt. 5:22) See recent headlines for examples. Yes, Christians can argue/debate with one another like brothers and sisters AND still love one another
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Thursday, April 9, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A fair fee
After a semester of lengthy quarrels over where money should be cut and where fees should be raised, a fee request has been submitted to the Student Senate, and it probably will pass.
In the wake of frequent overloads of transcript requests, the office of student records has made its plea heard for the adoption of a fee. Sally Bryant, the assistant to the dean of educational services, has recommended a $2 charge for each student copy of a transcript after the first request.
Demanding a fee is not a radical measure. The policy is similar to the procedure followed by all other Kansas Board of Regents schools. At
the university of Kansas, the measure has been viewed as a last resort to cure the perpetual mayhem at the office of student records.
The $2 fee should result not only in a lighter workload, but also in higher productivity in the records office. The funds raised from the fee will go toward a new computer system that will provide transcripts at a faster rate, and the costs for the system will be borne equally by users of the service.
Student body president Brady Stanton indicated that he would recommend the $2 fee for approval. And why shouldn't he?
Playing a silly game
The Soviet Union and the United States are playing childish games with each other.
The latest tug of war is over the new U.S. Embassy building now under construction. Some congressmen and intelligence officials have said that the $190 million project should be demolished because the building is full of Soviet eavesdropping devices. Soviet workers are building the embassy with some prefabricated parts assembled at a site that the United States was not allowed to inspect.
U. S. officials now are saying that the building, which has been under construction since the 1970s, lacks sufficient security against Soviet spying.
This discovery also has created a controversy over Secretary of State George Shultz's trip to Moscow this week. Shultz will use a house
trailer outside the embassy for secret conversations.
The project is well under way and tearing down the building may be the solution to this isolated problem, but it will not help U.S.-Soviet relations. Communication, not eavesdropping, is the proper step towards improving relations. The United States and the Soviet Union are so worried about spies that they are reaching the outer stages of paranoia.
The two countries are playing silly games with each other, and no one is going to win unless officials from both countries begin constructive talks.
Instead of tearing down the prefabricated walls of a building, the two countries should work toward tearing down the walls that are separating them.
Dragged down by druas
Another star has fallen from the heavens — pulled down by drugs.
After the test results were disclosed, Gooden volunteered to admit himself to a New York City drug rehabilitation center and was put on the disabled list by the New York Mets.
Dwight Gooden, one of the brightest young stars in sports and a hero to young baseball fans everywhere, was admitted last week to a drug rehabilitation center after testing positive for cocaine. And although it is a tragedy that someone with so much influence on young people is on drugs, the story of Gooden's recovery could set a positive example.
Gooden, 22, undoubtedly has been one of the best pitchers in the game since he entered the major leagues at age 19. In 1985, he won the National League Cy Young Award with a 24-4 record. 1.53 earned run average and 268 strikeouts. His performance last year was good, but with a 17-6 record
came rumors that Gooden was using drugs.
The one positive sign in this situation is that Gooden seemed to want to be caught in his drug use. He repeatedly volunteered to undergo drug tests, the same tests that discovered the cocaine in his system. Some think his agreeing to the voluntary testing was actually a quiet cry for help.
Now is the time to see just what kind of hero Dwight Gooden will be. If he can recover from his drug use and play at the level is capable of, there is little question that Gooden will be a Hall of Famer. But just as importantly, if he can recover and is truly sorry for his offense, he will serve as an important symbol that drugs can be beat.
The best that could be hoped for is that all of the fans that sat up and took notice as Dr. K struck out batter after batter will see that even a superstar is no match for the devastation caused by drugs.
News staff
News staff
Frank Hansel . Editor
Jennifer Benjamin. Managing editor
Jul Warren . News editor
Brian Kaberline . Editorial editor
Sandra Engelland . Campus editor
Mark Stebert . Sports editor
Diam Dullmeier . Photo editor
Bill Skeet . Graphics editor
Tom Ebnel . General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Lisa Weems. Business manager
Benanie Hardy. Ad director
Denise Stephens. Retail sales manager
Kelly Scherer. Campus sales manager
Duncan Calhoun. Marketing manager
Lori Coppel. Classifier
Jennifer Luismanski. Production manager
David Nixon. National sales manager
Jeanne Hines. Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words and should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
Guest shots should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The
The Kansan reserves the right reject or edit letters and guests tickets. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, Kann 181 Stairwater-Flint Hall, Kansei, Kan 6045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and on Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage paid in Lawrence, Kan 6044. Subscriptions by mail are $40 per year in Douglas County and $50 per county. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid to the student activity fee.
Opinions
POSTMASTER Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118
Strauffer-Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045
Fear of advisers a common phobia
I have gotten something out of my four years at the University of Kansas. It is a phobia. Not an uncommon one at universities, but a phobia just works.
Barbara Shear
Associate editorial editor
---
I first began to notice it about four years ago. It was a humid, partly cloudy June day. Thousands of wideeyed, soon-to-behreshmen were roaming the campus of the University. It was pre-enrollment day.
Completely confused, along with everyone else, I was herded from building to building, room to room, filling out forms, listening to speakers and filling out more forms. Finally, after hours of University red tape, we got down to the business of what we were there for — enrolling in classes.
pursue as a lifelong career, I entered the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, along with most other freshmen, and subsequently was assigned an adviser from the college. That was when my phobia first reared its ugly head.
Not yet knowing what I wanted to
About 4:30 p.m. that same day, about 25 students were sitting in a small, cramped room in Wescoe. A middle-aged man dressed in a suit and tie was sitting behind the desk at the head of the room. Little did I know when I first entered the room that the man sitting smugly behind the desk would be the root of my worst nightmares.
Not knowing about the reputation of University advising, I sincerely looked to my assigned adviser for guidance. Boy, was I in for a surprise.
I aimlessly thumbed through the timetable, picking out classes I thought I was required to take. When I finished, I took my card to my adviser to have him look at and approve.
"I don't see any math course or here. You really need to take Math: 101." He gave me back the enrollment card.
I chose a section of the course and handed him the card again. This time, he was looking at my high school transcript.
"Your ACT score in math is high enough to exempt you from this course. But you really should take some kind of math course." Again, he gave me back the enrollment card. My fear began to take root.
I soon discovered my liberal arts and sciences adviser was a language professor. That only added to my phobia.
When I went back to see him during the next enrollment period, my adviser was trying to push foreign language classes on me. I had a silly notion of becoming a computer science major, and, not being entirely clueless, thought I needed some more math classes.
My adviser gave me a dumb-bounded站ed. "Well, I don't know
about that, but I really do think you should take another foreign language course besides French."
That's when I sunk into the lowest depths of my phobia. Whenever enrollment came around, I would shake uncontrollably, become nau-
cle.
seated and break out in a cold sweat. Fortunately, I entered the School of Journalism just in time. By then, I learned to take the right precaution — to ignore the advise of my "advisers" — and, slowly, my phobia began to disappear until just recently.
With just a month left until graduation, the nightmares are starting to reappear. And it's always the same. I am walking down the hill, my family proudly sitting in the stands knowing they no longer have to support me. I am getting older and I receive my diploma. He looks through his stack of diplomas.
"Shear, Shear ... I'm sorry Miss
Shear, but you are three hours short
of receiving your degree. You still
need to take a Math 101 course."
IN-COMING!
INFLATION
UHLG
University Daily Kansan
Fame and fortune a terrible fate
It's just human nature, I guess.
Most of us fail to appreciate how good we've had it until we see the ordeals that others who are less fortunate have had to endure.
Mike Royko Columnist
This struck me when I read what Frank Cashen, the general manager of the New York Metrs, had to say about his star pitcher, Dwight Gooden.
PETER HARRIS
In announcing that Gooden, 22, would enter a drug rehabilitation program, the grief-striken Cashen said, "This is a terrible thing, one of the saddest things I've ever had to do in baseball. I have been agonizing over it for the last 48 hours.
"The sudden fame and fortune he achieved is nice. But we sort of robbed him of his vouch."
He was referring to the fact that he became a star pitcher, call the longer lenght.
His sad fate has made me look back on my early years and realize how much I missed them.
Little wonder that Gooden took to snorting expensive white powder to relieve the emotional anguish of being had his youth plucked from him.
Think about that — what a terrible loss, to be robbed of one's youth in exchange for fame and fortune.
be in Texas, where I made the acquaintance of a rustic father-figure named Wilson, who had three stripes on each sleeve.
Before dawn, he would awaken us by playfully shouting, "Git your ace out of bed and git on the road in 10 minutes."
Once we were out on the road, Sgt. Wilson would spend the next 12 or so hours entertaining us with remarks like: "RayKain, cain't you run no faster than that? . . . now we're gain' on a nice 10-mile hike with full equipment
At age 19 I was fortunate enough to
... Rico, git your ace over that obstacle course ... you call those boots shiny? ... you call that carbine clean?"
I'm sure that many members of my generation knew someone exactly like Sgt. Wilson during their youths.
And I realize how luck I was to have spent that portion of my formative years with him. It's chilling to think of what might have happened if I had been cursed with the capability of throwing a baseball 95 miles an hour to a precise spot.
Then I, too, might have found myself caught up in the drudgery of having to pitch a baseball game every fourth or fifth day. The awesome responsibility of playing baseball. What a sad way to squander one's precious youth.
Then there was my 20th year. Like thousands of other young men of my generation, I spent it frisking boyishly about a lovely land called Korea. We trockled on one side of Korea and hundreds of thousands of Chinese
youths frolicked on the other side.
But for our good fortune in not being able to whip in a sharply-breaking curve ball, we, too, might have been forced to spend our 20 years as did Gooden: the youth-draining regimentation of spring training in Florida; another summer of being confronted by hostile batters and domineering umpires; being bombarded by the ear-shattering din of thousands of shouting fans, and accosted by the menacing pencils and scorecards of the dreaded autograph-hunters.
And somebody said war was heir?
All that suffering, and for what? As General Manager Cashen said, mere fame and fortune. A million and a half a year, plus endorsement fees.
And with it, the enormous, youth-draining pressures of having to figure out how to spend it.
And somebody said war was hell?
And I'm sure that you could find many of today's more fortunate 22-year-olds who will share Cashen's regret that the less-fortunate Gooden had been robbed of his youth.
I'm sure they would say, "You ask if I would give up these pleasant youthful pursuits for the cruel grown-up world of playing baseball? For more fame and fortune? What do you think I am — a masochist?"
And remember one other thing. Because he pitches in the National League, when he takes a hit, the poor lad had to take batting and bunting practice.
Isn't there something in the child labor laws to cover such cruelty?
Mailbox Think before acting
First, I would like to clarify that I am not homosexual, nor do I condone homosexuality. However, I understand when homosexuals lash out against "homophobia" because, in a sense, it does exist. Homophobics, in my book, are not necessarily those who do not condone homosexuality, but people who go "bleugh!" when confronted with it, showing an irrational fear and/or hatred of homosexuals. Homophobia is when someone is treated as sub-human and as unworthy of consideration because of their homosexuality.
I think that homosexuality is in the same ballpark as, say, casual sexual intercourse. A homosexual person does not need self-righteous condemnation, for that will merely alienate him. For Christians, this means remembering that God hates the sin but loves the sinner.
I guess the point of difference I have with my homosexual friends is that I think homosexuality is a problem to be overcome, while they do not think it is a problem. But that does not keep me from being open to it, because we allow our friends to only the sinless ones, we'd have no friends (not even ourselves!).
So the next time you run into homosexuality, think again before reacting, and you may gain a friend; not a "queer" friend, but one just like many others who have the qualities and failings of human beings.
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, senior
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 9, 1987
5
Now there's more than one way to get through college.
Wordsworth's Prelude vs. Honda's Prelude:
Worlds in Collision.
As Thomas Mora said shortly before his untimely demise, "There is no hurt on earth that is beyond heavenly help."
How does this simple, poignant, powerful thought relate to the inherent tension evident in the contrast between Wordsworth's immortal The Prelude and that more recent (and better recog-nized) offering from one of Japan's pre-eminent artists, The Honda Motor Corporation?
First, let's consider the facts.
Poem vs Car Student Preferences
Honda's Prelude Wordsworth's Prelude
Wordsworth's Prelude vs. Honda's Prelude: Worlds in Collision.
As Thomas More said shortly before his untimely demise, "There is no hurt on earth that is beyond heavenly help."
How does this simple, poignant, powerful thought relate to the inherent tension evident in the contrast between Wordsworth's immortal *The Prelude* and that more recent (and better recognized) offering from one of Japan's pre-eminent artists, The Honda Motor Corporation?
First, let's consider the facts.
Poem vs Car Student Preferences
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If you want to get ahead in college, it helps if you choose a brilliant roommate. Like a Macintosh personal computer. And now there are two models from which you can choose.
First, there's the Macintosh Plus-now widely accepted by students at colleges and universities all across the country.
It comes with one 800K disk drive and a full megabyte of memory (which is expandable to four).
For those of you who need even more power, there's the Macintosh SE.
It comes with all of the above. As
well as a built-in 20-megabyte hard disk, for storing up to 10,000 pages. Or if you prefer,you can add a second built-in 800K floppy drive.
The SE also gives you a choice of two new keyboards, one with function keys for special applications.
And it has an internal expansion slot so you can add new power without performing major surgery. Like a card that lets you share information over a campus-wide network. Or another that lets you run MS-DOS programs.
With either Macintosh, you'll be
able to take advantage of the latest most advanced software.
Like idea processors that outline your thoughts. Word processors for writing, editing and checking your spelling.And communications programs that give you 24-hour access to valuable information.
So no matter which model you decide on-you'll be able to work much faster, better and smarter.
KU Bookstore Burge Union Computer Store 864-5697
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© 1987 Apple Computer Inc. Apple and the Apple logo are registered trademarks of Apple Computer Inc. Macintosh is a trademark of Apple Computer Inc.; MS DOS is a registered trademark of Microsoft Corp.
6
Thursday, April 9, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
... and then I see Wilbur go around to the back of the barn carrying this shovel and he's got this wild look in his eyes and he is like real nervous and then I notice he's trying to buy this big plastic bag which at first I figure is just full of manure but then I start to wonder what the hey is going on and then...
Mr. Ed spills his guts.
Tornado
While victims were lying on the lawn, ambulance drivers attached tags to their wrists, which explained their injuries and helped speed up the emergency room process.
to the emergency room.
Continued from p. 1
The hospital also was working under unusual conditions yesterday. The outpatient emergency entrance was blocked because of construction, said Cindy Hornberger, clinical coordinator of the emergency department. To be admitted, the victims had to go
Once victims were admitted to the emergency room, nurses evaluated their wounds to determine which were the most serious. The procedure is known as triage, or sorting.
In addition, the hospital faked a power outage, because of the storm, from 2 p.m. to 2:30 p.m.
"We follow this procedure to decide which patients are the sickest so we can treat them in the best manner." Hornberger said.
through the emergency room doors.
Incoherent cries filled the emergency room hallways as Mari Elizabeth Nothern, Topeka fresh
Four fake victims in critical condition were rushed immediately to surgery, and two others were "flown" by helicopter to Kansas City for special treatment at one of the city's hospitals. Hornberger said.
man, pleaded with a nurse to stay by her side. Northern feigned severe head and arm lacerations.
Because spring is tornado season, the national Weather Service in Topeka recommends several ways to go in the event of a tornado.
"Go to a basement if at all possible." James Hayes, weather service specialist, said. "If that isn't possible then go to a central
part of the house, a room with no windows or a closet."
Hayes says it also was wise to be protected by a mattress, or something heavy, in case of flying debris.
Joe Eagleman, KU professor of meteorology, said the southwest part of a house was the worst place to be during a tornado because the walls could cave in, or debris could fly in from surrounding windows.
"The northeast part of the house is the safest place to be in a room," he said, "and the small. the room you take cover in, the better."
Mall
On Campus
Continued from p. 1
while not permitting construction of a suburban mail.
Zacharias said yesterday that he knew of two mail developers that already had options on suburban Lawrence property. Two others were looking for land, including Sizerel Realty, which was the city's first developer of record.
Tom Schmitz. a JVJ official, said
Don Jones, JVJ vice president, had said before the election that JVJ would probably try to develop a suburban Lawrence mall if the downtown mall were rejected.
Duane Schwada, president of Town Center Venture Corp., a group of local investors that was working with JVJ. didn't return phone calls.
On Tuesday night, Duane Morris, chairman of the Keep Downtown Downtown Committee, a group that had campaigned for a pro-m vote on one of the referendum questions, said downtown merchants feared that a suburban mall would destroy downtown.
JVJ was studying the situation and refused to comment further.
"The Musical Tradition of Latin America," a Brown Bag Lunch, is scheduled for 11:30 a.m. today at 109 Lippincott Hall.
"Royal Lichtenstein Circus",
sponsored by the St. Lawrence
Catholic Center, is scheduled for
nono day on the Watson Library
The KU baseball team is scheduled to play Baker University at 1 p.m. today at Quigley Field.
A Latin American Solidarity Rice and Beans Dinner is scheduled for 6 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
- The KU Chapter of the National Organization for Women is scheduled to meet at 7:30 p.m. today in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union
A Native American Poetry Reading is scheduled for 8 p.m. today in Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas Union.
A student recital with the KU Trombone Choir is scheduled for 8 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
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As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20, 1970 in the saving of furniture, art objects, and invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present the Kansas Union with a gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarship/awards from the interest on the gift.
Qualifications
- Regularly enrolled students at the University of Kansas at the time of application (spring term) and at the time of receipt of the award (fall term).
- Service to the University and/or the Lawrence community.
- Scholarship, financial need and references will be of minimal consideration in application reviews.
Applications
- Applications must be received by 5:00 p.m., Monday, April 20, 1987 in the SUA office, Kansas Union. Interviews to be held 5:30 p.m., Wednesday, April 22, 1987.
- Applications available at SUA office, Kansas Union, 864-3477.
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University Daily Kansan
Arts/Entertainment
Thursday, April 9, 1987
7
Concert to feature soloists
By JERRINIEBAUM
Staff write
When Dave Cooper, Leavenworth senior, was in fourth grade, he thought playing the trombone would rake him taller.
And his father, a junior high and high school band teacher, wanted him to play in the band.
He wanted to be tall because he wanted to play basketball. He thought trombone players were shorter than the drummer to stretch to play the instrument.
"Hewas probably my first tolerator," Cooper said about his father his first trombone teacher.
Cooper will play a trombone solo with he Concert Band at 8 p.m. Monday in Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Kurthy Hall. He will be one of two featured student soloists. Cynthia Mitchell, Kansas City, Kan, senior, will play a trumpet solo with the University Band.
"I got a 'one', " he said. Then he smiled and said, "I got a new horn."
Playing the trombone didn't make Cooper taller, but it gave him something to work on. He remembered practicing one and a half hours a day during the week and three hours a day on weekends when he was a seventh grader. He wanted to do well in a music contest.
Cooper didn't plan to major in music when he came to the University, but after performing in every ensemble a trombone player can play in at KU. Cooper decided to major in fine arts with an emphasis in trombone performance.
Cooper has directed the Jazz
Ensemble II since August and has composed several pieces for jazz bands. "A Little Rain" was performed by the Jazz Ensemble I on an album that it produced last year. He hopes to hear "Doc's Baby Blues," a song he dedicated to the band director's new baby earlier this year, on the group's next album.
Ron McCurdy, assistant professor of music and director of Jazz Ensemble I, said Cooper was a "rare gem" in the music world.
He said Cooper's natural talent and his desire to write, arrange and perform good music would make him a successful musician.
"The sky is his limit," McCurdy said.
Cooper has spent the past two summers in Florida performing with the Walt Disney World All-American College Marching Band. Two years ago he played his trombone for the five daily performances, and last year he was assistant director.
In February, Cooper auditioned for a year-long internship with the Epocet Institute of Entertainment Arts. He hopes to get the job, but if he doesn't, he will start auditioning for military bands.
In addition to working toward his degree, Cooper loads boxes for the United Postal Service in Lenexa.
"That's work," Cooper said. "You don't sweat when you play trombone, unless you're in front of the Magic Castle or something. . . You're not working. You're entertaining."
Cooper, 26, isn't sure what he'll
BENEDETTE FLORENZI
Amy Rhoads/KANSAN
Cynthia Mitchell Kansas City, Kan., senior, practices for her trumpet soli. Mitchell will perform Monday evening with the University Band.
"There's nothing like hearing what you've written or arranged played," he said.
be doing next year, but he says he wants to perform and write music.
Cooper will perform a trombone solo in "Turn Yourself Around," a bossa nova pop tune by Dave Wolpe, in Monday's concert.
'You don't sweat when you play trombone, unless you're in front of the Magic Castle or something. You're not working. You're entertaining.'
— Dave Cooper trombone soloist
Mitchell will perform Clifton Williams' "Dramatic Essay," a solo she said was a popular piece that many trumpet players aspired to play.
She performed the piece during spring break at an audition with the United States Air Force band in Nebraska. Her performance earned her a four-year paid position in the Air Force Band of the Golden Gate in San Francisco beginning this summer.
"I'll have to go through basic training." she said.
She said having the opportunity to play in a band would make the training worth it.
"Whenever I have time, I just pick up my horn and play, wherever I am," she said. "It's not work. It's fun."
Mitchell started playing the trumpet in fifth grade. She chose to play the drums, but her school instructor wanted Mitchell and the other beginning drummers to play the bells before they learned to roll and beat the drums.
"I didn't want to play bells. I wanted to play drums." she said.
So she decided to play horn. She said that she didn't remember exactly why she chose the trumpet.
"I think maybe one of my friends was playing trumpet, and I wanted to sit by him." she said.
Now Mitchell, 23, is a third-year member of the KU Orchestra and a member of the Kansas Brass Quintet, an ensemble of University faculty members. Mitchell earned a degree because of her musical ability.
Roger Stoner, associate professor of music, plays trumpet in the quintet and gives Mitchell private trumpet lessons.
He said that Mitchell had a combination of range, endurance, flexibility and style that was unusually mature for her age.
"She can make it sound like it's great music as opposed to an exercise." Stoner said.
Stoner said that Mitchell's position with the Air Force would provide her with enough pressure to become an exceptional musician.
"She'll have that horn on her face three hours every day," he said.
In addition to playing in the orchestra and the quintet, Mitchell played with the Symphonic Band for three years and the Marching Band for two years. She had to stop playing with the two groups because she didn't have enough time to perform in all of the groups and graduate on time. She will receive a bachelor's degree in fine arts, with an emphasis in trumpet performance, this spring.
Dave Cooper, Leavenworth senior, will play a trombone solo with the KU Concert Band at 8 p.m. Monday in Murphy Hall.
Amy Rhoads/KANSAN
KU bands prepare for a musical week
Staff writer
By JERRI NIEBAUM
The Symphonic Band, the top KU concert band, will perform at 3:30 p.m. Sunday under the direc- tors of the Orchestra, director and professor of bands.
The performance will feature Charley Oldfather, professor emeritus of law and a local actor, with a group of 70 students in a rendition of Aaron Copland's "A Lincoln Portrait." Oldfather will narrate the words of Abraham Lincoln as the band plays.
Sunday's concert also will feature Zuohuang Chen, associate professor and director of
orchestra, as he directs the band in his final performance at the University before returning to China to direct the Central Philharmonic Orchestra of Beijing Chen has been an instructor at the University for two years.
University in Springfield.
Chen will direct the band to the "Overture to the Marriage of Figaro." He also will direct the KU orchestra in the University Theatre and music and dance departments' production of the opera this weekend.
A third feature of the Symphonic Band's performance will be a world premiere of "Symphony for Winds, Opus 19," by John Prescott, a KU graduate. Prescott received his doctorate degree in music last spring and now directs music at Southwest Missouri State
At 8 p.m. Monday, the Concert Band, under the direction of Thomas Stidham, assistant director of bands, will perform in a concert that also will feature the University Band, under direction of James C. Barnes, assistant director of bands.
The Concert Band of about 70 students will perform a fairly traditional band concert with "Boys of the Old Brigade," "Incapitation and Dance" and "Light Cavalry Overture."
The University Band of about 65 students will stipend tradition with "The Texans." a composition of old cowbones tunes that Barnes wrote for Texas' 150th birthday last year.
They also will play an Irish tune
called "Ye Banks and Braes O'Bonnie Doon," a slower "Serenata," and a John Phillips Sousa march, "The Fairest of the Fair."
The University Band is the youngest of the three concert bands and is comprised mainly of non-music majors. In the early 1970s, the band broke away from the other two bands and started playing lighter, easier tunes for the novice musicians.
In February, the Symphonic Band and the Concert Band performed at a Kansas Music Educators Association annual convention in Wichita. They were the only bands chosen from a taped audition in a state competition.
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TEMPLIN CASINO PARTY
Saturday, April 11, 1987 8:00 P.M.-1:00 A.M.
WHOISON
A Formal Gambling Event Featuring Dance Music and Live Entertainment
AUST HAMMER
GREGORY SANDOW
MODERATOR
PANEL DISCUSSION
Catch the Fever of the New Music Movement Philip Glass Virgil Thomson Gregory Sandow
A meet the Composer/Mid-America Art Alliance Program
Panel Discussion Living Composers Communicating With Their Musicians and Audientes.
1:30 p.m.
Sunday, April 12, 1987
Liberty Hall, Lawrence
Free and Open to the Public
This Program is made possible by the support from the Kansas Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts, through their participation in the Mid-America Arts Alliance, a regional arts organization, and Meet the Composer, Inc
Don't Forget:
The Kronos Quartet in Concert
8.00 p.m., Sunday, April 12 1997
Cratton-Preyer Theatre Tickets
on sale in the Murphy Hall
Rest Office
V
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Presented by the University of Kansas Concert and Chamber Music Series
8
Thursday, April 9, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Mozart's 'Figaro' gives clever lines that coax smiles
The Marriage of Figaro is a 8 p.m. tomorrow and Saturday at Cradle-Prasoner Theatre, in Murphy Hall. Tickets are available at the Murphy Hall box office and are $4.50 and $3.50 each. Tickets cost $9 and $7 for the general public and $8 and $6 for senior citizens and other students.
"The Marriage of Figaro," Mozart's comic opera, opened Tuesday night at Crafton-Preyer Theatre with a strong performance by the University Theatre and department of music and dance.
Gil Chavez
Columnist
Under the fine direction of Zhuhuang Chen, the orchestra was the evening's star, but that is to be expected. Mozart's mischievous score coaxes a smile that doesn't leave until long after the final scene.
The versatile scenery on a revolving stage doesn't distract from the performance. The opera is set in a chateau outside Seville, Spain.
It opens with Figaro comparing the height of his beloved Susanna to the length of his wedding bed. She fits.
But Count Almaviva also desires Susanna's measurements.
When Figaro learns of this, he plans a small revenge against his master. But the plan is soon bungled, and the family must find an alternative, neatly inspired plans and counter-plans.
Cherubino, wide-eyed page boy.
played by Amy Christian, disrups many of the plans with his unrestrained infatuation with Susanna.
"Figure" first opened in Vienna in 1786. It seems as lively as ever, although it has suffered some minor indignities.
It is the first of three operas Mozart wrote for Lorenzo da Ponte's librettos. Originally written in Italian, it is performed in English. This is the operatic equivalent of colorization.
In fairness, Edward Dent's translation fits surprisingly well with the score, and gives the audience opportunity to enjoy the clever lines. Sometimes, however, the English clunks against the music.
against Strong singing makes these flaws easily forgiven. Kenn Woodward and Stephanie May Humes as the servants, Figaro and Susanna, are a charming couple.
They get exceptional support from Jeffrey Nolte and Evelyn Brabant as well.
Mozart wrote "Figaro" when he was at the apex of his wealth, so its mood is lighter than "Don Gionani," which was written a year later, when he began his long descent into debt. Mozart was staging his own concerts at the Burgtheater in Vienna rather than depending on royal patronage.
He encountered difficulty in receiving approval for the performance because it presented the servants too favorably and ridiculed the count. But for all its subtle politics, it still is a love-play.
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GRADUATE STUDENTS
You've got a lot at stake in this Student Senate Election
Possible loss of the Graduate Student Travel Fund;
The raising of out-of-state tuition;
Enactment of the 100% fee waiver for GTA's;
The taking away of funds for Graduate Student Organizations.
Which coalition will work for you?
VOTE TODAY April 9th
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 9, 1987
9
Turnout low for Senate elections
y a Kansan reporter
The decision to have Student Senate elections in the spring instead of the fall allowed voting to take place outdoors in beautiful spring weather. But it didn't increase the voter turnout much in the first day of polling.
One thousand eight hundred thirty students turned out to vote yesterday, said Tom Moore. Senate election committee co-chairman. In the fall elections, at least 1,500 students voted on the first day.
"They had everything there work
Voting began at 8 a.m. and lasted until 7:15 p.m. Today, voting will begin at 8 a.m. and end at 5 p.m.
Jason Krakow, Bottom Line presidential candidate, said he was disappointed by the turnout.
ing to their advantage if they wanted to vote." Moore said.
poem:
"Possibly people don't want to do anything other than be out in the sun.
Voting is not a priority for them," he said.
Voting took place smoothly yesterday at polling centers outside Watson Library, Wescoe Hall, Summerfield Hall and the Kansas and Burge Unions, Moore said.
The largest turnout was at Wescow, where about 575 people voted.
sad.
Among those who voted, some were confused by the computer-processed ballots. Also, many students forgot to take their KUIDs back after they voted.
Several presidential and vice presidal candidates stood outside Wescoe all day, urging students to vote.
Chris Arth, Olathe senior and a Wescoe poll worker, said students who had left their IDs behind would be called.
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- A car stereo valued at $200 and an equalizer valued at $100 were taken between 11:30 p.m. Tuesday and 12:30 a.m. yesterday from a KU student's car in the 1500 block of Lynch Court, Lawrence police said.
- Someone took $100 cash between 12:30 p.m. and 1:30 p.m. Monday from a KU student's unlocked room in Lewis Hall, KU police said.
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The University of Kansas
Degree Candidates and Faculty:
Order caps, gowns & hoods Now
All participants, including faculty, doctorate, law, Master's, and Bachelor's candidates, wear traditional regalia during the commencement ceremonies.
Candidates and faculty members may order caps, gowns, and/or hoods by mailing in the order form from the graduation mailing, OR by visiting Booth 1 on level four of the Kansas Union between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. on any weekday until Friday, April 24. Beginning Monday, March 30th.
10
Thursday. April 9, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Foreign teachers study U.S. culture
By PAUL SCHRAG
Staff writer
Walking down a hall in Lawrence High School yesterday afternoon, Grazyna Siedlecka-Orzel notified students' clothing styles.
"Some of them are quite shocked
Polish educational super-
visor said.
Marina Stros, a professor from Yuqoslavia, noticed the jammed pipe.
"My students would be amazed at how many students have cars," she said.
But Siedlecka-Orzel, Stros and 13 English teachers from 13 other countries paid the most attention to Lawrence High School as an example of how young people are educated in the United States.
The 15 visiting educators were
participating in a week-long seminar on contemporary culture and life in the United States, sponsored by the KU American studies program. The Academy for Educational Development in Washington, D.C., selected KU to sponsor the event.
"This is one of the best ways to foster international understanding," said Rebecca Cardozo, the group's escort from the State Department.
The visit to Lawrence High School was the first observation activity for the visiting educators, who listened to presentations by KU faculty members Monday and Tuesday.
Between visiting high school classes, talking with students and teachers and listening to speeches by administrators, the visitors discussed topics as varied as the countries they represented.
Siedlecka-Orzel, who lives in Warsaw, painted a grim picture of life in Poland.
"We are more and more oppressed by the government," she said. "Everyday life is difficult. The people are tired."
She said that prices of consumer goods were increasing and that shortages were common. To maintain their standard of living, many Poles have to work more than one job.
"This is done on purpose by the government because they know that if the people are tired, they don't have time to think of freedom," she said.
Siedlecka-Orzel said some Polish youth imitated U.S. cultural trends.
"They look at America
where it's the rich and
the poor, but they
hate the man." Everything that is
Maria de Ghenadenkin, an Argentinean university professor, said she thought competition put a lot of pressure on U.S. students.
American is the best, they think."
"You want to be the first and the best," she said. "You may be too strict with yourselves. Sometimes I wonder, 'Are they happy?'"
Roberto Jimenez of Venezuela said many people in his country received impressions of the United States from television shows such as "Dynasty," "Dallas" and "Falcon Crest."
He said many Venezuelans followed professional baseball in the United States and Canada because about 10 Venezuelans played in the major leagues.
Two injured as car motorcycle collide
By a Kansan reporter
A KU student was involved in a car-motorcycle collision Tuesday night in which two people were injured.
According to the Lawrence police report, a 1900 Harley-Davidson motorcycle driven by Paul A. Vervynn, Lawrence resident, was eastbound on 23rd Street at about 8 p.m. when a 1986 Honda four-door driven by Pamela S. Kukorin arrived north into the street from the driveway of The Malls Shopping Center.
Kiesling told police that she was
turning left to go westbound on 23rd Street.
Verynck swersed his motorcycle to the left but could not avoid being struck by Kiesling's car.
Mary Vervynck's right leg and ankle were fractured by the car's bumper, the police report said.
The impact threw Vervynck and his passenger, Mary Vervynck, off the motorcycle.
Paul Veryvnck was treated at Lawrence Memorial Hospital but not admitted. Mary Veryvnck was admitted and is in fair condition, a nursing supervisor said yesterday. Kiesling was not injured in the accident.
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FILMS: help plan, promote and coordinate the film program.
FINE ARTS: assist in the planning and coordinating of cultural programs; i.e., art fairs, performing arts, and literary readings.
FORUMS: help plan and promote in lecture oriented activities.
SPECIAL EVENTS: the concert producing entity is looking for help in the following areas: public relations, usher/security communications/marketing, stage manager, graphic design. and administration.
INDOOR RECREATION: help run games and tournaments.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 9, 1987
11
KU theatre student changes light into art
By LAURA BOSTROM
Staff writer
David Neville spent opening night of "The Marriage of Figaro" sitting in the balcony, fretting.
Neville, Wichita senior,
designed the lighting for the KU
operatic production in Crafton-
Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall,
and like any artist, he was
concerned about the finished product.
Neville recently won the top award from Wichita State University's theater scene and costume design exhibition for his set design for a 1985 KU production of "Twelve Angry Men."
But set design is secondary to his lighting work, he said.
Wichita State's competition is the only one of its kind in the United States, said Delbert Unruh, associate professor of theater and media arts and one of Neville's teachers.
Neville's theatrical career,
which has included a little acting,
some set design and much lighting
design, began more than nine
years ago in a Wichita children's
theater.
Unhrush that Neville had the skills, intelligence and artistic style to make a career from lighting design.
ing design.
And Neville plans to make it a
career, he said. He will move to New York City after summer theater ends in Wichita.
Neville the artist said that he grimaced at being called a "lighting teche". A lighting designer subtly interprets the story and characters for a production's audience. Lighting can shape characters and the entire production, but should not overpower it. Neville said.
"There's an old saying that they shouldn't come away from the show humming the lighting," he said.
Designers use lighting to enhance a character's development by consistently lightning that person in a certain color, or by lightning the stage to further carry the character's mood.
In "The Marriage of Figaro," Neville's lighting helps the audience see characters who are hard to depict and by their mental limitations.
"It's as much the shadow as the light." Neville said.
"It shows the folly of these people hiding from each other," he said.
In the three-hour production Tuesday night, Neville saw one light that bothered him and that he planned to remedy.
MORRIS & CO. FURNITURE
Darcy Chang/KANSAN
David Neville, Wichita senior, stands between ornate chairs on the set of "The Marriage of Figaro." Nevada, lighting designer for the production, recently won a top award in an undergraduate theater design competition.
Effort called key in job hunt
By CAROLINE REDDICK Staff writer
Graduates of professional schools who are willing to expend some effort usually have little trouble getting jobs, several KU placement directors said.
Julie Cunningham, placement director for the School of Engineering, said that engineering was a high-demand field and that few graduates had problems finding employment.
"You still have to work at it," Cunningham said. "You have to let people know you are available. You've got to go out there and sell yourself. It has much less to do with major or GPA than it does with effort."
Maggie Cartart, placement director for the School of Law, said that 91 percent of 1986 law graduates were employed. She said that the market for graduates was good but that they still had to work at finding the right job.
"You have to try to separate yourself from the rest of the applicants, to make your unique, to draw attention to yourself," Cartarr said.
Fred Madaua, placement director for the School of Business, said, "It's been our experience so far that students who keep their geographical options open and work at their job search have had good success. Students can't sit back and wait for them to come to them. It's the person who works at finding those positions or opportunities that will get the offers.
"It assesses one's values, skills and interests, and will generate alternate occupations based on these," Madaa said. "Based on the way you answer certain questions, it will ask you others and flip you through various careers."
Madaua said that 85 percent of 1986 business school graduates responded to a KU employment survey 30 days after graduation, and 58 percent said they were already employed. Only 22 percent of the graduates were seeking employment, and the remaining graduates were not looking for jobs.
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"The University of Indiana in Bloomington has an intensive one to two-hour course on interviews — how to dress, comb your hair," he said. "And their students are very competitive in the interview process."
Madaus said students who were still unsure of what field to enter should use Sigi Plus, a computer program in 116 Bailey.
Maddaua said students should start preparing for the job search early by going to career fairs and company recruitment programs. Students also should be well-prepared for interviews, he said.
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PICTURE - 13 PARALLETS STRENGTH CASTERDON (ND) [2] (Canada Copyright)
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ALL AT ALLEN FIELD HOUSE
12
Thursday, April 9, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
STUDENT SENATE ELECTIONS TODAY
IMPORTANT NOTICE HERE'S HOW TO VOTE
VOTE FOR (2) CANDIDATES
CANDIDATE
BALLOT
correct
no good
no good
no good
(VOTE to the left
of the name
you've chosen)
SAMPLE
BALLOT
MCS Print Spouse 146303084770453
© 1983 by National Computer Systems, Inc.
To vote, you must bring your student ID to the poll!
All polls open 8:00 a.m.-7:15 p.m. Polling Places Are:
Kansas Union Burge Union Learned Hall Wescoe Fraser Summerfield Hall Strong Hall (Look for outside polls)
TODAY IS THE LAST DAY TO VOTE
- Any Student can vote at any polling place with a valid KUID. All Students elect the President and Vice-President (including Graduate Students and Law Students)
- All Students elect Senators by school Note: Freshmen and Sophomores in LA&S vote for Nunemaker Senators. Juniors and Seniors in LA&S vote for LA&S Senators
- Students living in Residence Halls vote for a Residence-Hall-At-Large Senator.
- Students living off-campus in non-affiliated private accommodations vote for five Off-Campus Senators.
- Non-Traditional Students (students over 24 years of age; married students; students who are parents; students who commute ten or more miles per day; and/or Veterans elect a Non-Traditional-Student Senator.
- Mix'n Match - You do not have to vote for slates of candidates. Choose the students who you feel will best represent you, regardless of their affiliation.
VOTE
Any questions or problems please call 864-3710
Sports
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 9, 1987
13
Stanfield keeping atop of KU baseball
Staff writer
Bv DAVID ROYCF
With runners on first and third and two outs in the bottom of the seventh against the School of the Ozarks on Tuesday, Kansas' leading hitter, Hugh Stanfield, had a chance to end the Jayhawks' 14-game losing streak
Stanfield hit a weak roller to shortstop that ended the game.
"Baseball is tough," Stanfield said before the season started. "It's a game where you have to learn how to handle failure."
Not even Kansas' most consistent hitter of the season could end the losing streak.
Kaupang
When Stanfield graduated from Webster Groves High School in St. Louis, he decided that he wanted to go to a school with a good academic reputation. he said
Hugh Stanfield, KU baseball's leading hitter, joys to first base as he flies out against School of the Ozarks. Despite the out on Tuesday' s 8-7 and 3-2 losses in a doubleheader, Stanfield has enjoyed a successful senior season, batting .36 with six home runs.
"Baseball was something I did to fill my time," he said. "I knew that KU was one of the best in academics, and that's why I came here."
Fred Sadowski/Special to the Kansam
Stanfield said that he learned a lot about baseball when he was six years old.
"I played with guys who were 12 or 13 and was able to hit against them," he said. "It was probably when I was eight that I realized I was a pretty good hitter."
The 5-foot-8 senior began his career as a walk-on and immediately earned a starting position.
In his first year, he started in 36 of the 48 games and hit .364. He finished second in the country with seven hits.
Stanfield did not play organized baseball until he was 13 years old. During his early years of playing baseball, Stanfield toyed with the idea of being a switch hitter, he said.
"I switched hit a little in high school, and its something I'd like to get back to somebody," he said. "It wasn't really hitting from the right side though."
"When I finished second in the country in triples, I gained some attention and realized I had some
God-given talent," Stanfield said. "I took baseball a little more seriously."
Stanfield is usually the shortest player on the field, but he said that his size had not affected his play.
"Someday I may move to the infield, but my speed usually compensates for my height." he said. "If it rays, it has not hurt me at this level."
Coach Marty Pattin said earlier this season that if Stanfield continued to hit the way he had been playing, he would be able to play some professional ball.
Stanfield has hit well above the .300 mark for every year that he has been at KU. This year he is second on the team with a .380 average. David Smith leads the team with a .382 average but only 34 at bats compared to Stanfields' .94.
This year Stanfield broke KU's career hit, at bat and stolen base
This season, Stanfield already has hit six home runs. One of the home runs was taken away when a game was called early because of darkness.
"A coach told me to close my stance more, and I started using a 35 ounce bat instead of 34 ounce, and the insults for the home runs" he said.
Before the season started, Stanfield had hit 10 career home runs. He hit four in each of his first two seasons and two last year.
Stanfield already has earned a degree in communications, but he said that he has not thought about being drafted into professional baseball as much as he should.
"Actually, I am thinking more about getting into law school. That's more definite."
"It's something I have no control of," he said. "I am aware that it could happen, but I am more worried about finishing out strong.
He said. "The records are nice to have, but they really don't show much. I am not going to get a banner or anything for it.
"I am pleased that I will be recognized as being one of the better players in the program. But I am a lot produce of my degree in
communication than the records."
He said that his goals were team oriented.
Stanfield said that his greatest asset to the team was that he provided a spark of inspiration.
"When I am going good, I can really spark the team and get the momentum rolling," he said.
Players given awards at annual banquet
Associate sports editor
By NICOLE SAUZEK
The presentation of awards followed a film highlighting the 1986-87 season. Approximately 1,300 people attended the banquet.
Danny Manning and Cedric Hunter each won three of the 10 awards given last night at the annual men's basketball banquet at the Holiday Inn Holdome 200 McDonald Drive
Manning, KU's outstanding junior forward who won numerous awards during the 1986-87 season, was named the team's Most Valuable Player, and was awarded the Captain's Award and the Rebounding Award. Hunter, who holds the all-time
leading assist records for KU and the Big Eight Conference, was awarded the Captain's Award, the Most Unselfish Player Award and shared the Senior Award with Mark Turgeon.
Turgeon shared the Captain's Award with Manning and Hunter, and was named the Most Inspirational Player on the Javahw team.
"Mark and Ced have been good friends to all of us," Manning said after he received the MVP Award. "I'm going to miss them."
Hunter was also honored with the creation of the Cedric Hunter Award. The award is modeled after the Willie Pless Tackler of the Year Award
Scooter Barry received the Academic Award; The Most Improved Player Award went to freshman Jeff Gueldner; and Junior Chris Piper received the Defensive Player Award.
established last year to honor Pless the all-time leading tackler at Kansas and in the Big Eight. The Hunter award will be given to the player who leads the Jayhawks in assists.
Milt Newton was the first Jayhawk to receive the $100,000 Palmer Family Scholarship Award. The gift was made anonymously last semester—the family's name was announced last night. The Palmer Family Award is the first fully endowed
scholarship created at Kansas.
The award was established to hon or the player who maximized his performance on the court and in the classroom.
Coach Larry Brown received a portrait of himself, which will hang in the picture gallery that circles the lobbies in Allen Field House. Brown and the team members were given a standing ovation for their efforts during the season.
"It is a thrill to be here with this team," Brown said. "I always look back on the season to see if the team played to its potential. In doing that, I think this team has a lot to be proud of."
Campanis prompted to resign
United Press International
A Dodgers spokesman said owner Peter O'Malley asked for and received the resignation. The team said executive vice-president Fred Claire would temporarily handle Campanis' duties.
LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles Dodgers Vice President Al Camanis, who told a national television audience blacks lacked the " necessities" to become baseball managers, yesterday resigned under pressure from team officials and political and civil rights figures.
Asked if he thought racial prejudice still existed in baseball, Campanis said, "No, I don't believe it's prejudice. I truly believe that they may not have some of the necessities to be, let's say, a field manager, or perhaps a general manager."
"The only thing I can say is that you have to pay your dues when you become a manager," Campanis said. "Generally, you have to go to minor leagues. There's not very much pay involved, and some of the better-known black players have been able to get into other fields and make a pretty good living in that way."
On the ABC program "Nightline" Monday, Campans was asked by host Ted Koppel why there were no campers in the war and who owners or owners in the major leagues.
On Tuesday, Campaigns released a statement apologizing for the comments and called the interview, "the saddest moment of my entire life."
Campanis played alongside Jackie Robinson in 1946 when Robinson broke into organized baseball as a members of the Montreal Royals, a Dodger farm team.
TOMMY WILSON
Coleman picked by Tampa Bay
Settina prettv
Darcy Chang/KANSAN
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — Michael Ray Richardson, banned by the NBA last season when he tested positively for cocaine a third time, was the first player selected in the United States Basketball League draft yesterday.
Norris Coleman, of Kansas State University, is the first grounded player in the first round by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
Pat Clark, Des Moines, Iowa, junior, sets the ball to a teammate during a volleyball game. Clark and some friends played volleyball yesterday afternoon in the sand pit on the south side of Robinson Center.
United Press International
Richardson, who has hunted for a team to play with since he was banned in February while playing for the New Jersey Nets, was selected by the Long Island Knights. Richardson was the only former NBA player taken in the first round.
The rest of the first-round selections included Tyrone Bogues of Wake Forest by the Rhode Island Gulls, Ron Moore of West Virginia State by the Miami Tropics, David Popson of North Carolina by the West Palm Beach Stingrays, Brian Rowson of North Carolina by the Jersey Jammers, Tommy Amaker of Duke University by the Staten Island Stallions and Andre Moore of Loyola by the Philadelphia Aces.
Three-run homer lifts KC to 9-3 win
United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Buddy Biancalana hit a three-run homer, and Steve Balboni added a solo shot last night, powering the Kansas City Royals to a 9-3 victory over the Chicago White Sox.
Kansas City's Charlie Leibrandt had a no-hitter through five innings, until Gary Redu doubled to left in the sixth. The left-hander lost the seventh when Ozzie Guillen doubled and scored on a Ron Karkovice single.
Leibrandt, 1-0, allowed three hits in his seven innings, walking two and six in the game.
Floyd Bannister, 0-1, lasted only three innings for Chicago, giving up nine hits and six runs, all earned.
Biancalana's home run was only the sixth of his major-league career, spanning parts of six seasons and 258 games. It was also the first right-handed homer for the switch-hitting shortstop.
The Royals pounded out 15 hits in the game, and every Royals starter except Frank White hit safely in the game.
Kansas City jumped on Bannister for a 2-10 lead in the second innning. Jackson singled, Balboni walked, and Jordyn's northeast corner's own double into the left-field corner.
The Royals then sent 10 men to the
Jackson got his first RBI of the season in the sixth. He increased Kansas City's lead to 9-0 when he doubled in the right-field corner to score Tartabull, who had singled leading off the inning.
plate in the fourth inning. Jackson began and ended the frame by striking out.
In between, Balboni singled and Hearn stroked his second double of the night, setting the stage for Biancana's home run, which made it 5-3.
The Royals added two more runs in the fifth. Baldoni led off the innings with a towering 420-foot blast onto the ground that gave Kansas City a 7-1 lead
Kevin Seitzer then singled, prompting Bannister's removal from the game. Seitzer went to second when reliever Jim Winn walked Danny Tartabull, and scored on a single by George Brett.
After a two-out double by Willie Horsford from home with his first-round win, he has his first-round win.
Staff writer
By DIANE FILIPOWSKI
Kansas track office prepares for Relays
Fereshetian said yesterday that he had come to a simple conclusion.
For a month now, Al Feresheitan,
Kansas Relsays manager, has lived in
the men's track office, sorting the
entries for track and field athletes
who will compete in the 62nd annual
Kansas Relsays on April 15-18.
Top participants
"The meet was successful last year because the field was so strong," Fereshetian said. "But this year the race was longer, and every race is outstanding."
Fereshetian said that approximately 1,200 collegiate athletes from 45 universities and 1,400 high school athletes from 95 high schools would compete at Memorial Stadium.
Fereshtian said a strong group of women would represent the San Diego Track Club.
Fereshetian said the running events had the most depth, especially the men's 1,500-meter run, which has eight runners with times in the mile at or under four minutes.
The 400-meter dash will include Sunday Uti, a 1984 Olympian from Nigeria who is competing unattached, but trains with Iowa State's team. Also in the field will be last year's winner, Devon Morris, from Wayland Baptist Junior College in Plainview, Texas.
More than 20 states will be represented, including California, New York Florida and Montana. All of Big Right Conference schools will
Aaron Thipin will represent the San Diego Track Club in the 100-meter dash. Ferroshelian said Thipin was a world-best for the year.
Ray Wicksel, unattached from Phoenix, Ariz., is the entrant with a time of 3 minutes, 56 seconds. He will battle South Dakota State's RD Dehaven, the country's premier middle-distance runner.
Feresheti said there were also 20 unattached athletes who have made NCAA qualifying times and distances, a requirement to compete in the Relays for unattached participants.
In the men's 800-meter run, 28 athletes are entered who have times faster than 1:52. The fastest is recorded at 1:47, which is under the NCAA qualifying time of 1:48.11.
"A lot of good athletes will not qualify for the finals Saturday because the field is so stong," Fereshetian said.
In the 400-meter dash, worldranked Renee Reye, whose entered
time is 51.33, and defending Relays champion Leisa Davis-Knowles, both of San Diego, will battle in the race. The NCAA qualifying time is 53 seconds.
Latonna Sheftfield, also of San Diego, will compete in the 100-meter hurdles. Her entered time of 13.46 is .19 faster than the NCAA qualifying time.
Kansas Relays manager
KU's Courtney Hawkins, who qualified for the NCAA outdoor championships in the 110-meter high hurdles last weekend at the Texas Relays, will compete against Danny Harris, a silver medalist in the 400-meter intermediate hurdles at the 1984 Olympic games.
Al Fereshetian Kansas Relavs manager
The meet was successful last year because the field was so strong. But this year the field is even stronger, and every race is outstanding.'
Fereshetian said Kansas athletes also should make a strong showing in the NCAA.
Kansas All-America Denise Buchanan will compete in the shotput against Big Eight rival Pinkie Suggs of Kansas State. Suggs, also an All-America, and Buchanan finished first and second at the Big Eight Conference Indoor Championships in February.
Both will face Regina Cavanaugh of Rice, the defending NCAA indoor champion, who has thrown over 58 lbs. and 54 feet and Buchanan has thrown 52 lbs.
Fereshetian said Kansas' pole vaulters, who will compete in the collegiate and the invitational division of the event, will face eight vaulters in the invitational division who have vaulted above 18 feet.
Al Oerter, a former Jayhawk and a four-time Olympic gold medalist, will compete in the discus. Eighteen athletes entered in the high jump have jumped 7 feet or better.
Kansas' Ann O'Connor, a recent All-America who has jumped 6 feet in the high jump, will compete against Tammy Thurman, Nebraska and Connie Long, Wichita State.
Septien pleads guilty to indecency
United Press International
DENTON, Texas — Dallas Cowboys placekicker Rafael Septien pleaded guilty yesterday to indecency with a child and was placed on 10 years probation and fined $2,000.
Septiann, accused of fondling a neighbor's 10-year-old child in December, had been indicted on charges of aggravated sexual assault but entered a guilty plea to the lesser indecency charge as part of a plea agreement with W. Johnson of the Denton County district attorney's office.
Johnson said Septien was granted
deferred probation, which means that if he fulfills to the terms imposed by probation officers, he can petition the court in 10 years to have the case removed from his record.
Septien entered the plea before State District Judge John Narsutis, who had been scheduled to try him on the sexual abuse charge. Sexual abuse is a first-degree felony punishable by up to 99 years in prison and a $10,000 fine.
The veteran NFL kicker had maintained his innocence to the charge, which prosecutors said occurred Dec. 27 in the Denton County suburb
of The Colonv.
"The truth is that I am not guilty of this," he said in January after his indictment. "It is totally a misunderstanding."
Cowboys president Tex Schramm issued a statement yesterday, saying, "The matter has been resolved by the court. Septien is still a member of the football team."
Septien, 33, a native of Mexico City is a 10-year NFL veteran. He is the Cowboys' leading career scorer with 874 points.
14
Thursday, April 9, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
。
Sports Briefs
Jayhawks to play Baker Wildcats in doubleheader at Quigley Field
The Kansas baseball team will play a doubleheader against the Baker Wildcats at 1 p.m. today at Quigley Field.
The Jaywaks have not won in their last 15 games, losing 14 and tying one.
During the losing streak, Kansas has lost several games to NAIA competition, including Missouri Western, Washburn and School of
KU reports no men's basketball signees
the Ozarks.
In the past, the Jayhawks had been able to handle NAIA competition. Last year they were 14-7 against NAIA teams camped to 6-5-1 this season.
The Kansas men's basketball team reported no signings yesterday on the first day of the national
Kansas has consistently beaten Baker, though. The Jayhawks have a 43-6 lifetime record against the Wildcats. Last year Kansas beat Baker 25-6.
letter of intent signing period. Players who are considering signing with Kansas include
guards Daron "Mookie" Blaylock and Lincoln Minor of Midland Junior College in Midland, Texas, forward Desmond Clifton of Kansas City Kansas Community College and center Marvin Branch of Barton County Community College in Great Bend.
The signing period lasts until May 15.
Softball team sweeps two from Missouri
The Kansas softball team opened its Big Eight Conference season yesterday, beating Missouri twice in Columbia and raising their record to 17-13.
Brasier, who pitched a complete
Pitcher Roanna Brasier pitched a shutout in the first game and led the Jayhawks to a 8-0 victory. Offensively, Kelly Dowd did most of the damage with a three-run run that included fifth inning, putting KU ahead 3-0.
game and raised her record to 10-4, also went two-for-four with two RBs.
Kansas won the second game 3-2 behind the pitching of Sherry Mach, now 2-4.
"We played well and got two really well-pitched games," said Coach Bob Stanclift. "We needed those two wins to start the conference season. I think those were big wins for us."
THURSDAY
75¢ Pitchers
4 p.m. - 3 a.m.
$1 cover
Fri. Special: All You Can Eat Tacos 4:30-6:30 $2.00
the Sanctuary
7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 843-0540
the Sanctuary 7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 843-0540
"KOREAN NIGHT"
Friday, April 10
7:00 p.m.
McCollum Hall
Admission Free
Features Korean traditional folk
dance, music, movie. Tue Kwon Do
demonstration and food.
2 SALE FOR ROAST BEEF SANDWICHES Roast beef—sliced thin and piled high!
2 FOR $1.99 MILK SHAKES Chocolate. Vanilla or Strawberry 2.99¢ FOR Prices good through Sunday, April 12, 1987 Bucky's come as you are . . . hungry 2120 WEST NINTH
33
Bucky's come as you are . . . hungry 2120 WEST NINTH
JAIL AND BAIL
A Salt-A-Thon for the American Cancer Society
SPONSORED BY:
AKΛ & AXΩ
FRIDAY, APRIL 10th
AKΛ HOUSE 10:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.
ClassifiedAds
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Modern users. Lonely? Bored? Want a new use for that modern gathering dust next to your computer? Meet new people on the K.U. Connection.
Vote Jon Gregor For Residence Hall Senator
EVERYONE IS PSYCHET TO SOME DEGREE.
A Tarot Reading can help you channel that power,
make decisions, and heal the spirit. Tarot
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Gift Certificates! call 043-6061 and hide the anchors!
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AIDS Kills 'hawks dead.
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APRIL 12-16
7-11 PM
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FM91
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Adam, Dedley, Cotter, Jenni, Scott, Joy,
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HILLEL
לולה
Saturday, April 11
KU/K-State/Mizzou
Hillel Party
8:00 p.m.
149 Pine Cone Drive
Note: Reservations for Passover Sader due by April 9.
Paid for by Synchronicity
For more information call Hillel, 749-4242.
KJHX
FM 91
So Like G'Day, eh? Synchronicity, eh?
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Get Something Going!
LEARN TO FLY-GET #4 7hrs K.U credit in
Economy Flight #814-FLYN
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Don't do without the things you really want simply because of today's high prices. You must have the items available in stores are listed at lower prices, and the items on sale in bargain bins on an already low price, since many items in classified are sold by private parties. Don't do without - do it with
If you can't buy it . . . bargain.
Experience the communal living environment of the
Kansan Classifieds
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
864-4358
JEWISH STUDENTS
HILLEL HOUSE 940 Mississippi
Spaces available for summer and academic year, 1987-88.
For more information call Hillel office at 749-4242 by April 12.
The Un-coalition.
Synchronicity
University Community Service Scholarship
Award application deadline is 5 p.m. Monday,
through Friday, office 844-377, fourth floor of
the Kansas Union
Paid for by Synchronicity.
Student Government, not Student Politics.
Synchronicity
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DISIORIENTAION Number 2.1(2) to coming soon to a reality near you Zeep, snad, abgo, flax
DANCE-O-GRAM
Private parties for all
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Have the Hottest Party in Town Rent a Hot Tub
LIBERTY HALL
7.30 & 8.30
WHAT HAPPENED TO
KEROUAC?
FOR RENT
2 Birmingham Townhouse for summer special use. U. B. Call 845-701-0978 between 8 a.m. & 5:00 p.m.
Sublease for Summer One bedroom, adajent to campus, low utilities. Call 841-6833
2 Bedroom apartment for summer sublease. nice.
Room is located in the center of town, pay $250 monthly. mountainwalk. Call 791-493-8021.
3 Bedroom Apartment Summer Sublease: 2
Bedroom Bathroom, waaperous Close to camps
Call 841-7000
3 bedroom apartment available June 1st. Close to
town and campus. Includes洗衣 and dryer.
$450. Utilities paid. Other apartments available.
841-4144
4-Bdrm, 2 full bath, large kitchen, living room.
Brand new furnished apartment. Sublease summer:
Mastercraft Campus Place, Next to Yello Red. Cheap $841-3176
4 Bedrooms available this summer in large loft style with two additional 3-bedroom/month/7.5 unit homes 824-3124
Room in old Remodeled house. Utilities paid.
1 Block from KU. Lida, Lora 7919, 842, 2522
4 Bedroom room near KU. A. Available mid May or June 1. Hardwood floors, lt of windows W.D.
8 Bedrooms, 3 Bathrooms. Adjacent to campus.
No pets. Call 482-9871.
Apartment for Sublet; Spacious 2 bedroom; bather, pool, and tennis courts. Call 841-7896.
Apartments for summer and fall at University Terrace Apartments, 1007 W 7th. 1 Bedroom for summer; 1 Bedroom for fall; furnished $205, plus all utilities: 2 Bedroom for summer; June and July only, $240 unfurnished, furnished $200, plus all utilities: 1 Bedroom for summer; June and July only, $240 unfurnished, $235, plus all utilities 2 Bedroom for August: 1-June 1, $310 unfurnished, $200 unfurnished, plus all utilities Central air on, $250 unfurnished, $235 unfurnished, 4 Bedroom Apartment 41, 1607 W 7th or 841-3230. If no answer call 843-1433.
Aspen West now leasing for Summer. Energy efficient, 1 and 2 bedrooms. 3 blocks of west on Iowa 15th. Private vaults/decks, ceiling fans, no pets. Rental/month, 749-1288. Open house Saturday,
Beautiful large 2 Bedroom in old Remodeled house. 1 block HKU Lida K94-7198, 941-2523
Beauty, eh? Two Bedroom Apartment, Five minutes to Fraser. Low Utilities. Lease for Same Room. Car. A/C.
DON'T DELAY! Sublease. 3 story, 3 Bk, Glenaven Hapten. Car.
Available mid-May for summer sublease. Studio near campus. Water paid. Unique design Call
DON'T DELAY! Sublease. 3 story. 3 BR, Brighaven Apartments. Campus 1 block. MicroFireplace, washer/dryer, more. Great opportunity. Will negotiate. 841-5797.
Excellent location: 2 bedroom apartments in four-plex, carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, and low utilities. Available June 1. Summer Rate 89.00. Enroll at 1148 Hall Avenue and 1341 Ohio St. 842-442-442
Female. Non smoker needed to share co-ed house for summer. 844 69432 or 842-0777.
- emule, nonsmoker, to share condo. 2 blocks off of KU bus局 to route June 1. 1:381-6242
Roommate needed from May 26-august
20. Furnished Tangleywood Apartment. Large
bedroom. Great bargain for $175 a month. Call
749-7498
Female roommate wanted for this summer and
his bedroom apartment at Surprise Place. Call 841-596-2730.
FOR RENT. LARGE ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT, clean, directly located next to the stadium. Rent includes beater, water, and cable television. Available May 20. $300/mo. Call 841-5602.
or Rent. August 1; June 1 through June 1, 1988.
Furnished second floor 2 bedroom apartment.
For two girls and for 3 girls. Outside balcony and no pets.
Phone 843-709-9 a.m. 9 p.m. or 7 p.m. 9 p.m.
For Rent: Large rooms in private home (Basement).
5 minutes from KU & one block from bus line.
Share kitchen. Private entrance: $106.00
+$45 plus utilities $87.97, Call 842-3987 or
843-9848
FREE 25" Color t.v. for summer subleasing. A spacious 2 bedroom apartment with balcony and dishwasher. Great location. Call 843-0537
Great 2 BR house. Sublease now or for summer.
Great for 3 people. I very large br. Call 749-3935.
Have a duplex adventure this summer! Need
a large kitchen, laundry room, rented
Rent request. Call 841-5598.
HEY LOOK AT THIS! Brand new 1 Bidrm. Apt for summer sublet, Close to campus. D W./ A C to boot! 841-7616.
BEST VALUE!
Gatehouse
Large size 1, 2, 3 bedroom apart. on bus route. All have gas heat, appliances, carpet and drapes. Extra storage to choose from. If you want the most room for your dollar, then come see us a 2166 W. 26th or call 843-6446.
Large three bedroom apartment, close to campus May 15. Free rent through May $250 monthly.
Houses, Bedroom Apartments, Sleeping Rooms.
Available June 1st; 2-bedroom apartments. 1,2
and 3-bedroom apartments; and, sleeping rooms.
Near campus. No pets. Call 842-8971.
LEASE NOW FOR FALL. Rooomy 2B bpt apt, location; fireplace, laundry; garage. No pets. Lease & 8KLE Couple price $1000. Moisture resistant in apartment in older house. Spacious, wood floors, fireplace, waer/dryer. $350/mo plus gas & electricity. Will discount for summer petting. Anne.
IF YOU LIKE SPACE & QUIET WE HAVE IT AND YOU CAN STILL WALK TO CAMPUS
Spacious 2 bedroom
Laundry facilities
Waterbed fine
Swimming pool
10-12 month leases
VILLAGE SQUARE
9th & Avalon
842-3040
Modern Split Level 2 Bedroom Apartment available for the summer months. It includes 11/2 baths, water loft, spacious living room, and kitchen. $222/month plus half utilities. Call
Must sublease for Summer. Short walk to campa-
mind, 2 mtr. townhouse. Call 841 8231
Need to sublease Apple Place Place studio apartment for the summer. Available May 1 or asap after May 1. Wate and cable call. Paid 841-4272. Reserve your apartment now! Just 2 short hours from university 1, 3, and 4 bedroom apartments in New York City paid and off street walking. Nets: 841-5500
Reserve your room now! For summer and/or fall Furniture with most utilities paid. Shared cooking and bath facilities. Just 2 short blocks from University with off street parking. No pets
Location
Lifestyle
RESERVE YOUR
UNIT NOW...
FOR SUMMER OR FALL!
Located among 70 acres of rolling hills and trees, you'll enjoy the convenience of being close to campus and area shopping.
Meadowbrook offers a selection of spacious and comfortable studios, 1, 2, or 3 bedroom apartments, and townhouses to fit your lifestyle
meadowbrook
15th & Crestline 842-4200
Roommate needed for summer & 75-88 school
year 4th grade students to townhouse
in Elizabeth, K94-7374
Rooms available for summer and the 1987-88 academic year in the Christian living community "Korona" at Ecumenical Church Ministers. Information come to 1243 Dread or call 845-765-2010.
Share Rent, utilities, and dues; Nice house close to campus; walk to private room on campus or Fair Park; parking available.
SPRING GRADS to Wichita dept. for. rest 38 l/12 bath, appliances, to park, cemtrally treated, excellent condition 475 Available June 1. Call 316-682-3679
Studio available for summer in super api. com,
great maintenance, recreation facilities and
luxury availability I will assume part of expenses
Call 885-9098 after 6:30 p.m.
SUMMER SUBLEASE extra clean. furnished,
two bedroom apartment at Tanglewood Apartments.
Call 749-8073 anytime
SUMMER SUBLEASE: Two bedroom Apt available mid May. New and close to campus: 749-2432
SUMMER SUBLEASE Need two non-smoking females to sublease Trailridge townhouse. Call now! 749-3717.
sublease for summer, studio at Hanover Place Call 749-5440.
SAVE TIME
Find your apartment or rental home in the Kansas City area.
- FREE SERVICE
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Call or stop by.
6600 College Bvld.
Overland Park, Ks.
GREAT PLACES (913) 345-8777
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 9, 1987
15
--accepted
• Lowest utility bills in town
• Gas heat, C-A, D-W
• FF refrig, Disposal
• Quiet location
For more info, call between
HEATHERWOOD
VALLEY
NOW LEASING
FOR FALL
- Short term leases
--apartments--all near KD!
Consider:
• Custom furnishings
• Energy efficient
• Affordable rates
• Variety of floorplans
• Designed for privacy
• Many great locations
• Professional management
Sublease for Summer. Furnished one BR with hift
campus at $395 plus electric, close to
campus at $335.
Sublease for summer Tangweed 2 bedroom
Carpet Sale Call 791-438-2620 Low utility
Cleaners Call 791-438-2620
MASTERCRAFT
offers...
CAMPUS PLACE—1145 Louisianna
841-1429
HANOVER PLACE-14th & Mass.
841-1212
TANGLEWOOD----10th & Arkansas
749-2415
OPEN DAILY 1.5
Sublease Available mid-May 1. b lock from cam-
paner or other room's sparepart.
Copenhagen to open beds, summer 1499-798.
AMENITIES
Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the amenities of Naismith Hall. Applications for fall semester are now being accepted while space remains.
NAISMITH HALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
913-842-4591
Sublease for summer! One large bedroom in two
bedroom apt Mall's Ole English Village
Sub-lease Apt: May 18, 1 bedroom with left, furished, water paid. 841-3939
20-july 5 May rent free $43.00 month Pe-
sonal ballet for summer, studio at Hauwer Place.
Sublease for summer, studio at Hauwer Place.
incentive for summer. Furnished 2 bedrooms, full
campus, campus, near open bars in
california. Call 811-495-3600.
Sublease. Traitrial 3 bedroom, 2/1/2 bath townhouse. Available mid-May, option to lease next fall. One large bedroom with own bathroom. Two bedrooms, sports club facilities. $400 call. 791-4894.
من أجل التسجيل الداخلي.
Southridge Plaza Apts
10 month leases water & cable paid pool
842-1160
Summer Sublub 2 Bedroom Townhouse Pool
349-6497 0499 early-fax 841-1827
adult 3.50 acre
Summer Sublease 3 bedroom Apartment with 2 baths. a. c. d. w. pool. Close to campus. 841-5697.
Summer Sublet Large 3 BR Townhouse. AC Near pool, bus line, cable. Rent negotiable.
**Summer Sublimese** 2 Bdr. Apt. near downtown.
Low utilities. Spacious $729.00 call 81-5979.
**Summer Sublimese** near campus. Great for small
groups. Possible redecoration. Call 81-7474 after 5 p.m.
Summer Sublease. One bedroom luxury apartment has washer/dryer, microwave, access to jezuzu Option to renew lease. $300 per month.
Summer Sublet Coolest in town in town. 1 bed, 2 bath, Dry Stairs, Whirpool, Garage, Ceiling fan, furnished w/ king size beds. $400 per mo. 799.5235.
Summer sublease: 1 bedrooms in new 4 bedroom
townhouse; 2 baths semi furnished. $142 plus 1/4
utilities. Available May 19th Sunrise Terrace,
481-3633.
Summer sublease: 2 bry furnished apart-
ment with lawn. Camp - Neighboring Tanglewood 841-759-9600
Summer Tentners wanted for very nice 4 bedroom house. 2 miles from campus near bus route. Microwave, Dishwasher, beds, and some other amenities. 1/2 plus 1/2 utilities. Call Erix. Evenings, 3:10-10:30.
Summer sublease to females: 1 bdm furnished apt. 1/2 blocks from campus. Call 841-5794
Sunrise Place flownew Available for summer
summer 11/2 baths, perfect for 4 Pools, cosmetics
11/2 baths, perfect for 4 Pools, cosmetics
EDDINGHAM PLACE
14th & Eddingham (next to Gammar)
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- 10 or 12 month
10 or 12 month contract
contract
Satellite T.V.
- Exercise Weightroom
- Free Showtime
- On-Site Management
Fire place
* Energy efficient
Open Daily 3:00-5:00
Saturday 9:00-12:00
841-5444
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Management, Inc
2
Very nice two bedroom apartments available summer/fall. Low utilities, fully carpeted, air conditioning, and washer/dryer included. $150 aslo month. Call 749-2189.
WEST HILLS APARTMENTS 1012 EMERY RD. 841-3800
Now taking reservations for summer & fall Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apartments furnished & unfurnished Great location near campus
DISPLAY APARTMENTS OPEN
Monday-Wednesday-Friday 1:00-4:00
No appointment needed Stop by office located in middle of complex by pool
Person to Sublet apartment for summer Water
Call Tamer at 843-3544 for further information
FOR SALE
1974 WV Bug. Shiny inudey. Put new engine
guaranteed by Metric Motors. $1750.00 814-6600
50-70% off Coach Airline Ticket Credit Cards on
74 Honda 450, all stock, a classic $450.00 O B.O.
842-3362, Dave.
80 Datsun 210 Sedan 2D; Stereo. 36K miles.
owner $1000 Excellent Condition
powered by Valeant
BAND EQUIPMENT - 2 Bass bins 49 x 12 x 19"
EV drivers 600 pair; 2 band FQS 125, Yamaha
FQS 150; Yamaha FQS 175. Bianchi 12 speed bicycle, 21 inch frame, excellent
bianca 12 S
For Sale. One gold Hotton Trumpet and One
Guitar. Call 718-523-6900 or BD or Leo &
Cord $84 4702 or Bee or Leo &
CPA EXAM Study Material Best CPA Review
inquiries only $399. 842-755-9021, after p. 91; 846-755-9021,
after p. 91; 846-755-9021.
Blue Nishikii 12 Speed Touring Bike: new tires
Avalanche: Asking $710 negotiation
843-4060 or 845-4940
open option pricing
option pricing must sell
Bike For Sale Must 183, 643-814
Fuji Epsipe Excellent Condi-
tion Fuji Epsipe Excellent Condi-
tion
Have fun in the sun! Moped for sale -Must sell Must have fun in the sun! Moped for sale -Must sell Must have fun in the sun! Moped for sale -Must sell Must have fun in the sun! Moped for sale -Must sell Must have fun in the sun! Moped for sale -Must sell Must have fun in the sun! Moped for sale -Must sell M
For Sale. Brother HR-15 XL Letter quality daisy
wheel printer. Standard parallel interface, 32 k
buffer, and port for optional keyboard. Used very
little. $200.00, 749.192 @ 6:30 p.m.
For Sale. Bicycle 18" 12 speed Trek, 2 years old,
excellent condition, with pump and front bag.
$225. Pancho, Schaller full sized upright, Mahogany,
602 pieces, $622, nice, with hard shell,
$725. Call 842-805-603
Dining room set. 2 twin beds, small dresser, all air condition. All available May 18. Call Saul 656-7420.
Harman Karden STEREO Ampl. $15, * 3' Reflector TELESCOPE, matheghy tripod, lenses, filters, B/O; PARKA with bed, men's L, $20. $84-5120, 814-6686.
IBM PC/ATX compatible. 1 inch monochrome monitor
with wi-fi card; w/ 32Kb / 512Kb / 1 Gigabit drive.
PC/ATX adapter w/ 32Kb / 512Kb / 1 Gigabit drive.
Must Sell 1855 BMW K10KRT Warranty tl 10/08.
New Pirittire Rack, Tail Shield, Heated Grip. Reynolds Rack with trunk Cornbat seat.
Rockers with $295.00. Make offer 423-3134. Leave message
Leading Edge PC, 640 K, 2 DD, colorSystem, 2 speed CPU, DOS 2.11, LE Word, LE Word Speed 2.02 Also have medium modem ($Ep) Espion BASIC ($Ep) BASIC ($Ep) TUR-BO Pascal ($2) 841-8672 after 6 p.m.
*** MOTHBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
812 E H 749-340 - 6 p.m. Saturday 10: 8 p.m.
512 E H 749-340
MAX'S COMICS. Comic Books, Playbies, Penthouse, etc. 811 New Hampshire.
Nice as he型 typewriter Smith-Corona Memory
immediately! Call at 789-4051 Need cast immedi-
cally! Call at 789-4051
TREK 402 Bicycle. In great condition! What a
Bargain! Call Paul. 843-4684
NOTES now available for variety of classes.
Enhance learning and grades. Call 643-512-3120
For extra help, call 643-512-3123.
Peavey's a best horn with tweeter pack; list $1200
asking $800 everything. Mongo monitor 300 gpm.
www.peavey.com
TYPEWRITERS for sale. Silver-Reed 223 C; correcting selective film/science/correction excellent condition, $105. Smith Corona Galaxie 12 manual, excellent condition, $50.841-4675.
Racing Bike Tunturi 23 bs. 125, with look. Cyclo computer more first $300 takes. 84-2813.
Red carpeting 6 x 9'. Perfect for dorm rooms.
AUTOSALES
computer more than 512 kb/s takes 964-3812.
Redirection of carpet *5* Perfect for dorm rooms.
Floor tile *5*
1981 Pontiac Formula Freihandler 70 000 Miles. New rear shocks, new front suspension. 301 AM F/M Cassette.
1973 Trump Spitfire Convertible 30,000 miles
1974 Trump Spitfire 30,000 Form. Firm 845-0194.
Excellent Mileage Must
1977 Volkwagen Rabbit, Restored, beautiful
fire-tolerant, long-life highway car, free gas or
money, fires long, highway car, free gas or
money.
1979 Conv VW, White body, White top, Excellent condition, $3000, miles 1000, firm Larry, JEWELLE
1963 BMW. Great condition. Must sell. Leaving
tom, will take any call. Can work, evenings only.
79 Ford Mustang; V. 8-32 4 Speed, Stereo,
Custom Wheels; 824-1034 Price Negotiable.
82 Cutlure Superieur: AT, PT, PS, Tlam, AFM Cassu, Cruise, Air, 68,000 miles. Good Condition.
Must Sell- 1970 Chevette 4 cylinders. Automatic Hatchback 87,000 miles, 4 new radial tires. Air conditioning. Break ling (recently paid $90). 1300 ($firm). 911-5533.
New engine, new everything! Dependable Subaru
traveler. Certified Acura 1978, must drive to appreciate $400.00, 84.62 miles.
Sale price: $350.00
Nice Toyota Starlet 21, Air Stere, 3-speed, good condition. Ask $240 Call Alan or Mell.
Found: Two boxes of computer packages:
Southeast of Eudora Call evening; Scott.
LOST—FOUND
Found: A women's gold watch near the Chi-O
ountain. Call Brian at 749-2820 to claim it.
Listen $: 1,000.00. If you can find it, you can keep it.
Listen for Hunt Trust hues on KLZK 108.
Leet. Calculator, HP-215e, Watson Library,
Satday 6. Oh please return no questions asked.
Watton Library, NYC. 850-749-3840.
HELP WANTED
Lost leather black wallet with important documents. Call J. Losada at 842-5630.
AIRLINES CRUISINELS HIRING! Summer Career! Good Pay Travel Call For Guide. Cassette, Newservice! (916) 944-4447 132 Are you good with children? Would you like to be paid to live with a California family and help with a school project? Mail Adres A23, 235 Menino Park, CA 94025 (415) 322-8888 Menino Park, CA 94025 (415) 322-8888
Checkers Pizza has immediate openings for (5) hard working, responsible drivers. Must be 18 years old or older and have own car and insurance. Start paying $3.50/hour, plus commission and tips. Apply in person 2:00 p.m. 8.p.m. daily. Call 212-8421 Yale Road, Equal Opportunity Employer.
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterskiers, gymnastics, tennis, kayaking, paddleboarding, patrics, camping,戏剧, dramas, OR riding. Also kitchen office, maintenance $210 or less. Catering, sheepshead, 765 Lease, N154, Mld. 61003, 316-424-244.
Children's Counselors, Activity Instructors, WSL.
Bus Driver, Cook. Kitchen Manager, Kitchen
Help, Massauwer. Maintenance, Nanny for
Mom, Massauwer. P.O. Box 711,
Boulder, CO 83003 (306) 442-5457
Computer graphics consultants need office manager. Bookkeeping and computer experience a must. If you can think for yourself and take a lead you will want to call, Call411-1510, Designation 1414 W. 4th.
Exchanging private room and bath for evening and weekend help with blind grandmother. Flexible Preference given to older student in care giving or nursing. Acceptable if message mottures at 841-1152.
French interpenetrers wanted for simultaneous translation in a Grain Storage and Marketing course to be held at K-State University June 18-20, 2018. Must have college degree or enrolled in KSU Contact Merla Brookman at (913) 323-6161 for information. 323-6161 jbk@ksu.edu 19. 875 KSU Equal Opportunity Employer
GOVENMENT JOBS. $16,000-$25,200 yr. Now
Hiring Call 805-267-8007
Group leader needed for June and July for seven week course in Grain Storage and Marketing for children and adults with supervisory experience and be sensitive to needs of persons with different cultural background and English required. Responsibilities include: collecting fees, arranging medical care, confirming travel arrangements, driving bus, school bus, classroom and 24 hour availability. Contact Merla Brookman at (013) 523-6164 for more information. Application deadline April 14, 1987. KSU Equal
Housecleaner Needed. Weekly. Will Pay $7 00 Hr
Call 843-463-168, by 6 p.m.
Naisim Hall is taking applications for a full time cook position. Schedule is Tuesday-Saturday, early shift If interested step by step EOE/M/F/IAA
out our "Nanny Network" of over 500 placed by us in CT, NY, NJ, and Boston. One year committed to building a team of professionals, board, airfare. All families precried for your satisfaction. Many families for you choose from: Contact Holding Hops, Inc at 203 424 8142 or NECS Today Show & Hour Magazine
NANNY POSITIONS AVAILABLE: Good salary
Nice Families Dallas, Texas Call 9:39 p.m. (214)
568-780-3000
Nana Finder, i.m. looking for names. Position
with Nana Finder, i.m. make your commitment "POWER.
Must make your commitment."
Summer - Job. Opportunities available with the U.S. Marine Corps—No obligation to be a Marine! Earn between $130 and $400, plus meals & travel. Apply now.
*******
SEARCH EXTENDED. School of Education seeks DORMITORY SUPERVISOR (1) coordinator for DORMITORY SUPERVISION (1) or a related position, requiring secondary students required. DORMITORY ASSISTANTS (4) live in dorm and supervise high school students. Degree preferred. Job description available at Upward Bound, 804 Bayley Hall. Send letter of application, current job description to Upland Bound, 804 Bayley Hall. Hart, Director, Upland Bound, 804 Bayley Hall. C. Hart, Director, Upland Bound, 804 Bayley Hall. University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 69043 (913-
Part-time delivery person needed. Must have own car. Call Peking Restaurant. 749-0030.
Phoneworkers for benefit concert. Fun company.
Good working conditions. Evenings, no ex-
cuse.
Student Draftsman Needed. Architectural detailing on campus projects including preparation of project cost estimates and application of current construction plans. Study feasibility studies, cost estimates, and detailed drawings on campus site planning projects. Participate in a mentoring program with an engineering or architectural office. This is a 12 month appointment Call Rose Etta at 800-652-4971 during Preview Deadline; April 10th at 5:00 p.m.
SUMMER JOBS A new fifties dance club is opening in Leningua. We hire cocktail waiters and bartenders. WT train. Apply in Appli, 93 M.S. at D.R., Ridenska L. Leningua, Located Four Colonels Plaza.
Summer Employment. Lawn care. wood refinishing, and odd jobs. Hours flexible. Male or female applicants welcome. Send inquiries to Box 401. Loveland, Kansas 66032
PERSONAL
Bug April 257 Want to go to a safety formal?
Sophonore girl tired of selection. Reply to box 411. Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kansas 66045
Taking applications and interviewing sharp, energetic bartenders & cocktail waitresses; experience preferred. Hrs Th 11/5, Fr 11/2, Sat 12/4, Mon 8/6, Tue 8/7, Wed 7/4, Grh 7/1, & Massachusetts in the Eldridge.
Wanted Nanny/Mother's Helper, female, in a northern New Jersey town, close to NYC. Must be pleased with children, energetic and adaptable, good with children, good pay and permanent or /permanent. 901-901-8913
AC AND FRIEND `dinner` and `^` We hear the
baited dish. The Rat and his Shadow
The University of Kansas Budget Office has a position opening for a continuous half-time student assistant. The person in this position will manage budgets and other financial reports, do word processing, typing, spreadsheet preparation, and perform reception duties. This position requires experience with data analysis and good written and oral communication skills. Desirable applicant will be planning to stay in the university for up to a maximum of 40 per month for a half-time appointment or date April 17, 2018. Start date is flexible. For information call Jane Hinz, Budget Office. 804-3136 fax 804-3135. Mail resume to: Job Opportunities, 100 W. 34th Street, April 10: 0:30 p.m. e-mail: Oppunlty Employer
Elaine. But I became afraid. I was afraid to jump into the arms of endless endurance. Aracun it because I felt the weight of my own arm became afraid. It was to good to be true. And I never doubted you. It was indifference that made me feel so safe. I felt what I really wanted. I'm sorry. I became afraid. Sorry for the pain I've caused. It will not go away.
Come to the Templin Hall Casino Party® Saturday, April 11 at 8. Bring a ticket for the gambling game.
Dearest YOU! IF YOU are the fresherperson who arrived at the Bahamas on 13th, and aspires to become a corporate attorney, please write me my resume. PLEASE JOB DP, JD 298 BSN 30, St. Newark, NJ 07102
ALLEEN LEVINE the right choice for Off-Campus Senator paid for by Synchrony.
Fereed to have sex on a date or while parking is prohibited. Wear a U.S.-made shorts (wrists through HEADCAPTURE 814-256-9700) or long pants with a U.S.-made headscarf.
If You've Got a Gal in Kalamazoo
Who's a Serenade in Blue
Get In the Mood and take the Chattanooga Choo-Choo
to
Miller Hall's Moonlight Serenade
Happy Birthday Jay Jay! Paramount I forget
you b-day. "Never" Hope you have a drunken
birthday.
Jennifer and Anne. It is the Bottom Line. You are not a good student, you are not a good teacher. You TIDW. You’re perfect just as you are. ©
Kristen, Interior Design. This one's for you!
You're a special friend. Thanks! C
M & M. You will always be my Blue Light Special.
I'll give ya discount on points you still. You will me one night in the Greekom plus a Porsche-Catch my drills!" MEL
OLLIE NORTHI I am really bad at remembering
and again and again. NANCY HEAGAN
Reed. missed you at 6.a.m. last weekend. Did you already lose my number? K
Susan, I'm okay. You're okay. C-
To My Afatalaya Baby. I wouldn't really feel you to the gaters. Your little Jambalaya you
To my loving wife, Tonya G. I'm very happy
she is making life of my love. I wish
your husbandship G.
BUS.PERSONAL
GREENS PARTY SUPPLY
808 W. 23rd
Weekly Beer Specials
April 8-14
1
Busch 12 pk. $4.26
Coors Light 12 pk. $5.37
Coors Extra Gold12 pk. $5.37
Lowenbrau 6 pk. $3.10
Old Style 12pk. $4.12
Weidemann 12pk. $3.49
REALLY LISTEN Call or drop by Headquarters. We're here because we care. 841-2345 1419 Mass.
HEADACHE, BAKCHAKE, ARM PAIN, LEG PAIN? Student and most insurance accepted. For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark Johnson 943.3697
Use It or Lose It Money Saver
Unlimited Use
$2 per session/enrollment $10 a mo.
EUROPEAN SUNTANNING HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUP
HAS SPRING BREAK
LEFT YOU BOKE?
Paid Summer Internships
(any major)
— must work
— $400 per week
For interview call 749-7377
25th & Iowa 841-6232
New, Connection, 300 Elm, North Lawrence,
Connecticut. Position: Point hair designer
position. Paint hair done your way. Through
outdoor, indoor, retail spaces.
Spring Fling
Net crinoline in pastel colors. New fun jewelry from LA. Bunny suits for rent.
Spring Fling
6 Visits $20.00
12 Visits $35.00
Barb's Vintage Rose
GLEV LASERMAN* Write for KS/MO info. PER-
KSM 9401628 Mail Disabled/confidently
9401628 Mailed discreetly/confidently
Gives piano and voice lessons over summer.
Be creative in gift, gifting. Fullfill fantasies with beautiful Bou迪 Portraits for all occasions. Call Mike or Gracie at Photos Plus. 749-306-706
Most reasonable rates in town for all your photo needs especially graduation, resumes, and portraits.
Mice or cloves at Trentham - Rn: 481-306
Mice or cloves at Barrie - Rn: 481-307
Sell, or Trade
Mice or cloves in New Hampshire
Conscientious, Economical tax preparation 841-2292
AUTO TINTING. Best scratch resistant solar
film suitable for Lifeite. PROTINT of
solar film.
SERVICES OFFERED
total membership through 5-31-87
CRIMSON SUN PHOTO is looking for young women interested in developing a modeling portfolio. 15% over direct cost. No set fees. Call 841-9699
FOR WOMEN ONLY $37.50
- Levels Aerobics
* Training Clases
* Tanning
* Weight Equipment
* Swimming
BodyShapes
501 Kasold Westridge Shopping Ctr. 843-4040
FITNESS CLUB
Hours:
M-F 8:30-8:30
Sat. 9:00-4:00
Sun. 1:00-4:00
Crit. Ort. 843-4040
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749
"Graduates and undergraduates, money for college is available. Contact College Scholarship Sources. (913) 764-0299 or 1-800-USA-1221 Ext. 7079."
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES KEKhachrom
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES KEKhachrom
SPADE $PORT 600 * Art & Design Building,
Boston, MA
MATH TUORIST BY 1976, M.A., $/hr (courses
above) 199, H.P. /hr) 843-9023
MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC
Audiobook Audio book A A A A A A A A A A A A A
Maximum Audio Warranty
749 192 749
www.maximumaudiowarranty.com
HARPER
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Affordable and affordable typing and wordprocessing.
FromMass
Suite 201 749-0123
PRIVATE OFFICE Obie Gn. and Abortion Services
Overland Park, OH 413-891-4001
Sexamestats. All ladies dresses can be made here in town. You choose your favorite designs or styles from the latest fashion magazines. I will make them for van. Call Suz. B143-349.
SUNLEWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided 841.210
TYPING
TUTORING MATH STAT $8.90/HR CALL
414-STAT
cientius Reliable B42-3111 for service
24-Hour Training, 13th semester in Lawrence
Resumes, dissertations, papers. Close to campus
Best, quality, and fastest service B42-3106...
A2 professional typing. Term papers, Theses,
Dissertations, Resumes, etc. Reasonable IBM
Electronic Typewriter 842.3246
/application storage for word processing/
document storage for spreadsheets, any time
weekdays. Campus pickup available.
A-2 Word processing Service. Quality resumes, papers, dissertations, Reasonable rates. File formats: .DOC, .PDF.
Experienced Typeist : Dissertations, theses, term papers, etc. ; Reasonable Rates. Call 842-3203
Experienced typist tesis, dissertations, term paper 842 2310 after 6:15 p.m. M or F/Sat on
Saturday.
Absolutely Fast Typing. Dependable and experienced with reasonable rates. Call Kathy at p.m. and m.p. or call Brian at p.m. Accurate affordance by former instructor. Call Mrs. Nancy Mantcy. 841-1219.
GOOD IMPRESSIONS Typing/Word Processing/TypingSettings Papered Typeset Typeset
Dependable, professional. experienced
TRANSCRIPTION also; standard tape. 943.8877
DISSERTATIONS. THESES. LAW
CONSIDERATION. THIS AD will return. KEEP WATCHING THIS AD
For professional typing/word processing, call
for a 641-8490. Spring special $120, double page
address: 641-8490.
Donna's Quality, Typing and Word Processing.
Term papers, maps, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mail lists. Letter quality
printing, spelled corrected. 842-7247
Resume Service-laserwritten 10 copies ONLY
$20.748-2193 after 5 p.m.
processing logic, tractor repair, 843-7949
ACT NOW, Papers $1.50/pg, Resumes $15.
WRITING LIFELINE 841-3469.
Smart Word Processing includes editing and spell checking. Very reasonable rates. For larger, 749-2420.
THE WORLD DOCTORS. Why pay for typing? Word processing, legal, transcription: 843-3147
KU SECRETARY will do your typing and word turnaround. Competitive rates. Mountain biplane turnaround. Quality typing; excellent editing, grammar, punctuation. Reliable, reliable, delivery available. 843-0247
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes HAVE M.S. Degree 841-6254
Typing, *very reasonable rates*, will also assist with spelling punctuation and form. Call 842-3629
---
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word
processing, manicure supplies, theseis, letter
writing.
*simulate* (s): Wanted: 1 or 2 for summer or for next visit; 1 person gets 1 room, upgrades to 2 rooms; 2 people get 2 rooms.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WANTED
Experienced drummer needed for established Lawrence band, primarily originals. Influences are Husker Du, U2, etc. Must be devoted. Troy, 841-6314
Female Deposit $157.00 Summer or into or at fall:
841.196 Donda Ranta Tunes/Theres/Or leave
Roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom Apartment. Quiet, non-smoker $150 and half utility room.
Outgrowing female roommate wanted to share two bedroom apartment with senior close. Summer close.
Part-time housekeepers wanted for Spring and Summer Day or evening hrs. If you are a meticulous cleaner, Buckingham Palace needs your talents. Call 842 6284
Roommates: For 2.3, 4. bedroom apartments and
call: HCJ 841 2194
Roommate Wanted now to share very nice
toothbrush 150 rent plus 1 utilities Call eveny
month.
Words set in Bold Face count as 3 words.
Roommate Wanted. Beautiful apartment in older house, close to KU and downtown, spacious woods, FP, FP, W/D) Must like cats (4) $715 plus 1/2 gas and electricity. Annie, 799-3578 after 4.
Wanted. Female roommate non-smoker to share
room with students and staff at campus and downtown 810 plus 1212 calls. Utilize
Wanted: Roommates for summer. 3RU Dphlex on Bus Route W B $150.00, utilities paid 842-7927
Want to buy Appleworks version 1 or 1 or 3 only
Call 843-4164 after 5:00.
Fency Words set in ALL CAPS as 2 words.
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words.
Classified rates are based on consecutive day insertions only.
No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
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No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising.
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001 announcements 300 for sale 800 help wanted 900 services offered
100 entertainment 310 auto sales 700 personal 900 tipping
100 retail 500 office supplies 700 insurance 900 training
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University Daily Kansan
Lawrence 696405
Lawrence 696405
16
Thursday, April 9, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
JOHN WALLACE DODGE-YUGO Where KU Goes ... YUGOS
®
$3990.00
ONLY
©
LET'S GET SERIOUS
YUGO
GRADUATING SENIORS
Receive Special Financing Through the Chrysler Credit Corporation.
YUGO
$3990
THE ROAD BACK
TO SANITY
THE PERFECT FIRST CAR
PETROLEGAN
John Wallace Dodge OF OVERLAND PARK
I-435 & Metcalf
(913) 642-4600
When it rains, it pours
MUCKY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details, page 2
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Friday
April 10, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 130
(USPS 650-640)
Students sweep Bottom Line into Senate
By LISA A. MALONEY
Stati writer
Students elected Jason Krakow and Stephanie Quincy, Bottom Line coalition candidates, as student body president and vice president yesterday by 429 votes, according to unofficial elections records.
President/Vice President
Student Senate Election Results*
.
Bottom Line received 1,432 votes, or 46 percent. Jeff Mullins and Brian Kramer, of the First Class coalition, received 1,023 votes, or 32.4 percent. The Synchronicity coalition, of the Synchronicity coalition, received 617 votes, or 19.6 percent.
O
"It it just proves that a positive campaign will produce positive results." Krakow said early this morning after hearing of the victory. "We're just very, very happy. We've got a great year ahead of us."
Quincy said, "It feels a lot better to win than to lose. We promised a lot of things during the campaign, and we want to make sure they get done."
President/Vice President
JASON KRAKOW-STEPHANIE QUINCY..BOTTOM LINE 1,452 46.0%
JOEFF MULLINS-BRIAN KRAMER...FIRST CLASS 1,023 32.4%
PHILLIP DUFF-GLENN SHIRLTFUCE.SYNCHRONICITY 617 19.8
Results are unofficial SEE FESTEN SENATE ELECTION RESULTS. PAGE 8
O
Elections results are unofficial until the Elections Review Board hears appeals and audits campaign spending.
Voter turnout for the presidential and vice presidential race was 3,155 students. Twelve votes were invalid, and 607 were counted. In the all, 377 students voted.
Bottom Line supporters were predicting a win for Krakow and Quincy as early as 1:30 a.m., when they the first race vote totals came in.
In races for senator positions, Bottom Line won 42 seats. First Class won eight, and Synchronity received one seat.
Bottom Line supporters camped out at the Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity, 1116 Indiana St. until about 2:30 in the final results were announced.
Krakow said the two wanted to get to work immediately.
"We're going to establish those town meetings, first thing, and find out what's on students' minds," he said.
Student candidates from all three coalitions drifted in and out of the
house, undeterred by the fact that the beer ran out around 11:45 p.m. More beer was supplied, people danced on the sticky floors, and the party went on.
Elsewhere, near the phone, the mood of a small cluster of supporters was tense. The Student Senate Elections Committee had said that the first results would be ready by 10 p.m., but time passed, and the official estimates got later and later.
Quincy said that she thought a new balloting procedure was more efficient but that she couldn't understand why it took so long to get results.
"The waiting has always been a problem. This is the kind of balloting procedure that gives you ulcers," she said.
THE NEW YORKER
See WINNERS, p. 8, col. 4
Newly elected student body vice president Stephanie Quincy and Jason Krakow, newly elected student body president, celebrate their victory over First Class and Synchronicity coalitions. Unofficial results received at about 2:30 a.m. today showed that the Bottom Line coalition received 46 percent of the votes.
Officials hope plans end class overcrowding
By PAUL SCHRAG
Staff writer
Anticipating another enrollment increase this fall. KU administrators are planning ways to prevent gridlock during summer orientation sessions.
Gridlock, which administrators use to refer to required classes filling up before all students have enrolled, is a worst-case scenario, administrators say. But a flood of new students who entered the University last fall, likely will limit the choice of classes for freshmen and sophomores.
"People are going to have to be flexible in terms of times," said James Carothers, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. "The days are over when you could get any class you wanted on Monday, Wednesday and Friday at 9:30."
KU's new application deadlines of April 1 for out-of-state students and May 1 for Kansas students should help prevent gridlock, said Lovely Uimer, coordinator of orientations. Students who apply this year after the deadlines cannot be admitted to the University until spring 1988, easing the burden on summer orientation.
Officials also have increased the number of orientation sessions from 14 last summer to 17. Eleven of those, from June 11 to July 21, are designated for students entering the college. Administrators also will not allow students who have not registered in advance to participate this year.
Another change is in the price for attending a session, which has increased from $9 to $25.
Also important, Carothers said,
will be an effort by summer orientation advisers to inform new students of their curriculum options.
"Students need to be advised of their alternatives," he said. "We need to make sure students understand there is a difference between courses they prefer to take and courses they must take."
But Ulmer said that the college's curriculum changes may compound the problem. New students will have fewer alternatives because they must enroll in courses in math and English.
Carothers said the changes might be an advantage, however, because
the new requirements would create more openings in courses that fulfill distribution requirements.
The importance of summer orientation will be magnified because of the large number of students participating, Ulmer said.
"It's not that we won't try to accommodate them in the fall, but we won't be able to promise what will be available for them," she said.
Ulmer said admissions officials tried to stress to new students the importance of attending summer orientation.
1 V
Fred Sadowski/KANSAN
Law mandates separate jails
Concentration
Jody Ellis, of the Royal Lichtenstein Circus from Santa Clara, Calif., entertains a lunchtime audience with his juggling. The circus performed for about 250 people yesterday on the lawn in front of Watson Library.
By PAUL BELDEN Staff writer
Douglas County hasn't complied, could lose federal funds
Staff writer
Douglas County probably won't have a separate jail for juveniles by Jan. 1, even though a federal law requiring one will take effect on that date, the county administrator said Wednesday.
"It will be a physical and financial impossibility for Douglas County to comply with that law by Jan. 1, 1988," Chris McKenzie, the administrator, said.
Two cells in the county jail are set aside for prisoner prisoners, and one staff server is also.
The law will forbid states to keep juvenile prisoners where they possibly could come into contact with adult prisoners. It also will require separate staffs, including management, security, counseling and education, for juveniles and adults, and entirely separate activities.
Mkenzie said it was not clear what could happen to Douglas County if the deadline was not met.
"The mandate is clearly on the state, not on local governments," he said. "But unless we comply with this requirement, we do stand a chance of losing federal funding. It's the old carrot and stick approach, which we've seen before."
Even so, the federal government might withhold about a million dollars from the state if counties didn't comply with the federal law, said Allen Beck, a consultant to the state Department of Education on Juvenile Offender Programs.
But McKenzie said he thought some state officials had mixed feelings about making the counties comply with the law.
The Kansas Legislature in 1986 passed a state law requiring all Kansas counties to submit by April 1, and requiring juvenile and adult prisoners.
The Douglas County plan lists five proposals; no policy change; joining
with neighboring counties to build a regional juvenile jail; using juvenile jails in Johnson, Shawnee and Waydette counties; remodeling the existing jail to conform with the federal requirements; expanding the use of fenced prison phones and intensive supervision; and using more home detentions.
McKenzie said that before juveniles could be separated from adults, the county would have to study the alternatives. If it decides to build a separate juvenile jail, the county will have to do location and design studies.
"One of my biggest problems is that statistics on juveniles are not assembled and compiled regularly at the local level, and there are no state-wide statistics at all." McKenzie said.
The only statistics available for the county indicate that from January 1985 to June 1986, 208 juveniles spent time in the county jail.
Ex-pilot counsels phobiacs
Students plan to put pedal to metal
BY JENNIFER WYRICK
But, aerobiaophobia, the irrational fear of flying, can present real problems
Staff writer
To combat this fear, W.H. Gunn, a psychologist at the University of Kansas Medical Center, counselled five people with apherophobia April 2 in a session designed to explain their fear and to answer their questions.
Ophidiophobia, the irrational fear of snakes, and triskaidekaphobia, the irrational fear of the number 13, are common, garden-variety fears, both relatively harmless.
The clinic was one part of a two-part seminar. In the second session, participants will visit the TWA simulator at the airline's Kansas City, Mo., offices. The cost of the program is $90.
Gunn was a TWA pilot for 39 years before he became a psychologist.
He said he had found that most aerobiosis had a distinctive personality. They are of above-average intelligence, professional, skilled, artistic, imaginative, creative and possess a tremendous ability to visualize.
One of Gum's patients is a middle-aged woman who is forced to fly frequently because of her husband's business trips. She has had a panic attack on an airplane, which was not necessarily caused by anything but her anxiety about flying.
"Her fear is justified because once you've had a panic attack it is the scariest thing to think about having again." Gunn said. The woman's fear is compounded by an inner ear imbalance that makes things appear to be
Bv IOHN BUZBEE
KU students may shave a few minutes off their driving times if Kansas raises the speed limit to 65 mph on rural interstates, but some said yesterday that it wouldn't make much difference.
See PHOBIAS, p. 6, col. 3
Staff writer
She hasn't received any tickets going 65, she said, and she is passed by other drivers. She may have seen a car from Manhattan Beach, Calif., senior.
"I think people will go faster," she
said. "It will be even worse - more
luckier."
Paula Owen, Shawne freshman,
said she already drove around 65
miles an hour and would speed up to
70 if the limit were raised
"When you get up around 75, man, you are flying." Polizotto said. But he doesn't speed much on his way home to the Los Angeles area, even through the New Mexico desert, to avoid costly tickets.
Polizotto started driving just before the speed limit dropped to 55. City driving was more dangerous
A higher speed limit would be good for professional drivers such as truck drivers, Polizzotto said, but it's not a good idea for everyone.
then, he said. But the change wouldn't have much effect, he said, because traffic already moves at 65 in many areas.
"There's a lot of people out there that shouldn't be on the road to begin with."
"I think there's going to be law breakers and people who drive within a reasonable, safe speed," he said.
The state Senate already has passed the bill, which would take effect May 1. The House is expected to pass a bill thatHayden has endorsed the change.
A bill now in the Kansas House would raise the speed limit to 65 on rural interstates. The change was permitted recently by the U.S. Con-
But the Kansas Highway Patrol lobbed in the Legislature against raising the speed limit because it could cost lives, said Bill Mooam, acting superintendent of the highway
patrol.
Mooma said that now the patrol didn't begin enforcing the law at any set speed and that it wouldn't if the speed limit were raised.
"The troopers out here on the road write what they can write," he said. "If everybody out here is running 70 or 75, they'll take what they can get. They'll probably take the fastest ones they see."
They probably won't get Kristie Calohan, Stanley senior. She drives around 55 or 60, and she'd like to keep it that way.
"I think that it was lowered for a purpose — to limit accidents," she said. "I think they're kind of defeating the purpose by raising it up." But if the speed limit does become 65, she'll drive that fast.
"I think most people are conscientious enough not to drive much faster than 65 or 70," he said.
Kevin Nasseri, Topea junior, also would drive a little faster with a higher speed limit, he said, but not longer. "I don't think other people will, either."
INSIDE
Party pics
University Photography has domi nated the party photography busi ness at the University of Kansas, capturing 78 percent of the mark ot. See story page 4B.
Drought ends
The Kansas men's baseball team ended its 15-game winless streak yesterday b sweeping a double-header from Baker University at Quigley Field 9-1 and 17-6. See stories page 11.
4
2
Friday, April 10, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Around the World
Soviets exhibit bugging devices, allege U.S. spying in its missions
MOSCOW — The Soviet Union yesterday displayed microphones and other gadgets it said were found in the walls and floors of its U.S. missions and said the devices proved Soviets were victims of U.S. spies.
The devices, no bigger than a pencil and some crammed with miniature electronics, are "material evidence of who is really intruding into the sovereign territory of others," Foreign Ministry spokesman Boris Pyadyshev said at a news briefing.
The briefing was a Kremlin response to reports that the KGB laced the U.S. Embassy in Moscow with bugging devices and compromised its security.
The Soviet counterattack came as U.S. officials were trying to gauge a sex-and-spy scandal that allegedly involved U.S. Marine guards who became sexually involved with Soviet women and
were enticed into allowing KGB agents inside the U.S. Embassy.
The Soviets have denied that they spied on the U.S. Embassy in Moscow. And officials have alleged the United States was trying to poison the atmosphere for the vices of Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's weekly and harm chances for an arms control agreement.
Ppyadshev said alleged U.S. bugging operations violated international norms of conduct, impeded superpower relations and created "unbearable working and living conditions" for Kremlin diplomats.
Ivan N. Miroshkin of the Foreign Ministry's security service said U.S. bugging devices had been discovered in the Soviet Embassy in Washington, the embassy residential complex, the Soviet U.N. mission in New York and the Soviet consultate in San Francisco.
WASHINGTON — The House yesterday approved a $1 trillion Democratic budget that would raise $18 billion in new taxes. slash President Reagan's military build-up and block White House plans for sharp decreases in domestic programs.
Across the Country
The House endorsed the plan drafted by its Budget Committee, 230-192. No Republicans voted for it.
House OKs tax hike, cuts military spending
However, most lawmakers conceded that the blueprint would fail to meet the $108 billion deficit target of the Gramm-Rudman budget-balancing law. Democrats argued it did more to cut red ink than any other option, including the president's.
The House plan features a call for $18 billion in unspecified new taxes plus $1 billion from
increased tax enforcement and another $2 billion from fees and premiums for government services. Overall, it calls for $38 billion in taxes and spending cuts toward reducing the deficit, compared with $36 billion in the White House plan.
Reagan has threatened to veto any tax rate increase.
The Democratic plan would limit defense spending to $281.7 billion in outlays in the fiscal year starting Oct. 1, about $15 billion less than the president's plan.
The president's domestic spending cut plans, including the elimination of dozens of federal programs, was unacceptable to the lawmakers. In a symbolic vote before approving the Democratic plan, the House rejected Reagan's budget, 394-27.
Five die in cargo plane crash in California
TRAVIS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. — Five people were killed Wednesday in the crash of a cargo plane on a training flight for Southern Air Transport, a company once owned by the CIA and linked to contra aid efforts.
Officials said the four-engine Lockheed L-140 Hercules civilian aircraft was landing when it caught on a fence and cart-wheeled, exploding about 300 vards from the runway.
The crash was the second involving a southern Air plane in six months. On Oct. 4, 14-largo cargo plane crashed at Kelly Air Force Base in San Antonio, Calif., killing three crewmen.
Air Force Capt. Tom Dolney said the plane crashed on its return to the base from a two and a half hour civilian training mission over Northern California. Details of the mission were not disclosed.
Southern Air Transport Inc., once owned by the CIA, currently is under investigation in the Iran-contra scandal as well as by a federal grand jury looking into private U.S. efforts to supply the contras.
The company has acknowledged servicing the plane that was shot down by Nicaraguan troops on Oct. 5 while bringing arms to the contras.
Workers search collapsed Bronx buildings
NEW YORK — After a dramatic, six-hour operation to rescue a buried man, workers yesterday searched brick-by-brick for more survivors in the heaped rubble of two collapsed Bronx ghetto buildings whose six died.
tumbling down onto a small grocery store at 3:45 p.m. Wednesday.
Fire marshals and about 20 Consolidated Edison workers searched the South Bronx disaster site in an effort to determine whether a natural gas leak caused the explosion that brought an abandoned apartment building
Six people died and 17 were injured in the collapse. Twelve rescuers were injured during the daring effort to save Norberto Luna, 24, of Roselle, N.J.
For six hours, rescue workers clawed through bricks and splintered wood to free Luna, who was trapped with his arms pinned behind his back and his legs broken.
From Kansan wires
Weather
LAWRENCE FORECAST
From the KANSAN Weather Service
Clouds move into the area today, and there is a chance for showers. Winds will be out of the northwest at 10- 20 mph and the high will be about 60 degrees. It will stay partly cloudy tonight with a continued chance for a low near 35 degrees.
WEEKEND OUTLOOK: The rain will leave the area, but the clouds will remain. The highs will be in the 60s tomorrow and Sunday and the lows will be near 40.
---
DES MOINES 60 / 36
OMAHA 59 / 35
LINCOLN 60 / 35
CONCORDIA 61 / 35
TOPEKA 63 / 38
KANSAS CITY 63 / 40
COLUMBIA 66 / 42
ST. LOUIS 68 / 44
SALINA 62 / 36
CHANUTE 65 / 36
SPRINGFIELD 66 / 40
WICHITA 66 / 35
HILSA 71 / 42
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SIGMA PHI EPSILON
DELTA DELTA DELTA
SUPERTEAMS
Sigma Phi Epsilon and Delta Delta Delta would like to thank the following groups for participating in our Superteams philanthropy:
Alpha Chi Omega
Delta Gamma
Alpha Delta Pi
Alpha Epsilon Pi
Delta Tau Delta
Delta Upsilon
Alpha Gamma Delta
Gamma Phi Beta
Alpha Kappa Lambda
Kappa Alpha Theta
Pi Beta Phi
Alpha Omicron Pi
Kappa Kappa Gamma
Alpha Tau Omega
Kappa Sigma
Pi Kappa Alpha
Lambda Chi Alpha
Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Beta Theta Pi
Phi Delta Theta
Chi Omega
Sigma Chi
Phi Kappa Psi
Delta Chi
Sigma Delta Tau
Phi Kappa Theta
Sigma Kappa
Sigma Nu
Tau Kappa Epsilon
Theta Chi
Tri-Delt Waiters
Zeta Beta Tau
Superteams continues with:
Weightlifting,
This afternoon, 3:00 p.m., The Wheel
Track and Field.
Saturday, 9:00 a.m., Lawrence High School
Superteams is a philanthropy to benefit the Rehabilitation Center and the Children's Cancer Research Center of the KU Medical Center.
SIGMA PHI EPSILON
DELTA DELTA DELTA
University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 10, 1987
3
Local Briefs
Today last day for obtaining dean's stamp
Today is the last day for students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and the schools of architecture, business, engineering, fine arts, journalism, pharmacy and social welfare to obtain a dean's approval stamp on their enrollment cards.
Campus and Area
Hashinger Hall will have its annual spring musical at the Hashinger Hall Theatre, 1632 N. Broadway, p.m. today, tomorrow and Sunday.
Hashinger to give annual musical
The musical. "An Evening With Rodgers and Hart," features more than 50 songs written by composer Richard Rodgers and lyricist Loren Hart. Included in the musical are "Manhattan." The "Lady is a Tramp," and "My Funny Valentine."
Tickets are $2 and may be bought at the door on the days of the performance. Admission is free to Hashinger residents.
The deadline for students in the school of education is April 22.
Easter services to be celebrated
Traditional Roman Catholic Easter services will take place next week at St. Mary's Academy and College in St. Mary.
Thursday through April 19,
a chanting of tenebre will be at 8:30
a.m., followed by confessions at
a.m. and a sermon at 11:30 a.m.
A Mass celebrating the evening of the Last Supper and the Washing of the Feet will begin at 4:30 p.m. Thursday Stations of the Cross, April 17, and at 5 p.m. the Passion according to St. John will be sung.
April 18, vespers will be recited at 5 p.m., and confessions will be heard from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
At 10 p.m. the traditional Pascal Vigil Liturgy will begin, concluding with the high Mass of the Resurrection.
On Easter, another traditional Latin high Mass will be celebrated at 9 a.m. followed by a low Mass will be celebrated in the benediction w be sung at 5 p.m.
KU Spirit Squad to hold auditions
The KU Spirit Squad will hold auditions for Jayhawk mascots, cheerleaders and yell leaders next week.
Auditions will be held at 6:30 p.m. from Monday to Thursday
For more information, call Elaine Brady, the squad's coordinator, at 864-3002.
Applications for fall semester news and business staff positions on the Kansan are available in 119 and 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The deadline for news applications is 5 p.m. Wednesday, and the deadline for business applications is 5 p.m. April 17.
For more information, call the Kansan newsroom at 864-4810 or the Kansan business office at 864-4358.
Applications due soon for Kansan
From staff and wire reports
Losing coalitions proud of their attempts
By TIM HAMILTON and JOSEPH REBELLO Staff writers
Staff writers
Members of the two losing coalitions in the student body president and vice president races were proud of their accomplishments but were disappointed with the final results early this morning.
At first, the mood last night at First Class headquarters was festive but relaxed.
More than 35 members and supporters of the coalition drank beer, listened to records and socialized for hours at an apartment in the West Hills complex, 1012 Emery Road, before results of the election began coming in around 1:30 a.m.
At about 2:30 a.m., unofficial results showed Bottom Line coalition's presidential and vice presidential candidates the winners with 429 more votes than the First Class candidates and 835 more votes than the Synchronicity candidates.
After the first results came in, in favor of Bottom Line, attendance at the party began dwindling, but members of the coalition said they still were were proud of their efforts.
"All the candidates have done a really good job. Of course we're disappointed," said Jeff Mullins, First Class presidential candidate.
At the Synchronicity headquarters, vice-presidential candidate Glenn Shirlte received news of his defeat despondently but with pride.
"We've already won, regardless of how the vote goes," Shirttiff said. "We've campaigned with dignity, we've not sold out, and we've not degenerated into the mudslinging
"We came into this campaign expecting to joust with windmills and to run a campaign the way it should be. We feel we achieved what we set out to do."
you see in other coalitions.
Phillip Duff, Synchronicity presidential candidate, was out of town.
THE SCOOPERS
Shirlife said he would consider today whether to complain to the Senate Elections committee about irregular election procedures.
"I think there are certain things that have been done that are definitely breaches of Senate rules and regulations." he said.
Mullins said that if First Class coalition members decided that foul play had influenced results, they would file a complaint.
Mike Killeen, St. Louis sophomore who ran for an architecture seat but lost, said First Class colection members still could be proud of their
"Win or lose, we fought the fight well and we're all the better for it," Killen said.
Mullins said his coalition's campaign platforms were far better than those of other coalitions.
After hearing of their win, Stephanie Quincy, vice president-elect, hugs Jason Krakow, student body president-elect, Krakow and Quincy, members of the Bottom Line coalition, heard the news early this morning.
"They're standing on issues that they know are safe and have been brought up before just to try to raise more votes," Mullins said of the Bottom Line coalition.
He said First Class was the first coalition to take such unique stands on issues such as class closings and presidential salaries.
"Our platform was very controversial, and it may have cost us the election, but at least we presented the issues the students wanted."
Mullins said.
The Synchronicity coalition's platform included proposals to grant full tuition waivers to graduate teaching assistants; to develop a long-term financing plan for student groups; and to improve parking facilities and
campus lighting. It promised an efficient businesslike student government.
Shirltefle has his coalition had tried to make inroads into graduate and international student electorate, knowing that the voting blocs with
the most influence were the fresh men and greeks.
He said he knew that unless graduate students and international students turned out to vote en masse, the Synchronicity campaign was doomed.
Police to hold charity shoot-out
By PAUL BELDEN
Who will take the cop cup home?
Find out this Sunday at Allen Field
House.
Twenty-six men and women have worked countless hours — taking jump shots then chasing the airballs, going in for layups then chasing the airballs, to get faster and stronger shots for their pain; they want the cop can.
At 3 p.m. Sunday, the Lawrence police will meet the KU police in mortal basketball combat at the field house.
Everyone is invited, with the price of admission being a can of food. Proceeds will go to the Ballard Community Center, 708 Elm St., a depository for Lawrence food banks. The food will feed hungry people.
Be warned. however
Dave Davis, a Lawrence police officer and starter on the team, says
his team will stop at nothing to avenge a defeat it suffered three years ago at the hands of the University of Kansas' finest.
"We intend to foul a lot," he said.
"We want to hurt them early, to take out their best players quick.
"I understand that the University of Kansas police department is going to make arrangements to have ambulances on hand to remove their players. We suggested that to them, actually."
But Rick "Sugar Bear" Rosenshein, KU police officer and coach, said his team would not be intimidated.
"I think you'll see a hard-fought battle," he said. "We've been practicing hard, and the team spirit is really high."
Calvin Thompson, who played on last year's Final Four KU basketball team and now plays basketball for the Topeka Sizzlers, will be at the
game, Rosenshein said. Fire trucks also will be on display in front of the field house.
Davis' and Rosenshein's predictions of the final score of the game differed greatly.
Rosenshein said he expected the game to be close, but Davis said, "We anticipate a score of a whole lot to not very much."
But neither man would predict a winner.
Rosenshein said, "It really doesn't make any difference who wins or loses. It would be nice for people to walk away and say they had a good time."
Jeanne Longaker, a KU police officer but not a basketball player, said "it's going to be fun. I've got to play." It's going to be a lot of fun.
Then laughter overcame her and she could speak no more...
Lawrence women run bookstore
Staff writer
An out-of-the-way store on Massachusetts Street houses a unique operation. It's a bookstore run by lesbians.
By KJERSTI MOEN
On the store's shelves are books with titles such as "When God was a Woman" and "The Life of Jesus."
"This is the only bookstore in the nation advertised as being collectively operated by lesbian women," said Kiesa Lenae, a volunteer who helps run Spinsters Books and Webbery Inc., 801.2] Massachusetts St.
A collective of three lesbian active members and 10 women volunteers, most of whom are lesbian, run the Lesbian Resource Center, a culture, records and art only by women.
function was to make women's resources available to women. Most of the store's customers are heterosexual women interested in spiritual books, Brow said. Other customers include lesbian, feminist and ethnic women, as well as men.
Judy Brow, a Lawrence resident and one of the three active collective members, said the store's primary
"Some of our best customers are men." Brow said.
Staff writer
"We need a space that is for women only." Brow said. "It's important for women to have some to go and not be interfered by men."
The operation's proceeds go to running the store and the library and sponsoring speeches, concerts, lectures, parties and dances for women. The store started out on $250 collected at two such dances in 1980
Now, its inventory is almost $120,000.
By CHRISTOPHER HINES
But there's one room in the store where men are not allowed. It's the library, which holds about 1,000 volumes.
1988 KU budget awaits final vote
"It's just through women's energy that it's become this big, Lenae said.
The collective also provides support for lesbians.
"There's an increasing need for it," Lenae said. "When a woman first figures out that she's a lesbian, it can be a very lonely experience. If you're rejected by family and friends, it's extremely important that you have a community where you can come to be yourself with a lesbian identity."
In spite of some discrimination against homosexuals in Lawrence, the store has been well-received, Lenae said.
"It itse like we've been welcomed here," she said.
The Kansas Legislature is not expected to give final approval to KU's fee release request or 1988 budget until the end of April, leaving some KU administrators wondering how much money to spend and where.
"It makes planning and budgeting very hard," said Ward Zimmerman, director of the KU budget office. "My opinion is that the University will receive the fee release, but how much and when is the question."
Keith Nitcher, director of business affairs, said administrators' priority would be to make up for Gov. Mike Hayden's 3.8 percent budget cut and to pay for additional services required because of last fall's record enrollment.
"We were hit with a double whammy this year — the budget cuts and the increased enrollment." Nitcher said. "Any new money coming in will probably go to making that up."
Last week, the state Senate approved about $900,000 of the Board of Regents' $1.2 million 1967 fee release request for KU. Wednesday, in a separate bill, the Senate expenditures for 1988 expenses bills for Regents institution. The bill included a 1988 fee release of about $600,000 for KU and a 2.5 percent salary increase for state university faculty.
The Legislature will start a two-week recess Monday, but members of a conference committee will meet Tuesday to hammer out differences between the House and Senate versions of the bills. Final action on the KU fee release and budget bills will not be taken until the House and Senate return from the recess and approve the committee's report.
"I'll wait and see what the House
has to offer in committee before making any comment on appropriations bills," said state Sen. August Bogina, R-Lenexa, and head of the Senate delegation to the conference committee.
The head of the House delegation to the committee, State Rep. Bill Bunten, R-Topeka, refused any specific comment on what the House would offer.
"All I can say is that we're going to stand strong on our recommendations to secure the state's fiscal stability," said Bunten, who is chairman of the House Appropriations Committee.
Before sending the bills to the Senate, the House approved a 1987 fee release of about $600,000 and a faculty and classified employee increase of 1.5 percent for the second half of fiscal 1988.
The amended Senate versions raised both the 1987 fee release and the faculty salary, but the conference committee will try to achieve a compromise between the House and Senate versions of the bill.
The uncertainty of what the final amount will be has made KU budget planners conservative about their spending.
"We are waiting for final action from the Legislature and are making contingency plans," Zimmerman said. "But we are monitoring the situation."
"If we receive fee release money, the first thing we're going to do is cover obligations we've already made."
Zimmerman said recent summer class closings due to a lack of jobs is a bad signal, his buddy
"The money is just not there," he said.
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1. 判断下列句子中,哪些是正确的?
A. 明天要出去游泳。
B. 我要去图书馆。
C. 我要去公园。
D. 我要去学校。
2. 选出符合题意的选项。
A. B、C、D
3. 填空:
A. 明天要游泳。
B. 我去图书馆。
C. 我去公园。
D. 我去学校。
4
Friday, April 10, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Opinions
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A new beginning
The race has ended, leaving a new beginning for the Lawrence City Commission and possibly an ending for the proposed downtown mall.
Former city commissioner Bob Schumm will serve a four-year term after his firstplace finish, and Mike Rundle and Dennis Constance will serve two-year terms after finishing in second and third place respectively. Incumbents Ernest Angino and Howard Hill finished fourth and fifth, and Ellis Hayden finished sixth.
During this election,
Lawrence voters' strong feelings about their city and their downtown came out. Those feelings brought more than half of Lawrence's registered voters to the polls to speak their minds.
The three commissioners elected opposed the mall and the voters overwhelmingly opposed it. The mall issue
ruled this election, and many voters probably voted for commissioners strictly on the mall issue. And although the city commission is not forced to follow the vote on the mall, commissioners should abide by the decision.
Also, the new commission should start picking up on issues that the city may have neglected because of all the discussions and decisions on the proposed mall. It is important that commissioners get back on track and take all of these other issues just as seriously as the mall question.
The three new commissioners who will replace Angino, Hill and David Longhurst have a chance to bring many fresh ideas and solutions to Lawrence's problems. The commissioners owe it to the people of Lawrence always to do their best and never to forget the people who elected them.
All-around Hall of Famer
Congratulations should go to Jim Hershberger for being selected to the KU Sports Hall of Fame, and to the KU Athletic Department for making it possible by using a special admittance clause to admit Hershberger.
Hershberger, 55, may best be known for his monetary contributions to the University, especially the track program. The Jim Hershberger Track at Memorial Stadium is named for him.
However, not all of Hersberger's contributions have been monetary. He anchored the winning 1951 Big Eight Conference Indoor mole relay team, won four Kansas Relays and Texas titles and two Philadelphia Classic championships.
Since Hershberger was not named AllAmerica, he was not eligible for the Hall of Fame, but a special admittance clause recognized
Hershberger's accomplishments.
Hershberger is the first member of the Hall of Fame to gain entrance by the special clause.
He has remained both active and successful in athletics. Hershberger has broken 25 world age-group records and captured 20 Amateur Athletic Union and United States Track and Field Federation national championships.
He also has remained active in his hometown of Wichita and is a member of the Wichita State University Sports Hall of Fame. He is also the first Kansan and oldest athlete ever to be featured on the front of Wheaties cereal boxes.
Hershberger has meant a lot more to the University over the years than just money, and it is only fitting that his portrait will hang along side other great KU athletes on the walls of Allen Field House.
Take a chance
Selling lottery tickets in the Kansas Union is a worthwhile gamble.
Although no definite decision has been made yet, Jim Long, director of the Union, said the University is considering the
The Union is just one of many sites throughout Kansas considering selling the tickets. A bill that established a state lottery was signed into law March 12 by Gov. Mike Hayden. It is hoped the lottery will promote much-needed economic development in the state. Dan Walstrom, lottery project coordinator, said the profits from the lottery "would not support higher education, except to finance university research projects on developing the state's economy." It is estimated that the lottery will earn about $30 million for the state.
feasibility and advisability of selling tickets.
It would be good for the Union to sell lottery tickets. Even though most of the money is not going toward the improvement of higher education, the profits from the lottery tickets will still bring much-needed money into the state. And what better market to attract than University students.
Opponents may argue that the lottery is gambling; that it is "sinful" and will lead only to corruption. However, the lottery is just like any other commodity - if you can afford it and want, buy it. If not, no one is forcing you to purchase a ticket.
Kansas already is taking a chance on the lottery. The University should as well.
News staff
Frank Hansel ... Editor
Jennifer Benjamin ... Managing editor
Jul Warren ... News editor
Brian Kaberline ... Editorial editor
Sandra Engelland ... Campus editor
Mark Siebert ... Sports editor
Diane Doulmeier ... Photo editor
Bill Skeet ... Graphics editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Lisa Weems ... Business manager
Bonnie Hardy ... Ad director
Denise Stephens ... Retail sales manager
Veli Scharer ... Campus sales manager
Duncan Calhoun ... Marketing manager
Lori Copple ... Classified manager
Jennifer Lumianski ... Production manager
David Nixon ... National sales manager
Jeanne Hines ... Sales and marketing adviser
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Soviet press tells world a whopper
Some people will believe anything.
I thought it was absurd that the National Enquirer expected its readers to believe that Elton John's wife
Brian
Kaberline
Editorial editor
the media in more than 60 countries.
might really be a man. But compared to the whopper that has been spread by the press of the Soviet Union, you ain't heard nothin' yet.
the need in more than two countries. Apparently, the Soviets have been somewhat successful in getting people to believe the story. This probably is because the army is operating a AIDS research laboratory on the same base that used to be its biological warfare development center.
A story that appeared in a Soviet weekly newspaper in October 1985 claimed that the AIDS virus was created in a biological warfare experiment by the U.S. Army. Since then, the story has been spread by
I can picture it now: A large color photo of an attractive man and woman in fatigues and come-hither eyes. In inch-high type, the headline reads, "U.S. Imperialist Pigs Unleash Dead Sex Weapon."
Scientists now think the virus might have passed to humans from African monkeys and slowly evolved into the menace it now is. Researchers at the Harvard School of Public Health have even cloned the virus they think is involved.
After that, there is a long story on how the United States has plans to spread disease and death throughout the Soviet Union with a crack squad of paratrooper prostitutes.
The U.S. military's goal was to spread the disease so that everyone
either died or was afraid to reproduce. Either way, the Americans would be able to waltz right in and take over the country in 20 years.
Sounds credible to me. Of course I still believe in the tooth fairy and that bus drivers on this campus will yield the right-of-way to pedestrians.
The lesson in this whole stupid mess could be that people will believe anything they don't fully understand. It also could be that no propaganda ploy is too far-out for the Soviet Union and the United States. Then again, it may be that if any Soviet "journalists" choose to defect, the National Enquirer is keeping a space open.
Actually, I'm not sure who is more foolish, the ones who believe the story or the ones who made it up. The geniuses needed to make up a story like that don't grow on trees, you know (although they might swing from them). I mean, these people not only expect people to believe that the states considers a usually sexually transgender person, they have to refute the legitimate scientific speculation on the origin of the disease.
By the way, have you heard the latest about Mikhail Gorbachev's wife? . . .
"The Lord works in mysterious ways." OR, GOD'S THREE STOOGES:
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'I'm sorry' not common in U.S. vocabulary
WASHINGTON - U.S. citizens find apology the most difficult type of communication because making excuses is the second most important feature of capitalism, and forgiveness is not a U.S. trait.
Anne Saker UPI Commentary
In business, in politics, even in religion — as the current jihad among television evangelists demonstrates — apologies become currency, barter for a better deal. I'll say I'm sorry if you promise 1) not to sue; 2) to vote for me; 3) to keep sending these love offerings.
The nation has been injured to the deal-making. Because apologies are so expensive, U.S. citizens usually will forge them because they don't want to pay the price, even for the satisfaction of hearing somebody say, "I'm sorry."
The Pilgrims, full of divine fire.
landed on the New World's rocky shores utterly certain of their providential deed of trust. Such absolute purpose was born from the belief that the Old World was warring, oppressive and bloody because it was constantly apologizing to heaven for its mass of human frailty and suffering.
A magazine cover story recently
Apologies were unnecessary when godly people were carving out a city on a hill from an untractable wilderness. That article of faith got the Pilgrims through hellish winters, and though by time alone was made slightly more complex, that belief rules U.S. life now.
The U.S. nation, however, was founded on the tenet that believers could have a wholly correct and unerring contract with God — a belief that has not changed radically in tenor since William Bradford wrote to his spiritual cousins in Europe that deliverance was available upon arriving in the New World.
waited at the decline and fall of cando U.S. service.
A plane is an hour late for takeoff because a rear door cannot be closed. No one says, "Sorry for the delay, folks." Instead, the pilot blames Federal Aviation Administration regulations, which apparently require that all airplane doors be closed in flight.
Politically, apologies force reassessment of motivations and goals, something to be fervently avoided. Those who wait, candle in window, to hear from Richard Nixon or Ronald Reagan in this regard keep a lonely vigil. As a signal demonstration of U.S. political weakness, an apology is tops. Say anything else — communism had to be stopped, future presidents needed protection, mistakes were made — but for a U.S. politician, apologies are anathema.
The squabbling among the television preachers offers the most intriguing current study of apologies. The
Only a few days passed before his act of contortion took on the unappealing taint, in the current argol, of a hostile action to fend off a hostile takeover.
Rev. Jim Bakker's confession of infidelity seemed at first a bracing display of humility from a person who makes a fine living telling people to make right with God.
To extend the metaphor, the Rev. Jerry Falwell rode in as Bakker's "white knight" to save the "PTL Club," adding a delicious little twist for those who have watched Falwell's career with perverse fascination.
In the United States, apologies are a means to a foreseeable and attainable end, as much of the fabric of commerce and politics as money. Forgiveness, as a result, is drawn into the exchange as a matter of trade. Simply saying "I'm sorry" with no strings attached is a singular act of humanity, a gift from one spirit to another and, apparently, becoming rarer by the day.
Mailbox
An embarrassment
The University is to be commended for providing us, Tuesday evening, with a lecture by an internationally known and respected scientist, Steven Jay Gould. His presentation was animated, stimulating and intellectually engaging, making an embarrassment for the University community for the following reasons.
1. The heat in Woodruff Auditorium was excessive and surely could have been corrected by a little forethought about the consequences of filling the place with hundreds of warm bodies.
throughout the lecture was inexcusable, deplorable and rude.
David Parestky professor of microbiology
Lawrence Bradford Atchison graduate student
2. the behavior of those people who chose to depart at various times
Michael Wuenscher St. Louis graduate student
A big risk pays off
This letter is in response to the letter written by Darin McAtee. Darin, I am happy that you wore your blue jeans "because you refuse
to let the activities of a minority group govern the style of dress of the entire campus."
I think you are correct when you say that homosexuals are different regardless of the clothes they wear, as are other people. So, you ask, "Why are they so adamant about proving their similarity, anyway?" This is a good, rhetorical question, but one that I hope to answer anyway.
I wore my blue jeans (actually they were black) so that everyone would think that I was a homosexual. I thought, on this day, I would be one of them. I would be free to speak openly
without fear of losing my life, family, friends and job.
I sat down in the Kansas Union across from someone that I didn't know on purpose. Suddenly, I was afraid. I knew that I was different. I realized that I could lose everything because of my jeans. I wanted to go home and change, but just as I was about to leave, the person across from me asked, "Are those pre-washed or shrink-to-fit?" Thank God, not everyone is like you. I mean, we're all human, right?
Tod Estes Topeka senior
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Senate results keep candidates up late
Bv IIII IFSS
Special to the Kansan
At 1 a.m. today, after waiting five hours in Strong Hall for results from yesterday's Student Senate elections, candidates and election committee members were getting punchy.
5
Finally, Vic Osmokal and Tom Moore, Senate Elections Committee co-chairman, walked in the door. Candidates perked up as Osmokal read results from races for the architecture and journalism schools. Although results from Nunemaker — the largest race — had been tallied, workers would not yet release those, he said.
In 199 Strong Hall, candidates amused themselves by throwing olives over light fixtures and catching them in their mouths.
Osmolak and Moore had decided earlier to count ballots from smaller schools first, then larger ones
and finally, the presidential and vice presidential race.
"Once the president and vice president results are announced, the party either gets in full swing or dies out." Osmolak said of coalitions' election parties. "This way we can keep the groups together until the very last possible time."
Final results for presidential and vice president races were not announced until about 2:30 p.m. the polls closed a half hours after the polls closed.
In the fall, president and vice president results were announced at about 1 a.m., but some other came almost two hours later.
But Osmolak said, "Last year, you may have gotten the first announcement earlier, but you got the last announcement much later."
The Associated Press
For
BALDEN
TOPEKA — All traces of segregation in the Topeka Public School District's old dual system have been "dissolved by time" and the city now has a "unitary system of education" that does not discriminate against minorities, a federal judge ruled yesterday.
In his 50-page decision, U.S. District Court Judge Richard D. Rogers rejected allegations that vestiges of racial discrimination remain in the Topeka school system.
"separate but equal" system of racial separation. They wanted the district to be forced to do more to integrate minority students in the predominantly white schools.
Dan Biles, an Overland Park lawyer who represents the state Board of Education, said he was delighted and said the ruling "demonstrates that Topeka has an excellent school system that is offering a quality education to all it students."
Judge's ruling favors Topeka school district
If the decision is not appealed in 30 days, Rogers' ruling would signal an end to the famous Brown vs. Topeka Board of Education case which led to the death of a high court Court decision that ended segregation in public schools nationwide.
"We only hope Judge Rogers' decision will lay this matter to rest so precious educational resources can be used for students and not to pay legal costs associated with an appeal." Biles said.
University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 10, 1987
The students and parents who filed the latest suit contended the district had not done all it could to erase the last vestiges of what once was a
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Friday, April 10, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE FAR SIDE
Bv GARY LARSON
Sergio
'Well, this is getting nowhere fast!
Can't Get Enough!
Gunn later described four aephorbia personality profiles. In the first profile, he said the aephorbic had a generalized anxiety about flying.
moving when they come allow any of his parents' names to be used.
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A young woman patient of Gunn's, who also is an employee at the Med Center, has a chronic concern about flying. Almost 11 years ago, she was in an airplane that crashed in St. Thomas, Virgin Islands. She received only minor injuries, but a number of other passengers died.
"I know that two-thirds of most aerobics would fit into this category,"
"but really extra sensitive to flying or have a chronic concern about it."
400
"For six months after the crash I didn't well sleep, and loud noises really bothered me," said the woman, who is uncomfortable just talking about the possibility of flying.
Phobias
Continued from p. 1
"When a person becomes frightened, the body's normal reaction is to prepare it for fight or flight by alerting the body's nervous system." he said. "The sympathetic nervous system, which triggers the excited reactions in the body, is brought into
Gunn gives tapes to all patients to help them teach themselves to relax before and during the plane ride. In addition, he gives them a checklist of things they should and shouldn't think about while flying.
"Many times I have taken my patients on plane rides because the best way to deal with a phobia is to stop avoiding it," he said.
Gunn described what happened to the body during an anxiety attack.
Gunn said he told phobic people to block their sympathetic nervous system by relaxing or by using self-hypnosis and instead bringing into focus the parasympathetic nervous system. This system allows the body to relax.
moving when they aren't
The third personality profile involves patients with separation anxiety, or what Gunn described as feelings of insecurity without parental guidance. The symptom may show up in the elementary school years when a child is afraid to leave home for school.
"My method of dealing with these people is to logically desensitize them to flying," he said. "Because you are so focused on patients has not been in a plane accident or has even had anyone close to them in a plane accident."
The fourth profile involves claustrophobia, or the morbid fear of being in a closed place. Gunn said claustrophobia was central to many phobias because it was a physical indication of fear.
"These people are afraid of either being confined in space or time," he said. "Some may be afraid of flying in a small airplane, while others may be frightened by the thought of flying for eight hours."
The second personality profile includes those aerosphobics with control problems, Gunn said. Passive phobic people fear losing self-control if they have an anxiety attack on an airplane. If the people usually are aggressive, then they fear not being in control if an anxiety attack occurs.
"I had one male patient who was
play " When the fear is over, the body returns to normal.
aerophobic because he was afraid to leave his wife and new baby boy." Gunn said. "He was afraid of not ever seeing them again."
"I haven't flown since then."
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But a phobic person's fearful feelings are slow to dissipate, and the body actually remains tense for several hours, Gunn said. This ongoing stage of alertness actually tears down the body.
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- "Gone to a Better Land," a lecture by Jerome Rose of the University of Arkansas, is scheduled at 3:30 p.m. today in the Pine Room at the Kansas Union.
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There's only one problem with religions that have all the answers. They don't allow questions.
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University Daily Kansan / Fridav. April 10, 1987
7
Concert to dedicate new organ for center
By JERRI NIEBAUM
Staff writer
Music as big as an orchestra wins sound from one man and one large instrument at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road, tonight.
A world-renowned organist will play a concert at 8 p.m. to dedicate the band's new masterpiece.
Karel Paukert, curator of musical arts of the Cleveland Museum of Art and chairman of the organ department at the Cleveland Institute of Music, will perform a concert of both classical and contemporary music on the $150,000 mechanical tracker organ.
"Himm. Quite a bit of sound." Paukert said yesterday after rehearsing a piece that he will perform.
He spoke to Don Reich, designer and builder of the organ from the Andover Organ Company in Lawrence. Mass. Reich was finishing some of the organ's woodwork as Paukert rehearsed.
The Rev. Vince Krische, director of the center, said he chose Paukert to play the dedication concert because Paukert was known nationally.
The organ will be ready for the dedication, and so will the organist. Paukert will have practiced about 10 hours on the organ before this evening. He said every organ had a different tonal quality, which he must discover in rehearsal and then use with his music.
"You have a genuine art experi-
ence when the music blends with the inster-
spectacle."
Paukert has played organ since he
was a student in Czechoslovakia,
while he was born and studied at the
University of Prague.
He said he remembered hearing music at church and on the radio as a child. It became a way of communicating for him.
"We enjoy sharing our music with people who want to listen to it," he said.
Paukert came to the United States in 1964 because he thought he would have more opportunities to play the organ and to study.
"I want to be free to play and to do things that I want to do." he said.
Organs, which have been used to salute emperors, can create complex musical tones that resemble an orchestra or a simple tone that “bounces, that dances.” Paukert said.
And a large, broad sound can create a new set of emotions.
"There's a certain animal-like excitement." Paukert said.
Organs also attract Paukert spiritually. He said he appreciated the everlasting qualities of an organ, which suit it to a church.
"It can really uplift people," he said.
A U.S. citizen since 1972, Paukert has taught organ and harpischord at Washington University in St. Louis, where he conducted the University Chamber Orchestra, and has been an associate professor of organ and music at Northwestern University in Chicago.
Now, besides working at the art and music institutes in Cleveland, Paukert is organist and choirmaster in the Episcopal Church in Cleveland Heights.
An unknown person or people smashed the windshield of a KU student's car which was parked in the 1100 block of Kentucky Street sometime between midnight Tuesday and 3 a.m. Wednesday, Lawrence police said.
On the Record
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Call for Details
843-4754
A. M. BURKE
2040 Heatherwood No. 203
S
IGA
DISCOURT
Cultural Affairs Committee of Student Senate Presents:
1st ANNUAL COMEDY FILM FESTIVAL
Tues. April 14, 7:00 p.m.
Spencer Museum
La Cage Aux Folles
Wednesday, April 15, 7:00 p.m.
Spencer Museum
Woody Allen's Love and Death
Thursday, April 16, 7:00 p.m.
Spencer Museum
Marx Brothers' A Night At the Opera
KU Student and Staff $1.00 Public $2.00
PETER WILLIAMS
KU Student and Staff $1.00 Public $2.00
1987 KANSAS RELAYS BUTTONS HAVE ARRIVED!!
KU STUDENTS
If you purchased an All-Sports Ticket you may stop by the ticket office in Allen Field House and pick up your Relays button
If you didn't purchase an All-Sports Ticket, you can still get a button for only $2.00 until April 17.
This years Highlights include:
- Al Oerter, 4 time Olympic gold medalist
- Over 250 high school, college and university teams from over 20 states compete for Kansas Relays championships.
- Over 250 high school, college and university teams
- Over 1,000 runners to compete in Kansas Relays marathon and 10,000 meter town and campus road race.
Stop By:
Athletic Ticket Office Allen Field House Lawrence Kansas,66045 more info call 864-3141
8
Friday, April 10, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Senate vote totals
Editor's note: These are the unofficial Student Senate results according to candidates' schools and coalitions. Winners are boldfaced. In the larger races, final vote tallies were available only for the winners.
- Architecture — two seats available
- Brick Duff — Chancellor
- Chemistry — Chair
-Diane Portheus — Synchronicity
-Direma Morris — Line Bottom
-Direma Moore — Line A
Jennifer Ashen — First Class Chris Dalton - Bottom Line
**Business** - two seats available
She t网膜 - Bottom Line
Michael Womack - Bottom Line
Natalie Sullivan - First Class
Deli Metrum - First Class
Off campus - five seats available
Mark McMahon - Bottom Line
Mark Burke - Bottom Line
Kathryn Anderson - Bottom Line
Frank Partnow - First Class
John O'Connor - First Class
■ Engineering — four seats available
Lori Nabert — Bottom Line
Jed Redwell — Bottom Line
Tam Ferrara — Bottom Line
Reene McGhee — First Class
William Zanelli — Bottom Line
Michael Joseph Bell — First
Michael Joseph Bell — First
Tim Craig — First Class
- Education — two seats available
Kim Coulter — Bottom Line
Social welfare — two seats available
Stacey Walsh — Bottom Line
Tim Greenwell — Bottom Line
■ Journalism — two seats available
Leslie Stephens — Bottom Line
Eric Fisher — Bottom Line
Scott Long — First Class
Slavik Hoehmke — First Class
Stuart Hoemke — Synchronicity
Michelle Parada — Synchronicity
■ Non-traditional — one seat available
106 Helen Goldhill — Bottom Line
91 Ruth Lichardwic — Synchrony
94 Jc Cunningham — First Class
■ Fine Arts - two seats available 57
Andrea Louise Johnson - Bottom Line 522
Keith Bland - First Class 46
Kerry Sheehan - First Class 44
Kenny Schaefer - Second Class 42
Heidi Schweger - Synchrony 41
Tom E. Holland - Synchrony 39
■ Liberal arts and sciences (juniors and seniors in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences — 10 seats available)
147 Botton — Bottom Line
139 Susan Myers — Bottom Line
139 Jennifer Pollock — Bottom Line
121 Brian Moore — Bottom Line
127 David McGrath — Bottom Line
106 Cohy Hall — Bottom Line
208 Brad Wassinger — Bottom Line
305 Amy Handles — Bottom Line
280 34 Andy Morrison — Bottom Line
45 Rosign Ross - Bottom Line 325
Jon Gregoer - Synchrony inc
46 Residence at large — one seat available
Amy Baker — First Class 341
**N** nucleaner (freshmen and sophomores in the college) — 16 seats available
Kevin Pritchard — First Class 620
Roger Templin — Bottom Line 619
Cameron Geyer — Bottom Line 619
Michelle Stuart — Bottom Line 605
Jane Hutchinson — Bottom Line 595
Maren Maleki — Bottom Line 595
Jay Gerber — Bottom Line 590
William Sanders — Bottom Line 570
Scott W. Ragan — Bottom Line 570
Mark Flannagan — Bottom Line 551
Kelly Donohue — First Class 545
Brian Center — Bottom Line 540
Daniel L. Pennington — Bottom Line 539
Kelly Donohue — First Class 545
■ Pharmacy — two seats available
David Korber — Bottom Line 14
Michael Rikk — Bottom Line 12
Winners
Continued from p.1
Krakow said, "Every time the phone rings, I break out."
The evening was dotted with false alarms. Krakow was sitting on a ledge high above the phone when it rang at 1 a.m.
"Help me down, help me down!" he said.
Instantly, half a dozen hands from his supporters pushed forward to lower him to the floor, but Krakow broke into a second, and broke into a grin.
"My people, my people!" he said. But the phone call was only the first of several prank calls last night.
Although First Class candidates took a number of Senate seats, Krakow said it wouldn't affect the coalition's plans.
Quincy said that Mullins and Kramer had a lot of enthusiasm and that she hoped they would stay active in Senate. But she thought the rest of the field had more experience.
"I if hadn't have been running, I "would have voted for Synchronicity."
Kansan reporter John Buzbee contributed information to this story.
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Catch the Fever of the New Music Movement Philip Glass Virgil Thomson Gregory Sandow
PANEL DISCUSSION
A meet the Composer/Mid-America Arts Alliance Program
Panel Discussion "Living Composers Communicating With Their Musicians and Audiences."
This Program is made possible by the support from the Kansas Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts, through their participation in the Mid-America Arts Alliance a regional arts organization, and Meet the Composer, Inc
1:30 p.m.
Sunday, April 12, 1987
Liberty Hall, Lawrence
Don't Forget The Kronos Quartet in Concert
Free and Open to the Public
8:00 p.m. Sunday, April 12 1987:
Crafton-Preyer Theatre Tickets
on sale in the Murphy Hall
Box Office
For Reservations, call 913/864-3982
Presented by the University of Kansas Concert and Chamber Music Series
MAAAA
M
SIMONS & CO.
Photography by Nathan Ham
Spring Cleaning Sale!
April 7-10
9:30-4:30
Reduced prices on art books,
note cards, posters & post cards.
Spencer Museum Book Shop
Sperry • Generra
Shoes ... 30% Off
Save on our entire stock of men's casual shoes by Sperry and Genera Slip-on and tie styles. Sale ends 4/17.
830 Mass. • 843-6155
Litwin's
830 Mass. • 843-6155
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Sat 11:30 a.m. 3:00 a.m.
Sun 11:30 a.m. 3:00 a.m.
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KU
sidewalk sale!
yuu
- Kansas Basketball Sweatshirt 11.95 (Reg. 16.95)
T-shirt 6.95 (Reg. 9.50)
- Clearance sweatshirts 10.00 each or 2/18.00
- Official KU Football Jerseys- Half Price
- "Punching" Jayhawk Puppets 6.95 (Reg. 9.95)
- Cliff Notes- 50¢ off
- Far Side Posters 3/2.00 or 1.50 each
- Assorted Youth Clothing up to 75% off
- Assorted Glassware up to 75% off
- Many more specials
BOOKS- Paperbacks 69c Hardbound 1.99 All you can carry 24.99
Now through April 17th, weather permitting.
---
B
layhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd. "At the top of Naismith Hill"
Mon.-Fri. 8-5 Sat. 9-5
843-3826
University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 10, 1987
9
University to sponsor three lecturers
Author, journalist and Reagan administration official to talk on variety of topics
By JENNIFER FORKER
Staff writer
Lectures presented by an author, a journalist and an official in the President Reagan's administration will take place at the University of Kansas in the next two weeks.
Nicholas Daniiloff, U.S. News & World Report diplomatic editor, will speak at 8 p.m. Monday in Hoch Auditorium about his 1986 detention in the Soviet Union. Daniiloff was serving as the news magazine's Moscow correspondent when he was arrested Aug. 30 and held for 30 days. Soviet officials accused Daniiloff of being a sow.
Tom Wolfe, author of "The Kandy-
Kolored Tangerine Flake Streamline Baby," "The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test" and "The Right Stuff," will speak at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Hoch Auditorium about his writing and what inspires him to write. He also will answer questions from the audience.
Michael Johnson, chairman of the department of English, met Wolfe in April 1972 when Wolfe was at KU to talk about new journalism, which Wolfe practices. Johnson said Wolfe was a flexible writer who changed his writing style to match the events he covered.
"He tries to get the style close to what he's dealing with," Johnson
saw.
Johnson said although Wolfe wrote subjectively, he didn't judge the events he covered.
said.
"He usually suspends moral judgment." Johnson said.
bain lectures are sponsored by the Student Senate lecture series. They are the series' final lectures this semester.
Elliott Abrams, U.S. assistant secretary of state for inter-American affairs since July 1985, will speak at 1 p.m. April 21 in the Kansas Union Ballroom. An advocate of U.S. aid on the contrasts, Abrams will speak on, "Central America: What Are the Alternatives?"
The Latin American studies department is sponsoring his lecture.
Abrams graduated from Harvard University in 1969 and Harvard Law School in 1973. He also received a master's degree in economics with a specialty in international relations from the London School of Economics.
Charles Stansifer, director of Latin American studies, said Abrams' lecture probably would be used as foreign affairs policy and be printed in the U.S. Department of State bulletin.
"He has been talking about it as a major foreign policy address," Stansifer said.
Faculty senate elects 13 council members
By a Kansan reporter
Thirteen people were elected last week to the 1987-88 faculty council. The council is the elected body of the faculty senate, which is composed of the University's almost 1,200 faculty members.
The council's new members are:
Donald Chambers, professor of
social welfare; David Downing, associate professor of aerospace engineering; Ron Francisco, professor of Soviet and East European studies; Robert Hohn, professor of educational psychology and research; Bob Jerry, professor of law; Carl Lande, professor of political science; Don Marquis, associate professor of philosophy; Ray Moore, associate pro
fessor of civil engineering; Oliver Phillips, professor of classes; James Seaver, professor of history; Gary Shapiro, professor of philosophy; Barbara Watkins, extension associate for independent studies and continuing education; and Leann Weller, engineering librarian.
elected each year. The council has 31 members and includes representatives from each of the University's schools.
Council members serve three-year terms, and one-third of the council is
All faculty members received a ballot for the elections, and 410 voted.
ORCHARDS NOW OPEN!
3000 W. 15th St.
843-7456
Joe Suggs, Manager
GOLF CLUB
JAYHAWKER TOWERS
Two bedroom apartments for one to four KU students which feature:
- On campus location
- All utilities paid
- Individual lease option
- except telephone
- Meal plan option
- Free basic cablevision
- Academic Resource Center (ARC)
- Covered parking
- Furniture rental
• Laundry facilities
- Furniture rental
- new venuing area
Choose your space NOW on an individual contract for fall/spring semester!
University of Kansas Department of Student Housing
On the KU Campus
1603 W. 15th
843-4993
Need a second job? [ ]
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Enjoy a relaxed, exciting and fun atmosphere with flexible part-time evening and weekend hours that can be tailored to fit your schedule.
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If you want honest grading and better prices, please stop by.
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JEWELERS
Member National
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Member American
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817 Massachusetts
842-360-9999
The University of Kansas Symphonic Band
Spring Concert
Pietro Bacchioli
Robert E. Foster,
conductor
Zuohuang Chen,
guest conductor
April 12, 1987
3:30 p.m.
Craton-Preyer Theatre
Murphy Hall,
Univ. of Kansas
admission is free
Charles Oldfather,
guest narrator
Joe Brashier,
guest conductor
Stephan speaks to law students about the necessity of lawyers
By CAROLINE REDDICK
No profession is more important to the quality of life in the United States than the legal profession, Kansas Attorney General Bok Stephan yesterday told a group of KU law students.
Staff writer
"That's why I think it should be strictly regulated." Stephan said.
Stephan, speaking at a noon forum, sponsored by the Student Bar Association, discussed his February trip to New York with a group from Lawrence.
"Gorbachev is something else. He's a politician's politician. I really like him. He's short and bald," short, balding Stephan said.
He also criticized the law profession.
"The profession, in some respects,
quote, unquote, is a supermarket," he said, referring to advertising by attorneys.
"Lawyers are quick to say they're not ambulance chasers, but their activities sometimes belie that statement."
Figures that indicate an overwhelming abundance of U.S. lawyers by comparing the number of lawyers in the United States and Japan are misleading, Stephan said. The Japanese figures include only lawyers practicing in court, not those in business and other fields, he said.
"Everybody thinks that there are a lot of lawyers. It's difficult to say. If we had one lawyer, some people would say that's one too many."
He discussed a recent Florida case in which a lawyer went to jail for stealing evidence.
"I think that's a sad commentary on our profession," he said. "The truth, guilt or innocence are not as important as they should be. They ought to be at the core of our concern instead of on a back burner."
TAKE A STUDY BREAK
A man is sleeping in a hammock between two trees. He is holding a book under his arm and has a pillow on his head. There are other objects scattered around him, including a bag of cookies and a bottle of water.
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10
Friday, April 10, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Israeli's Berlin visit causes stir
United Press International
BERLIN — President Chaim Herzog of Israel honored World War II Nazi victims and viewed the Berlin Wall yesterday during the first visit by an Israeli head of state to the seat of power of the Third Reich. But the trip was marred by controversy over a call for West German arms sales to Saudi Arabia.
Herzog, accompanied by West German President Richard von Weizsacker and West Berlin Mayor Eberhard Dieppen, laid a blue and white wreath shaped like a Star of David at a wall of the Ploeztenseen memorial for all victims of Adolf Hitler's regime.
The 2,500 foes of Nazism executed at the Ploetzensee prison included 89 German officers who were captured by a German emperor to assassinate Hirara in 1944.
Herzog later viewed the Berlin Wall, which was built in 1961 by East Germany to thwart refugees fleeing to the West.
Herzog called Berlin one of the great cities of the world and described its political and physical division as sad and painful.
But Herzog's visit was marred by controversy over a call for West German arms sales to Saudi Arabia.
Herzog told reporters that Bavarian State Premier Franz Josef Strauss had chosen an inappropriate time to call this week for an end to West Germany's ban on weapons sales to Saudi Arabia.
He said West Germany had a moral obligation to refuse all assistance to Israel's sworn enemies, including Saudi Arabia.
Strauss, who leads the Bavarian wing of Chancellor Helmut Kohl's Christian Democratic Party, this week said it was in Israel's interest for West Germany to sell arms to a moderate Arab state such as Saudi Arabia.
Herzog concludes his five-day state visit today.
DONALD G. STROLE
LIABILITY IN LAW
- DAILY I & TRAFFIC
- FAILURE & other alcohol offences
- Family Law & other legal problems
**Forwards:** 491, 492, 493, 494, 495, 496, 497, 498, 499, 500, 501, 502, 503, 504, 505, 506, 507, 508, 509, 510, 511, 512, 513, 514, 515, 516, 517, 518, 519, 520, 521, 522, 523, 524, 525, 526, 527, 528, 529, 530, 531, 532, 533, 534, 535, 536, 537, 538, 539, 540, 541, 542, 543, 544, 545, 546, 547, 548, 549, 550, 551, 552, 553, 554, 555, 556, 557, 558, 559, 560, 561, 562, 563, 564, 565, 566, 567, 568, 569, 570, 571, 572, 573, 574, 575, 576, 577, 578, 579, 580, 581, 582, 583, 584, 585, 586, 587, 588, 589, 590, 591, 592, 593, 594, 595, 596, 597, 598, 599, 600, 601, 602, 603, 604, 605, 606, 607, 608, 609, 610, 611, 612, 613, 614, 615, 616, 617, 618, 619, 620, 621, 622, 623, 624, 625, 626, 627, 628, 629, 630, 631, 632, 633, 634, 635, 636, 637, 638, 639, 640, 641, 642, 643, 644, 645, 646, 647, 648, 649, 650, 651, 652, 653, 654, 655, 656, 657, 658, 659, 660, 661, 662, 663, 664, 665, 666, 667, 668, 669, 670, 671, 672, 673, 674, 675, 676, 677, 678, 679, 680, 681, 682, 683, 684, 685, 686, 687, 688, 689, 690, 691, 692, 693, 694, 695, 696, 697, 698, 699, 700, 701, 702, 703, 704, 705, 706, 707, 708, 709, 710, 711, 712, 713, 714, 715, 716, 717, 718, 719, 720, 721, 722, 723, 724, 725, 726, 727, 728, 729, 730, 731, 732, 733, 734, 735, 736, 737, 738, 739, 740, 741, 742, 743, 744, 745, 746, 747, 748, 749, 750, 751, 752, 753, 754, 755, 756, 757, 758, 759, 760, 761, 762, 763, 764, 765, 766, 767, 768, 769, 770, 771, 772, 773, 774, 775, 776, 777, 778, 779, 780, 781, 782, 783, 784, 785, 786, 787, 788, 789, 790, 791, 792, 793, 794, 795, 796, 797, 798, 799, 800, 801, 802, 803, 804, 805, 806, 807, 808, 809, 810, 811, 812, 813, 814, 815, 816, 817, 818, 819, 820, 821, 822, 823, 824, 825, 826, 827, 828, 829, 830, 831, 832, 833, 834, 835, 836, 837, 838, 839, 840, 841, 842, 843, 844, 845, 846, 847, 848, 849, 850, 851, 852, 853, 854, 855, 856, 857, 858, 859, 860, 861, 862, 863, 864, 865, 866, 867, 868, 869, 870, 871, 872, 873, 874, 875, 876, 877, 878, 879, 880, 881, 882, 883, 884, 885, 886, 887, 888, 889, 890, 891, 892, 893, 894, 895, 896, 897, 898, 899, 900, 901, 902, 903, 904, 905, 906, 907, 908, 909, 910, 911, 912, 913, 914, 915, 916, 917, 918, 919, 920, 921, 922, 923, 924, 925, 926, 927, 928, 929, 930, 931, 932, 933, 934, 935, 936, 937, 938, 939, 940, 941, 942, 943, 944, 945, 946, 947, 948, 949, 950, 951, 952, 953, 954, 955, 956, 957, 958, 959, 960, 961, 962, 963, 964, 965, 966, 967, 968, 969, 970, 971, 972, 973, 974, 975, 976, 977, 978, 979, 980, 981, 982, 983, 984, 985, 986, 987, 988, 989, 990, 991, 992, 993, 994, 995, 996, 997, 998, 999, 1000, 1001, 1002, 1003, 1004, 1005, 1006, 1007, 1008, 1009, 1010, 1011, 1012, 1013, 1014, 1015, 1016, 1017, 1018, 1019, 1020, 1021, 1022, 1023, 1024, 1025, 1026, 1027, 1028, 1029, 1030, 1031, 1032, 1033, 1034, 1035, 1036, 1037, 1038, 1039, 1040, 1041, 1042, 1043, 1044, 1045, 1046, 1047, 1048, 1049, 1050, 1051, 1052, 1053, 1054, 1055, 1056, 1057, 1058, 1059, 1060, 1061, 1062, 1063, 1064, 1065, 1066, 1067, 1068, 1069, 1070, 1071, 1072, 1073, 1074, 1075, 1076, 1077, 1078, 1079, 1080, 1081, 1082, 1083, 1084, 1085, 1086, 1087, 1088, 1089, 1090, 1091, 1092, 1093, 1094, 1095, 1096, 1097, 1098, 1099, 1100, 1101, 1102, 1103, 1104, 1105, 1106, 1107, 1108, 1109, 1110, 1111, 1112, 1113, 1114, 1115, 1116, 1117, 1118, 1119, 1120, 1121, 1122, 1123, 1124, 1125, 1126, 1127, 1128, 1129, 1130, 1131, 1132, 1133, 1134, 1135, 1136, 1137, 1138, 1139, 1140, 1141, 1142, 1143, 1144, 1145, 1146, 1147, 1148, 1149, 1150, 1151, 1152, 1153, 1154, 1155, 1156, 1157, 1158, 1159, 1160, 1161, 1162, 1163, 1164, 1165, 1166, 1167, 1168, 1169, 1170, 1171, 1172, 1173, 1174, 1175, 1176, 1177, 1178, 1179, 1180, 1181, 1182, 1183, 1184, 1185, 1186, 1187, 1188, 1189, 1190, 1191, 1192, 1193, 1194, 1195, 1196, 1197, 1198, 1199, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 1000, 1001, 1002, 1003, 1004, 1005, 1006, 1007, 1008, 1009, 1010, 1011, 1012, 1013, 1014, 1015, 1016, 1017, 1018, 1019, 1020, 1021, 1022, 1023, 1024, 1025, 1026, 1027, 1028, 1029, 1030, 1031, 1032, 1033, 1034, 1035, 1036, 1037, 1038, 1039, 1040, 1041, 1042, 1043, 1044, 1045, 1046, 1047, 1048, 1049, 1050, 1051, 1052, 1053, 1054, 1055, 1056, 1057, 1058, 1059, 1060, 1061, 1062, 1063, 1064, 1065, 1066, 1067, 1068, 1069, 1070, 1071, 1072, 1073, 1074, 1075, 1076, 1077, 1078, 1079, 1080, 1081, 1082, 1083, 1084, 1085, 1086, 1087, 1088, 1089, 1090, 1091, 1092, 1093, 1094, 1095, 1096, 1097, 1098, 1099, 1100, 1101, 1102, 1103, 1104, 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1137, 1138, 1139, 1140, 1141, 1142, 1143, 1144, 1145, 1146, 1147, 1148, 1149, 1150, 1151, 1152, 1153, 1154, 1155, 1156, 1157, 1158, 1159, 1160, 1161, 1162, 1163, 1164, 1165, 1166, 1167, 1168, 1169, 1170, 1171, 1172, 1173, 1174, 1175, 1176, 1177, 1178, 1179, 1180, 1181, 1182, 1183, 1184, 1185, 1186, 1187, 1188, 1189, 1190, 1191, 1192, 1193, 1194, 1195, 1196, 1197, 1198, 1199, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 1000, 1001, 1002, 1003, 1004, 1005, 1006, 1007, 1008, 1009, 1010, 1011, 1012, 1013, 1014, 1015, 1016, 1017, 1018, 1019, 1020, 1021, 1022, 1023, 1024, 1025, 1026, 1027, 1028, 1029, 1030, 1031, 1032, 1033, 1034, 1035, 1036, 1037, 1038, 1039, 1040, 1041, 1042, 1043, 1044, 1045, 1046, 1047, 1048, 1049, 1050, 1051, 1052, 1053, 1054, 1055, 1056, 1057, 1058, 1059, 1060, 1061, 1062, 1063, 1064, 1065, 1066, 1067, 1068, 1069, 1070, 1071, 1072, 1073, 1074, 1075, 1076, 1077, 1078, 1079, 1080, 1081, 1082, 1083, 1084, 1085, 1086, 1087, 1088, 1089, 1090, 1091, 1092, 1093, 1094, 1095, 1096, 1097, 1098, 1099, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 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JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Police with dogs and whips broke up a crowd of striking black postal and transport workers outside a Johannesburg labor hall yesterday and several hundred other workers were arrested south of the city, union officials said.
United Press International
COME SEE US
Boshoff was the 59th policeman — the fifth white one — to be killed in racial violence that began in 1984. Two suspected African National Congress rebels were killed during the gunbattle in the black township of Tshing, 90 miles west of Johannesburg.
842-0064 645 Alabama
In Pretoria, authorities said police Constable Danie Boshoff, 19, who was shot in the head during a battle Wednesday with black nationalist guerrillas, died yesterday at Johannesburg Hospital.
Police break up strikers
More than 2,300 people, the overwhelming majority of them black, have died since the unrest erupted against the white minority government and its policies of racial separation, known as apartheid.
Authorities said about 20,000 black workers continued three separate strikes yesterday against the South African Transport Services, the postal service and a coal mine owned by the Anglo American Corporation.
The transport workers are protesting the punishment of a driver accused of theft, the postal employees are embroiled in a dispute over transportation for night workers, and the miners are angered by the detention of colleagues who tried to attend a funeral.
Dirk Hartford, a spokesman for the Congress of South African Trade Unions, which represents the transport workers, said about 20 policemen, some of them leading dogs, ordered 300 strikers to leave the area around the union's hall in Johannesburg.
The workers, employees of the Post Office and the South African Transport Services, had gathered at Cosatu House to keep abreast of
developments in the disputes with the government when the police arrived, Hartford said.
"They came in four or five vans and used bullhorns to order the crowd away," he said. "They made one charge, whipping a handful of the men with sjamboks." Jiamboks are the 6-foot plastic ships used by police for crowd control.
In other strike-related activity, at least 300 South African Transport Services workers were arrested for "illegally gathering" Wednesday at Ogies, 15 miles southeast of Johannesburg, the government Bureau for Information reported.
Mike Roussos, a spokesman for the South African Railway and Harbor Workers Union, said the workers were arrested on their way to a meeting at the union's headquarters in the nearby town of Springs.
A transport spokeman said train service in the Springs area was disrupted for about an hour by "an incident with black men."
Demjanjuk takes over his defense and cross-examines Nazi expert
United Press International
JERUSALEM — In a surprise move, retired U.S. autoworker John Demajnik took over his own defense at his war crimes trial yesterday and interrogated a Nazi document expert whose testimony strongly implicated him as "Ivan the Terrible," a death camp guard.
Speaking in Ukrainian, Demjanjuk, 67, asked prosecution witness Professor Wolfgang Scheffler about the uniforms worn at the Trawnik training camp in wartime Poland and Demjanjuk's photograph on a Trawnik identification card.
Demjanjuk asked his three judges whether he could take over the cross-examination because he felt his lawyers were asking the wrong questions. The judges agreed.
"The questions that should be asked now are very important indeed for me since I have been in prison for such a long time, and I don't know what the future may hold for me." said through a court translator.
Demanjak, who emigrated to the United States and became a naturalized U.S. citizen, is accused of being "Ivan the Terrible," a sadistic guard at the Treblinka death camp. If convicted, he could be hanged.
Scheffler, a historian from West Germany and expert on Nazi documentation, testified earlier in the week that he thinks the identification card from a Nazi SS training camp, the key piece of evidence in the trial, is genuine.
The card, which the prosecution
says was issued at the Trawnik training camp in Nazi-occupied Poland, bears Demjanjuk's name, photograph and physical description. Defense lawyer Mark O'Connor contends the card is a KGB forgery
Using an enlargement and a magnifying glass, Scheffler said he thought the man in the photograph was wearing some sort of tunic. But Demjanjuk said he saw many things that would show it was a forgery.
Scheffler was an observer at the only other Nazi war crimes trial ever held in Israel, the 1961 trial of Adolf Eichmann. Eichmann, one of the architects of Adolf Hitler's campaign of genocide against Jews, was convicted and hanged.
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The University of Kansas Department of Music and Dance Presents
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Director: Haskell Wexler A powerful film which challenges the American government's official version of military involvement in Nicaragua. Eddie Gourrier is a former soldier, who was part of the 'Canton'. Through his eyes, we are presented with a passionate, courageous story of conquest.
Sunday - 2:00 p.m.
Woodruff Aud.
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Aprilis Fair Housing Month
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April 23 at 9-11:30 am, 2-4:30 pm
7-8:30 pm, City Commission Rm.
and you're invited to "our house
Join us at
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 10, 1987
Sports
11
Valesente concerned about upcoming football scrimmage
By DIANE FILIPOWSKI
Staff writer
The Kansas football team has made some improvements during its two months of spring football practices, but certain areas still concern Coach Bob Valesente.
"We still have a long way to go"
ready to confront a law. Fight, fight yet.
The Jayhawks will play their annual spring football scrimmage tomorrow at 1 p.m. at Memorial Stadium. It will be the team's first game in the Rie Eight Conference, and 48 overall.
The game is open to the public, and Yakesse said he hoped people would come and play.
Amission fee is $2 and proceeds will go to the Boy's and Girl's clubs of Lawrence.
Valsente said he was concerned because the team lacked overall speed. He said that the offensive line lacked depth and that it must stay free of injuries.
Spring Football
"I am happy to say that in the last two weeks, we have had no injuries," Valesente said, "and I think that is because we are in good shape."
Valesente said in March that the team's main goal for spring training was to be in better condition so that it could play intensely for a whole game. He said yesterday that he thought the team had achieved this.
"Our conditioning has given us the opportunity to start in a much better position in March." Valesente said. "We have had good,
physical practices."
Valesente said the new intensity of the team came out in a scrimmage last Saturday that ended in a bench-clearing brawl after Kelly Donohue and Kelly Dohnhoe for the quarterback position.
"There is some character being developed here," Taleseh said. "This team cares about it."
Valesente said Orth and Donohoe had improved because of the competition between them.
"Mike's competitiveness has really come out," Valesente said, "but the position is still open."
Another improvement this season is in the team's willingness to be flexible and to work together.
"We are playing team defense instead of
individual defense." he said. "People are excited to throw a good block that will spring open a good play for the team."
Von Lacey unselfishly changed his position from offensive lineman to defensive lineman, Valesente said.
Normore has shown improvement each week. Valente said "he has picked up the skills."
Valesente said Wichita State transfer Clint Normore would fill the free safety position vacated by senior Wayne Ziegler.
"I told him we needed some size, and he told me he would do what would help the team," he said.
David Gordon, a freshman redshirt last season, will move into the defensive end position, and Stacy Henson probably will start as right linebacker.
Valesente said that freshman Chip Budde would start at center tomorrow and that other probable starters had been injured.
The offensive柱 position is open because Bryan Cohane is recovering from knee surgery and Bryan Howard, a starter position, is recovering from a dislocated shoulder.
Fall training camp will be important to the team's success, especially if the players keep up their conditioning during the summer. Valesente said.
"I am concerned." Valesente said, "but I have to give the team a lot of credit for working as hard as they did after offing a disappointing season."
Southern Illinois State University is the only team the Jayhawks will play this season.
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — It may be unusual to remove a pitcher who has given up only one hit, but Jose DeLeon was pitching an unusual game.
"I was getting tired. I was ready to come out," DeLeon said last night after going six% innings in
American League
the Chicago White Sox's 6-0 victory over the Kansas City Royals. "I felt fine until that inning, but then I was just trying to guide the ball, and I couldn't throw strikes anymore."
DeLeon gave up a bunt single to Willie Wilson, leading off the Kansas City first. He cruised into the seventh with a one-hitter, but walked the bases full. With two out, he gave way to Bobby Thigpen, who surrendered two hits before recording the save.
DeLeon did not permit a runner beyond first base until he issued one-out walks to George Brett and Frank White in the seventh. Steve Balboni walked to load the bases with two out, but Thigpen came in and retired pinch hitter Thad Bosley on a fly ball.
The White Sox took a 1- lead in the fourth inning when Ron Hassley doubled and came around to score on groundouts by Ivan Calderon. The White Sox added four runs against Mark Gubicza, in the fifth.
DeLeon, 4-5 with the White Sox last year, struck out six and walked five in his first 1987 appearance. Kansas City's other hits were singles by pinch hitter Juan Beniquez in the eighth and George Brett in the ninth.
with a walk, and went to second on a sacrifice by Ron Karkovice. Gary Redus' hard bouncer went through the legs of third baseman Brett for an error, with Guillen taking third and Redus second.
Donnie Hill bounced an infield single off Gubica's leg that scored Guillen and sent Redus to third, and Walker tripled into the right-field corner, making it 4-0. Hassley walked home, Walker home, Gubica from the game. Gubica's career record for the month of April is 0-8.
Ozzie Guillen led off the inning
Tigers 9. Yankees 3
Walt Terrell, who ran his career record to 20-5 at Tiger Stadium, pitched the first eight innings, allowing 10 hits and striking out five. Eric Kring retired the Yankees in order in the ninth.
DETROIT — Chet Lemon homered, breaking a 1-1 tie in the second inning, and doubled home another run in Detroit's six-run third inning yesterday as the Tigers won by 20. The victory averted a sweep of Detroit's season-opening three-game series.
New York starter Bob Tewksbury lasted only until the third inning, giving up four runs and five hits.
Brewers 12. Red Sox 11
MILWAUKEE — Rookie catcher B J. Surboff led off the bottom of the eighth inning yesterday with his first major league home run, giving the Milwaukee Brewers a 12-11 victory and a three-game sweep over the Boston Red Sox.
The winning blow came off right-hander Steve Crawford, 0-1.
Redbirds beat Cubs Mets sweep Pirates
'Hawks end 8-game losing streak
CHICAGO — Terry Pendleton's two-run homer, which helped the St. Louis Cardinals defeat the Chicago Cubs 4-2 yesterday, was his first of the season. He says it won't be his last.
"That's not being cocky, that's being confident," added the stocky third baseman, who hit three homers during spring training. "This winter I worked a lot on improving my swing in my swing. And if you look at the lower part of my body, you'll see where my power is."
"I guarantee I'll hit more than one," said Pendleton, who had one home run last year and a total of 13 in three seasons in the major leagues.
In addition to Pendleton's power, Vince Colemanole four bases and scored twice, tying a single-game career high.
Winner Danny Cox allowed one hit in six 2-3 innings and struck out eight, equaling his career high. He had a no-hitter until Riley Sanders off of the bottom of the sixth with his first home run of the season.
Coleman walked in the third inning, stole both second and third base and scored on Tom Herr's groundout. Coleman, who stole 217 bases in his first two major league seasons, singled in the seventh and ninth inbound one second and third before scoring a sacrifice fly by Ozzie Smith.
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Darryl Strawberry, who homered earlier, led off the seventh inning with a double and later scored the tie-breaking run on Howard Johnson's sacrifice fly yesterday, giving the New York Mets a 4-2 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Mets 4. Pirates 2
T
Brenda Steele/Special to the KANSAN
Kansas catcher Jarrett Boeschen takes a cut in yesterday's first game against Baker University. Kansas swent the doubleheader 9-1 and 17-6.
By DAVID BOYCE Staff writer
The Kansas baseball team took out its frustrations on the Baker Wildcats yesterday, sweeping a doubleheader, 9-1 and 17-6, at Quigley Field.
The losing streak ends.
"These wins will give us confidence," Darrel Matthews said. "We have been playing well, but coming un short.
"We had forgot how it felt to win."
Baker entered the games with a 5-8 record and left with a 5-10 record.
Meanwhile, Kansas snapped an eight-game losing streak and raised its record to 10-20-1 overall.
Freshman pitcher Brad Hinkle pitched the first game and went the distance, giving up one run and six hits.
"I had better control today."
Hinkle said. "I used my fastball to set up the hitters and my slider to strike them out."
Besides the strong pitching, the offense also came alive early in the game.
Hinkle struck out six batters and gave up only two walks.
Byrn Byrn and Matthews both went 3-for-4. Byrn drove in one run, and Matthews drove in three with a two-run homer and a single.
"He hung a slider over the plate.
Kansas 30 5
Members of the Kansas baseball team celebrate a home run by shortstop Scott Seratte, right, in the second game of a doubleheader. The Jayhawks beat Baker University in both games yesterday at Quigley Field, ending an eight-game losing streak.
renda Steele/Special to the K&NSA
and I happen to get the bat on the ball," Matthews said. "It's a pitch I should have been driving out more this season."
Matthews' home run came in the first inning when the Jayhawks erupted for six runs. And they were never in danger of losing the lead.
Kansas added single runs in the second, third and sixth innings. Baker scored its lone run in the sixth.
These wins will give us confidence. We have been playing well, but coming up short.'
— Darrel Matthews KU baseball player
In the second game, Kansas did put the Wildcats away early. The game was called after five innings because of the 10-run rule.
"All in all, these were good wins for us," KU coach Marty Pattin said. "We had a chance to put them away early in the first game, but still we played two good games."
The big blows in the first inning came on a three-run homer by Scott Seratte and a three-run double by Hugh Stanfield. Stanfield had four RBI in the first by adding a run-scoring single in his first at bat.
Baker opened the second game by taking its only lead of the afternoon, 1-0. The Jayhawks responded in the bottom of the first with nine runs.
Working with the large lead, Kansas starter Steve Renko had trouble throwing strikes. He walked two batters and gave up a single and a triple in the second. Three runs scored, shrinking Kansas' lead to 9-4.
Renko again had trouble in the third, giving up another run before he came to the finish.
Pattin said he was pleased with the pitching performances by Hinkle and Renko, even though he had to remove because of the control problems.
Mike Murrier entered the game in the third and pitched the rest of the day.
Kansas broke the game open in the bottom of the third with eight runs.
"These were good wins, and they will give us some confidence going against K-State this weekend," Pattin said.
The Jayhawks, who will play the Wildcats in Manhattan during the weekend, still are looking for their next Conference win, as is Kansas State.
Kansas 611 001 x-9 11-1
Armstrong, Stelzer (1) and Farnhart, Hinkle
and Boesenwijk W-Hinklee (1-0) L-Armstrong
2Bb-Kansas, Berate, Standfield HI-Kansas.
KANSAS 17. BAKER 6
Baker 131 10--6 8 11
Kansas 908 0x-17 12 11
Cook masters slick greens at Augusta
Kansas 908 0x-17 12 1
Swanson, Johnson (1) , Stelzer (3)
and Palmberg, Renko, Murree (3) and Boesen-
Wrinken R(w-2) 1. Lsawson, S-baker, Bakerman,
3b-Baker, LaFrance, Anspaugh, Kansas,
Sikhra, Smith, HRS-Serate(1)
AUGUSTA, Ga. — John Cook use a new attitude and an old putter and subdued glass-slick greens with a 69 that established the first-round lead yesterday in the 51st Masters Tournament.
The Associated Press
"A couple of times, if I'd hit the putt any easier, I'd have whipped it," said Cook, 29, who has won twice in an injury-plagued eight-year PGA Tour career.
"The greens played as fast as any one putted on," Cook said. "If I was scat, I would."
"It was a battle," said Cook, who used only 24 putts on the most difficult, frustrating greens the Augusta Golf Club has presented in years.
For comparable conditions, two-time Masters winner Watson Watson thought back to 1970. Six-time Masters winner Jack Nicklaus nominated 1966.
"You get it above the cup, then miss the hole, you can four-putt," said Larry Mize, whose 70 left him alone in second place.
Tied with Langer at 71 were Watson, Calvin Peele, Curtis Strange, Payne Stewart and Corey Pavin, the only two-time winner on the Professional Golfers' Association Tour this year.
"The greens were too firm, extremely fast," said West German Bernhard Langer, who won the title in 1985. He three-putted twice on the way to a 71 that nonetheless left him very much in contention.
Jodie Mudd made Mize a prophet, four-putting on the 11th hole.
Greg Norman, two-time Masters champ Steve Ballesteros of Spain and the ever-present Tom Kite, not yet a Masters winner but often a challenger.
Scott Simpson, a winner last week in the Greensboro Open, led a group at par 72. A large group at 73 included
Nicklaus finished at 74, five strokes off the pace.
There were very few chuckles and giggles during the sunny windy spring.
Norman, who dominated world goo,
last year, backed away from a 2-foot
putt on the 12th hole, nervously wiped
his palm on his pants leg and then
addressed the ball again. He missed
the putt.
"The speed of the greens was the crux of the matter," said Norman, who won 10 tournaments around the world last year. "One putt, on the sixteenth, the fastest I've had anywhere in the world."
The leader, too, positively
trembled over a 12-foot putt on the 16th.
"It was the scariest putt I've ever said," Cook said. "If it doesn't catch some part of the hole, it's off the green. I think that's the only time in my life I've had a 12-foot I simply don't need to putt. I was ready to nocee."
Arnold Palmer, 57, who built much of his legend around his four Masters victories, struggled to an 83. He wasn't alone in his difficulties.
He didn't, however, and sank the putt.
Some of golf's great names couldn't doubt the demands of one of its most celebrated players.
Ray Floyd, the current U.S. Open champion and a former winner here, had a 75. Another former champion, Fuzzy Zoeller, shot 76.
Track teams traveling to warm up for Relays
Staff writer
By DIANE FILIPOWSKI
Bob Timmons, men's coach, said this probably was the highlight of the season.
Thirty members of the men's team will be competing tomorrow in Berkeley, Calif., where they will face Arizona State, San Jose State and the University of California at Berkeley in a quadrangular meet.
"This has really motivated a lot of our athletes to train hard." Timmons said. "We have had some good prac
The Kansas track teams will be competing in different parts of the country tomorrow as they make final preparations for the 62nd Annual Kansas Relays, which will begin Wednesday.
tices lately, and we expect to have some good performances."
Timmons said he was not sure what kind of competition Kansas would face because this was the first time he had competed against these teams.
"I know that these are strong teams," Timmons said, "so I expect some diversified competition in each event."
Timmons said Cal-Berkley's stadium would bring back memories for him because it was the place where Jim Ryun, a former Kansas All-American, broke his first world record in the mile in 1966.
Timmons said that the team
See TRACK. p. 13. col. 1
12
Friday, April 10. 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Weekend softball wins could mean playoff bid
By ROB KNAPP
Staff writer
A good showing by the Kansas softball team against Creighton University this weekend could pay big dividends when postseason rolls around.
The Jayhawks, 17-13, meet Creighton in a doubleheader at 1 p.m. tomorrow at Jayhawk Field. They will play at Jayhawk field at 1 p.m. Sunday at the same site.
Creighton's coach is the chairman
of the national committee that selects teams to participate in regional postseason play. Kansas softball coach Bob Stancill said a victory could serve the Jayhawks well when selections were made.
"I want the teams to settle the matter on the field," Stancilf said. "If my team stacks up well against theirs on the field, then Kansas should go. If theirs stacks up better, then they should go."
region as the Jayhawks and was their main regional competition from outside the Big Eight Conference, Stanclift said. But the Blue Jays moved into a conference arrangement with some western teams, and now compete in a different region.
Creighton used to be in the same
In postseason, each region has a competition that produces a team for the playoffs.
Kansas played Creighton earlier in the season at the Sooner Invitational in Norman, Okla., and lost 6-3.
"They hit the ball pretty well, but I think we gave the game to them," catcher Kelly Downs said.
Kansas was mired in a defensive slump at that time, averaging two errors a game. But the Jayhawks have stressed defense in practice, and the work has paid off with four consecutive victories, including two at Missouri on Wednesday.
Downs had continued in her role as a home run hitter. She hit another against Missouri, raising her total for
the year to four and equalling her output for all of last season.
Downs has no explanation for her power surge. I guess I'm eating too much. I guess I'm eating too much.
Track
Second baseman Laura Cramer, the team's third-leading hitter, returned from a hand injury and played against Missouri.
Shortstop Cherie Wickham, who has been hobbled by an injured ankle, is expected to play this weekend.
received financial support from Cal-Berkley to attend the meet and that Kansas would do the same for the Kansas to attend the Kansas Relays next year.
Continued from p. 11
Ann O'Connor, who won the Big
Eight Conference Indoor title in the
Timmons said the Jayhawks would compete tomorrow but would do some touring of San Francisco and Oakland, California, including the beaches, on Sunday.
heptathlon in February, will compete tomorrow at the Tampa Bay Invitational in Tampa Bay, Fla.
Carla Coffey, his coach, said O'Connor found out Wednesday that she was one of 12 heptathletes in the national team. She appeared in a special event at the invitational.
"We expect most of the Big Eight teams to be there," Coffey said, "and a lot of Texas schools."
"It will be a good chance for Ann to qualify for the NCAA meet because she will have good weather and good competition." Coffey said yesterday.
Coffey said 16 members of the women's track team also expected good competition tomorrow at the John Jacobus Invitations in Norman.
Coffey said that not all of the team would compete because some members did not want to aggravate minor injuries before the Relays.
In yesterday's edition of The University Daily Kansan, the offer for 50% off the regular price of any accessory or apparel with the purchase of a 1987 bike (up to 20% of the value of bike) was left out of the Lawrence Schwinn Cycley ad. The Kansan apologizes for any inconvenience this may have caused
CYCLE MADNESS SALE APRIL 9, 10, 11, & 12, 1987
FOUR BIG SALE DAYS!
ACCESSORIES Everything in store on sale! Thousands of items reduced! Many items marked down as much as 40%! All items not sale priced will receive a 10% mark down at register.
and
BIKES All 86 models marked down 10-20% and
Cash in on the hottest deals of the season. Super savings on top name brands such as Cinelli, Movk, Shimano, Suitour Silica, Bell and more!
BIKES All '87 models receive a free Paramount water bottle and cage-PLUS: take 50% off the regular price of any accessory or apparel (up to 20% of the value of the bike).
APPAREL
REGISTER TO WIN A FREE TEAM ISSUE PARAMOUN1
LAWRENCE SCHWINN CYCLERY
1601 W.23rd.
842-6363
The Southern Hills Mall
Madness hours:
Fri. 9:30-10:00
Sat. 9:30-10:00
Sun. 12:00-6:00
Quality at a Fair Price Everyday
FILM
SANDAKAN 8
JAPANESE
Winner of all major Japanese film awards and Oscar nominee for Best Foreign Film SANDAKAN B features a compelling story about the Kuniyu Takaie as Naikai, a "kaikai"
April 10 and 11
7:00; 9:00 & 11:00 pm
Matinee April 11 at 3:00 pm
$2.00
UFS UNIVERSITY FILM SOCIETY
All UFS films are shown in Downs Auditorium in Dyche Hall
TWO COOL!
Schlotz
Schlotz
That's right! Buy one yogurt at the regular price—any size, any toppings—and Schlotzsky's will GIVE you a second yogurt (of equal or lesser value) ABSOLUTELY FREE!
Buy one yogurt at the regular price and get a second one FREE
Oh yeah, there's a catch!
You have to bring your
SCHLOTZSKY'S TWO COOL
COUPON with you.
Schlotzsky's
Sandwiches • Soups • Salads
23rd & Louisiana
--must sublease for Summer. Short walk to campus 2 belfrm townhouse. Call 841 8281
TWO COOL COUPON
Buy one yogurt at the regular price and get a second of equal or lesser value ABSOLUTELY FREE!
ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER, PLEASE
Schlotzsky's
OFFER EXPIRES APRIL 19, 1987
ClassifiedAds
OPEN HOUSE Saturday, April 11, 10 a.m-4 p.m.
Berkeley Flats, 11th & Mississippi.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
JEWISH STUDENTS
Experience the communal living environment of the
HILLEL HOUSE 940 Mississippi
Spaces available for summer and academic year, 1987-88.
For more information call Hillel office at 749-4242 by April 12.
Garage Sale April 11th, 7:00 a.m. - till 3:00 p.m.
Dry Cleaning Services from Claremont, Claremont College, Julian, and much more. Great bargains on name brands. 1440 Westbrook Street, Next Golf Course Golf Course. In God We Trust, all others cash.
ومن ثم يستمر ذلك حتى يصبح الحديث في هذا السطر في المقام الذي يبدأ منه
أو أن يكون في آخر الصورة إذا كانت في نهاية السطر أو في آخر الصورة
في نهاية السطر أو في آخر الصورة في النهاية المالية
Audit Anderson
أما الآخر فإنه يحتوي على بعض المؤشرات المختلفة في هذا الفصل.
IMMEDIATE OPENING FOR A TELEPHONE SALES SUPERVISOR: We have an immediate opening for a telephone sales supervisor. The performance allows the ability to train, motivate, and supervise a crew selling subscriptions of the Journal World Press. Supervisor experience is a plus. Working with our previous experience in telephone selling operations. Supervisor experience is a plus. Working with our previous experience in telephone selling operations. This position offers a base salary plus a commission for sales. The more your crew works, the better your return through Friday. This position offers a base salary plus a commission for sales. The more your crew works, the better your return through Friday. This is an immediate opening. If you are interested in earning some extra cash for part-time work, please call today, and ask for Ed Schultz or Kelthu
The University Daily Kansan is now accepting applications for the 1987 Fall semester business and news staffs. These are paid positions but do not require newspaper experience.
KANSAN STAFF POSITIONS
Application forms are available in rooms 119 (Kansan Business Office) and 200 (Journalism School Office) Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in 200 StauFFER-Flint Hall by p.5m. Friday, April 17. If you have any questions, please stop by the Kansan Business Office, 119 StauFFER-Flint Hall.
The Kansan is an Equal Opportunity / Affirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
EVERYONE IS PSYCHET TO SOME DEGREE.
A Tarot Reading can help you channel that power,
make decisions, and heal the spirit Tarot Therapy.
843-4235
IS MASSAGE BETTER THEN PIZZA? Find out try. steam & massage from Lawrence Massage Therapy and R-E-L-A-X. Student rates, Certificates too! 'Call 862-1663 and hold on!
LEARN TO FLY Get 47 brs. K U. credit.
INVEST IN LOW-LR rates around
841 FLY. BUILD YOUR DEFENSE
University Community Service Scholarship Award application deadline is 5 p.m. Monday, April 20 at the U.S. Office: 864-3477, fourth floor of the Kansas University
ROMAN CATHOLICS Do you yearn for the splendor of a Traditional Latin High Mass this Easter?
St. Mary's Academy & College
U.S. Highway 24
St. Marys, KS 65536 invites you to Traditional Catholic Holy Week Services
Each Morning,
April 16 - 18
confessions, 11-30 pm
April 16 - 18
9:30 confessions; 11:30 sermon
Maundy Thursday,
April 16
4:30 p.m. polem Evening Mass of the last Supper
8 - 9 p.m. Confessions
Good Friday, April 17
2 p.m. Stations of the Cross
5 p.m. Solemn Afternoon
Library at the Cross
2 p.m. Station of the
5 p.m. Solemn Afternoon
Liturgy/Veneration of the Cross
8 - 9 p.m. Confessions
Holy Saturday, April 18
Holly Saturday, April 18
7 - p. 9 fences
9 - p. 10m. Traditional Paschal
Vigil at the Resurrection of the
Resurrection
Easter Sunday
9 a.m. Latin High Mass with
Gregorian Chant & Organ
10 a.m. Low Mass
11 a.m. Low Mass
5 p.m. sung Vespers/Benediction
TRADITIONAL
LATIN MASS DAILY
For More Info, call
(212) 358-6790
For more info... call (913) 437-2471
ENTERTAINMENT
At Your Request 1 Lawrence's Best and Most Afraid
2 D. J. Sound and Lights for Any Occasion
3
Have the Hottest Party in Town. Rent A Hot Tub.
Call Tub-to-Gaill 841-2691
LIBERTY HALL
THE FUNNIEST CRAZIEST DRIESTEST
MOM PERVERSYL BEAUTIFUL
SCIENCE-FICTION MOVIE EVER MADE
R
liquid Sky
Midnight FRI. & SAT.
ALSO SAT. AT 9:30
SAT. ONLY 5:30 & 7:30
WHAT HAPPENED TO
KEROUAC?
642 Mass. 748-1912
FOR RENT
Metropolis Mobile Sound. Number 1 with a bubble! DJ: Extraordinaire, Weddings, Dances, Parties, Proms. Books starting graduation parties now Hot Spots for Maximum Party Thrust! 841-7083
1 bdmf furnished & 2 bdmf unfurnished with balcony available on Northside Plaza Apts
3 bdmf furnished & 2 bdmf unfurnished $215-3 bedroom, 1/4 bath. C.A., washer, dryer,
furnished. Roommate or sublet Spring and/or
Summer rental.
2 Birmn Townhouse for summer special-sate rate, bandy facilities, swimming teams, U.B. Bus., and more. (635) 794-5100.
2 Bedroom house. CA waiver/dryer, just South of K. U/ Prefer couple 81. K/ 843-9605.
3 Bedroom Apartment Summer Sublease
2 bathroom, bathrooms. Speciale Close to campus
4 Bedroom in old Remodeled house. Utilities paid
1 Bork from KRT [L81, L70, 1961, 842, 2522]
1 Block from KU. Lida, 749-1917. **PC**
4 Bedroom house near KU. Available mid May or June 1. Hardwood floors, lots of windows. W. D. 749-0166 eves.
4kDhm, 2 full bath, large kitchen living room
bathroom. Master's Campus Place. Next to Yelp
Master's Campus Place. Next to Yelp
3 bedroom apartment available June 1st. Close to town and campus. Includes洗衣 and dryer $450. Utilities paid. Other apartments available 841-4144.
4 Bedroom room, furnished, available June and Family preferred. Call for information, info@thefamily.com
8 Bedrooms, 3 Bathrooms. Adjacent to campus
No pets. Call 842-891-7600
Apartment for Sublet. Spacious 2 bedroom, bathroom, pool, and tennis courts. Call 841-7868.
Apartments for summer and fall at University, Terrace Apartment, 1607 W. 9th. 1 Bedroom forsummer. June and July only $190 unfurnished, furnished. 1 Bedroom forsummer. June and July only, $240 unfurnished, furnished $360, plus all utilities. 1 Bedroom forfall, to month lease. August 1 June 1. furnished bedrooms. August 1 June 1. furnished Bedroom for fall; August 1 June 1. $130 furnished, $290 unfurnished, central air, or bus route large rooms, gas heat. See see at, answer call 841-1411. W. 9th or 841-320. If answer not call 841-1411.
ARE YOU ATTENDING SUMMER SCHOOL?
Special summer rates starting at $210 disc.
Berkeley Flats, 845-2116.
Aspen West now leasing for Summer. Energy effi-
cency 1 and 2 bedrooms. 3 blocks west of Iowa on
13th. Private patio/decks, ceiling farm, pet
space. 749-828-1498. Open studio Saturday
11 p.m.
Beautiful large 2 Bedroom in old Remodeled house 1 block from Lida Kura Lida 749-812, 842-252
Beauty, eh? Two Bedroom Apartment, Five minutes to Frisco. Low Utilities. Lesse for Sampson. Complete furnished. Completely furnished 2 bdm. Low utilities Sublease. Close to campus. Rent neg Call
Available mid-May for summer sublease. Studio near campus. Water paid. Unique design. Call 129-1218.
Female, nonmoker, to share condo 2 blocks of
KU bus route until June 1 1.381-6242
DONT DELAY! Sublease; 3 story, 3 BR,
Glenhaven Apartment. Campus 1 block. Micro-
Fireplace, washer dryer, more. Great opportunity.
Will negotiate. 841-5797.
Female. No another member to share co ed home with. Female. No another member to share co ed home with. Female, no another member to share co ed home with. Female, no another member to share co ed home with.
Female roommate wanted for this summer and
want to spend 5 bedroom apartment at
Surprise Call: 841-692-3071
Excellent location: 2 bedroom apartments in four-plex Carpet central, air equipped kitchen, and low utilities. Available June 1 Summer Rate. Located at A104 Tennessean and 1148 Ohio Call 842-424-3211.
Female Roommate needed from May 20-05
29. Furnished Tanglewood Apartment Large
bedroom. Great bargain for $175 a month. Call
Holy, 749-4808
For Rent: Large rooms in private home *Basement*
: 5 minutes from KU & one block from bus line
Route: Shark kitchen, *Business entrance* $100.00
$15.00 plus $4 usages *Call Us* 842.347 or
843.908
POURENT LARGE ONE BEDROOM APART
INCREMENT INCLUSIVE WATER and airable television
INCLUDES DOWNSTREAM TV AND SOUTHERN
TV
Get Out of the Dorms! Enjoy living with 30 other students in a Cooperative Environment. Share the room with your classmates. SUNFLOWER HOME RENT $160-$240. Spaces open for Summer and Fall -744-897-ask for more information.
GREAT SUMMER RATES Special incentives, ask about our Military and ROTC Specials!
Have a duplex adventure this summer! Need great locations. Hire call 841-5098 for location. Hire call 841-5098 for location.
HEY LOOK AT THIS BRAND new 1 Bdmr. AFTER summer suburbs. Close to campus W/D /A C
W/C
Houses, Bedroom Apartments, Sleeping Rooms.
Available June 1st - 2-bedroom apartments, 1.2 and
3-bedroom apartments, and, sleeping rooms.
Near Campus, no pets. Call 842.8971.
Large three bedroom apartment, close to campus and downtown for summer sublease. Available May 15. Free rent through May. $35.00/month Call 843.7633 or 841.1237
Modern Split Level 2 Bedroom Apartment available for the summer months. It includes 11/2 bath, staff loft, spacious living room, and bathroom. Bedrooms have high utilities. Call Diane at 841-261-5 near 5 u.
LEASE NOW FOR FALL Rooomy 2B apt. good location; fireplace; laundry; no pets. CATS not allowed. LIKE CATS for summer beautiful apartment in old house. Spacious, wood floors, fireplace, washer dryer $300/mo plus gas & electricity for summer set of summer pet aftre: Anne, 79-325.
Need to sublease Apple Lane Place studio apartment for the summer. Available May 1 or asap June 26, 2023. Enjoy one bedroom house 1800 block of Maine Street. Walk to class. prefer couple accommodation. 6-1.
Reserve your apartment now! Just 2 short blocks from university, 1, 2 and 4 bedroom apartments. Furnished with some utilities paid and off street parking. No pets. 841-5500
Reserve our room now! For summer and/or fall.
Furnished with most utilities paid. Shared cooking and bath facilities. Just 2 short blocks from the apartment with off-street parking. No pets. 841-509.
Roommate needed for summer and. 87-88 school year.
$135 month, on bus route, 2 story townhouse.
Own room. Cal Elizabeta, 749-5774
Roommate 2 Bdrm apartment Near campus.
Rent: $100 summer, $150 fall. Not Sublease.
Caby, 749-1267
Rooms available for summer and the 1878-88 academic year in the Christian living community "Kronona" at Ecumenical Christian Minstries. Information coming to 1204 Oread or call 483-9833.
Share Rent, utilities, and dulies. Nice house,
close to campus, watcher/driver, private room;
free wifi.
SPRING GRID to Wichita duplex for 3, BRL
1.1/2 bath, bsmit appliances, to rent park,
ternally located, excellent condition $475. Available
June 1. Call 316-682-3679
Studio available for summer in super api. comp.
great maintenance, recreation facilities and
laundry available. I will assume part of expenses.
Call 842-9659 after 6:30 m.
SUMMER SCHOOL SCHOOL "NO CAR" 2d bermain & admissió d'englà, fajal i救援.ail, aval May 84129, Kdeh
SUMMER SUBLASE extra clean, furnished,
soundproofed, angle-wood Apert;
call 744-3073 anytime.
UMMER SUBLEASE Two bedroom Apt.
valid mid May New and close to campus
SUMMER SHILEASE: Need two non-smoking females to subside Trailer ride townhouse call
AMENITIES
Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the amenities of Naismith Hall. Applications for fall semester are now being accepted while space remains.
NAISMITHHALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
913-843-8559
University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 10, 1987
SUMMER SUNLLEASE available, 4 bedrooms,
2 full baths, both heated and warmed by Mastercraft
alternative heating system.
IF YOU LIKE SPACE & QUIET
WE HAVE IT AND YOU
CAN STILL WALK TO CAMPUS
Spacious 2 bedroom
Laundry facilities
Waterbed fine
Swimming pool
10-12 month leases
VILLAGE SQUARE
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Sublease for Summer: Furnished one RH with biflute used as second RH, $55 plus electric, close to home.
Saltwater for summer. Tangwelleed, 2 bedrooms.
Cream furnished. 3 level Low utilities.
Chen Furnished. (U.S.)
- apartment
Close to open bays in summer 749.990
• close for summer one large bedroom two
baths
Sublease for summer: a large one bedroom in two bedroom apt. Malf.'s Olde English Village, Leeds.
Sub-lease Apt. May 18, 1 bedroom with loft, furished, water paid. 841-5196
Sahabee one bedroom apartment. Available May 31.
Parkside Park. Cell 799-7057. Leave Message.
campus, low utilities, free cable. Call 843-576-1201
Sublease for summer, studio at Haven Place.
Call 843-576-1201
Sublease for summer. Furnished 2 bedrooms, full bath. A/C. Close to campus, near open barra in the courtyard. $350.
Sublease. Traitrade 3 bedroom, 2/1/8
townhouse. Available mid-May, option to lease
next fall. One large bedroom with own bathroom.
Two bedrooms, sports club facilities. $400 call
749-4849.
Location
Located among 70 acres of rolling hills and trees, you'll enjoy the convenience of being close to campus and area shopping.
Lifestyle
Meadowbrook offers a selection of spacious and comfortable studios, 1, 2, or 3 bedroom apartments, and townhouses to fit your lifestyle
RESERVE YOUR
UNIT NOW...
FOR SUMMER OR FALL!
15th & Crestline 842-4200
meadowbrook
Summer Sublet, 2 Bedroom Townhouse; Pool
near campus; 841-0749 early/late; 841-1287
inquire >5 D: afternoon.
Summer Sublime 3 bedroom Apartment with 2 baths, a. c. d. w. pool. Close to campus 841-5697.
Summer Sublime Large 3 BR Townhouse. AC power. bus line park. Rent negotiated 841-3640
**Summer Sublease:** 2 Bdr. Apt. near downtown
low utilities. Spacious $72.00. Call 841-5797.
**Summer Sublease:** Near campus, great for sum-
mum campers with possible reductions.
Call 841-7414 at 5:00 p.m.
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Summer Sublease. One bedroom luxury apartment has washer/dryer, microwave access to juices! Option to renew lease $350.00 @ 842.5189
Summer Sublet: Coolest Apartment in town. 1 bed, dishwasher, Wash/Dry, Stair Stairs.
Whirlpool. Includes w furnished w king size bed. bed max 104.799/325
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
- 10 or 12 month contract
- Swimming pool
- Exercise Weightroom
- Laundry room
* Fire place
- On-Site Management
Open Daily 3:00-5:00
Saturday 9:00-12:00
841-5444
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Management, Inc
--apt. 1/2 blocks from campus Call 841-5794
minute sublease 2 bd. furnished Close to cam
square location
Summer sublease: 3 bedrooms in new 4 bedroom
building, Available May 19th. Utilities:
Available May 19th. 9th Terrace Terrace
Summer sublease. 2 br fully furnished apartment.
Low rent. Uuivl located in Camp. Rent
$465 per month. 841-790-3824.
100g bag
Summer size to females 1 lbm furnished
1/2 bighops to females Call 841-8044
1 lb bags to females Call 841-8044
Summer Tumbers wanted for very nice 4 bedroom house. 2 miles from campus near bus route. Microwave. Dishwasher, beds, and some other furniture supplied $150 per month plus 1/4 utilities Call Eric, evenings, 5:30-10:30, 841-3641. Surprise Place townhouse Available for summer rentals. 12/2 floors based on basement, 11/2 baths, perfect for 4 Foo, cable connected. More information, 842-9910.
Person to Sublet apartment for summer. Water paid, close to school. Call Tamat at 802-3548 or 802-3547.
Very nice two bedroom apartments available summer/fall. Low utilities, fully carpeted, air conditioning, and washer/dryer included. $350 a month. Call 749-2189.
MASTERCRAFT
apartments--all near KU! Consider:
- Custom furnishings
- Energy efficient
- Affordable rates
- Variety of floorplans
- Designed for privacy
- Professional management
- Many great locations
CAMPUS PLACE—1145 Louisianna 841-1429
HANOVER PLACE—14th & Mass.
841-1212
SUNDANCE—7th & Florida 841-5255
TANGLEWOOD—10th & Arkansas
749-2415
OPEN 8:30 A.M.
FOR SALE
1974 VW Bug. Shiny in inside and out. New engine guaranteed by Metric Motors: $1750.00 or 841.6600
1984 Honda Nighthawk S 7000c, 450 miles, Still brand new. Must sell $2,300. 841.6720
1987 Yamaha Scooter: Perfect shape. Asking
Negotiate. Must see to appreciate Call.
1988 Honda Ride: Excellent shape.
$200 will purchase a Honda C70 with 1250 miles.
843-865-
843-8605
50% off Coach Airline Ticket. Credit Cards on
74 Honda 450, all stock, a classic, $450.00 O.B.O.
842-3368, Dave.
BAND EQUIPMENT 2 : Bass bins 49 x 3 x 19 *15*
EV drivers 602 pax 7 band EQ 852. Yamaha
Yamaha YXZ 450 8-speed Bansch Sport
Bianci Sport 188 upe 19 shot, Alii, Alloy Wheels
Great Condition. Must sell, John 843-6431
Bike For Sale, 25" Fuji Elegance Excellent Condition. $75, Call 441-3883.
Blue Nushki 12 Speed Touring Bike: new tires,
safety gear, asking $170 negotiable.
843-960 or br842-960
CPA EXAM Study Material. Best CPA Reviews
involved only. Please refer to:
842-945-2025; www.pa.com p. 841-880-6950.
Dining room set, 2 twin beds, small dresser, all furniture. Available May 19, 18 Call Scott. B41-6731
For Sale. Broiler HR-13 XL Letter quality data sheet. For purchase only. Must have buffer, and for optional keyboard. Used very well. Check out. (800) 247-9666.
For Sale. Bicycle '19 12' speed Trek, 2 years old,
excellent condition, with pump and front bag.
$252.钢琴, Schuler full sized upright, Mahogany,
725.琴箱, Schuler 602. nice, with hard shell.
$75. Cali 844-855
For Sale - One gold Holton Trumpet and One
gold Tenor Saxophone; $30 each; and $90
and $39 Call 841-702. For Bob or leave
it at www.holtonmusical.com
Harmard Karden STEREO Amp, $35, *5' Reflector*
TELESCOPE, mahogany tripod, lenses, filters,
B/O, PARKA with hood, m's L, $20. 864-5120,
841-6686.
Have fun in the sun! Moped for sale-Must sell a Hexagon Express HU $990 $150 or best offer. Call (866) 723-4600.
PCI/XT compatible, includes monochrome
graphics, monochrome monitor, switchable Turbo
motherboard w/ s12K. 1 Flippy drive.
875.7 month warranty included. 842 5495.
Leading Edge PC4, 60 K, 2 DD, colorystar, 2 speed CPU, DOS 2.11, BASIC, LE Word PROCESSOR $12.00 Also, 300 bd med medium ($60). Epson TUR-Poscal $83.99
MAX'S COMICS. Comic Books, Playboys, Pe-
nhouse, ect. All New, Hartpile.
SUNFLOWER
TRAVEL
SERVICE
704 MASS
842-4000
SPECIAL YOUTH FARE
CHICAGO—BRUSSELS
Must Sell 1985 BMW K100T Warranty till 10/88
New Pirrelli Mirrors, Tail Shield, Tail Heel
Grips, Reynolds Hack with trunk Cornbat seat
Grip, Reynolds Hatch with $295.00. Make off
452-3134. Leave message
- * MOTHALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
* * MOTHALL 10:50 p.m. Saturday 10:24 p.m.
M3 E1 8:24 p.m.
Nice as耳型 lyptapper. Smith-Corona Memory
Nice as earl type lyptapper. Need case in-
medial? Call helen at 749-8380.
For sale. Zenth 10.15. Color Good picture.
GP: Tim-Sunshade, like New, $25. Please Call
(866) 743-7855.
NOTES now available for variety of classes.
Enhance learning and grades. Call 861-3022
SCHOLARSHIP: Unspecified.
TREK 400 Bicycle In great condition! What a Bargain! Call Paul: 834-6484
Povey a best horn with tweeter packs, list $1200
(8 packs) for an amp run 487 amp.
Call 829-2829. Leave message
Red carpeting 6' 9. Perfect for dorm rooms.
Asking $30.00 Call 841-4306.
TYPEWRITERS for sale. Silver Repel 223 C: correcting selective free films/correction tape, excellent condition, $195. Smith Corona Galaxie 12 manual, excellent condition, $60.841-4675.
1978 Celica GT Liftback, 5-speed, Air Conditioner
1978 Celica GT Liftback, after 2 years, 7 p.m.
Racing Bike Tutiur 23 Ils lbs. with lock Cyclo
computer more first $30s拿 864-281
1979 Conv VW, White body, White top, excellent
Condition 35,000 miles $600 firm Larry,
Jim B.
Volkswagen Rabbit. Restored, beautiful
tire types, long life highway car for gas for 100
years, long life highway car for gas for 100
AUTO SALES
79 Ford Mustang V-8, 302 4. Speed, Stereo,
Custom Wheels, 842-1043, Price Negotiable.
1979 Triumph Spitfire Convertible 50,000 miles
Excellent condition $1400.00 Firm. Call 843-0194
Must have a valid license to drive
1801 Pontiac Formula Hybrid 70,000 Miles. New
rear shocks. New exhaust. 301. AM/FM Cassette.
New brakes. New tires.
Must Sell! 1789 Chevette, 4 cylinders, Automatic Hatchback 87 000 miles, 4 new radial tires, Air conditioning. Breakling (recently paid $90) $190 (Firm). 841-5533
New engine, new everything! Dependable Subaru with extra tires, durable simple, etc. 1974, must be a DODGE V8.
- extass Supreme: AT, PD, PS, TU, AM/FM
Calls in: AIR, 60.0 km/h Good Condition
Call in: AIR, 59.2 km/h Good Condition
LOST-FOUND
Lost female calf calcea cat wearing pink collar
17 at 4th and 18 at 5th College. Please call
749-0200, B92-3922
Found. Two boxes of computer packages.
Southeast of Eudora Cali events. Scott.
HELP WANTED
Listen $;1,000.00 If you can find it, you can keep it.
Listen for Hunt Clauses in clkZ12 KLIZ 1627
Calculator: HP/Elcve, Watson Laburn, Satur-
atron Computer, Mitsubishi, Nintendo,
Circulation Desk or JQM Colonnium. 4,6003
Boot Load
$ 1,000.00 If you can find it, you can keep it!
For learner to Tester hard chars on KZ110 866-723-4122
**Career's** Good Pay. Travel. Call For Guide.
**Careers** Good Pay. Travel. Call For Guide.
Are you good with children? Would you like to be paid to live with a California family and help with
children? Would you like to live in Milpark Park, CA 94055, 412-232-8800,
Milpark Park, CA 94055, 412-232-8800,
Lost leather black wallet with important documents. Call J. Losada at 842.5630
AIRLINES CRUISELINES HIRING' Summer,
Career' Good Pay. Travel. Call For
Guide.
Children's Counselors, Activity Instructors, WSLI
Bus Driver, Cook, Kitchen Manager, Kitchen
Help, Washerman, Maintenance, Nanny for
Daughter, Bedroom, P.O. Box 711,
BOULDER, CO 8030 (306) 442-557
COULD YOU BE A BOSTON NANNY? We have a number of benefits. Work one year, equipment, excellent salary, benefits, round trip transportation. Mrs. Fisch. Childcare Placement Service. 149 Bucknisman Road.
CAMP COUNSELORS WANTED for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teacher campers, canning, sailing, water games, gymnastics, baseball, softball, sports, camping, camping, drama, dramatics. OR riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Bikewheel $10 or more. Serenity Lease, 1760 Maple Nidl. IL 40093. 312-484-2444
French interpreters wanted for simultaneous translation in a Grain Storage and Marketing course to be held at K-State University June 28. The job requires the Master Must have college degree or enrolled in KSU Contact Merla Brookman at (913) 523-6161 for more information. Application deadline April 13.
Exchanging private room and bath for evening and weekend help with blind grandmother. Flexible Preference given to older student in care giving profession. On bus route 8429 or lease.
Computer graphics consultants need office manager. Bookkeeping and computer experience a must. If you can think for yourself and take it on your own, you call 841-1510. Designate, 1414 W. 6th
GOVENMENT JOURS. $16,840 $29,230/jr. New
Government Journals $29,230 000-6700 RJR for
current federal list
Summer Job Opportunities available with the U.S. Marine Corps—No obligation to be a Marine! Earn between $10,000 and $25,000 per hour! Hours: 913-841-1821 (collect).
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
Group leader needed for June and July for seven week course in Grain Storage and Marketing for professionals from developing countries. Must have a background in providing needs of persons with different cultural backgrounds. Conversation skills in French, English, and Spanish are required. Include collecting fees, arranging medical care, confirming travel arrangements, driving bus to various locations, assisting with classroom and 24 hour availability. Contact Merla Brookman at (913) 523-6161 for more information. Employer ID #13, 1987; KSUEqual Opportunity Employer
out our "Nanny Network" of over 500 placed biu in CT, NY, NJ, and Boston. One year committee visited us at the Nanny Network, board, airfare. All families preconditioned for your satisfaction. Many families for you to choose from. Contact Hands Holding, Inc. at 203-854-1742 or www.handsholding.com. NC Today Show & Hour Magazine
NANNY POSITIONS AVAILABLE Good salary
positions Dallas Call 9 318 p. (214)
486 258 fb
Vaisimath Hall is taking applications for a full time cook position. Schedule is Tuesday-saturday, early shift. It interested step by step with you and fill out an application 30E/M/HM/F.
Campus interviews for
Campus interviews for summer employment at a resident camp in Shawnee, KS.
Male and female counselors Waterfront director Waterfront assistant Head counselor Counselor-in-training director Arts and crafts director Nature, archery, riffler, and
rappelling specialists
Call the placement office to set up interviews on Wednesday. April 22, from 1:00 to 4:00 p.m.
Phoneworkers for benefit concert. Fun company Good work conditions. Evenings hours, no excursion.
SUMMER JOBS A new fifteen dance club is opening in Lenox. We invite cocktail waitresses and bartenders WTL训. Apply in person. 9:3 M-S. Located Rd. Lenca. Located Four Colonies Plaza.
Sunflower Council
Summer Employment Lawn care, wood
and landscaping technician. Send
applicant applications welcome. Send inquiries to
Xavier M. Sullivan, 516-824-3900.
Student Draftsmans Needed Architectural detailing on campus projects including preparation of project cost estimates and applications of current building materials (easibility studies, cost estimates, and detailed drawings on campus site planning projects). The student will also be drafting experience with an engineering or arch design as a 12 month appointment. Call Rose Etta at 864-4636 for an interview. Deadline: Friday April 7.
SEARCH EXTENDED. School of Education seeks DORMITORY SUPERIOR (1) coordinate dorm staff and live in dorm. Degree and major required. SEARCH DORMITORY ASSISTANTS (4) live in dorm and supervise high school students. Degree preferred. DEADLINE: April 20, 1987. 5:00 p.m. complete application to College of Education. Bailey Hall. Send letter of application, current resume and names of references to: Mrs. Nettie C. Hart. Director, Upward Bound. 482 Bally Hall, Lawrence,KS 68035 (914) 6953 (914) EEO AA 914
Taking applications and interviewing sharp, energetic bartenders & cocktail waitresses, experience preferred. Hrs. Th 11:5, Fr 11:3, Sat 12:4 Gr 11:4, Fr 11:4, Gr 7th, 4 Massachusetts in the Eldridge.
PERSONAL
The University of Kansas Office has a position opening for a continuous half-time student assistant. The person in this position will be responsible for managing the university's budgets and other financial reports, do word processing, typing, spreadsheet preparation, and status tracking. The position requires junior, senior, or graduate student status. Deniable applicant will be planned by Lawrence Academy at 18 to 24 months; $400,000 to $400,000 by April 17, 1987. Start date is flexible. For information call Janice Hinz. Bureau code 803136.
formatted call Jana Hilt. Budget Office, 806-331-3500
1:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m. Equal Opportunity Employer
1:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m. Equal Opportunity Employer
—mother/Mary's Helper, female, in al-
buena Northern New Jersey town, close to NYC
northern New Jersey town, close to NYC
energetic,
and have driver's licence. Use of car good pay
Summer or permanent. (201) 903-8433
【歌】
【舞】
Dearest TB. You are the most incredible
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, LOVE, LAKE. Always Ken.
driven at the Bahamas on 13th, and aspires to become a corporate attorney, please write me for your Guest Peter P. J29 28 James N. 301 Newark N. 427
Come to the Templin Hall Casino Party! Satur-
day and 18. Bring a date for the gambling and
dancing.
If You've Got a Gal in Kalamazoo
Happy Birthday, Scum Remember the Scout MOTTO Always be prepared Love, from the "Angels"
Elaine. I but became afraid. I was afraid to jump into the arms of endless estasy. Afraid because it had been so long since I had felt so good. But I became afraid. It was to good to be true. And I became afraid. I was not ready for the decision for me. A decision that was opposite of what I really wanted. I'm sorry I became afraid Sorry for the pain I've caused It will never happen again. A friend, D.
Dear Sparky Happy Number 2. I'm waiting for you, love forever, Sean.
Who's a Serenade in Blue
Jance, no hits! How special? You could have put my eye out! from the bumpholes!
Get In the Mood and take the Chattanooga Choo-Choo
Miller Hall's Moonlight Serenade
Junior. I can’t believe it’s been 2 months (tomor-
ward). They’ve been great! I’d for sure want to tomor-
ward them.
to
Jilly, just thought I'd call back. Still waiting:132 to go I love you, Sean
Needed: Two fabulous looking babies with abilities of a sense of humor to go to the Royals game. You should be confident and skillful of fabulous looking. Please help Call Before the game:以后. Mike: at 842-942 or Jay at 842-943.
OLLIE NORTHI I am really bad at remembering jokes please tell SNOW that one again and then forget it.
POOTER Being shipwrecked with you was great, cruise to pinnacle will be even better. Get a boat for you!
FELIZ CUMPLEANOS LYNNE
A
LOVE
Nina and Julia
Reed: missed you at 6 a.m. last weekend. Did you already lose my number? K
Susan from Olathe - Your musician misses you.
Call again. Lust always. D
To My Atchafaiya Baby, I wouldn't really feel to the gators. You little Jambalaya
To my loving wife, Tonia G. I'm very happy
with you. I love you and live of my life.
Love your husband, Johnny G.
BUS. PERSONAL
To That Cute Design Student. Don't be afraid to let somebody love you
HEADACHE · BACKACHE · MRM PAIN · LEG
Injuries · ELASTICITY · FATIGUE · COMPLEX
complete quality IEP/care plan Dr. Mark
McKinney
Be creative in gift giving. Fulfill all desires with a beautiful Beautiful Portraits for all occasions. Call us at 917-348-5260.
Net crinolines in palet colors. New fun jewelry from LA. Bunny suits for rent.
Spring Fling
Barb's Vintage Rose
927 Mass. 841-2451 M.S 10.5:30
LGBLEISMAN *Write for KS/MO info* PER
CAAGITASM *Managed contact/confidentiality*
CAPAGITASM *Managed contact/confidentiality*
GREENS
PARTY SUPPLY
808 W.23rd
G
Weekly Beer Specials
4
Busch 12 pk. $4.26
Coors Light 12pk. $5.37
Coors Extra Gold12 pk. $5.37
Lowenbrau 6 pk. $3.10
Old Style 12 pk. $4.12
Weidmann 12 pk. $3.49
Need music for your wedding? Call Jean, 843-3704
Gives piano and lessons over summer
PERSONALIZED GRADUATION INNOUNCEMENT
April 8-14
ANNOUNCEMENTS
QUICK SERVICE • INEXPENSIVE
Most reasonable rates are town for all your photo needs especially graduation, education and portraits. We will do the best possible.
BRIDAL FORMAL
815 MASSACHUSETTS
843.7628
New Connection, 300 Elm, North Lawrence
822-401-3235 Tuesday, 9:04, evening by ap-
piration. Savings are $6 off April,
April and May. $6 cuts and sets, $3 perms.
Hare and Used Records, Buy, Trade or
Sell.
Don't Forget!
See Advisor
---
Check TODAY
Sell books back.
Soc. final on Thurs.
Plane Tickets Home
Check TODAY for the best prices and the lowest fares.
Maupintour
KU Union/831 Mass.
749-0700
SERVICES OFFERED
Conscientious, Economical tax preparation
841-2292
AUTOINTING. Best scratch resistant solar
panels. Great warranty. PROT OF TANTH
841-7178. 841-7178
CRIMSON SUN PHOTO is looking for young women interested in developing a modeling portfolio 15% over direct cost. No set fees. Call 841-9609.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749.
*Graduates and undergraduates, money for college*
*Source: 0413_764-0299 or 8001_UA214210*
*Source: 0413_764-0299 or 8001_UA214210*
KU PHOTOGRAPH SERVICE: Ekachrome processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W services. PASSPORT $6.00 Art & Design Building, Room 206. 844-6797
MATHI TUORIS tince 1976, M A, $/crew (coours
above) 199, $/crew | 843-902 803
Red House Audio 8 stock (P A, A and Light)
Maximum Auditor Wizard度
Audio 799 799 630
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services.
Overland Park...913-490-6878
Stauntsmith. All Indian dresses can be made here in a range of colors and styles from the latest fashion magazines, I will show you them in a few days.
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-7316
TUTORING MATH STAT $8.00/HR CALL
SUSTAT
1:1000 pages. No job too small or too large. As
example, you can use a big-processing
dojo, 842.7945 or K49.7244
TYPING
FTT FTRD FWD processing. *Hospiscal* 'Conscious Reliable' Relable B4-321-311 for service training in the semester in Lawrence Hesness, dissertations in Harvard Hesness, best quality and fastest service. B4-321-306
A: 3 professional typing. Term papers, Theses.
B: A professional typing. HSM. IEM
Electronic Mail: 8924-381
Electronic Post: 8924-381
A-2 Word processing Service. Quality resume, papers, dissertations, Reasonable rates. File submission.
AAA TYPING has low cost word process
support. AAA TYPING is 8422 after
1992 and 5694 after weekdays.
The time to get a typed letter is
Absolutely Fast Typing, Dependable and ex-
cellent support. Send resume to Harvard
8900 1 899 5 m and at 749 2 364 after 5 p.m.
Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard
Medical School secretary, Call Mae Nancy Mansy
Dependable, professional, experienced.
Dependable, professional, experienced.
TRANSCRIPTION also, standard tape. 894-8877
DISSERTATIONS. THESES. LAW
will be satisfied. but will
keep. KEEP WATCHING THIS AD.
KU SECRETARY will do your typing and word processing. Fast, accurate information. 8296 after 4 o'clock. Quality typing; excellent editing, grammar. Pick up a keyboard. reliable portbook deliverable. 843-0724
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing Term papers, sheets, dissertation, letters, resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter quality printing. spelling corrected. 842.724
Resume Service-written-10 copies ONLY
$29.74 - 2193 after 5 mths
For professional typing (word processing, call
Myra 4194 4980 Spring special $1.20, page doub
e)
Experienced typist theses, dissertations, term papers. 842-210 6:15 p.m. M-F or Sat/Sun.
Barb
Smart Word Processing includes editing and faxing
checking. Very reasonable rates. Foster, 749-2740
GOOD IMPRESSIONS Typing/Word Process/
Typewriting and Typepressing Typeset
Typeset corrected, 84-291
THE WORD DOCTORS. Why pay for typing? Word processing legal, transcription 843-3147
GUARANTEED PERFECT typing done on word processing. Located near Lawrence hospital. Call process.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
ACT NOW, Papers, $1.50, Resumes $15
WRITING LIFELEI 814 369
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition,
investigating the effects of dissertations, papery letters' application and editing.
TOP-NOPTH SERVICES professional word pro-
ducer with experience. See these letter
quality printing, #81-903-900.
Typing, very reasonable and rates will also assist with spelling punctuation and call. Form 842 3629
WANTED
Experienced drummer needed for established Lawrence band, primarily originals Influences are Husker Du, U2, etc. Must be devoted Troy, 841-6314
Cellmate$): Wanted: 1 or 2 for summer or for
fall. Cellmate$) wants to update unpaid
only $2 plus $3 utilities. Bundle
Female Deposit $157.00 Summer only or into fall
841-1900. Bundle Anytime Tuesrhs or leave
until next Sunday.
Part-time housekeepers wanted for Spring and Summer collections. Mention of meticulous cleanliness. Buckingham Palace needs a cleaner.
Outgrowing female roommate will share two
roommates. Will they be able to care for
cows? $137 plus playmates. $482 +127 interest.
Policy
Female graduate for 2 BR apartment May 15. Decrease near campus, $162.50 bills paid
Roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom Apartment. Quit, non-smoker $150 and half utilities Call 749-7524
Roommate Wanted now to share very nice
Townhouse $150 rent plus 1.3 utilities. Call e-vens-
ings. 841-1125.
Roommates For 2,3,4, bedroom apartments and
call JC 841-2194.
Wanted: Female roommate non-smoker to share
spacious 2 bedroom apartment next fall. Close to
campus and downtown. $150 plus 1/2 utilities. Call
749-3981.
Wanted: Roommates for summer. DR3P Duplex on Bus Route W B $150.00, utilities paid 842/7927
Want to buy Appleworks version 1.2 or 1.3 only! Call 843-4164 after 5:00
Classified Information Mail-In Form
Words set in ALL CAPS as 2 words
Words set in Bold Face count as 3 words.
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words.
Classified rates are based on consecutive day insertions only.
No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising.
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Tearheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements.
Found ads are free for three days, no more than 15 words.
PrepAid Order Form Ads
Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansas.
Deadline is 4 p.m. two days prior to publication.
Deadline is 4 p.m. two days prior to publication.
Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. two days prior to publication.
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| 0-15 | 2.70 | 4.00 | 5.70 | 9.50 | 14.25 | 18.00 |
| 16-20 | 3.20 | 4.75 | 6.70 | 10.75 | 15.75 | 19.75 |
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Classifications
001 announcements 300 for sale 500 help wanted 800 services offered
100 entertainment 310 auto sales 700 personal 900 tipping
400 office supplies 200 travel 600 luggage
Classified Mail Order Form
(phone number published only if included below)
Please print your ad one word per box:
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ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Date ad begins ___ Make checks payable to:
Total days in paper. ___ University Daily Kansan
15 St. Burlington, Fla.
Classification. Lawrence, KS 66045
---
14
Friday, April 10, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Tennis squads set for last home meet
By ROB KNAPP
Staff writer
The Kansas men's and women's tennis teams play their last home matches of the season when they play the Colorado Buffaloes today. The men's team also will play Wichita State tomorrow.
The women begin play at 9 a.m. today, and the men follow at 1 p.m. The men's match with Wichita State begins at 1 p.m. tomorrow.
Any Big Eight Conference match is an important one, Scott Perelman, Kansas men's and women's tennis coach, said.
"You don't know where you stand in the Big Eight standings until the season starts."
The winner of the Big Eight is decided by the number of points each team accumulates during the season plus the points earned in the conference tournament at the end of regular-season play.
A team receives one point for each individual victory in singles or doubles play. The men's team has 11 points after two matches and is in
third place in the conference. The women's team has 10 points after three matches.
"With the women, we've got to pull together and fight." Pererlman said. "We've got to be like total animals on the court."
The women's team hopes junior Tracy Treps rebounds at No. 1 singles, and that Treps and sophomore Jenette Jonsson both rebound at No. 1 doubles. They suffered the only Kansas losses in the Jayhawks' 7-2 victory over Kansas State on Tuesday.
Treps is now 11-8 in the No. 1 singles slot and 14-9 overall for the season. Treps and Jonsson are 7-9 at No. 1 doubles and 8-9 overall.
The men's match with Colorado will feature a battle at No. 5 singles between the Buffalooes 'undefeated James Johnson and Kansas senior Larry Pascal. Johnson is 19.0 this season and Pascal is 9-5 in the No. 5 position.
The Jayhawks are led by Mike Wolf, who has an 11-4 record at No.1 singles.
Sports Briefs Women's golf team to travel to Columbia
The Kansas women's golf team will travel to Columbia to compete tomorrow and Sunday in the Missouri Invitational.
The Jayhawks will face nine teams, including Big Eight Conference opponents, Iowa State, Nebraska and Missouri.
Coach Kent Weiser said that the team had not been playing consistently and that he was not sure how the team would play.
"We have proven that we can beat all of these teams," Weiser said yesterday, "but we have also proven that we can lose to all of these teams."
Weiser said that if the playing conditions were good, the team usually played well but that the players were not always able to put bad conditions out of their minds.
"We played well yesterday when the weather was great," Weiser said, "so we are hoping that will take us into the meet thinking positively."
The Jayhawks finished seventh of 14 teams Wednesday after two days of play at the Susie Maxwell-Berning Invitational in Norman, Okla.
Tina Gnewch led the Jayhawks with a 253 total. Susan Pekar and Sherri Atichion finished one stroke behind Gnewch with 254. Donna Jo Loewen followed with a 255 total, and Suzanne Mossberg, who shot a 267, rounded out the field for Kansas.
Crew to compete in regatta
The same five golfers will compete in Columbia.
The Kansas Crew will compete tomorrow in the Washburn Open President's Regatta III at Lake Shawnee in Toneka
Teams from 14 states will compete in the regatta, which will feature 400 and 2,000-meter courses. Some preliminary heats will be raced today and all final heats tomorrow.
This is the Jayhawks second regatta this year. Kansas competed in the Heart of Texas Regatta on March 21 where Kansas won the Jester's Cup as the top team for the fifth year in a row.
Contests set for weightlifters
Weightlifters from Kansas and other states will have one last chance tomorrow at Anschutz Sports Pavilion to qualify for the 1987 National Weightlifting Championships May 2-3 in Detroit
Ed Bilik, Kansas strength coach, said yesterday that about 60 athletes from Kansas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana, Missouri and Texas would compete in the Region IX Weightlifting Championships, the 1987 Missouri Valley Masters Meet and the Javhawk Spring Open.
Competition for the 114 to 165-pound weight classes will begin at noon and the 181-pound to super heavyweight classes will compete at 3 p.m.
Bielik said this was not a powerlifting meet because snatch and the clean and jerk were included. These lifts involve strength as well as technique and power, he said.
Biekik said "some well-known weightlifters would compete in the meet, including Derreck Crass, a 1984 Olympian; Gene Gildorph, a 1986 Olympic Champion; McClain, the 1984 World Master's Champion.
"A lot of people are attending the meet just to prepare for the national championships." Bielek said, "so there will be some intense competition."
Bielek said the Kansas graduate and assistant weight coach would compete in the meet, including Al Jakubowski, graduate assistant coach, who is nationally ranked and has competed internationally.
Texas A&M cited by NCAA
COLLEGE STATION, Texas — Texas A&M University football players sold complimentary tickets in violation of NCAA rules, according to the school's investigation of its football program.
The 850-page report, the latest disclosure of wrong-doing involving SouthwestConference teams, was released yesterday by the school after numerous open records law requests and lawsuit.
From staff and wire reports.
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Second Section
Lady arm wrestler is no conformist
SCHOLARSHIP
FIRST IN ALL
WITH A BOWLING
MATCH
A WINNER
BOWLING MATCH
A WINNER
Dannv Rav/KANSAN
Cheryl Frisbie displays some of her wrist-wrestling trophies, stained glass artwork, and a ceramic monkey she created.
By TIM HAMILTON
No one has ever accused Cheryl Frisbie of being a conformist.
Staff writer
From her name to her hobbies.
Frisbie is different from the rest.
Frisbie earned her title as women's lightweight — 145 pounds and under
Not exactly what state champion arm wrestlers are supposed to look like.
But her appearance is not unusual for a 22-year-old woman. Frisbie's 121 pounds are spread thin over her hair and she flies off when her falls untamed down her shoulders.
Besides being the Kansas state champion women's arm wrestler, Frisbie also is an accomplished, versatile artist and a single mother. As an artist, Frisbie's mediums include paintings, ceramics and paint. An 8-by-30 mural she painted has been displayed in museums in New York and Chicago.
"Everyone said I was crazy to go. They said, 'Lots of big, scary people hang out down there.' " she said.
rightweight — 145 pounds and older
— state champion last year at the
Kansas State Fair in Hutchinson. The
title earned her a chance to compete
this June at the Arm Wrestling Inten-
tional World Championships in Las Vegas, which will be televised on ESPN.
Frisbie, who has been arm wrestling for more than four years, became interested in the sport as a child and arm wrestling shows on television.
Frisbie's mother, Elaine Frisbie, said Cheryl's childhood on a farm near Grantville helped build her daughter's muscle. Farm chores such as baling hay and driving a tractor helped build strength in her hands and arms, she said.
Frisbie said she didn't become really interested in the sport until her first year at the University of Kansas in 1982.
Frisbie and her 17-month-old daughter, Sanamtha, live with her family in Grantville.
That year, Miller Beer sponsored an army wrestling tournament in New York.
Frisbie went to one of the preliminary competitions at the Time-Out, 2408 Iowa St., to see what it was like.
Frisbie won that night's competition and went on to compete in the finals against its other women at the Notre Dame football game, at Ninth and Mississippi streets.
Again, she reached the finals.
In the final match, Frisbie and her opponent wrestled each other for four and a half minutes before Frisbie's arm touched.
"After that we hugged each other with our 'left arms,' she said. "I couldn't get my arm to move for two minutes, the most time I ever had arm wrestling."
In all the tournaments in which Frisbie has competed, she has never placed lower than third. And, the third place finished came at the World Championship in the Basketball Association's World Championships in October 1966 at Las Vegas.
Frisbie said that arm wrestling, like any sport, had its secrets to success.
"There's all kinds of tricks people will do if they see they're going to lose," she said. She said those tricks include letting one's arm slip on the table to restart a match and wearing very high-heeled shoes to stand taller.
Frisbie said her main advantage over her competitors was the dexterity in her hands, which also benefits her art.
"Some people have more dexterity in their hands than others." Frisbie's mother said. "I think there's a correlation between the dexterity in her hands and her abilities as an artist and arm wrestler."
Frisbie said she thought women were more competitive than men.
“Sometimes the women get carried away,” she said. Although men pump themselves up before matches by jumping around and yelling, Frisbee players hardly ever tried to intimidate their opponents as women sometimes would.
One girl came up to her before a match and told her to drop out right away.
However, one of the main reasons she likes arm wrestling is because of the people involved. Arm wrestlers often bring together after tournaments to party.
Last October in Las Vegas, Frisbie said she and a friend met two male arm wrestlers from Canada who were deaf.
"It's something that does not take a special ability," she said. "Even
Frisbie said she also arm wrestled men outside of competitions.
"If they are about the same size as me I can usually beat them," she said. Frisbie said she performed better against bigger women because the women underestimated her because of her size.
Elaine Frisbie said, "It's not obvious how strong she is."
Frisbie said her job repairing imported souvenirs helps her prepare for her competitions.
"At work I do a lot of sanding so it keeps my hands toned up. I had a fencing class at KU so I decided to lift some weights, too," Frieisie said. "I've always been able to work well with my hands."
Editorials cause rift between schools
Bv ROGER CORFY
Staff writer
Some students at the University of Kansas call Kansas State University "Silo Tech" or "Moo-U."
And some K-State students call KU "Snob Hill."
Recent articles in the Kansas State Collegian, the Lawrence Daily Journal World-and even the Wall Street Journal publication between the two universities.
In a March 31 article about the farm crisis and K-State, the Journal said: "Prying more money out of donors and the hard-pressed legislature is one of the tasks facing President (Jon) Wefalid, who must compete with the arch-rival University of Kansas — "Sobn Hill" to generations of Kansas State basketball fans — and four other major schools."
And the Journal-World, in an April 6 editorial, said: "Up at Manhattan, numerous students at the esteemed agricultural college, often show frzened delight in referring to Kansas University as 'Snob Hill.'"
The Collegian, K-State's student newspaper, printed a column March 9 by Patrick Muir under the headline "Real students don't go to KU."
That column sparked a letter to the Collegian editor by KU student Mary Lorson, Hope junior.
In her letter, Lorson said: "If it weren't for Muir, I wouldn't have known that all us Jayhawks graduated from Johnson County. Stupid me. I believed everyone when they told me they were from Salina, Wichita, Tulsa, Chicago or St. Louis."
Officials and students at both universities, while mostly acknowledging the rivalry, say it is nothing big, and nothing new.
But Chancellor Gene A. Budig said earlier this week that no conflict with the bill has occurred.
"Kansas State is a first-class land-grant university," Budig said. "We're working on a number of issues together and striving to cooperate on a whole host of programs in the curriculum, computer science and health."
Budig said K-State had widespread respect among the KU's academic community.
"Whenever you get 11 people out there going head to head, it gets
And Wefaid said, "You have to be a sense of humor about the hilarity."
Wefald said most of the competition between the schools occurred in the spring.
He agreed with Budig that a feeling of cooperation and good will was growing between the two universities. He and Budig met in February to discuss ways the two schools could work together on projects.
competitive." he said.
Ann Eversole, KU's director of organizations and activities, said the rivalry had gone on for a long time at both institutions.
"It's a typical kind of competition," she said.
And competition usually exists between land-grant and liberal arts universities, Eversole said. She mentioned the competition between Purdue, a land-grant university, and Indiana University, a liberal arts university, in a similar rivalry; between Michigan State and the University of Michigan.
Land-grant universities were established with the Morrill Act, signed by Abraham Lincoln in 1862. Their purpose is to to teach agriculture and offer higher education to common citizens. Kansas State, the oldest land-grant university in the United States, was founded in 1863.
"Some of that competition is also part of the folklore of the campus," Eversole said. "Various help students identify with their schools."
Deron Johnson, the Collegian's editorial page editor, said Mur's column had reflected the muris personaliate of the K-State representative of the K-State student body.
"If there is a rivalry, it's more from the K-State side than from the KU side." Johnson said. "I think students here are trying to overcome the label of K-State being an agriculture university."
He said the Collegian also had received letters from K-State students critical of Mur's column. The students said columns like Mur's were not a good way to strengthen ties between the two universities.
"We don't always agree with KU on various issues," Johnson said. "But obviously the University is doing something right. Enrollment is increasing and that has created problems in those kinds of problems are enviable."
Lorson said she wrote to the Collegian because her brother goes to K-State and gave her a copy of Muir's column.
"I get the impression they think we have a holier-than-thou attitude at KU," Lorson said. "That we think we're better. But I don't think we do."
She said both universities had strong points.
Mike Kadel, a K-State student senator, said no serious conflict existed between the two universities.
"Any conflict is just done in a joking manner," Kadel said.
He said one problem with being a land-grant university was being labeled as an "agriculture school" or something, and he is envious of KU's image, he said.
Stanton and Milligan reflect on their work in Student Senate
Bv LISA A. MALONFY
Staff writer
Kelly Milligan, outgoing student body vice president, sat back in a booth at the Wagon Wheel Cafe, put down his third Bud Light can and said, "This is where it all began."
Milligan and Brady Stanton, outgrowing student body president, said that they had planned the Cheers coalition to meet in their projects at the Wheel: 507 W., 14th S.
This is the
The real taste
of beer.
Monday, the two were back at the cafe to reminisce about the birth of the coalition and their six-month Student Senate term, which will end April 22.
Watching the election process showed them how to run a campaign, and while serving as senators, they saw ways that they could help students. Milligan said.
Milligan and Stanton met at a sorbity dance two years ago, but the idea of the Cheers coalition didn't begin to jell until fall of 1983, when they were elected as student senators and Epstein in Common Sense coalition.
Kelly Milligan, student body vice president, left, and Brady Stanton, student body president, reflect on the past year in student government.
"I like working for and with people, as cheesy it as sounds." he said.
"Those names all say. 'Hi, we’re all a bunch of resume-padding jellyfish and we’re out to change your world," he said. "This is student government. You’ve got to put it into perspective."
By April, they had half a coalition, but needed a name.
"I so I went off to my internship in Washington," Milligan said, "and late one night I got a phone call with this voice that said, 'Cheers!'
In the past, Senate coalitions had run under names like Vox Populi, Momentum, Fresh Vegetables, Priority and Frontier, Milligan said.
"I said, 'What?' and Brady said, 'Cheers. What do you think of it?' and I said, 'What do I think of what?'"
The main planks of the Cheers coalition were to set up a typing room in Watson Library; to create JyCredit, a student credit card system for the Kansas and Burge unions; to start a student notetaking service; to establish a new interest bank; to $15 to $100 student loan system, and to lobby the Lawrence City Commission to allow underage students into bars after 8 p.m.
Epstein's Senate term had been fairly successful, with little infighting between senators, Stanton said.
Many people thought that the Senate was entering a new era for student government, he said, and the name "Cheers" was meant to toast that era.
"We're not typical of your student politicos," Milligan said. "We were not out to kid anyone. We knew, though, that we were a couple of students who knew a little more than the average student about what was going on at this University."
But the peacefulness that was the Common Sense coalition's legacy didn't last. Two original members of the Cheers coalition, Betsy Bergman and Stephanie Quincy, broke off to form their own coalition, Initiative. Others were unsure how Stanton and Milligan would appear to voters.
"We were told that there was no way we'd win because we were two men."
Stanton is a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity, 1621 Edgehill road, and Milligan is a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 1301 W. Campus
Stanton and Milligan cited that division as one reason why they never fulfilled most of their campaign promises. But the main problem, Stanton said, was Gov. Mike Hayden's call for a 3.8 percent budget cut in all state institutions.
They won the election, but Initiative members won more than a third of the Senate seats, which created a divided Senate.
"We sat down and said, 'Hey, getting minors into bars, short-term loans and JayCredit are great and
valuable ideas, but how can we consciously work for that when the University can't afford classes? How would it have looked if we had blown off the problems of the state?" Stanton said.
"We had to set our priorities. With the recession, we had to cut the things we could not feasibly do in one semester," he said.
Stanton said he was proud of the way the KU campus group of the Associated Students of Kansas had joined in his fight for Martie Aaron and Eddie Watson.
"If there's one thing our term in office has done," Stanton said, "it's proven that students can make a difference.
"We had a bunch of lobbying days where we took 30 to 40 students to Topeka. We went right to the legislators, so they couldn't ignore us.
"Had the students not gone, the question of getting any percent of the fee release would have been ridiculous."
The Senate was able to finish revenue code and student organization financing, but lengthy meetings and controversy over the Black Student Union, KU Forensics, KU Crew and the Consumer Affairs Association also took time away from other projects. Milligan said.
"A lot of people on the Senate were new. New senators don't see a problem in handing out $37,000 like it's M & M.'s." Milligan said.
"They were afraid to tackle revenue code. But that's not responsible government. So we said, 'It's better, and we got it done,' Milligan said.
He said he and Stanton were expecting to accomplish the short-term loan program before leaving office. They also have been working behind the scenes to lobby for underage admittance, but the change won't come about in their term, Stanton said.
Although the two promised during their campaign that they would run again this spring, they later decided not to.
"We would be here for eight years if we did that," Stanton, a junior, said. "I'm not a professional student at the university I've involved with my world while I'm here."
Stanton said that his term in office had put him a semester behind in
credits, in addition to giving him two warts that he says he developed because of the stress of the position.
Milligan gave one piece of advice to the newly elected student body president and vice president, "Don't kid yourself."
"You won't have the Midas touch. You won't do everything right," he said. "This is not an excruciary activity. It's work, it's a job, it'n an
adventure, and if the new leaders treat it as anything different, they'll have a miserable time."
Stanton said, "Expect the unexpected."
.
2B
Friday, April 10. 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Plays need universal understanding, Soviet says
By CHRISTOPHER HINES Staff writer
A political prisoner of 19th-century Russia awaits his death alone at Akatu prison in Siberia.
Memories of his past return to him during the night in the form of ghosts, as he relives his life experiences. In the hours before his execution, he ties together the strings of his life and answers some of the most fundamental questions of human existence.
That scene from Edward Radzinsky's play, "Lunin": Theatre of Death," may seem far from Kansas in time and space, but Radzinsky thinks the key to a good play is universal understanding.
"For it to work, it has to be unshaken in the heart of America," he said last week.
Radzinsky, one of the most popular playwrights in the Soviet Union, left Lawrence on Sunday after a two-week visit to the University of Kansas. He attended a rehearsal of the University's production of "Lunin" on Friday.
Joseph Brandesky, left. Lawrence doctoral student, listens to Edward Radzinsky, right, a visiting Soviet playwright, talk about Radzinsky's play, "Lunin: Theatre of Death." Brandesky, who is directing KU's production of "Lunin," receives some help with translation from Gerald Mikelsen, middle, professor of Soviet and East European studies.
"I was quite struck by the audience's reaction to the play in New York because it was the same as the reaction in Moscow," said Radzinsky, through a translator. "They laughed in the same places and were silent at the same moments. I did not have to understand the language the play was being performed in because I could tell exactly where they were by listening to the moments of laughter and silence."
Mikhail Sergeevich Lunin was one of the Decemberists who unsuccessfully attempted to overthrow Czar Alexander I in the early 19th century and was sent to live in exile in Siberia.
Joe Brandesky, the director of the play at KU, said Radzinsky's visit provided his actors with a unique opportunity to gain insights about the play. The play will be performed at 8 p.m. April 23 in the Inge Theatre at Murphy Hall.
Dennis Christilles, Lacoste, Texas,
graduate student, plays the part of
Lumin. "I don't think it's just politi-
calism," he says. "There are here to
draw the line is important."
The department of Slavic languages and literatures sponsored Radzinsky's visit as part of its program to attract Soviet playwrights to KU.
Gerald Mikkelsen, professor of Slavic languages and literatures and Soviet and East European studies, translated for Radzinsky, who, like most people who are learning a new language, understood more than he spoke. Mikkelsen said it was easy to learn the language through Radzinsky thought before he spoke and his words were clear and precise.
"They fly like the words in his plaus." Mikkelsen said.
"I like Lawrence," he said, without a translator. "It is very nice. There is a very strong intellectual atmosphere here."
But the soft-spoken playwright could hold a conversation without the assistance of a translator and seemed to enjoy talking about his travels and the pleasure of his stay in Lawrence.
Radzinsky will stay in New York this week to attend an off. Broadway performance of "Lunin" before returning to the Soviet Union.
"New York is horrible," he said.
"But I love it."
ky's previous requests to travel abroad because of the strong political statements in his plays. But this time, his request was approved. He had visited the United States six years ago.
NYT
Mikkelsen said the Soviet government had denied some of Radzinz-
"The privilege to travel abroad is an acknowledgment in the Soviet Union of success," Mikkelson said. "To have it taken away is a form of retribution. Against what depends on the mood of the Soviet government."
Radzinsky said he never wrote his plays as political tracts, but as a memoir.
"I'm not very fond of political plays," he said. "Life is the combination of the temporary and the eternal. And politics is temporary. When the political times change, those plays die.
"Plays are, first and foremost, about people, history and suffering. And 'I Lunin' is the story of an old man's journey through his subcon-
Brandesky studied the Russian history in Radzinsky's plays and said he was intrigued that the playwright had used a Decembrist revolutionary to make a statement against what Lunin in the play calls "merciless power."
"They are heroes in the Soviet Union because they represent the first intellectual uprising against the Czar," Brandesky said. "It's difficult for anyone to openly criticize the first, failed Russian revolution."
The Soviet people's curiosity about the Decembrists compels him to write about early revolutionaries, Radzinsky said. He received a degree in history from Moscow State Historical-Archival Institute in 1960
their work in Harvard University in 1803.
"It seems to me that such people
exist in all times and all countries." Radzinsky said. "If there had not been such people, history would have stoned.
"Lunin is one of the most mysterious people. He continues to have great influence in the Soviet Union."
writings supposedly were burned. But Radzinsky said a 15-volume work of his manuscripts soon would be compiled by a Soviet writer.
After Lunin was strangled to death while in exile in Siberia, all of his
Answering the mystery, Radzinsky said. "Manuscripts do not burn."
Radzinsky grew up among the Soviet Union's intelligentsia. He was born in 1936. His father was a well-
known man of letters who translated French and dramatized works of works
Radzinsky has more plays in production in the Soviet Union than any other playwright. A number of them have been translated and produced in several languages and he has gained critical acclaim worldwide.
Group seeks to help kids from single-parent families
Special to the Kansan
Bv VALOREF ARMSTRONG
The dedicated work of three sorority sisters is keeping University Pals alive in Lawrence. But the program, which provides companionship for young boys and girls, is not large enough to meet area youths' needs.
University Pals is the successor to the campus Big Brothers/Big Sisters program, which disbanded last spring because of a lack of dedication, said Kim Bulman. Bulman, a member of Gamma Phi Beta sorority, 1339 W. Campus Road, started
University Pals last fall in an effort to continue the work of the Big Brothers/Big Sisters program.
Bulman, a junior, transferred to Wichita State this semester. Three volunteers from her sorority then took over the program.
The new coordinators said they decided that University Pals, which matches children from single-parent families with students who will spend time with them, was worth the time and effort.
"It is a good program and I want it to continue," said Julie Timmons,
Lake Quivira junior and one of the coordinators. "I think anybody who's involved with it would really get something out of it."
Only members of the greek system are eligible to be volunteers. That rule makes it easier for coordinators to work with the volunteers, Bulman said.
Sandra Pence, a school psychiatrist at New York Elementary School, said that she thought that every KU student should be eligible to volunteer.
way," said Pence, who helps to find pals for elementary and junior high school students. "We always have more kids to match than volunteers. Every year there are more kids who need a pal."
But Timmons said the limitation was necessary because the group was not financed by the University of Kansas.
"It's not that we're trying to say that only these people can do it." Timmons said. "It's just that, otherwise, we couldn't sponsor the program. It would get too big for us to
"You get more volunteers that
handle."
The Big Brothers/Big Sisters program was plagued by some participants' reluctance to complete the yearlong commitment that the program required, Bulman said.
"There were some problems with a lack of devotion," she said. "Too many weren't willing to make the commitment every week."
rummons' goal for the program this semester is to make sure that volunteers know the extent of the team, and the need before they become involved, she said.
"A lot of people have said that they don't have time for it this semester." Timmons said. "That upsets me because that can really hurt those little kids when suddenly we don't have time to be their friend."
Pence said, "We encourage them to do it for a whole year because these kids have had a lot of disappointments in their lives. If the children have somebody that they're good at, they'll be a week, and all of a sudden the pals don't show up again, the children really can be hurt."
KU STUDENTS 1987 KANSAS RELAYS BUTTONS HAVE ARRIVED!!
If you purchased an All-Sports Ticket you may stop by the ticket office in Allen Field House and pick up your Relays button
If you didn't purchase an All-Sports Ticket, you can still get a button for only $2.00 until April 17.
This years Highlights include: Al Oerter, 4 time Olympic gold medalist
- Over 250 high school, college and university teams from over 20 states compete for Kansas Relays championships.
- Over 250 high school, college and university teams
- Over 1,000 runners to compete in Kansas Relays marathon and 10,000 meter town and campus road race.
Stop By:
Athletic Ticket Office
Allen Field House
Lawrence Kansas, 66045
more info call 864-3141
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Friday, April 10, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
3B
Downtown cafe has local flavor
MENU
Gene Lester, Lawrence resident, sautees the veggies to prepare an omelet. Lester cooks at Paradise during the morning shift.
By RUTH JACOBSON
Special to the Kansan
At this time three years ago, the Paradise Cafe had just opened in an empty hall at 728 Massachusetts St. On a busy Saturday, it can attract 800 customers, many who say its popularity is due partly to the owners' people-before-profits attitude.
"I think they care about what they do." said Steve Albright, Lawrence resident and a regular customer at the Paradise.
"Making good food is more important to them than the bottom line," Albright said.
"This is a family-type restaurant," said owner and manager P.J. Brungardt. "We don't have much turnover in the employees because they're happy here. I think that shows in the food and the service."
Brungardt, 32, describes himself as a people person, the type of employer whom employees can talk to.
"I'm kind of like the dad around here. People come to me with their problems." he said.
Brundard is concerned about the restaurant's decor, the employees' feelings about their jobs and the quality of the food.
Inside the Paradise, overhead fans whirl gently, while terry cloth napkins and flowers rest on tables. Waiters and waitresses wear bright print shirts or dresses. Photographs and paintings by local artists hang on the walls. The art work is rotated every six weeks.
"I try to give everyone a chance to hang their work in here." Brungardt
Employees say that they feel at home in the relaxed environment.
"I like being able to be myself," said Fran Zillner, who has been a waitress at the restaurant for two and a half years.
"It can be classy, it can be relax ed" said Austin Clark a waiter.
During the day it is like a friendly neighborhood cafe with basic farmer's breakfasts and burgers for lunch. But at night it is fancier, the
prices are higher and the meals more extravagant, Brungardt said.
"We do it for fun," he said. "It would be boring if we did the same things all day long."
Brunardt is no stranger to the restaurant business. He grew up in western Kansas, where his mother worked in a roadhouse cafe called the
Paradise Cafe
Vagabond. Brungardt would go there after school hoping to find work. He always found something to do, he said.
"I was the little guy standing around waiting to bus a table," he said.
He worked at several restaurants while in high school in Hays and while working on his degree in sociology at the University of Kansas.
"I always worked with a lot of real creeps," he said. "I thought it would be fun to see if I could do it and be nice to people."
And he hasn't forgotten the Vagabond cafe.
Brungardt and his wife opened the Paradise on April 1, 1984. It was a hit from day one, he said. But Brungardt, who is now divorced, said he worked constantly the first year.
"A friendly neighborhood diner is pretty much what I looked for in the Paradise." he said.
In the summer of 1985, help arrived from two friends who owned a restaurant called the Black Jack Inn in Baldwin City.
Brundard said that the Black Jack Inn hadn't been doing well because there weren't enough people in the town to support it.
Conversely, the Paradise was almost too busy for Brungardt to
handle alone, he said. Steve McCoy and Steve Coffee sold the Black Jack Inn and bought into the Paradise.
Each owner now spends about 50 to
60 hours a week working at the
staffroom.
"Steve Coffee manages the business end, Steve McCoy deals with the kitchen and the bar, and I deal with the front and the waitresses," Brungardt said.
But it's tough making a big profit from the homemade type of food that the restaurant sells because of the time needed to prepare it, Brungardt
"You really can't charge what it's worth," he said. "We'll never get rich at this, but we make enough to pay ourselves a decent wage."
He said that only fast-food restaurants could make high profits. But adding a bar this summer at the adriadise should increase profits, he said.
The restaurant purchases tofu, herbs, sprouts, honey and eggs from local farmers, because they are fresher than produce bought from big companies, he said. In addition to getting fresher produce, patronage of the restaurant has increased money in the Lawrence area, said Jeanne Spencer, a Sunday cook.
"In the summer we buy almost all of our vegetables from people in North Lawrence who have large gardens," Brungardt said.
Customers come not only from Lawrence, but also from Topeka, Kansas City, Tonganoxie and other area communities, Brungardt said.
Although Brungardt said that it was difficult to keep all of his employees happy, he added that his favorite part of owning the Paradise was the family-like situation that existed among its 55 employees.
"It reminds me of the TV sitcom Catch Me, that's it's fun to hang on with these people."
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KRONOS QUARTET
David Harrington, Violin
John Shera, Violin
Hank Duff, Viola
Joan Jeannemau, Cello
Dan Quintero, Serenade
A Mid-America Arts Alliance Program Presented by The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Chamber Music Series
8:00 p.m.
Sunday, April 12, 1987
Crabton Prever Theatre
Program
String Quartet No. 8
Peter Scullhorpe
String Quartet No. 3
String Quartet No. 3
Aulis Salinen
Philip Grass
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office.
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Karen Hummel, left, doublechecks a minor detail with Susan Winslow and De Anderson, Wilmington, Del., junior, on her way to the dining room. The three women are part of the service staff at Paradise Cafe.
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Steve Coffee, part owner and manager of the Paradise Cafe, pauses for a moment at the end of the day.
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Fridav. April 10. 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Quintet blasts musical standards
The Kronos Quartet will perform at 8 p.m.
Sunday in Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy
Hall. Tickets are on sale at the Murphy Hall box
office and are $4 and $5 for students, $7
and $9 for senior citizens and $8 and $10 for the
general public.
By JENNIFER FORKER
Staff writer
The Kronos Quartet is not the usual, stuffy, high-collared string quartet. The performers don't wear black evening attire for their shows. They don't play Bach or Beethoven.
For the last nine years, the Kronos Quartet has blasted conventional music standards with its unique style and new wave attire. It plays everything from jazz to African folk, and from Bela Bartok's "String Quartet No. 6," to Jimi Hendrix's "Purple Haze."
The four-member string quartet will perform five pieces Sunday at 8 p.m. at Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall.
The quartet, based in San Francisco, is comprised of David Harrington and John Sherba, violins; Hank Dutt, viola; and Joan Jearenrau, cello.
only playing music by modern composers.
The quartet is known internationally for its innovative interpretations of modern music. It also is known for
"Everybody in our group did that as kids. We've done that." Harrington, the quartet's founder, said. "We're carrying on the classical tradition. People just don't realize that."
Harrington said the group's contemporary music style appealed to people of all ages and not just to young audiences.
"The music we play tends to appeal to people with youthful spirits. I don't think there's an age limit," Harrington said.
"We take all of these experiences going on in our culture and try to bring them together in one place for an evening." Harrington said. "For me, variety, as someone once said, is the spice of life. I love variety."
The quartet plays jazz, rock 'n'roll, and folk and ethnic music from different areas of the world. Harrington said it's music ranged from the spaced out and harsh to the gentle and poetic.
He said it was important to open people's eyes and ears to the quarrel.
"That's one of the things we delight in — giving people a chance to
experience music they've never come into contact with," he said. "I think it's really important that a lot of people hear what we're doing."
The quartet will open Sunday's performance with Peter Sculthorpe's "String Quartet No. 8," a visual piece that Harrington described as having colorful and rhythmic elements from Bali and Indonesia.
"It feels refreshing and exotic and colorful to play," he said.
The quartet will then play Adils Sallinen's "String Quartet No. 3," a score Harrington said Sallinen took from an old Finnish fiddle tune.
A few weeks ago in New York, the quartet premiered the third musical score that it will play Sunday. Philip Glass' 1962 "Quartet," never had been performed by anyone publicly before because it was considered too bizaare, Harrington said. The piece is 10 minutes long, contains two movements and is composed of interconnected, 30-second phrases.
“It’s going to sound really spaced-out. Be ready and reflux,” he said as a woman in his wheelchair spoke.
The quartet will play Virgil Thomson's "Stabat Mater," with a Philip Glass Ensemble soprano, Dora Orenstein.
Harrington described the piece, written in France in the 1920's, as the French champagne of music.
The quartet will wrap up its performance with Bela Bartok's "String Quartet No. 6," which Harrington said was heavy and sad.
"It's amazing what you can feel in that piece," he said.
The quartet has received 3,000 musical scores from composers all over the world. Sting, former lead singer of The Police, is writing a piece for the quartet, and plans to sing it with them this fall.
The group practices together almost every day. The quartet, performing 120 shows a year in the United States and Europe, will leave for a monthlong European tour in two weeks.
The quartet has produced eight albums since forming in 1978. Another album, "White Man Sleepes," will be released June 1.
Before Sunday's concert, contem-
porary composers Glass and Thomson will join music critic Gregory Sandow for a panel discussion titled,
"Living Composers Communicating With Their Artists and Audiences." The discussion will be at 1:30 p.m. in Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St.
I
Party picture company grabs KU market
Mark Schrag, University Photography photographer, takes party pics at a Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority pinning party at the Theta Chi fraternity house, 1011 Missouri St. University Photography boasts that it has cornered the market on party pics on and off campus.
By DENISE LACROIX
Special to the Kansan
Suppose you're planning a party. It's going to be great. Everyone will want to remember who wore the watering can, who played leapfrog in the living room, who swung on the chandelier.
So, you decide to call a party photography service. But Whistle Pies is defunct. And Flashbak Photography is brand-new in town.
Besides, a friend recommends University Photography's Party pic Service. In fact, it seems almost every emends University Photography.
That's because this particular photo business has managed to lock up through exclusive contracts — the one he and his wife're party photography, business.
University Photography, 1601 W. 23rd St., now boasts contracts with 78 percent of the greek organizations at the University of Kansas and says it serves more than half of the remaining Lawrence and Topeka markets as well.
"I don't feel that there is enough of a market in party photography, to have a show."
The contracts have discouraged new businesses from gaining a substantial foothold in the market while existing customers' ranks of paying customers.
"If others try to compete with us, it's going to be uphill for them," Dave Gregory, sales manager at University Photography, said recently.
Lyndale Moore is the manager of Flushbook Photography, 2104 E. W. 56th St., New York, NY 10024.
"Our plan is to last it out," Moore said. "There are always going to be people who want a change."
Moore said Flashbak would have difficulty breaking into the market because of the well-established competition from University Photography.
University Photography's contracts with greek houses give the photo service sole rights to cover all house activities.
The University Photography "Organization Photography Contract" grants the business "exclusive photographic coverage of all major social activities, group pictures or other situations in which photographic services are required."
Right now, a one-year contract includes a $1.80 non-negotiable per print cost. A two-year contract offers a $2.50 per print cost. $2 for customers without contracts.
Houses with contracts from previous years can renew the contracts at the same rate. Gregory said, which is less expensive for houses for staying with the company.
Camille Dalager, director of the Consumer Affairs Association, 819 Vermont St., said the contract was a binding one.
"When the parties sign the contract, both are agreeing to act in good faith," she said. "If that good faith is not honored or problems not remedied, the contract can be voided."
The contract specifies how an organization may cancel the arrangement if it has a complaint.
The organization must have a majority of its active members vote to terminate the deal. University Photography must then be allowed 90 days to try to correct listed problems.
The penalty, however, for violating the process is not great, simply the difference between the contract price charged customers without contracts.
Gregory said contracts helped picture prices stay constant and allowed the company to make more accurate pricing. Gregory also eliminated short-term price hikes.
Marilyn Douglas, social chairman of Alpha Micron Siperion, 1510 Sigma Nu Place, which has a contract with University Photography, she said never had had any problems with the company, although she said she didn't particularly like contracts.
University Photography then can concentrate on service and quality instead of worrying about the sales part of the business, he added.
Gregory said, "The benefit that the contract gives you is so intangible. The party pie market is so fickle. They are always people with new ideas.
Yet, customers tend to honor their contracts.
"A contract is one way to provide loyalty in party photography." (www.megaphotocom)
pany's customer loyalty formidable. Kevin Stefanik, former manager of Whistle Pies, which was in business in the 1970s and then died from petition between University Photography and other photo services firsthand.
pany's customer loyalty formidable.
— Dave Gregory sales manager. University Photography
If others try to compete with us, it's going to be uphill for them.'
Stefanik, who now manages a party photography service in Ames, Iowa, said University Photography was the only business in Lawrence offering party photography when Whistle Pics opened its doors.
Whistle Pies began when a University Photography manager, Greg Heinze, left to develop it as a new competitor. The struggle to win a chunk of University Photography's market was worsened by Heinze's work as manager at University Photography.
Before leaving University Photography, Heinze had created the idea of using exclusive contracts to draw cheap customers with the company.
Because University Photography dominated the market when Whistle Pigs began, Heinze's contract idea worked to his new business' disadvantage
"When waitte Pics started, we had to wait two to three years for the contracts to expire before the people would try us," Stefanik said.
Heinze, no longer with any established photography business in Lawrence, could not be reached for comment.
Because Heinze did not use contracts when at Whistle Pics, he decided to lure customers by beating University Photography's prices, Gregory said. That triggered a price increase in University Photography ultimately won.
"In the last three years, University Photography has been more adamant about really competing, and so we played Heinze's price game," Gregory said. "But now our policy has become so stringent that we don't play pricing games."
"In the short run, the competition may lower prices," he said. "But in the long run there will be a definite linear increase in price because they must recoup the losses and debt incurred when the price was low."
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IN RUSTY'S WE TRUST
KU students treated for STDs increases
By ROGER COREY
The number of patients treated for sexually transmitted diseases at the University of Kansas student health center was 457. Buck, Watkins Hospital physician
Staff writer
Sexually transmitted diseases, or STDs, include many different diseases, not just syphilis and gonorrhea Other forms of STDs are herpes simplex, chlamydia and genital warts (HPV).
"Chlamydia and HPV are the most common sexually transmitted diseases we see at the health center." Buck said. "We have no statistics, but may there has been a 25 percent increase in cases over the past year."
Chlamydia is the most common sexually transmitted disease in the United States today, infecting from 10 million to 14 million people each year. Its symptoms often are similar to men's and are caused by a virus-like bacterium that infects the urethra in men and the cervix in women.
"Chlamydia is by far the most common sexual disease." Buck said. "If a woman has gonorrhea, we also treat her for chlamydia."
Joe Blount, a statistician at the national Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta, said of chlamydia, "Sixty-five percent of the cases occur among people who are 25 years old or less. Two and a half million of those cases are teen-agers."
Because a test for the disease wasn't created until 1980 by a Swedish medical team, doctors had difficulty diagnosing chlamydia. Culture techniques used today in testing are unreliable.
"The problem has been to have a good test." Buck said.
He said Watkins Hospital had ordered a special microscope to check cervix specimens for
"Thirty to 40 percent tested positive for chlamydia," Buck said. "That's how fast the disease is spread."
Buck said the state health department in Topeka recently conducted a study among young women between 16 and 25. The young women were tested for chlamydia during regular office visits.
"I treat the partner as well as the patient," Buck said. "If I think someone has it, I give them enough antibiotics to covet both partners."
Possible complications of chlamydia are sterility in both men and women, and eye damage or infant pneumonia in newborn babies. The antibiotic tetracycline, some other antibiotics, amorrhoea, is used to treat chlamydia
chlamydia. The microscope should arrive in the next few months and be installed for tests by summer.
He said the second most common sexually transmitted disease at the University was HPV, or genital warts. The warts are found on the vulva, vagina, penis, and women and may be treated using only a laser or freezing.
If not treated, genital warts may cause cancer of the cervix.
"We'll be the only place in town to do that test." Buck said.
"Cancer of the cervix in younger women is increasing." Buck said. "Also, abnormal pap smears are increasing."
Barbara Mikkelson, director of nurses at the Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department, 336 Missouri St., said the number of genital warts cases at the department had nearly doubled since 1985
"We treated 214 cases of genital
injuries in 1985 and 425 in 1986." Milk-
epsilon lesions.
She said that the health department did not have the facilities to test for chlamydia but that it was aware the disease was increasing.
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71
Friday, April 10, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
5B
Career as city official comes to an end for Longhurst
By JOSEPH REBELLO
Staff writer
David Longhurst sits in his cluttered office on Massachusetts Street, a pencil stuck behind his ear. Behind him is a campaign poster that he's about to put away forever.
"Longhurst," the poster reads. "Leadership for Lawrence."
Longhurst looks at the poster indifferently, as if it is something from the distant past. It is going to be put in a box, along with other campaign literature and moved out of his office, he says.
And with that, his career as a once popular but frequently controversial city commissioner will come to a close.
Tuesday, almost four years after he was elected to the commission with the highest number of votes, a city hall meeting as a commissioner.
Somehow, between 1983, when he was elected to office with the most votes, and March this year, when he lost a bid for re-election in the city primary, Longhurst went from being Lawrence's most popular commissioner to one of its most resented ones.
"When I made the decision to run for re-election, I supposed I would do well," he said. "I thought I would wait." He really stunned when I didn't make it.
On March 3, Longhurst's bid for re-election was destroyed when voters rejected him in the city primary. The result did not aid to make the ballot by three votes.
And for a few days after his defeat, Longhurst tried to understand what had gone wrong. Finally, in what he called an act of self-defense, he concluded that what had gone wrong was the people.
A political maverick
In 1838, when Longhurst won the city elections with 6,090 votes, Jack Rose, a former city commissioner, cautioned him, "Do your job right and you'll never get re-elected."
They just didn't vote for the best man.
That warning, he says, was cast aside in the euphoria of his victory. Things had to be accomplished in the war; but that was what he was going at them single-mindedly.
Longhurst and two other members of the new city commission that had no office in 1983 were members of the City Commission efficiency to the commission, he said.
"I think in my year as mayor the attitude at City Hall was changing," Longhurst said. "It was more important not to subject the city to our demands by deciding policy, and to make policy in the best interests of the city."
They made quick decisions, they were united, and they restored a farm.
"We really turned things around," he said. "We set the tone that things were going to happen, and by God, they were going to happen right."
But of the five members of the commission, Longhurst was the most impulsive and the least tacful in political issues affecting the commission.
"He had a strong tendency to go off on his own instead of consulting other commission members," said Nancy Miles. "He was very uncooperative and served with Longhorn for two years."
"That sometimes put the commission in extremely embarrassing positions."
In 1983, for instance, when Gov. James Blanchard of Michigan remarked that the best thing about Kansas was its Holiday Inn, Longhurst wrote an angry response to him that told him to stay away from Kansas.
Other commissioners were appalled that Longhurst had acted when he had been a lawyer.
Longhurst said his response to them was: "I would not say or do anything unless it was the right thing
There were downtown merchants who said I had a personal reason to advocate any policy downtown. I was going to lose no matter what I did.'
David Longhurst former city commissioner
to do. If this commission isn't happy with the things I'm doing, I'll step aside. But if you are, then get out of my wav.
"People don't want politicians to be honest," Longhurst says. "If you tell it like it is, you're going to get mad. I don't have any patience for that."
Leader, not follower
That impatience for protocol and rules for the sake of rules dates back more than 20 years, beginning at the time Longhurst volunteered for a tour of duty in Vietnam.
Longhurst, born in Pennsylvania before moving as a child with his family to Corrales, New Mexico, dropped out of college at the University of New Mexico in 1964 and joined the Marines.
In 1966 he left for a tour of duty in Danang, Vietnam. A recruiting officer told him that with his brains, a quick series of promotions was in the cards.
Because of his tendency to be sassy with his superiors, he said, he spent much of his time cleaning toilets. There were no promotions.
But in Danang, Longhurst went on no dangerous missions, encountered no enemy deadlier than boredom.
Returning to the United States in 1967, Longhurst had no desire to go back to school. Nor did he care much for going to work for another person, prompting him to start his own business.
"In the Marine Corps, you're not supposed to think or have initiative, and there's a very good reason for that. And I had trouble with that idea," he said
His parents had moved to Lawrence. Longhurst used the basement of their home to set up a printing shop he called House of Usher. Longhurst said he'd always been a fan of Edgar Allan Poe, author of the horror story titled "The Fall of the House of Usher." But he named his business after his mother, whose maiden name is Usher.
For the first few years, it was a business he ran alone. Income went as low as $200 a month. But in 1973, the business prospered. It has not stopped growing. Today, he said, the House of Ushers employ 22 people.
Making foreign policy
It was with that record as a successful businessman that Longhurst ran for city commissioner in 1883. In his election campaign, Longhurst promised to promote business and economic development in the city.
Since Longhurst knew no Russian, communication between the two was limited to nervous smiles, nods and an occasional grunt, he said.
On his first night on the commission, Longhurst was elected mayor by the commission members.
Almost immediately he began to do the things that would earn him both praise and scorn.
in 1983, a group of Soviet athletes visited Lawrence, and a banquet was held in their honor. Longhurst, who attended the banquet, found himself
sitting next to an athlete who knew no English.
Finally, desperate to get his Soviet guest to understand him, Longhurst pointed to his then 13-year-old son, and gestured that the boy was his son.
The Soviet athlete understood. He pulled out his wallet, took out a picture of a young boy and gave it to the boy. The boy, he gestured, was his son.
There was no trouble communicating after that, Longhurst said.
"We understood each other," Longhurst said. "All of a sudden he wasn't that alien."
It was an electric moment. Long-
hurst remembers. Suddenly the
Soviet athlete was a parent much like
himself, not a national enemy.
The excitement of being able to communicate with the athlete led Longhurst to call on President Reagan and then-Soviet leader Yuri Andropov to meet in Lawrence to see if they could iron out their differences.
"It was crazy," Longhurst said.
"But I was sincere."
Domestic dissent
That began Longhurst's four-year association with the idea of super-power peace, culminating in a trip to Russia in 2013 for invitation of the Soviet government.
It also began his association with a kind of politics that some Lawrence residents considered so liberal as to be abhorrent.
"There are many who think the city shouldn't have a foreign policy," said Ernest Angino, a colleague of Longhurst's on the city commission. "There were many who didn't approve of his trip to the Soviet Union. I have a feeling his timing was just wrong."
In March 1986, the city commission, with Longhurst's prodding, passed an ordinance restricting the sale of handguns. The ordinance was
in response to the 1985 suicide of a KU student, who killed herself with a handgun she had bought only a few hours earlier.
The public furor resulting from his initiative, Longhurst said, was something he'd never seen before.
"My God, you'd think I asked to confiscate every firearm in the house or to take it out and be able to walk into a store and buy a gun the way you would a toaster."
Many Lawrence residents disagreed. For several weeks during the commission debate on the ordinance, Longhurst's son received phone calls from people who told him they were going to kill his father.
That controversy, Longhurst says, significantly damaged his chances for a run.
Despite his apparently liberal positions on superpower peace and the handgun ordinance, Longhurst could sometimes appear to govern from the other side of the political spectrum.
In 1985, he argued against community development funds for the Council on Community Services, a welfare group that had been conducting studies on shelter and nutrition needs for the homeless. As a result, the group was forced to disband.
"David has been the most outspoken opponent of funding human services on this commission," said Caryn Mirriam-Goldberg, then the group's coordinator. "I just wish his peace efforts extended to those in need in our own community."
Sticking to his guns
But, Longhurst says, what really did him in at the primary was his role in the downtown mall debate.
"There were downtown merchants who said I had a personal reason to advocate any policy downtown I was aware of, no matter what I did," he said.
Longhurst, an outspoken supporter of the mail, was invariably identified as a conspirator.
"If I had been politically astute, I would have voted the same way and said the same things differently," he
said.
But, according to some city commissioners, that just wouldn't have been worth the effort.
"His style was forthrightness and directness," Angino said. "He had the courage to stick to his guns, and he made sure that in going end, he never held an grudge."
Shontz said, "He has a way of impressing the listener with sincerity and presenting arguments that are very convincing. And somehow, once you've heard him, it's hard to put the argument in another perspective."
Former Mayor Mike Amyx said, "He gave out a very positive image of the community. The one impression David gave me more than anything else was the image of being a real go-getter. He put every bit of his energy into everything he did."
That energy, Longhurst said, is now going now to be directed toward his business. Politics, he said, has hurt him in innocence, but not his business drive.
Besides, he said, the extra time he will have will allow him to do the things he loves to do — jog a few miles every day, read a few science fiction novels and, most of all, be with his family.
Until now, Longhurst had been able to set aside only Sunday as the day he spent with his family, which includes his wife and children. That, however, may change now.
Because of a technical problem on Tuesday morning, the story on David Longhurst was pasted up in the wrong order. The Kansan is reprinting the story today.
"I can almost physically feel a burden being lifted," he said. "I have neglected my business for four years. I put myself under so much pressure. All of a sudden, all that tension is gone. That's exhilarating."
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6B
Friday, April 10, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
KU interns get credit and experience in Washington
By JAVAN OWENS
By JAVAN OWENS
Special to the Kansan
WASHINGTON — After a hard day at work on the Hill, 18 KU students head to their favorite hangout to unwind.
But they aren't at the Hawk in Lawrence. They are about 1,000 miles away at the Hawk and Dove, a bar in Washington, D.C. For them, the nation's capital is home this semester. They are interns, working with members of Congress and a variety of Washington, D.C., organizations.
In choosing to become interns, they left friends and relatives behind and moved among strangers. They live in an expensive city while earning little or no money. They are gambling that whatever the sacrifice, the practical experience and connections they develop will make it all worthwhile.
"Most of us have come out here out of some sacrifice, financially on our part or on our parents," said Amy Kincaid, Kansas City, Mo., junior. "It's just expensive to come out here and live."
To her, Washington is a "city of excess." She is an intern for Independence, a coalition of national nonprofit organizations, learning 12 hours of academic credit.
Monthly bills and the absence of a paycheck complicate her life, she said. But like the other students, she thinks her internship is beneficial.
"It allows students who are looking for a different learning experience to meet their aspirations of gaining
knowledge about the political are na " she said
But even more difficult for the
store is living in a new town on
shore.
Jennifer Rowland, Lawrence junior, works as a copy editor for the News Media and the Law, a quarterly journal published by the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press. She said making the decision to live on campus in a semester was an easy one. Leaving her friends was a big concern.
"The distance was the thing I had to overcome," Rowland said. "It was a hard decision to make to leave Kansas for a whole semester. I had to decide whether I wanted to leave my friends and college life."
Rowland is one of the few fortunate interns who receive a stipend for their work. She receives $750 for the semester. She said she was grateful for the money, which will help her pay some of her expenses.
Dan Green's story is somewhat different. Green, Overland Park junior, who works in Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole's office, was forced to take a second job to offset some of his living expenses.
The students' sacrifices have not gone unnoticed by their adviser, Ellen Gold, associate professor of communication studies.
"I have been delightfully impressed with the caliber of students," Gold said. "It takes a fair amount of initiative, courage and guts to pull up from that safe place you had in Lawrence and start a new job."
is part of the internship arrangement, a joint effort of the political science and communications studies departments and the honors program.
Gold has coped with a lot herself. She said the University did not provide for the extra expense of her move to Washington. But Gold was drawn there for her own research project.
Her work with them in Washington
Michael Diggs, Wichita sophomore, works in the office of Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev. Diggs said living with him has been an advantage for a hindrader than an advantage.
He said he wanted to gain experience, independence and a chance to meet new people through the program, and living with other KU students just may be too safe.
One of the ways the group copes with Washington is by staying together. Students live together in threes in one-bedroom apartments in the Capital City park. Gold, who lives in a house apart from the students, said the arrangement provided a "safety net" for students so they didn't have to face all the adjustments alone.
"People here seem to be content to stay home and watch TV," Diggs said. "I don't want to spend any more nights in my apartment — I know it well enough. Getting to know Washington is a part of the experience.
"You have to have a certain amount of independence. You have to learn how to make it on your own, living in a brand new place. It's a certain growing-up thing that would
benefit a lot of people."
Diggs also said that some students might find themselves doing busywork for an office.
"It's easy to fall into the trap of copying and opening mail." Diggs said. "This is a disservice to the program and to the student."
Aaron Levine, Lawrence senior,
explained that it was important for
students to pick their internships
wisely to avoid problems.
Levine said he chose Rep. Jim Slattery's office not only because he was from his district, but also because Slattery, D-Kan., was the politician whom Levine agreed with most.
"You want to pick the area you are most interested in," Levine said. "You'll get to see how communication is channelled, and you'll get to see power in action whether on the congressional side or lobbyist side."
For the most part, interns take their jobs seriously. Mike Horak, Emporia junior, said he had a duty to uphold the University's name. He also felt a duty to do well because he had a hand in shaping public policy.
Horak, who works in the Student Press Law Center, said Midwesterners were at a disadvantage because programs like the internships were rare. Although interns are very much a part of the Washington policymaking process, the opportunities are often taken by students from the East.
"In the East, it's pretty standard to take off a semester to do something like this," Horak said. "It puts kids in the Midwest at a disadvantage
because the other kids have so much experience."
Andi Kounas, Lawrence senior, said she was not as serious about the internship as some of the other students. Kounas took an internship with National Public Radio as an alternative to spending her last semester in Lawrence.
"I had pretty well taken what I needed — I wanted to experience the cultural aspect of Washington," she said. "I am an exception to the rule."
Kounas, a speech-language-hearing major, said she was an example of how to use the new technology.
dents of any major, regardless of their interest in politics.
Brett Frazier, Pratt sophomore, said although the interns were diverse, they all shared exceptional talent Frazier, a General Accounting Office intern, said KU had a strong presence and an internal intern. He attributes a part of his success at the GAO to a KU intern who was there the year before.
"It's a credit to Kansas that we have a program, and a good program at that," Frazier said. "It speaks very well of the University."
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Internship program may end
By JAVAN OWENS Special to the Kansan
The Washington internship program may be difficult to continue next spring because of the University of Kansas' 3.8 percent budget cuts, a lack of applicants and difficulty in finding a faculty adviser.
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Robert Lineberry, dean of liberal arts and sciences, said college officials would weigh the internship with other programs before reaching a decision. With the program serving just a few students, it might have to be sacrificed for programs that benefit more students, he said.
She also said that the college should look at the program's cost-effectiveness before considering cutting it. It is one of the best public relations tools that the University has, she said.
But a decision will not be made until October, because the program is offered in the spring semester, he said.
'It is so inexpensive for what it gives KU.'
Randa Dubnick, assistant director of the honors program, disagrees. Dubnick said it was unfortunate that faculty advisers could not be paid more for their expenses. But she always has had interested faculty advisors and then promptly allows them to do research in Washington, she said.
Doreen Torgerson, Joplin, Mo. senior, who was an intern last year, said she hoped that more students would apply. She said the quality of the program could be maintained only if more qualified students applied.
"Regardless of major, the program is for those who are serious-minded, competitive and who are inked in public policy," Torgerson said.
The semesterlong program, sponsored through the political science and communication studies departments and the honors program, requires only that the applicants to be in good academic standing. Eighteen out of 40 applicants for internships this semester were selected.
"It is so inexpensive for what it gives KU," she said. "It increases the visibility for some of the most talented students at KU, and in return it increases the visibility for KU."
But some past advisers also are concerned about finding qualified
"We haven't gone begging, and we still have excellent faculty to go each year." Dubnick said.
Pete Rowland, associate professor in political science and the adviser last spring, said that because the program required advisers to make a considerable financial sacrifice, officials may have difficulty finding good advisers in the future.
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Details, page 2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
April 13, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 131
(UPS 650-640)
Kansas House, Senate recess
By CHRISTOPHER HINES Staff writer
By JC IU
Kirk
playin the bls
the folks
going
At when
er Se guest
Tb their doilu
The state Legislature took a two and a half week recess Friday without finishing some of its homework, including several bills concerning money and programs for the University of Kansas.
"This year is exceptional in that so many bills are in conference and that so many issues are unresolved," said State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence. "This is becoming more so every year."
State lawmakers did, however,
approve a state lottery, liquor by the
drink and a bill prohibiting nuclear
waste disposal in Kansas, before
going into recess. Two weeks ago, the
Senate threw out by four votes the
death penalty, despite strong support
from Gov. Mike Hayden.
for a sessi-
priate alloc-
budge and i
increase
emplem
A H put it
and W under
Reger by the
"It to vocati-
educa
Sen. J of the
"We v from a
tee this
Two elimin
univer increa
of each were
tees.
"The change
Baker, into thi
The ported
Nation in the
decide after
after bill anw
Anot
ly allow who tr
pay in would high sme unver Hayde
"It it busine
Roche "High strong
A nu mittee out di
Senate
An a mittee KU's
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WOLF CITY
CITY HALL
Alan Hagman/KANSAN
The city hall in Mound City was built in 1868 and houses the old city jail.
17
Mound City retains small-town values.
KANSAN MAGAZINE
KANSAN
MAGAZINE
April 10, 1987
PERSONNEL DIRECTOR
---
agman/KANSAN agricultural
attracting
1 residents
new sewer
; putting in
tion of the
into Scott's
, p. 8, col. 1
business in food be drink.
liquor laws and private Wallace said. nt chains that food require n.'s, might do
d Under will drink estab on as July 1,
g its menu to meet the 30 he said. It's of the other some liquorers. And it's ing laws will wrivenice.
DE
ob Stanclift
defensive
hawks com-
leasing two
n Saturday.
Rain, rain go away
TRENDER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details, page 2
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Monday
April 13, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 131
(USPS 650-640)
Kansas House, Senate recess
By CHRISTOPHER HINES Staff writer
The state Legislature took a two and a half week recess Friday without finishing some of its homework, including several bills concerning money and programs for the University of Kansas.
By JO
Star still
Kirt
playing in the
blows,
folks
going.
At
when
er Sa gues
Tb
their
dolla
State lawmakers did, however, approve a state lottery, liquor by the drink and a bill prohibiting nuclear waste disposal in Kansas, before going into recess. Two weeks ago, the Senate threw out by four votes the death penalty, despite strong support from Gov. Mike Hayden.
“This year is exceptional in that so many bills are in conference and that so many issues are unresolved,” said State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence. “This is becoming more so every year.”
When laid out in June 1929
"The change Baker, into this The ported Nation in the decide after a bill anot Anot House allow who tra pay it would high s move univer Hayde It "it business Rochel "High strong A nu mittee out di Senate An a mittee KU's House fee re that and th releas The salary propof of fisc the en
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FALLING CREEK
MILITARY CENTER
Alan Hagman/KANSAN
The city hall in Mound City was built in 1868 and houses the old city jail.
17
Mound City retains small-town values.
Contents
Kansan Magazine
Volume 3, Number 6
UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
CALLIGRAPHY COMBINES craft and art. See P. 18.
4
MCDONALDLAND 4
A student's account of her first summer job.
MUFFLED BELLS Weather and disrepair may endanger the future of the Campanile. 7
7
SAFETY FIRST 14 Blood testing aims to keep the supply risk-free.
14
FICIION 16
A tall tale about a touring baseball team.
16
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In Focus P.12
Interview P.3
A Look Back P. 5
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EDITOR: Lynn Maree Ross
ASSOCIATE EDITOR: John Benner
KANSAN MAGAZINE is a monthly supplement to the University Daily Kansan. Articles and photographs to be considered for publication should be sent to 11 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KA 6045.
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---
lagman/KANSAN agricultural
attracting
1 residents
new sewer
; putting in
tion of the
unness in toed tea drink
liquor laws and Wallace said.
nnt chains that food require its might do
into Scott's
, p. 8, col. 1
d Under will +drink estab on as July 1.
g its menu to meet the 30 he said. It's of the other some liquorers. And it's laws will wrence.
E
2
ob Stancliff
defensive hawks com-
pleasing two
in Saturday.
KANSAN MAGAZINE/April 10, 1987
Rain, rain go away
SIR GEORGE CURLEW
1879 - 2006
British cartoonist and novelist.
By JC IO
Kirst
sirr
playin the
blam
fols,
going
At
when
er Sa
guess
Tb
the
dolla
Details, page 2
Monday
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
April 13, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 131
(USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Kansas House, Senate recess
session pri-
tials alloca-
budge and in
increase
emplem
A H put it
and W under
Reger by the
"It vocatica-
educua
Sen. J of the
"We w from a tee thie
Two elimin univer
increae of each were tees.
"The change Baker, into this
The ported Nation in the decide after bill awa
Anot allow who tr pay in would high s move univer Haydie
"It i business Rochel High strong
A nut mose out di Senate
An a mittee KU's House fee re that to and then releas
The salary propof of fisc the en
By CHRISTOPHER HINES Staff writer
The state Legislature took a two and a half week recess Friday without finishing some of its homework, including several bills concerning money and programs for the University of Kansas.
"This year is exceptional in that so many bills are in conference and that so many issues are unresolved," said State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence. "This is becoming more so every year."
State lawmakers did, however,
approve a state lottery, liquor by the
drink and a bill prohibiting nuclear
waste disposal in Kansas, before
going into recess. Two weeks ago, the
Senate threw out by four votes the
death penalty, despite strong support
from Gov. Mike Hayden.
When la...April 1990
SALO DISTRICT SENATE HALL
Alan Hagman/KANSAN
The city hall in Mound City was built in 1868 and houses the old city jail.
Mound City retains small-town values.
17
INTERVIEW
A. W. Kelsey
Deanell Tacha, former chancellor for academic affairs, was awarded 1986 to a life-time position on the 10th U.S. Court of Appeals.
Abbey
What does a circuit court judge do?
What does a circuit court judge do?
The circuit court is in the federal system which means that we hear only appeals on the law. For example, at the district court level, judges would hear witnesses and hear the testimony with respect to the facts, and it would look far more like a courtroom that one would see on television, for example. However, at the appellate level, parties can only appeal the application of the law to their cases. So what I do is principally a scholarly job. It is principally studying the briefs, hearing the arguments and then writing opinions.
What types of cases do you hear most frequently?
Oh, it's quite a mixture. Obviously we get a lot of criminal appeals because we have criminal appeals both from the state system and the federal system. We also get quite a mixture of environmental, labor, tax, and securities cases and then, of course, our diversity cases, which are the cases that involve citizens of more than one state.
Well, I think it goes without saying that those are among the most agonizing cases that are presented to us. As you may know, Kansas is the only state in this circuit that does not have the death penalty, so we are confronted with death penalty cases on a significant number of occasions. I think it would probably be true of every judge that we spend a great deal of time on them and work very intensively on death penalty cases.
Do you find appeals cases harder when the appellant is facing the death penalty?
Well, I must say that it's wonderful to have another woman on the court. I feel like in some ways I have not had to prove myself nearly as much as I might have, had I been the first woman. She's still on the bench, she's very active and really an outstanding judge, so I'm terribly fortunate
What has it been like being the second woman appointed to the 10th Circuit Court bench?
that I'm following in quite qualified foot-steps and thus have not had to bear the burden of being the first woman.
So you haven't experienced any uncomfortable situations about being female?
Oh, no. Now, there have been some humorous situations. Once in a long while we have a district court judge sit with us to fill out panels and just by total happenstance last summer we had a panel that was entirely female. It was the first time there'd ever been an all female panel but even more humorous were the reactions of the attorneys and people involved in the case. Of course, we didn't hear any of it but a reporter later in the Denver Post reported that these attorneys said that we were all quite well-prepared and asked good questions, as if they were surprised!
I think they were pleased. It's difficult to understand what a circuit court judge does so I think my children had a less clear impression of what I do than they might have. It has provided my family with considerably more flexibility in our schedule, at least when I'm in town. I'm home in the evenings and on the weekends and my work is such that I can do it late at night. I have been able, since I took this job, to spend my early evening hours with my children which has been quite a luxury for me. When I was an administrator at KU I was gone almost every evening and almost every weekend and that's very demanding when one has a family and children still very young.
What did your family think of your nomination?
Do you ever miss the academic life?
Do you ever miss the academic life?
Oh yes, and particularly I miss my friends at KU. The intellectual stimulation and freedom of an academic community can't be replicated. I find that one of the difficulties in my work now is the strain of reality. When I'm deciding a case, I do not have the luxury of looking at it academically. It is real people, it is lots of dollars and it is sometimes people's lives.
Deanell Tacha
'I haven't even begun to learn this job and I don't think any judge ever fully does learn it.'
To what do you most attribute your success?
Well, first of all, I never think of myself as a success. I think success is measured in terms of one's own view of whether you're fulfilling your potential and I hope I never think I've fulfilled entirely my potential or accomplished all my goals.
But to what do I attribute it? Well, there are lots of factors. I think I would put in first place my husband and my parents. My parents were the kind of people who thought that every opportunity was open and every individual had a responsibility to take advantage of those opportunities. They were challengers, that's the best way I can think of. My husband has been a facilitator and I guess I would put a combination of those three influences in first place. But there were a lot of others.
Fine education. I think students at KU are not fully aware of the caliber of this University and the standing it has not just in this country but around the world. I think the fact that I grew up in a small town was an important contributing factor. I was in a high school class of, if I remember correctly, 11 people. I always say I was the top 10 percent of my class. When you were in high school at Scandia High School, you had to be in the plays, the cheerleader, be in the band, do it all and I always thought I could do it all because of that.
What are your aspirations?
Oh. I'll stay with this job. This is a lifetime appointment. I haven't even begun to learn this job and I don't think any judge ever fully does learn it. No matter what issues come before us, we have to learn a lot about that and make decisions that are extremely important for those people or for that industry or for the country. I aspire to continue to try to contribute both in my community and in the broader community on a volunteer basis. And of course my highest aspirations are to be a good parent and to instill in my children a sense of the national and societal responsibilities that somehow somebody instilled in me.
agman/KANSAN agricultural
attracting
1 residents
new sewer
; putting in
tion of the
business in food he drink.
d Under will +drink estab on as July 1,
g its menu to meet the 30 he said. It's of the other some liquorers. And it's laws will awrence.
uness in too
tee drink.
liquor laws
and privacy
Wallace said.
nt chains that
food require-
n's, migh do
By Caroline Reddick
into Scott's
, p. 8, col. 1
KANSAN MAGAZINE/April 10. 1987
E
ob Stancliff
defensive hawks com-
losing two
in Saturday.
3
.
By JG
STAR
Kirr
playe
the be
folks
going
At
when
er St gues
Tb
thei
dollis
Rain, rain go away
P
When for a session prier allow budget and increase emplem A but put the and W under Reger by the "It vocati educa Sen. J of the "We from a tee thie Two univer increae of eac were tees.
"The change Baker, into the The ported Nation in the decide after bill awan Anot lallow who tr pay iwould high move univer Hayde "It busine Roche "High strong A numtee out di Senate An a mittee KU's House fee re that t and release The salary propof of fist the er
Monday
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details, page 2
Published since 1869 by the students of the University of Kansas
April 13, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 131
(USPS 650-640)
Kansas House, Senate recess
By CHRISTOPHER HINES Staff writer
The state Legislature took a two and a half week recess Friday without finishing some of its homework, including several bills concerning money and programs for the University of Kansas.
"This year is exceptional in that so many bills are in conference and that so many issues are unresolved," said State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence. "This is becoming more so every year."
State lawmakers did, however, approve a state lottery, liquor by the drink and a bill prohibiting nuclear waste disposal in Kansas, before going into recess. Two weeks ago, the Senate threw out by four votes the death penalty, despite strong support from Gov. Mike Hayden.
MAURIO CITY
CITY HALL
Alan Hagman/KANSAN
The city hall in Mound City was built in 1868 and houses the old city jail.
Mound City retains small-town values.
17
My McDonaldland adventure
KANSAN IN THE RAIN HAMBURGULAR MCDONALD LAND COOKIES McDonald's COOKIES
I spent the summer explaining to tired, cranky vacationers why we didn't have the McRib they could get at a McDonald's in Illinois. And I tried to figure out why little kids like to mash up their french fries and put them in the potted plants.'
They handed me an employees' manual, a blue polyester uniform with white pin stripes, and a visor.
"Welcome to McDonald's. We're glad to have you with us. You'll have a fun summer," said Lori, my manager. "I'll be back in just a minute."
First Person By Jane Zachman
I sat in the employees' lounge waiting to begin my first job. I was 17 and ready to face "the real world."
Lori came back with a videotape.
The tape started with a commercial about how great McDonald's was. Children were skipping around behind Ronald, Grimace and their buddies as they all sang. "You deserve a break today so get up and get away to McDona-a-da'ld!"
"This will show you the proper way to wait on a customer and prepare his order," she said.
The girl behind the counter said, "Hi! (big smile) Welcome to McDonald's. My name is Susie. May I take your order please?"
Then there was a picture of a lobby at a McDonald's restaurant. A smiling man and his two smiling children walked up to the counter.
The tape ended after about 45 minutes. It covered everything from the Hamburgler and Mayor McCheese to the exact amount of ice to put in a drink cup and how not to make McDonald's ice cream cones look like Dairy Queen's ice cream cones. If I'd had more time, I could've watched the rest of the tapes: How to sweep the floor, How to put ketchup on a hamburger (you know, just a drop in the middle so you don't get any in that first bite), How to put mustard on top of the ketchup, etc.
The girl was blonde, about 16 years old and had clear skin and nice, white teeth. I think she was the only person who ever looked good in one of those polyester uniforms.
That was enough for one day. I went home and tried on my uniform and the spiffy-looking visor that accompanied it. Neither made much of a fashion statement, but I conformed.
When I went to work the next day, I met the rest of my coworkers: McAmy, McTodd, etc.
I lived in a small town, so I knew most of them. Some McWorkers were like me, trying to make some money before college. Another was a housewife, and others were flipping burgers because they didn't have a goal in life and there was little else to do.
"Hi, Jane!" Lori said with a big smile. "Clock in. You'll be on register three."
The woman made me nervous.
I was going to the University of Kansas in three months to major in journalism. I had made all A's and B's in high school, and I was worried that I might put too much ice in a cup or ask, "What do you want?" instead of "May I help you?"
After a few days, I became a whir at the register. During rush hour we were whipping customers in and out as fast as the cooks could burn the burgers. Four minutes a person was our limit. If we went over four minutes when we were tested, we might not get that big 15-cents-an-hour raise.
Later, I had to wrestle with moral questions, but at first I had a conscience. If the fries had been sitting under the heat lamps for nine of their 10-minute life span, but were getting a little cool, I wouldn't serve them. I'd "waste" them, as they say in the fast-food world, and cook some more.
I kept my eye on the waste clock. When a burger sat for 10 minutes and five seconds, it was tossed out. I couldn't believe how much food we wasted, and if you try to find out, you probably won't get an answer. It's a trade secret.
Another term for waste was "quality control."
After about a month, I lost my spark of enthusiasm and had learned a few short cuts from my co-workers. If the fries had been sitting 11 minutes, we served them. If a burger had been sitting 12 minutes, we used it. Why should we waste a good burger when people were starving elsewhere?
I had an interesting summer. I made some money and learned a little about the fast-food business.
Most importantly, though, I made it through my first job. But only after serving truckloads of little league baseball teams wanting 20 cheeseburgers, 15 Quarter Pounders, 30 large orders of fries and 40 medium Cokes. all in 5 minutes.
I spent the summer explaining
See BUKGEK, p. 20.
---
lagman/KANSAN agricultural
1 residents
new sewer
; putting in
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attracting
into Scott's
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liquor laws
and private
Wallace said.
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p. 8, col. 1
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4
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KANSAN MAGAZINE/April 10, 1987
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Rain, rain go away
A bear wearing a raincoat and hat.
Details, page 2
Monday
April 13, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 131
(USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
By JC
Staff
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playin
the b
folks
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when
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Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Kansas House, Senate recess
By CHRISTOPHER HINES Staff writer
The state Legislature took a two and a half week recess Friday without finishing some of its homework, including several bills concerning money and programs for the University of Kansas.
"This year is exceptional in that so many bills are in conference and that so many issues are unresolved," said State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence. "This is becoming more so every year."
State lawmakers did, however, approve a state lottery, liquor by the drink and a bill prohibiting nuclear waste disposal in Kansas, before going into recess. Two weeks ago, the Senate threw out by four votes the death penalty, despite strong support from Gov. Mike Hayden.
SALWOOD CITY
SCHOOL HALL
The city hall in Mound City was built in 1868 and houses the old city jail.
Mound City retains small-town values.
17
A LOOK BACK
Portraits
A collection of campus legacies
University legacies are many. But a few portraits pieced together form images of the traditions KU students experience, regardless of the year they graduate.
R-o-o-ock Ch-a-a-alk, J-a-a-ay H-a-a-awk, K-a-a-ay U-u-u-u.
R-o-o-ock Ch-a-a-alk, J-a-a-ay H-a-a-awk, K-a-a-ay U-u-u-u.
Rock Chalk, Jay Hawk, KU
Rock Chalk, Jay Hawk, KU
Rock Chalk, Jay Hawk, KU
Even the most skeptical students may acknowledge some chills when hearing that chant at a crowded sporting event.
But the history of the ancient KU war cry is as colorful as the words.
E. H. Bailey, former professor of chemistry, is credited with starting the Rock Chalk chant. He wrote in the 1917 Jayhawker, "In one of our meetings in
1887 or '88, over doughnuts and cider, someone suggested we adopt a vell."
Other sources list the founding date as May 21, 1886, but most sources agree that the yell spread across the campus a century ago. The original "rah, rah" was changed to "Rock Chalk" because it sounded better and it rhymed. The chant also refers to a chalky rock, limestone, that is common in Kansas.
Since then, KU supporters have yelled the words on battlefields and during the Olympic games.
two letters from the December 1924 issue of Graduate Magazine show the strong feelings KU alumni have for the yell. One shows the pride, the other the disgust in its changes.
"The Army rooters made use of a new yell adapted from the famous 'Rock Chalk' of the University of Kansas. It is one of the most effective cheers to be heard on an athletic field."
Carl L. Cannon, of New York, saw these comments in the Nov. 30, 1923 issue of the New York Times about an Army-Navy football game.
But a letter from Harry Ballinger, of Seattle, expressed disgust with the yell's evolution from
"In my day it meant something. It was rendered by loud, coarse voices about as follows. 'Rock!! Chalk! Jay Hawk!! K! U!!' It was rude and masculine.
BILK
See next page
By Laura Bostrom
KANSAN MAGAZINE/April 10, 1987
lagman/KANSAN agricultural
attracting
1 residents new sewer ; putting in tion of the
5
into Scott's
, p. 8, col. 1
inness in food be drink.
liquor laws and private Wallace said. nt chains that food require n.'s, might do
d Under will drink estab on as July 1,
g its menu to meet the 30 he said. It's of the other some liquorines And it's laws ing lawswill wrence.
DE
ob Stancill
defensive
hawks com-
losing two
n Saturday.
Rain, rain go away
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details. page 2
Monday
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
April 13, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 131
(UPS 650-640)
Kansas House, Senate recess
by CHRISTOPHER HINES
Staff writer
The state Legislature took a two and a half week recess Friday without finishing some of its homework, including several bills concerning money and programs for the University of Kansas.
"This year is exceptional in that so many bills are in conference and that so many issues are unresolved," said State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence. "This is becoming more so every year."
State lawmakers did, however,
approve a state lottery, liquor by the
drink and a bill prohibiting nuclear
waste disposal in Kansas, before
going into recess. Two weeks ago, the
Senate threw out by four votes the
death penalty, despite strong support
from Gov. Mike Hayden.
Alan Hagman/KANSAN
WALKING CITY
CIVIL HISTORY
The city hall in Mound City was built in 1868 and houses the old city jail.
17
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"I suspect that this change was brought about through a suggestion of a convention of old-maid kindergarten teachers."
Whether sung by loud, coarse voices or old-maid kindergarten teachers, the Rock Chalk chant is engraved in KU's history.
Although some legacies evolve, others simply end.
The 250-foot smokestack ends its 65-year reign over the Lawrence skyline this year.
The University completed the smokestack in 1922 to get rid of residue from burning heating oil or natural gas and to build steam in KU's power plant boilers.
Last year the University decided to upgrade the power plant and replace the old stack with two 15-foot stacks.
The whistle is near the smokestack on the roof of the power plant.
The original whistle was used to awaken students and to signal curfew, but after much student and faculty request, a class whistle blow for the first time on March 25, 1912.
Students often were late for class because of a long-winded professor or a slow watch, and the students could not leave the classroom until they were excused by the professor.
But Chancellor Frank Strong laid down the whistle rule. "If the instructor isn't through, get up and go," he said, in the March 25, 1912 Kansan.
It is the smell of doughnuts, hot doughnuts, that reaches your nose before you can reach the door.
Long after the last whistle of the day blows, another KU legacy is just gearing up for the evening.
The nightly crowds are as constant for Ralph Smith, owner of the bakery, as they were for his father, Joe Smith, its found-
Now, on a weeknight after 10 p.m., about 25 people may be standing in a line winding to the door of Joe's Bakery.
Joe baked for 36 years, 23 at the present location, 616 W. Ninth St. Joe, now 60, and his wife retired from the business about seven years ago. Ralph said his father did "a lot of cutting grass" on his farm outside Lawrence.
Yet Joe still has his influence and his hands in the dough. One day last week he mixed 240 pounds of all-purpose dough for that night's doughnuts.
Joe, even his son calls him that, called the bakery that night, just to check on the dough.
Ralph, in bakers' whites and a Joe's Bakery cap, stood over a slab of yellow dough rapidly cutting doughnuts, flipping them onto his thumbs as they flew in the air, then placing them on a warming rack.
"It's a young man's business, especially at night," he said.
"You have to be young to keep up with it."
The bakery floor suffers by the end of the night. Flour dusts the floor and forgotten doughnuts holes lie underfoot and under the baking equipment that dates from the 1920's.
The hot, glazed doughnuts are the bakery's most popular item, "especially when it's cold outside," Ralph said.
Many KU graduates associate that final walk down the hill with another KU legacy.
Sixty-three classes of graduating seniors have walked down the grassy hill toward the stadium for commencement exercises.
The campanile is a World War II memorial, but it also was hoped that the instrument inside the structure, the carillon, or bells, would replace the whistle for calling and dismissing classes.
The whistle still blows, and the carillon bells still ring.
And since 1951 they have walked past the campanile.
The bells, which were brought from England, ring on the quarter hour, and Lawrence residents often hear bell concerts from the campanile.
The concerts are not run by machine, but are played by the University's carillonneur.
These are just a few of KU's legacies. Students also may remember strolling around Potter Lake, waving the wheat at a basketball game, lying on the beach at Clinton Lake, sitting on the patio of the Wagon Wheel Cafe or trarying down the hill behind Joseph R. Pearson Hall.
joe BAKERY 816 W. 5TH ST.
Above:
students flock to
joe's
Bakery, 616
Ninth St. for,
a late
doughnut.
Often times
between
10 p.m. and
mid-night
the customers
go out the door.
Right:
Urbana's 65-year-
old smoke-
stack, which is
about 250 feet
torn down
sometime this
KANSAN MAGAZINE/April 10, 1987
中華煤業股份有限公司
The image shows a panoramic view of the campus, featuring a tall tower with a clock face in the center, surrounded by buildings and trees. The sky is clear, and the layout suggests a spacious environment typical of university campuses.
agman KANSAN agricultural
attracting
1 residents
new sewer
; putting in
tion of the
into Scott's
, p. 8, col. 1
smein in,
he drink.
liquor laws
and private
Wallace said.
enthints that
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nments, might
do
6
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g its menu to meet the 30 he said. It's of the other some liquorers. And it's ing laws will wrence.
E
ob Stanclist
defensive hawks com-
plosing two
in Saturday
Rain, rain go away
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details, page 2
Monday
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
April 13, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 131
(USPS 650-640)
Kansas House, Senate recess
By CHRISTOPHER HINES Staff writer
The state Legislature took a two and a half week recess Friday without finishing some of its homework, including several bills concerning money and programs for the University of Kansas.
"This year is exceptional in that so many bills are in conference and that so many issues are unresolved," said State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence. "This is becoming more so every year."
State lawmakers did, however,
approve a state lottery, liquor by the
drink and a bill prohibiting nuclear
waste disposal in Kansas, before
going into recess. Two weeks ago, the
Senate threw out by four votes the
death penalty, despite strong support
from Gov. Mike Hayden.
Alan Hagman/KANSAN
April 1, 2006
When la
17
WALKING CITY
CIRCLE HALL
tor a sessioni priatio allocat budget and 19 increa: employ A He put the And We under Regent by the "It d vocatic educati Sen. Ji of the "We from a tee this Two elimin univ increat of eacl were tees.
The city hall in Mound City was built in 1868 and houses the old city jail.
Mound City retains small-town values.
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Campanile may become a silent war memorial
THE OBSERVER'S VIEW OF THE STACKING TOWER.
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
UNIVERSITY OF N.Y.C.
UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON
UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD
UNIVERSITY OF MIDLANDS
UNIVERSITY OF AUSTIN
UNIVERSITY OF WEST BROOKLYN
UNIVERSITY OF COLUMBUS
UNIVERSITY OF DENVER
UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA
UNIVERSITY OF RHODE ISLAND
UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS
UNIVERSITY OF UTROCHANGE
UNIVERSITY OF SAN JOAOS
UNIVERSITY OF WATSON
UNIVERSITY OF MILWAUKEE
UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO
UNIVERSITY OF ORLEANS
UNIVERSITY OF PITTING
UNIVERSITY OF LISBOURG
UNIVERSITY OF NEWARK
UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSippi
UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA
UNIVERSITY OF JOHANNESBURG
UNIVERSITY OF ST. PETERSBURG
UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
UNIVERSITY OF N.Y.C.
UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON
UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD
UNIVERSITY OF MIDLANDS
UNIVERSITY OF AUSTIN
UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON
UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS
UNIVERSITY OF UTAH
UNIVERSITY OF MIDLANDS
UNIVERSITY OF AUSTIN
Albert Gerken,
KU carillon-
neur, oils part
masonry that makes
the 53 bells in the
campanile ring.
The campanile is a memorial to students and faculty who own their country.
World War II.
UNIVERSITY OF
The bells of the University's carillon still are ringing, but people are not hearing the whole song. They eventually may not hear any song at all.
The instrument has been called one of the best in the country and has been ranked among the top carillons in the United States. But there is no budget to pay for its upkeep. As a result, a distinctive campus asset is in danger of becoming a useless instrument.
"The carillon has a symbolic importance to the University. It is an important part of campus tradition," said Peter Thompson, dean of fine arts. "I hope we can find the funds to protect it from deterioration."
The carillon, installed in the campanile in 1951, features Sunday concerts and serves as a ringing memorial to students and faculty who served their country in World War II.
The original cost of the carillon was about $78,000. The money was raised along with funds for the campanile and for Memorial Drive by contributions from the community.
The carillon's only regular maintenance is paid for by the man who makes the bells ring, Albert Gerken, professor of music theory and carillonneur. Gerken's dedication to the instrument has impressed Thompson.
"The carillon has basically been held together by the devotion and effort of Dr. Gerken and many times money from his own pocket to make remakes." he said.
As carillonneur, Gerken has been bringing music to Mount Oread for 24 years. He is concerned about the carillon's future because many bells no longer sound when struck, he said. The carillon needs a new transmission.
When Gerken strips the carilon's keyboard from inside the 120-foot campanile, the transmission amplifies and directs the
James Canole, campus director for facilities and planning, said that the proposal to replace the transmission probably would not be considered in the near future because of budget cuts.
By Donna Stokes Special to the Kansan Magazine
"However, it is on the list of major repairs, special maintenance, remodeling and energy conservation funds," he said. The office of facilities and planning will present the list of repairs to the Board of Regents, who will make the final decision.
"We both like to play as musically as we can, and it is difficult when the instrument is not in good condition," said Holmberg, associate professor of music theory and assistant carillon-neur." It's like trying to play a trumpet using only two valves instead of three."
But the transmission and insulation aren't the only parts of the carillon that need to be repaired. The keyboard also is played out.
Gerken's colleague, Mark Holmberg, also is aware of the instrument's deterioration.
"Many of them even sound dead," he said.
The bells that still ring do not all ring true because poor insulation between the bells and the frame of the campanile allows weather to alter their tone.
"It has played well for 35 years but wouldn't be working now if regular attention had not been given to its maintenance," Gerken said.
impact of the clapper, bringing the bells to life. But the transmission is wearing out.
"If it were replaced, they'd never have to touch it again," said Gerken.
Gerken proposed two years ago to have the transmission replaced at a cost of $220,000. The proposal still is being considered by facilities and planning budget authorities.
The "rare and beautiful instrument," as Gerken calls the carillon, is part of the memorial campanile dedicated in 1951 to honor the 8,000 KU men and women who served the United States during World War II.
An article in the May 24, 1951, Lawrence Daily Journal-World stated that the carillon fulfilled a
A poem written by Frederic Cardoze at the time of the dedication describes the carillon's function as a memorial:
noble purpose: "Here in the heart of the nation, a structure of beauty and culture would contribute to the campus life and yet would serve as a symbol for the finer side of life for which the young people fought."
"That we may not forget the lives they gave
Let deep bells sing the anthems of the brave.
Let carillons now color Heaven's fleece
With vibrant tone, like some old masterpiece
Aloud let every singing Tower rejoice.
Up toward the blue and silver of the sky.
In noble wind-swept belfries rising high
As can no shaft of stone denied a voice."
Today, students might not think about the war when they hear the bells, but they do think of them as a campus tradition.
"I believe the carillon is an important tradition to the campus, and I enjoy listening to it on Sunday afternoon's," said David Brown. Hays junior KU band member. "It would be too bad if the quality of sound was lost because of lack of money."
Every Sunday and Tuesday,
music rings out from the carillon's 53 bells, which range in weight from 10 pounds to seven tons. An automated system controls the bells that ring every 15 minutes and on the hour.
[Image of a cityscape with buildings and trees]
---
lagman/KANSAN agricultural
attracting
1 residents new sewer putting in tion of the
into Scott's
, p. 8, col. 1
KANSAN MAGAZINE/April 10, 1987 7
siness in food be drink.
liquor laws and private Wallace said. ntains chains that food require n.'s, might do
d Under will +drink estabon as July 1,
g its menu to meet the 30 he said. It's of the other some liquorers. And it'sing laws will wrence.
E
ob Stancliffe
defensive
hawks com-
loving two
n Saturday.
Rain, rain go away
BLOODSTOCK
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details, page 2
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Monday
April 13, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 131
(USPS 650-640)
Kansas House, Senate recess
By CHRISTOPHER HINES Staff writer
the state Legislature took a two and a half week recess Friday without finishing some of its homework, including several bills concerning money and programs for the University of Kansas.
"This year is exceptional in that so many bills are in conference and that so many issues are unresolved," said State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence. "This is becoming more so every year."
State lawmakers did, however,
approve a state lottery, liquor by the
drink and a bill prohibiting nuclear
waste disposal in Kansas, before
going into recess. Two weeks ago, the
Senate threw out by four votes the
death penalty, despite strong support
from Gov. Mike Hatven.
session priiatic allocat budget and 15 increase employ A Ho put the And We under t Regent by the "It d vocatio educati Sen Jir of the "We w from a tee this o elimin integer increas of each were thre tees "The change Baker, into this The ported Nations in the deciede after g bill awa I house allow who tr pay in would high sc move u univers Hayder "It n business Rochell "Highe strong A nur mittees out dif Senate An ag mittee KU's B house fee ree relate to and the release The salary propose of fisca the ent
When lawmakers return on April 29
for the vote.
Alan Hagman/KANSAN
By JOSI
Staff write
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Mound City retains small-town values
The city hall in Mound City was built in 1868 and houses the old city jail.
COVER STORY
Students plug into the
Tim Sanders, Lawrence senior, is a veteran of the job hunt. He has 10 interviews under his belt this spring and he's still looking.
But when Sanders took an interview sign-up sheet to the desk of the University Placement Center last week, the secretary told him he couldn't squeeze in. So now, he said, it's time to follow up on his other leads and wait.
The trick to interviewing is to start early, he said. And don't get an interview late in the day, when recruiters already have seen a lot of candidates.
the hill without guaranteed employment.
battles.
"Unless the student wins and the employer wins, we don't win," he said.
If Geisler has anything to say about it, Sanders will get a job. The office has a good track record. Geissler said, although it's tough to nail down exactly how many students get jobs through tips, programs and advising.
"Don't take it personally if they're yawning." Sanders said "I've had them vawn."
'Everybody goes home at Easter vacation and their folks turn the screws and say, "You don't have a job yet?" '
Vernon Geissler university placement director
Each spring, hundreds of students such as Sanders come to the placement center seeking to cash in their degrees. Some are nervous, some are confident, some bold and some shy. They all want a job.
major, Janusz Adamczyk, Lawrence senior, said that although opportunities still existed in his field, he was a little worried.
Sanders is willing to relocate, so he's not too worried about finding a job. He'd just like to get one soon. His wife needs to start looking for work wherever he gets a job, Sanders said, so he doesn't want to walk down
Sanders, a computer science major, is looking for a programming job, but the market is getting tight. Some of his classmates have had to take sales positions to get their feet in the door, he said.
"Our job is to learn about the companies and the kind of people they look for," Geissler said.
Admcyzky said that although many students were getting jobs, that was no consolation for the few who still were looking.
Another computer science
Brian Cohen, Pittsburgh graduate student, doesn't want a full-time job. He just doesn't want to deliver pizzas again this summer.
The placement center, a group of offices on the first floor of the Burge Union, looks professional and smells new. Shelves on the walls of its spacious entry display information about companies and interviews. Geissler is the office's chief matchmaker.
Cohen is a psychology major seeking an internship. He was at the placement center to test the waters for a temporary job, he said. Job experience in fastfood wouldn't look great on his resume.
Geissler said that all kinds of students came to the placement center seeking employment help. They have a similar motivation.
"This is no place for window shopping," said Vernon Geisler, university placement director. "You go for the kill."
---
---
TEACHER
"We don't get a job for you," he said. "We help you get a job."
Several of the professional schools, including the engineering, business and journalism schools, have their own placement offices. The placement center helps coordinate those placement offices and works with students from other schools that don't have placement programs.
The job hunt involves risks, Geissler said, and he sometimes hears from students who aren't happy with their catch. But most of the responses he receives are positive.
On his desk, Geissler keeps several thank-you notes from satisfied students. One former student who was grateful for Geissler's help sent him a note on Thanksgiving. Geissler had helped the man, who is now a bank vice president, get a job 14 years ago.
But Marjean Garrett, St. George senior, isn't in a big rush to find an advertising job. She was at the placement center to sign up for interviews, but she wasn't having a lot of luck finding open spots.
"Everybody goes home at Easter vacation and their folks turn the screws and say, 'You don't have a job yet?' he said.
TEACHER
JOURNALIST
---
JOURNALIST
hard work.
Erica Tannenbaum, Overland Park senior, would know. She's
"They don't hire the major first," he said. "They hire the person first. It's not voodoo. It's attitude and persistence. It's hard work."
A happy woman.
"A lot of these aren't going to be in my major," she said, "but they're opportunities to start somewhere."
Geissler said that a student's academic major wasn't the first thing corporate recruiters looked at.
Garrett said that she was just getting started in the job hunt and that she was not really sure what she wanted to do.
"It's scary," she said, "but I feel like I've still got the summer."
seen the placement center's videotapes on interviewing, she's talked with a placement counselor and she's had some interviews.
"I're really looking at companies I think I'd want to work for," she said. "I know the questions I want to ask them."
Sessions I want to ask them. She knows when an interview
is going well, she said
"When it starts working out to be where it flows like a conversation, instead of him just firing questions, it's a comfortable situation," she said. And that can make the job hunt fun.
"really like meeting people and sitting down and talking," she said.
---
lagman/KANSAN agricultural
attracting
1 residents
new sewer
; putting in
ation of the
into Scott's
, p. 8, col. 1
business in food he drink.
he drink
liquor laws
wallace claims
Wallace said
nts that
food require-
n's, migho
do
d Under will drink estabon as July 1,
g its menu to meet the 30 he said. It's of the other some liquorers. And it's laws ing will awrence.
E
8
ob Stanclif
defensive
hawks com-
losing two
n Saturday.
KANSAN MAGAZINE/April 10, 1987
Rain, rain go away
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details, page 2
Monday
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
April 13, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 131
(USPS 650-640)
Kansas House, Senate recess
By CHRISTOPHER HINES Staff writer
The state Legislature took a two and a half week recess Friday without finishing some of its homework, including several bills concerning money and programs for the University of Kansas.
"This year is exceptional in that so many bills are in conference and that so many issues are unresolved," said State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence. "This is becoming more so every year."
State lawmakers did, however,
approve a state lottery, liquor by the drink and a bill prohibiting nuclear waste disposal in Kansas, before going into recess. Two weeks ago, the Senate threw out by four votes the death penalty, despite strong support from Gov. Mike Hayden.
When lawmakers return on April 29
fax. oak1002
Alan Hagman/KANSAN
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reel that to
and the
release
The salary
propose of fisca
the enti
The
13
The city hall in Mound City was built in 1868 and houses the old city jail.
Mound City retains small-town values,
job market
---
---
By JOSI
Staff write
Kirk playing the blac
folks, going.
At th
where?
Eat satu
guests
MUNDEK
They their dollars
A happy man is standing with his arm extended. He is wearing a sweater and pants. The background has a pattern of dark and light lines.
T∈
ENGINEER DOCTOR BIOLGIST
87UDK.
---
BIOLOGIST
By John Buzbee
RESUME COPIES
Fine quality at a reasonable price.
kinko's Great copies. Great people.
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12th & INDIANA 841-6177
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Comes with Egg Roll or Crab Rangoon Hot & Sour Soup or Egg Drop Soup Hot tea or Iced tea
Lunch: 11 a.m.—2:30 p.m.
Dinner: 4:30 p.m.—10 p.m.
Sunday: 4:30 p.m.—9 p.m.
Holiday Plaza 25th& IOWA 842-4976
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We Offer This And More!
- Spacious 2 Bedroom Apartments
- Large Patios or Balconies
- Laundry Facilities in Each Building
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- 10-12 Month Agreements
- Waterbeds O.K.
- No Pets
A Great Place To Live!
VILLAGE SQUARE
VILLAGE SQUARE Apartments corner of 9th and Avalon 842-3040
---
KANSAN MAGAZINE/April 10, 1987 9
---
lagman/KANSAN agricultural
attracting
1 residents
new sewer
; putting in
tion of the
into Scott's p. 8. col. 1
, p. 8, col. 1
business in food he drink.
liquor laws and private Wallace said. nt chains that food require'n, might do
d Under will
drink estabon as July 1,
g its menu to meet the 30 he said. It's of the other some liquorents. And it's ing laws will wrench.
DE
ob Stanclift
defensive hawks com-
losing two
in Saturday
Rain, rain go away
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details, page 2
Monday
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
April 13, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 131
(USPS 650-640)
Kansas House, Senate recess
By CHRISTOPHER HINES Staff writer
The state Legislature took a two and a half week recess Friday without finishing some of its homework, including several bills concerning money and programs for the University of Kansas.
"This year is exceptional in that so many bills are in conference and that so many issues are unresolved," said State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence. "This is becoming more so every year."
State lawmakers did, however,
approve a state lottery, liquor by the
drink and a bill prohibiting nuclear
waste disposal in Kansas, before
going into recess. Two weeks ago, the
Senate threw out by four votes the
death penalty, despite strong support
from Gov. Mike Huckabee.
for a session priatic allocat budget and it increase employ A Hp put the and W under Regent by the "It d vocation educati Sen, Jif of the "We w from a tee this Two elimin univers increase of each were tees. The changer Baker, into this The ported Nations in their decide after bill away Anott House ally allow who tra pay in would high move o unvers Hayder "It n businesses Rochel "Higher strong ] A nur mittees out diff Senate An ap mittee KU's b House a fee reel to a and the release The salary proseuse of fisca the enti
When l. for .th
By JUST
staff write
Kirk playing the black
folks, going."
At the where Fur Satus
guests r
T∈
They their be dollars.
WILROD CITY
CITY HALL
The city hall in Mound City was built in 1868 and houses the old city jail.
Mound City retains
17
MISTER
GUY
MISTER
GUY
MISTER GUY
Spring begins in clothing for Men an from Mister Guy of La
HOURS: M-T-W-F-Sat.
9:30 a.m.-8:00 p.m.
Thurs. 9:30 a.m.-8:30 p.m.
Sun. 12-5:00 p.m.
MISTER
MENS & WOMEN'S TRADI
---
lagman/KANSAN agricultural
attracting
1 residents new sewer putting in tion of the
d Under will drink estabon as July 1,
biness in food be drink
g its menu to meet the 30 he said. It's of the other some liquorers. And it's laws ing will awrence.
siness in food he drink
liquor laws and private Wallace said. ent chains that require n's, mick do
into Scott's
p. 8, col. 1
10
DE
KANSAN MAGAZINE/April 10, 1987
ob Stancifl
defensive
hawks com-
leasing two
in Saturday.
10, 1997
. .
Rain, rain go away
TAXI Clerk
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details, page 2
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Monday
April 13, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 131
(USPS 650-640)
Kansas House, Senate recess
By CHRISTOPHER HINES
Staff writer
Staff writer
The state Legislature took a two and a half week recess Friday without finishing some of its homework, including several bills concerning money and programs for the University of Kansas.
"This year is exceptional in that so many bills are in conference and that so many issues are unresolved," said State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence. "This is becoming more so every year."
State lawmakers did, however, approve a state lottery, liquor by the drink and a bill prohibiting nuclear waste disposal in Kansas, before going into recess. Two weeks ago, the Senate threw out by four votes the death penalty, despite strong support from Gov. Mike Hayden.
When lawnmakers return on April 29 for a th
WILLOW CITY CENTER HALL
The city hall in Mound City was built in 1868 and houses the old city jail.
Mound City retains small-town values,
17
for
session
priori
allocat
budget
and it
increase
employm
A Hap
put the
And W
under t
Regent
by the
"It d
vocatio
educatiu
Sen. Jif
of the
"We w
from a
tee this
Two
elimin
univers
increas
of each
were t
tees
"The changer
Baker,
into this
the ported
Nationa
in their
decieder
after gill
bill awa
Anotl
House aly
allow who
tran pay in
would
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business
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A nur
mittees
out diff
Senate
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By JOSE 5
Staff visit
Kirk playing the black folks, going.
At the where E Saturan guests r
T∈
M
They their be dollars.
THE CHRISTMAS SUNSHINE JACKET
MISTER
GUY
d Women wrence...
N
GUY TIONAL CLOTHERS
TIONAL CLOTHIERS
920 Mass.
Lawrence, KS
KANSAN MAGAZINE/April 10, 1987 11
---
lagman/KANSAN agricultural
attracting
1 residents
new sewer
putting in
ation of the
into Scott's
, p. 8, col. 1
business in food he drink.
Iiquor laws and private Wallace said. nt chains that food requiremig, miz do
d Under will drink estab on as July 1,
g its menu to meet the 30 he said. It's of the other some liquorers. And it's ing laws will wrence.
DE
ob Stancill
defensive
hawks com-
losing two
n Saturday.
Rain, rain go away
Bears in the Hat
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday
Details, page 2
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
April 13, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 131
(USPS 650-640)
Kansas House, Senate recess
By CHRISTOPHER HINES Staff writer
for a session
priation
allocate
budget
and 19
increase
employ
A H o p put the
and W under t
Regent g
"It do voci-
educati
Sen J, i of
"The we from
a tee this
Two elimi-
univers
increases
of each
were
tees.
"The changer Baker, into this The ported Nations in their decide after g bill away Anoth House allow who tra pay in would high sc move univers Haydier "It n business Rochell "Higher strong A nur mittees out diff Senate An am mittee KU's House g fee relate that to g and the release The salary propose of fisca the enti
The state Legislature took a two and a half week recess Friday without finishing some of its homework, including several bills concerning money and programs for the University of Kansas.
“This year is exceptional in that so many bills are in conference and that so many issues are unresolved,” said State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence. “This is becoming more so every year.”
State lawmakers did, however, approve a state lottery, liquor by the drink and a bill prohibiting nuclear waste disposal in Kansas, before going into recess. Two weeks ago, the Senate threw out by four votes the death penalty, despite strong support from Gov. Mike Hayden.
By JOSE
Stait writ
Kirk
playing the black
folks, going."
At the where
E Ratur
guests r
T∈
Alan Hagman/KANSAN
They their b dollars.
ROUND OTTAWA CITY HALL
Childhood game
The city hall in Mound City was built in 1868 and houses the old city jail.
When lawmakers return on April 29
Mound City retains small-town values.
17
IN FOCUS
TRACER
A Darth Vader-like voice booms out in a foggy, futuristic setting instructing the players that the game has begun. "Try to trace your opponent and capture his base."
When a player is hit, his gun is disabled for five seconds and he loses points.
Players then carefully move around looking for the opposition. As each sees his opponent, he aims his laser gun, trying to hit his foe's sensory headband.
The game is called Tracer, and players on one team try to shoot the players on the other team with a yellow light beam from a laser light gun. As few as two players to as many as 10 can play at one time.
Tracer is just another version of a new game called laser tag that emerged in the fall.
Only two places presently have laser tag games in the Kansas City area.
Tracer, 103rd and Metcalf streets,
opened November 19. 1986 and Laser
Chase Arena, N.E. 76th Street in
Gladstone, Mo., opened after Christmas.
"It was fun walking around trying to shoot people." Keen Martin, 15,Owen D. McCormick
Martin played for the first time at Tracer last month, and said he would come again.
"It was really neat," he said.
Every first-time player must go
"It was really neat," he said.
through orientation before playing the game. A video presentation plays in the lobby to show the beginner the rules of the game. Also, Tracer has an observation level for people to watch the game.
It costs $7 for a membership to Tracer, which includes two games, each lasting about 15 minutes. Members pay $3 for each subsequent game. At Laser Chase Arena, games cost $3.50 for 15 minutes and $6 for a half hour.
The setting at Tracer combines primitive objects with futuristic structures as lights and sounds move across the terrain.
"Our place is more sophisticated than others because we have this light and sound system that other laser tag places don't," said Kevin Sutcliffe, manager of Tracer.
Laser Chase Arena's setting is a foggy room with six buildings, a tunnel, and cars in which players may hide.
The general age group of players is between 14 and 18 years old. Sutchie, though, said people aged 10 to 50 had plaved the game.
Instead of pitting one team against another as in some laser tag games, laser chase is every man for himself.
Because laser games are non-contact, they are popular with both sexes. Sutcliffe said.
Some people think the game causes aggressive behavior because its main
object is to shoot the opponent.
"like it because it's like a gun shoot-out," Kurt Wilson, 14, Overland Park, said at the Tracer arena.
Despite the object of shooting the opposing player, Sutclife does not think the game breeds aggressive instincts.
"We're talking about a game in which players can be disabled by opposing players for a few seconds, for which they lose points," Sutcliffe said. "It's a form of electronic tag.
"I believe it's on a less aggressive level than snowball fights, and certainly not as dangerous."
Despite the game's potential for violence, laser tag is gaining popularity.
"It's getting bigger and better," Ken Lourwood, employee of Laser Chase Arena, said. "During the summer it will probably pick up even more."
Lourwood said that an average of 40 to 50 people came in each day and that Friday and Saturday were the busiest days.
In a recent article in Business Week magazine, experts speculated that, like video games, laser tag may gain initial excitement and build high interest only to decline in a few years.
"I don't think laser tag will decline," Sutcliffe said, "but I guess we will find out soon.
"The important thing is that the high-tech entertainment industry is
upon us."
In fact, the original idea of laser tag equipment came from former Atari Corp. executive vice president Donald D. Kingsborough. He developed the laser gun and sensor jacket for the Worlds of Wonder toy company.
Business Week estimated that by March, Worlds of Wonder would have grossed $30 million since it introduced the equipment last fall.
Worlds of Wonder has spent about $7 million for advertising to promote its futuristic tag game.
It is sponsoring tag games at different college campuses, and the company started running teaser ads on MTV in July.
Sutcliffe said, "We have done very limited advertising prior to opening because we don't yet know how much advertising will be necessary."
If a Friday late last month was any indication, Tracer is a game that is only going to grow in popularity.
The Tracer arena was filled with children and their parents playing or watching the new game.
When one player left the arena after a game his parents yelled, "How did you do?"
"I shot 17 people and was hit 11 times." he responded.
When a person steps through the door at an event, enters a new world of eerie sounds.
Players get 30 points for hits and lose 10 points for being hit. If a team
See LASER, p. 20
TRACER The Game You LIVE!
12 KANSAN MAGAZINE/April 10, 1987
---
lagman/KANSAN agricultural
attracting
1 residents
new sewer
putting in
tion of the
siness in food he drink.
into Scott's
p. 8, col. 1
liquor laws
and private Wallace said.
nctains that chains
food require 'n's, migh do
d Under will drink estab on as July 1.
g its menu to meet the 30 he said. It's of the other some liquorines. And it's laws ing will awrence.
DE
ob Stanclist
defensive
hawks com-
leasing two
in Saturday.
Rain, rain go away
A man in a black jacket and brown hat.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details, page 2
Monday
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
April 13, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 131
(USPS 650-640)
Kansas House, Senate recess
The state Legislature took a two and a half week recess Friday without finishing some of its homework, including several bills concerning money and programs for the University of Kansas.
By CHRISTOPHER HINES Staff writer
State lawmakers did, however,
approve a state lottery, liquor by the
drink and a bill prohibiting nuclear
waste disposal in Kansas, before
going into recess. Two weeks ago, the
Senate threw out by four votes the
death penalty, despite strong support
from Gov. Mike Hayden.
"This year is exceptional in that so many bills are in conference and that so many issues are unresolved," said State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence. "This is becoming more so every year."
for-
sessor priaria
allocate
budget and
15 increase
employa
A Hc put the
and We
under t Regent
by the
"It do vocation
education
Sen. Jir of the
"We w from a
tee this
Two elimina
univers
increase
of each
were teees
The change
Baker, into this
ported Nations
in thei deciede
after g bill anot
An nurt
House alloy
to why tru
would high
move u univers
Hayley
"It in busnes
Rochell
"Highe strong
] A nur
nurtures out diff
Senate
An agr
KU's b house
fe ree
realey that to
and the release
The salary
propose of fisca
senate
When lawmakers return on April 29 for a th
T∈
VALLEY COUNTY CITY HALL
By JO51
Staff writ
Kirk
playing the blac
folks,
poing."
At th
where I r
E Satu
guests i
The city hall in Mound City was built in 1868 and houses the old city jail.
M
Mound City retains small-town values.
17
They their b dollars.
becomes electronic
Membership cards at Tracer cost $7 and provide the player with two free games.
TRACER
The Game You LIVE!
SONS
VON BARO 1220 SKYLER 380
MILF 458 UMMHALEM 1160
HYUNGAR 728 KIMTOEM 446
HYUNGAR BRANCH 900 KIMTOEM 620
MINIGHT 750 UDID 1420
TOTAL 3400 4220
A video display shows individual players and a team total. The highest individual is each team also blinks on and off the display.
Photos by Chad DeShazo
Story by David Boyce
KANSAN MAGAZINE/April 10,1987.
---
lagman/KANSAN agricultural
attracting
1 residents
new sewer
; putting in
tion of the
into Scott's
, p. 8, col. 1
iness in food he drink.
liquor laws and private Wallace said. nt chains that food require n.'s, might do
d Under will drink estab on as July 1,
g its menu to meet the 30 he said. It's of the other some liquories. And it's laws airwrence will awrence.
DE
ob Stancill
defensive
hawks com-
losing two
in Saturday
Rain, rain go away
[Blank sketch of a character in a wide-brimmed hat and trousers. The face is obscured by the hat. The background is plain white.]
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details, page 2
Monday
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
April 13, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 131
(USPS 650-640)
Kansas House, Senate recess
The state Legislature took a two and a half week recess Friday without finishing some of its homework, including several bills concerning money and programs for the University of Kansas.
By CHRISTOPHER HINES Staff writer
State lawmakers did, however, approve a state lottery, liquor by the drink and a bill prohibiting nuclear waste disposal in Kansas, before going into recess. Two weeks ago, the Senate threw out by four votes the death penalty, despite strong support from Gov. Mike Hayden.
“This year is exceptional in that so many bills are in conference and that so many issues are unresolved,” said State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence. “This is becoming more so every year.”
"The change Baker, into this The ported Nations in the decide after g bill awa Annot House allow who tra pay in would high sc move univers Haydier It in business Rochelle "High strong A num mittees out dif Senate An am mittee Kub's house fee reel that to and the release The salary propose of fisca the ent
when lawmakers return on April 29
for them, when you give them
By JOSI
Staff visit
Kirk
playing the
black
folks,
going.
At th
where
e) Sat
guests
T∈
They their dollars.
ROUND CITY
CITY HALL
Alan Hagman/KANSAN
The city hall in Mound City was built in 1868 and houses the old city jail.
Mound City retains small-town values,
-
17
Hope Pelton,
medical technician
Lawrence Red
Cross, adds
dilutant to a
blood transfusion
during the
AIDS testing
process. The
RTU which takes
about 4 hours,
involves an
animal and
body reaction.
M
Centers strive for safe blood
By Jennifer Wyrick
P
public health officials from the Centers for Disease Control, Atlanta, said two weeks ago that it would be wise for people who had received multiple blood transfusions from 1978 to 1985 to consult with their physicians and be tested for the AIDS virus.
During the last two years, the American Red Cross has instituted three programs in an ongoing effort to provide the safest blood supply possible. The programs involve two more sophisticated tests for the AIDS antibody, a detailed AIDS questionnaire and a "Look Back" program for people who've had blood transfusions.
In March 1985, the American Red Cross Blood Services added a laboratory test for donated blood.
The Red Cross tests each
donated unit of blood for hepatitis B and syphilis. Since March 1985, it also has tested blood for the antibody to the AIDS virus, said Jo Byers, Douglas County Red Cross chapter executive.
A period of about a month exists before the antibodies that the test recognizes actually develop, Byers said. This "window of opportunity" may lead to misleading results that indicate a person is free of the AIDS virus.
In other words, some infected blood can come into a blood bank, especially if the donors live in cities such as New York, San Francisco or Miami. Those cities are considered high-risk areas because they have a high reported incidence of AIDS.
In addition to the AIDS antibody test, the Red Cross instituted a new donor questionnaire
"This is why the Red Cross questionnaire is so important," Byers said. "It lets us know that there still might be a possibility that the donor could transmit AIDS because he or she is in a high-risk group, even though their test was negative."
In the past, donors answered a limited number of questions about their sexual history. Questions about AIDS symptoms have been a part of the health history survey since 1983, but the new questionnaire is much more specific as to high-risk AIDS groups. It also gives people an opportunity to protect their privacy while protecting the blood supply.
Prospective donors have time to read the explicit questionnaire in private and to check one of two boxes: "I believe my blood (or plasma) is safe for transfusion to
Donors do not sign the form.
another person," or "My blood (or plasma) should not be transfused to another person."
Doctors do not sign the form it does not even read the completed questionnaire. A computer code number is the only identification placed on the questionnaire, which is used only to help identify a specific unit of blood if the donor indicates the blood should be destroyed.
Red Cross officials in the region expect few people to exclude their blood from the local system, compared to areas on the east and west coasts.
"We're very fortunate in this part of the country. Our blood donors are healthy and they do not want to threaten a safe blood supply," officials said recently in a regional Red Cross report.
lagman/KANSAN agricultural
1 residents new sewer putting inition of the
attracting
into Scott's
p. 8, col. 1
g its menu to meet the 30 he said. It's of the other some liquories. And it's laws ing laws will awrence.
d Under will drink estab on as July 1.
siness in food he drink.
liquor laws and private Wallace said. nt chains that food requiren's, might do
14
DE
iob Stancifl
ne defensive
/hawks com-
losing two
in Saturday.
KANSAN MAGAZINE/April 10, 1987
Rain, rain go away
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details, page 2
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Monday
April 13, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 131
(USPS 650-640)
Kansas House, Senate recess
By CHRISTOPHER HINES Staff writer
Staff writer
The state Legislature took a two and a half week recess Friday without finishing some of its homework, including several bills concerning money and programs for the University of Kansas.
"This year is exceptional in that so many bills are in conference and that so many issues are unresolved," said State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence. "This is becoming more so every year."
State lawmakers did, however, approve a state lottery, liquor by the drink and a bill prohibiting nuclear waste disposal in Kansas, before going into recess. Two weeks ago, the Senate threw out by four votes the death penalty, despite strong support from Gov. Mike Hayden.
When lawmakers return on April 29,
for a few, four, five days.
ROUND CITY
CITERIA
Alan Hagman/KANSAN
The city hall in Mound City was built in 1868 and houses the old city jail.
Mound City retains small-town values,
17
pratio allocate budget and 19 increase employ A Hc put the And Wi under T Regent by the "It d vocatio educati Sen. Jir of "We w from a tee this Two elimim univers increases of each were tees.
"The change Baker, into thi
The ported Nations in the decide after g bill aww Anoth House loy allow who tra i pay in would high sc move univers Hayley "It n businesses Rochel "Higher strong A nur mittees out dif Senate An a jm mittee KU's b house te ree feel those o and the release The salary post sca
The University of Kansas Medical Center is one of the 69 hospitals that sends blood to the Community Blood Center, said Nancy Miller, director of University Relations at the Med Center.
The Community Blood Center, 4040 Main, Kansas City, Mo., routinely tests every unit of blood from volunteer donors in the community for the AIDS antibody. Since July 1888, the Center has performed the service for patients in Kansas and Missouri, said Lynn Bridges, director of public relations.
T∈
By JOSI
Staart wait
Kirk playing the black folks, going.
At th where )
e sat guests
Of the 80,000 units of blood that the Community Blood Center has tested since 1985, only 22 units have tested positive.
"This is quite low compared to other cities," Bridges said.
Bridges said that the AIDS antibody, or HTLV-III, test was not 100 percent accurate. However the test is considered good because of its sensitivity to the presence of AIDS antibodies.
"If we find a sample of blood that has tested positive, then we run our other tests on it and then ask the donor to come back in and donate a second pint of blood," she said. "If the test is positive again, then we talk one-on-one with the person and tell them that they have tested positive for AIDS."
N
"We're really picky at the Center," she said. "Potential donors have to sign a letter stating that they understand that they could jeopardize the blood supply if they have AIDS, and fill out a medical history form that includes candid questions about AIDS exposure."
The Center collects blood according to the needs of the service area and does not import blood from outside of the region where it might have a greater chance of being tainted, Bridges said.
The Lawrence community also may be considered a low-risk area. Of the 10,000 units of blood that the Lawrence Red Cross has tested since 1985, Byers said that only two units had tested positive.
"I believe that one of those cases occurred because the individual was considered high risk," she said. Those two people and their physicians were contacted and told about contamination of blood was discarded.
The National Academy of Sciences in Washington, D.C., estimates that nationwide more than 500 people may have contracted AIDS after receiving transfusions given before the initial test became available in 1985.
They their b dollars.
Recipients of these donations are being tracked from transfusion records. The Red Cross follows up by sending letters to involved hospitals, who then inform physicians that their patients have received potentially contaminated blood and may be at risk for AIDS.
Because of this, Byers said that last year Red Cross instituted a "Look Back" program to identify the recipients of AIDS-patient blood donated by people who didn't know they were infected.
Bridges said that the Med Center received a number of calls after the recent warning about transfusions. People who had received a transfu
sion during the specified years asked whether they should have their blood tested for the AIDS antibody.
Those people should consult with their physicians first, she said, especially if they received the transfusion in a low-risk area. The test still may be needed and can be administered on test and tested again by the Center.
"The chance of acquiring AIDS through a transfusion was remote before the HTLV-III test." Bridges said. "The chance of acquiring AIDS since the test was implemented is as simple as finding a needle in a haustack."
People who suspect they have come in contact with the AIDS virus can be tested at any one of 25 counseling and testing sites in Kansas. The state Health Department said people could go someplace and request a blood test instead of asking blood donor centers to test them.
The Lawrence site has tested 51 people for the AIDS antibodies since April 1986, said Ann Ailor, a charge nurse specializing in communicable diseases Ailor said as an AIDS counselor at the Lawrence site, 338 Missouri St.
A testing laboratory has returned 45 of the 51 samples, and all 45 were negative.
"I did recommend to a number of these people to have the test taken again in six months because the disease's incubation period might have caused the antibodies not to have shown up yet." Allor said.
"I think it is good that the incidence of positive tests was so low and that Kansas is considered a low-risk area." Alor said. "But people shouldn't become complacent about the disease and think they can't acquire it in Kansas, because we've had 59 cases here statewide."
The Lawrence site has had a substantial increase in the number of requests for the test from last year. Ailor said she attributed the increase to greater media coverage and to educational material about AIDS.
But she said it was important to view the testing site in its proper oerspective.
Anyone can be tested for AIDS at the state testing site without having to pay anything, Ailor said. She added that she counselled everyone before they had a tube of blood drawn and whether they were in a high-risk group.
"People come in here to have the test taken because they think they might have come in contact with the disease." Allor said. "So we would have a greater number of positive tests."
The AIDS antibody test is returned from the state lab in a week to 10 days, Ailor said. If the test is positive, then she sets up a counseling session to inform that person that he or she is carrying AIDS antibodies.
Last year, Ailor said, 11.8 percent of the people tested for the AIDS antibodies at testing sites across the state were diagnosed as positive.
164
Pelton mixes the test tube of dilutant and sample.
I think it is good that the incidence of positive tests was so low and that Kansas is considered a low-risk area. But people shouldn't become complacent about the disease and think they can't acquire it in Kansas, because we've had 59 cases here statewide.'
— Ann Ailor nurse
---
lagman/KANSAN agricultural
KANSAN MAGAZINE/April 10, 1987. 15
attracting
1 residents
new sewer
; putting in
tion of the
into Scott's
9, p. 8, col. 1
siness in food he drink.
liquor laws and private Wallace said. ntains chains that food require n's, might do
d Under will 1-drink estab on as July 1,
g its menu to meet the 30 he said. It's of the other some liquorise. And it'sing laws will awrence.
DE
DE
tob Stanclift
ae defensive
hawks com-
tile losing two
on Saturday.
Rain, rain go away
Details. page 2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday
April 13, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 131
(USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Kansas House, Senate recess
By CHRISTOPHER HINES Staff writer
The state Legislature took a two and a half week recess Friday without finishing some of its homework, including several bills concerning money and programs for the University of Kansas.
session,
priation
allocate budget,
1987 and 1988
increases employee
A Hours put the s
and Wasl.
under the Regents p
by the Ses
"It does vocation education
Sen. Jim l.
of the Ses
"We will from a job this tee this
Two oo eliminate universitise increase t of each u were three tees.
State lawmakers did, however, approve a state lottery, liquor by the drink and a bill prohibiting nuclear waste disposal in Kansas, before going into recess. Two weeks ago, the Senate threw out by four votes the death penalty, despite strong support from Gov. Mike Hayden.
“This year is exceptional in that so many bills are in conference and that so many issues are unresolved,” said State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence. “This is becoming more so every year.”
"The changes."
Baker, Ri
into this
The Ho ported by National M in their decided to after grad bill awaits Another House and allow em who trans, pay in-sta would all高校 move out university Hayden is "It make businesses Rochelle "Higher es strong poin A numbe mitters wi秀mete senate Ver an app mitew们kuil BUs house reel release that to abo and the Se release of The salary inc proposal I of fiscal y the entire!
By JOSEPH
Staff writer
Kirk Bo
playing on
the blackja
folks, plays
"going."
Tei
When lawmakers return on April 29
for a three- to four-day wrap-up
Mo
They sw their bets. dollars.
At the a. where Boyt er Saturday guests need
MILWAUKEE CITY
CIVIL HALL
Alan Hagman/KANSAN
The city hall in Mound City was built in 1868 and houses the old city jail.
Mound City retains small-town values,
-
17
FICTION
Y
Peanuts slides home
By Rob Knapp
N
wow believe me when I tell you, I never see nothing like it. And when you think about all I seen, you know I'm saying something.
This was back in the good years, when this old body was good for something aside from sitting on the porch and telling stories. We'd spend all day traveling or playing, and the nighttime was left for a whole lot more than sleeping. Those was the good years, and don't let no history books or nothing tell you otherwise.
I told you about the team I played for, you heard about them before. And I'm telling you, we didn't have no fancy name like "Dodgers" or "Yankees" or "Monarchs." Didn't need no name. When people seen us rolling into their town in those two beat-up old cars, they knew who it was. We was the best, and everybody in every town up and down the state knew它.
Anyway, there was this boy on our team name of Peanuts, Peanuts Morrison. You heard of him? Ah, I've told you about him. Anyway, Peanuts was the best second baseman ever, and anybody that seen him play would sit here next to me and tell you the same to your face.
Some folks said Peanuts was the fastest man God ever saw fit to make. He was so fast he could flip off the light switch and be in bed before the room got dark. I wouldn't doubt it, neither, but I never seen it for myself. We'd do our traveling in the warm months, which was most of the year, and we'd all sleep in the cars to
Peanuts was a quiet little guy, didn't make a whole bunch of stir about nothing, but he always had a little smile to let everybody know there wasn't nothing wrong with him. Most of the guys on the team, myself included, was loud and rowdy and tended to get into some trouble now and then, but Peanuts played it straight, and nobody took nothing away from him for it.
So one afternoon we worked into some little town, don't know exactly when 'cause my memory's getting a dark little in spots. We rolled into this little town name of Chesterfield. I think. The cars slowed down, and some of us got out and started walking alongside, of making our own little parade so folks would know we was in town. Folks started to come out and watch us roll by, and the little children ran around in the dust hollering, "Look, Mama, it's a ball team!"
save money, so there wasn't never any light switch for Peanuts to flip at bedtime
I take a look up at Peanuts, and he's not smiling. He's looking kind of nervous, and he keeps looking around like some kind of big bird is gonna sneak up on him and carry him off.
I said, "Peanuts, whatsamatter with you? These folks is glad we're here. We're gonna have a big crowd tomorrow."
Peanuts looked at me, and his eyes looked big enough to pop out of his head and roll away on their own.
I said okay, and we walked our way to the town square. Wip Washington, he was our pitcher and one of the cars was his, and Bunk Bradley talked around 'til they got us a game set up. Bunk was third baseman and business manager. He never let nobody get the best of him, and what little money we made was mostly thanks to him. Bunk could've sold overcoats to the Devil in July.
The dark came down quick like a black cat off the rooftops, and we sent the children home to their mothers. Whip said he wanted to work on his car for a while, so we went off looking for an evening meal.
There was some handshaking, and they set the game for noon the next day. Most of the folks went back home and such, and we stayed in the square and played a little catch and some pepper. Some of the little children stayed to watch, and we let them whip throw the Rosseau Rocket, the fastest fastball on all the civilized continents. Whip called it the Rosseau Rocket 'cause he was from Rosseau, Louisiana, and 'cause he figured it could probably get to the moon if he threw it in the right direction.
He said, "I'll tell you later, Punch, but
you gotta promise not to tell."
the lame dance for joy. We was at a place like that in Chesterfield, and I was making short work of hot chicken and dumplings when I seen Peanuts having the same and hardly getting the fork to his mouth. I was worried for the little guy, 'cause, you see, I kinda felt like I stood up for him. I was bigger than him, and if someone was picking on him, they'd answer to me. He was sort of my little brother.
Now don't be saying to your grandmother about her cooking 'cause I'm a lucky man and I wouldn't change her an inch from the way God made her, but there was some cooking we came across that could make the blind see and
So walking back, I said, "Peanuts, you're worrying me. Tell me what's bringing you so low."
He looked around and lagged us back behind the rest of the guys.
I said okay, but I didn't know what he could be hiding. Word tended to get around between 10 ballplayers riding around the state most of the year.
"Punch," he said, "I'm gonna tell you what I haven't told nobody. You gotta promise not to tell a soul."
Peanuts told me that the last time we'd played in Chesterfield, he'd found a lady friend. I patted him on the back and said good for him, 'cause Peanuts didn't have much of a time with the ladies, it didn't seem. He shushed me though, and told me some more.
He said he met this girl and they knew right away they liked each other, so they spent most of the evening together. Then she told him that she was the girlfriend of the Chesterfield pitcher and that he was away playing pool that night.
lagman/KANSAN agricultural
1 residents new sewers putting in the
attracting
into Scott's
, p. 8, col. 1
16
siness in food he drink.
liquor laws and private Wallace said. nt chains that food require 'n's, might do
d Under will drink estab on as July 1,
g its menu to meet the 30 he said. It's of the other some liquorines. And it'sing laws will wrence.
KANSAN MAGAZINE/April 10.1987
DE
iob Stanclift
ne defensive
hawks com losing two
in saturday.
Rain, rain go away
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details, page 2
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Monday
April 13, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 131
(USPS 650-640)
Kansas House, Senate recess
By CHRISTOPHER HINES Staff writer
PALO DURO CITY CENTER
The city hall in Mound City was built in 1868 and houses the old city jail.
The state Legislature took a two and a half week recess Friday without finishing some of its homework, including several bills concerning money and programs for the University of Kansas.
17
"This year is exceptional in that so many bills are in conference and that so many issues are unresolved," said State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence. "This is becoming more so every year."
Mound City retains small-town values,
State lawmakers did, however,
approve a state lottery, liquor by the
drink and a bill prohibiting nuclear
waste disposal in Kansas, before
going into recess. Two weeks ago, the
Senate threw out by four votes the
death penalty, despite strong support
from Gov. Mike Havden.
When lawmakers return on April 29 for a thrust to four-day 'wrap-up'
pration bills
allocate $3.9
budget The and
1988 fee increases,
an employee sal
A House-ap put the state and Washbur under the sup Regents prob by the Senate
"It doesn't a vocational ed education as Sen. Jim Aller of the Senate "We will prob from a joint ee session this summer
Two other eliminate opn universities a increase tutku unure threw n tees.
"These are changes," said Baker, R-Derb in this witho
The House
ported by Hay
National Merit
in their state
and national
after graduat
bill awaits See
Another bill
House and
Senior allow empl-
y who transfer t
pay in-state t
would allow t
high school st
move out of uni-
versity and
Hayden is expo
"It makes businesses easy Rochelle Chrro "Higher education strong points."
A number of mittees will me out differences Senate versions
An appropri-
mite will mee KU's budget a
House approve
release be, b that to about $&
and the Senate
release of abou
The Senate salary increase proposed 1.5 per of fiscal year 1 the entire fiscal
Tem
by JOSEPH REB Staff writer
Kirk Boyum,
playing card stu
the blackjack ta
folks, place you
going."
At the annual where Boyum winer Saturday night guests needed to
Monc
They swarm their bets. The dollars.
Peanuts said he got flustered about being with another man's woman, especially a man he was gonna have to hit against the next day, so he got away from her quick and played the whole next day praying to God and His sweet mercy that the pitcher hadn't heard nothing about it.
the preacher back I heard about sbbe in So now, here he was back in town again one year later, and he was scared even more. He said he'd been thinking about Chesterfield for a solid month and dreading it north all the way up the map.
kid I am I gonna do? That gorilla's had a year to find out, and if he has, he's gonna kill me."
"Cheer up," I said to Peanuts. "Maybe he's dead."
But Peanuts just kept mumbling over and over how that pitcher was gonna kill him.
When we got back to the square, Whip was draped back across the hood of his car and he said, "Peanuts, a big friend of yours name of Jojo come by looking for you. He said he'd be awful glad to see you at the same tomorrow."
I never seen nobody as scared as Peanuts was then. His eyes were big, and his tongue was hanging out. He looked like a dog in the headlights of a car.
This Jojo had left word that he'd be playing pool across the tracks if Peanuts wanted to see him tonight.
Whip said to Peanuts, "That was an awful big man, and he was smiling real funny and talking through his teeth like he was mad. What you done, boy?"
I started to say something, but Peanuts looked at me like he was about to cry. All the guys gathered around, wanting to know what kind of trouble was up. But I didn't say nothing 'cause I'd promised, and Peanuts just shook his head and said something like nothing in a jittery voice.
Bunk hopped into the back of one car and propped his feet up, and Rollblock put his big self on the hood of the other car, 'cause it was their turn to stay with the cars. We never expected no trouble, but once in a while folks got a little too curious, so we always left a couple guys with the cars. Nobody liked car duty, 'cause then they missed out on nightliftin'.
So anyway, we left Bunk and Rollo with the cars in the square and went out looking for someplace to go, which was pretty easy to find in that small a town. It don't take too long to find the place where everybody is.
Those were special times. Sure, everybody had it tough, but somehow that made it more fun. Nights we'd go out, and it was warm and the music might be playing somewhere. The menfolk in town would tolerate us, 'cause we was doing what they'd be doing if they could. And the small-town ladies was always glad to see us, 'cause they'd seen nothing but the same old men for so long. Then here come 10 ballplayers to town, none of us too bad looking and a few pretty good, and all just looking for a little fun.
We went in, and the boys started talking around to the ladies and pretty soon the place was lit up. I stayed close to Peanuts, and we got us a table in the corner and sat for a while. I tried to get him to have fun, but he wasn't gonna have none. See, Peanuts was looking out across the tables, and all the pretty ladies and smoke was in his eyes and the music was in his ears. He'd probably met that girl in that same place.
"Peanuts." I said. "are you thinking
about that lady?"
"Nah," Peanuts said to me. "I'm thinking about tomorrow, walking away from the plate with my bat in one hand and my head in the other."
I could see we was wasting our time, so I hauled him up and pulled him outside.
On the way to the square, Peanuts wasn't talking any, so I thought about how I might help him out. Now this was Peanuts' business, and I knew right well I couldn't go messing with another man's business, but I thought of something I could do. I'd sneak over to the pool hall and get a look at this Joo. I figured I'd know him to see him see we'd played him before, and maybe he wasn't as big and bad as Whin made him out.
Now back at the cars, Bunk was sacked out in the back seat of one car, snoring to raise the hairs on a cat's back Rollo, who was made out of as much stuff as two normal-sized men, which I guess is a good thing for a catcher, was sitting in the other car, eating an apple and listening to the crickets chirp. I told Rollo to keep two good eyes on Peanuts for me.
So anyway, I left Peanuts with Rollo that night and went looking for Jojo. I peeked in the back door of the pool hall, and there he was, big as life and twice as mean. I recognized that jaw of his underneath a Chesterfield ball cap from when we played him before. He looked like he was carved out of some kind of thick, dark wood, but then again, maybe he was just the whole tree. I seen why Peanuts was worried, and when I got back that night I didn't say nothing to him about it.
The sun crawled up the next day, and we had ourselves a ball game to play. Everybody got stretched out right so we wouldn't have nobody get hurt. We had to on the team, and you need no to play, so we didn't believe in no injuries.
We put on our uniforms, which was still dirty from our last game, and got to the ballfield right by noon. There was lots of people there for the game, looked like all the town and most of the county, so all of us was happy 'cape we'd make some money. All of us 'cept Peanuts, of course, who was thinking he wouldn't live to send it.
That Jojo looked even bigger out on the mound than he had in the pool hall. I walked down to the end of the bench to get a better look at him and seen him smiling like a housecat with a throat full of feathers and a meal in his belly. I said a little prayer for Peanuts.
We was visitors, so we got first bats, and Peanuts was our first batter. He picked up his bat and looked our bench up and down, maybe so he could remember everybody's face when he got to heaven. Everybody but me looked back at him kind of funny, like he was crazy, 'cause they didn't know what was going on.
The crowd was hollering for a game, and the umpire yelled for a hitter, so Peanuts walked up to the plate, dragging his bat behind him.
Peanuts dressed face-down into the dirt so fast, his bat fungin in the air for a second before it fell on top of him. Only thing was, the ball was straight over the plate, about belt-high if Peanuts had stayed on his feet.
So Peanuts tiptoed into the box and got ready for a fastball between the eyes. Jojo went into a big windup and threw a hard one.
The umpire yelled strike, and the crowd laughed their fool heads off. The guys on our bench looked at each other wondering what was up.
The next pitch was the same place. a
blue streak right down the middle. Peanuts ended up in the same place, flat on his face in the dust.
Peanuts didn't take the quick dive on the next pitch, but it was coming straight for his head, so he went down again. Even some of the guys on our bench laughed when the pitch curved across the plate for strike three.
Peanuts pulled himself up and walked back to the bench with dust and chalk on his face. The guys asked him what was wrong, but he just shook his head and got his glove.
We walked out to the field after we were out. Peanuts always started the game by buying a bag of peanuts so he could eat them while he was playing, and that's why we called him Peanuts. But this time he just walked straight out to his spot by second base and stood there.
I hollered in from left field, "Hey,
Peanuts, don't forget your peanuts."
He looked out at me and nodded. He walked over and bought some but just put them in his back pocket and forgot about them.
The game was one of those tight ones where almost nobody hits the ball. Sure, Whip was throwing the Rosseau Rocket past everybody, but Jojo was pitching good, too, and we couldn't do much with him.
Joek kept on playing with Peanuts. He was teasing him with that fastball that was too fast to take a chance on and that curve coming straight at his ear. Peanuts didn't take no chances, and he dove for cover every pitch and struck out every time. The crowd was laughing themselves blue in the face.
So we battled it out and got to the last inning tied nothing to nothing. The crowd was screaming for their team, and we was wondering if we were gonna lose for the first time all summer. There was some long faces on the bench, but none was longer than Peanuts'. He was worn out from getting laughed at. He told me when he left the bench for the plate that he was going to stand in this time.
The first pitch was a fast one straight for the head, and not a man in the world could have got out of its way but Peanuts. He pulled back from it chin-first and ended up flat on his back.
I looked out on the mound, and I seen Joo was through playing with Peanuts 'cause he wasn't smiling no more.
Our boys all stood up 'pause they knew that pitch was supposed to knock Peanuts in the head. But we didn't do nothing, partly 'cause we didn't want to fight the whole town and most of the county, I'm guessing. I guess that was a little yellow of us. Peanuts was on his own.
Three more fastballs straight at his head, and three times Peanuts somehow managed to get away from them. The umpire pointed to first base, and Peanuts took his walk, raising a cloud of dust as he tried to clean off his uniform.
Somebody out of the crowd hOLERed,
“What’re you doing, Joio?” The big kid
was just pounding his glove and staring
over at first base.
Bunk was up to bat, and I was on deck ready to bat next. Joo got ready to pitch, but instead he threw the ball over to first base.
He threw that ball as hard as he humanly could right at Peanuts' head. Maybe Joo thought the sight of that ball coming straight for his head might freeze Peanuts, and I seen that it did for a second. But Peanuts ducked at the last second, and the ball rolled out into right field. By the time the ball got thrown back
in, peanuts was standing on third base with some more dust on his shirt and an uppty look in his eye. He'd ducked Joo's best fastball.
Joo walked Bunk and me both, and the crowd was crying out for him to throw some strikes. The catcher came out to talk to Joo, and I figured out what was up. With the bases loaded, Peanuts would have to try to score if Rollo hit the ball, and Joo would be waiting at home plate to let poor Peanuts have it. I seen Peanuts on third, and he knew it too.
But Rollo struck out and so did Ham Henry after him. It was two outs with the bases loaded, and Whip Washington came up. Whip swung as hard as he could, and the ball bounced real slow right back to Joo. Jojo picked it up and smiled 'cause he had it just like he wanted it.
Now the crow was yelling at Jojo to touch home, throw to first, do something to get an out, but Jojo didn't hear. He walked over to the third base line and started walking toward Peanuts, one foot on each side of the line like he was climbing a rope.
I don't know how long everybody just stood there. The crowd was confused, not knowing if they should cheer or boo or what. But out of that came a holler.
I was standing between first and second, and I could see the fear of God and Jojo in Peanuts' eyes. Jojo got about halfway between home and third and stopped, just begging Peanuts to try to get him past he so he could take a shot at him.
"Joio." some lady yelled.
She was down in front, standing with her hands on her hips and looking at Jojo.
Joo took a look at her, and I figured this was the lady the whole fight was over.
Then I saw Peanuts, but just for a second. He took off toward home plate like a streak of summer lightning. He was moving so fast he was just a blur. Jojo never even seen him, and Peanuts slid through Jojo's legs so fast he singed the big kid's socks.
The amazing thing was, he'd built up so much speed that he just kept sliding, all the way across home plate and back to the backstop. Then he got up and took off running out of the park.
Well, the crowd hollered their heads off 'cause they'd never seen nothing like that and they wasn't sure if it was legal. The umpire signaled safe, then bent over to look at the brown streak down the line where Peanuts had slid.
Sure enough, it was peanut butter. Peanuts had run so fast and slid so hard that those peanuts in his pocket turned to butter.
We won the game, and when we got to the town square, we found Peanuts in the back seat of one of the cars, hiding under a pile of clothes. He wouldn't talk nothing about what happened, even when we told him he won the game for us. But he did have his old smile back.
So we changed his name to Peanut Butter 'cause there wasn't nobody ever gonna forget about that game. And every year after that, every time we got close to Chesterfield, ol' Peanut Butter would ask to please skip that town and just go somewhere else. And we always did 'cause he was the best little guy there was.
Rob Knapp, Tulsa junior, is a journalism major.
agman/KANSAN agriculural
attracting
1 residents
new sewer
3 putting in
tion of the
siness in food he drink.
liquor laws
and private
Wallace said,
cant things
that food require
nothing, migho
did
into Scott's
KANSAN MAGAZINE/April 10, 1987
d Under will drink estab on as July 1,
4, p. 8, col. 1
g its menu to meet the 30 he said. It's of the other some liquorises. And it's ing laws will sworen.
DE
iob Stanclift
defensive
hawks com-
plaining two
in Saturday.
Rain, rain go away
Details, page 2
Monday
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
April 13, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 131
(USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Kansas House, Senate recess
By CHRISTOPHER HINES Staff writer
The state Legislature took a two and a half week recess Friday without finishing some of its homework, including several bills concerning money and programs for the University of Kansas.
State lawmakers did, however,
approve a state lottery, liquor by the
drink and a bill prohibiting nuclear
waste disposal in Kansas, before
going into recess. Two weeks ago, the
Senate threw out by four votes the
death penalty, despite strong support
from Gov. Mike Hayden.
"This year is exceptional in that so many bills are in conference and that so many issues are unresolved," said State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence. "This is becoming more so every year."
When lawmakers return on April 29 for a three- to four-day wrap-up
for a th. session, the priation bi allocation $budget. Th and 1988 f increases, employee put the str and Washb under the pr. Regents pro by the Sena "It doesn vocational education. Sen. Jim Al of the Sena "We will pr from a joint tee this sur Two othe eliminate c universities increase tui of each unit were throwees.
"These changes," s Baker, R-De in this wit
The House ported by I National M in their st decided to l after gradu bill awaits S Another House and Ely allow who transfe pay in-state would allow high school move out u university a Hayden is e It make businesses b Rochelle C Higher ed strong point number mittees will o differen Senate versi An approp will r KU's house apprec free release, that to about and the Sen release of al The Sene salary incre proposed 1.5 of fiscalwear the entire fi
Ter
By JOESEPH
Stait writer
Kirk Boyu
playing card the blackjac
folks, place
going."
At the an where Boyun
er Saturday guests neede
Mo1
They swat heir bets. lollars.
MIDDLE CITY
CITY HALL
The city hall in Mound City was built in 1868 and houses the old city jail.
Alan Hagman/KANSAN
Mound City retains small-town values,
17
Irene L. Burridge
Cathy Seibel performs her art on at-erring from dip-holes and back covers and is paid from $2 to several dollars for her work.
Calligraphy
Lawrence artist uses more than pen and ink
Cathy Seibet:
Lawrence calligrapher stops
from her work
for a moment
to speak to her
to speak to her
to fellow artists at
the 6th Street
Artists Studio
and Gallery
619 E. Eighty-
St.
By Kjersti Moen
Doodling on note pads during boring classes developed into a craft, an art and a profitable business for Cathy Seibel, a Lawrence calligrapher.
With a careful hand, she meticulously draws old-fashioned, elegant letters using black ink and peculiar-looking pens.
Her centuries-old craft brings to mind European monks spending years hand printing Bibles with quill pens in poorly lit monastery vaults during the Middle Ages.
Nothing is left of that image in the modern calligrapher except that the artist still does the work by hand and sometimes uses a quill pen. Unlike those monks, Cathy wears sweats, works in an airy studio full of sunlight and doesn't hand-letter Bibles.
She does hand-letter diplomas awards, certificates, book covers advertisements, business logos, per 18 KANSAN MAGAZINE/April 10.1987
And people do pay. Cathy charges anything from a couple of dollars to several hundred, depending on the type of work. For example, she charges about $2 to hand-letter the name on a preprinted certificate. When she creates a custom-made certificate, the price can be more than $400.
"People are attracted to the human quality," she said. "There is a magical quality about something that's done by hand."
Her calendar is full of appointments and deadlines. Apparently, the demand for calligraphy is great.
sonal gifts and anything else that people pay her to create.
Her hand lettering is the heart of Pandion Graphics. She and her husband, David, run the business from an office in their home at 1446 Kentucky St.
David is the manager. He handles calls, customers and the bills, while Cathy works at her desk at 8th Street Artists, a large studio and gallery she shares with two other artists at 619 E. Eighth St.
Cathy's co-workers are painters, and Cathy paints too, from time to time.
On the gallery walls hang many paintings with Cathy's signature. They are mostly pastel water colors of flowers, trees, grass and animals. The free-flowing paintings are very different from the elaborate, strict lettering in her calligraphy.
"Painting has always been my first
---
lagman/KANSAN agricultural
attracting
d residents
new sewer
putting in
tion of the
into Scott's
0, p. 8, col. 1
siness in food he drink.
l liquor laws and private Wallace said. entn chains that food requirein's, might do
u under will drink estab on as July 1.
g its menu to meet the 30 he said. It's of the other acme liquorers. And it'sing laws will awrence.
DE
tob Stancilc
the defensive
chawks com-
tire losing two
on Saturday.
Rain, rain go away
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details, page 2
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Monday
April 13, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 131
(USPS 650-640)
Kansas House, Senate recess
By CHRISTOPHER HINES Staff writer
The state Legislature took a two and a half week recess Friday without finishing some of its homework, including several bills concerning money and programs for the University of Kansas.
“This year is exceptional in that so many bills are in conference and that so many issues are unresolved,” said State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence. “This is becoming more so every year.”
State lawmakers did, however,
approve a state lottery, liquor by the
drink and a bill prohibiting nuclear
waste disposal in Kansas, before
going into recess. Two weeks ago, the
Senate threw out by four votes the
death penalty, despite strong support
from Gov. Mike Hayden.
When lawmakers return on April 29 for a three to four-dav wad-up session the
BOLDO CITY
CITY HALL
Alan Hagman/KANSAN
pration bill, allocate $3.9 budget The and 1988 fee increases, an employee sale A House up put the state and Washburn under the sup Regents prob by the Senate
The city hall in Mound City was built in 1868 and houses the old city jail.
Mound City retains small-town values.
17
"It doesn't a vocational sci education as Sen. Jim Allet of the Senate." "We will prob from a joint eime this summ
Two other eliminate op universities a increase tutic of each univer were thrown Itees.
An appropriat
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release be,
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The Senate salary increase proposed 1.5 pe of fiscal year 1 the entire fiscal
"These are changes," said Baker, R-Derb into this witho
By JOSEPH REB Staff writer
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Rochelle Chr
"Higher educa
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Tem
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Monc
love," she said. But she likes doing both, because the paintings supplement her income, and because it provides a good balance between tight and loose, black and colorful.
But Cathy's calligraphy is not all black and white. On custom-made awards, for example, she paints detailed, colorful borders around the work. It's called illumination, and it is an art.
"Calligraphy often falls in the crack between craft and art," she said. "Anybody who puts some creative thought into it, approaches it as an art form, is going to create art."
Cathv often puts a lot of creative
thought into her work. She did extensive research before she began working on a Harvard award for geologist and popular science writer Steven Jay Gould.
The illumination was related to his work and hobbies, including some tropical fish that he had researched. And all of her work paid off. Gould said later that the beauty of Cathy's work made him break a precedent of not displaying his awards.
David thinks calligraphic awards
"A lot of people want to be able to write a nice looking letter. They feel really insecure about their handwriting," she said.
Good handwriting is not a prerequisite for becoming a good calligrapher, however. Instead, people who enjoy details and solitude and who are disciplined and precise have a better chance of succeeding at calligraphy, she said.
a hobby, and people who wanted to improve their handwriting.
For five years, she taught calligraphy classes for the Lawrence Arts Center, Ninth and Vermont streets. Her students were professionals who wanted to learn how to write signs and brochures at work, people who wanted
Cathy no longer teaches because she wants to concentrate on the business. But she thinks there is a need for
She learned the proper techniques from Stephen Skaggs after she moved to Lawrence. Skaggs taught lettering at KU's School of Fine Arts.
After perfecting her skills for a few months, she found that she could make a living from the craft. But she had to put general graphic knowledge to work for her, as well.
"I learned very quickly that if someone could hand me an idea, and I could bring back the finished, printed product, I was much more marketable. So I have learned the fundamentals of graphic design to be able to do that."
are good alternatives to traditional plaques and trophies. After calligraphy went through a revival period in the 1970s, people became increasingly interested in hand lettering, he said.
And most of her products are com-
Barclay Marie Fuellgraf
was born into this world in the
year 1985, the eighteenth day
of February in the town
of Hendersonville
in the State of
Tennessee.
Mother
Martha Ann Bishop
Father
Louis Charles Fuellgraf III
19 85
Calligraphy guilds and workshops are popping up across the country as the interest grows, Cathy said. That interest is here in Lawrence, too.
education in calligraphy. The University of Kansas has not offered classes in the craft for many years, but Cathy thinks it should do so.
"You see it all the time now. Perfume bottles, magazine ads. It's used a lot. That's why I think they should offer a class, because the ad people are getting shortchanged."
Cathy's doodling interests led her to take a course in lettering 15 years ago while enrolled at Western State College in Gunnison, Colo. But her teacher was not a professional.
"I learned it all wrong." she said.
plete design projects where the lettering is only a part of the whole.
But it's an important part. She experiments with numerous lettering styles called calligraphic hands, and she even has created her own. She also experiments with colors, including gold and silver ink.
But her creativity goes beyond what she puts on paper. She is also resourceful when it comes to tools. She does some of her work with sharpened popsicle sticks.
That's an exception, she said, but her materials basically are inexpensive. Paper and ink don't cost much. Neither do her pens and brushes.
What costs is her time. Some projects can take several weeks. But she enjoys her work and hopes she can continue to combine painting with lettering to create the individualized work for which she is known.
"Whether this will last, I don't know," she says. "But I think as people get more educated, the demand for good lettering will only grow."
KANSAN MAGAZINE/April 10, 1987 19
lagman/KANSAN agrificultural
attracting
d residents
new sewer
s putting in
tion of the
into Scott's
) , p. 8, col. 1
siness in food he drink.
l liquor laws and private Wallace said. nt chains that food requirein's, might do
id Under will 3-drink estab on as July 1,
g its menu to meet the 30 he said. It's of the other acme liquorise. And it's ing laws will awrence.
DE
DE
job Stancliff,
ne defensive
rhawks com-
tle losing two
on Saturday.
Rain, rain go away
MARC JACOBS
Details. page 2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Monday
April 13, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 131
(USPS 650-640)
Kansas House, Senate recess
Staff writer
By CHRISTOPHER HINES Staff writer
The state Legislature took a two and a half week recess Friday without finishing some of its homework, including several bills concerning money and programs for the University of Kansas.
“This year is exceptional in that so many bills are in conference and that so many issues are unresolved,” said State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence. “This is becoming more so every year.”
State lawmakers did, however,
approve a state lottery, liquor by the
drink and a bill prohibiting nuclear
waste disposal in Kansas, before
going into recess. Two weeks ago, the
Senate threw out by four votes the
death penalty, despite strong support
from Gov. Mike Havden
When lawmakers return on April 29 for a three- to four-day wrap-up session, they will have several appro
phation on allocate $3 budget. Th and 1988 f increases, a employee s
A House a
put the sta-
and Washub
under the sb
Regents pro
by the Senat
"It doesn't vocationals education a Sen, Jim Alla of the Senat "We will pr from a joint tree this sum
Two other eliminate or universities increase tuit of each univ were thrown tees.
Baker, R-Der into this with The House ported by Hr National Mej in their stat decided to liie graduda bill awaits Se Another b House and Sely allow empl who transfer pay in-state would allow high school s move out of university an Hayden is exx
"It makes businesses easie Rochelle Ch "Higher educ strong points. A number of mittees will n out difference Senate version An appropri mitte will me KU's budget House approve release见. I to that about $ and the Senate release of abo The Senate
"These a changes," sa Baker, R-Der into this with
The Senate salary increase proposed 1.5 pef of fiscal year the entire fiscus
Alan Hagman/KANSAN
--life
Ter
By JOSEPH REI Staff writer
Kirp Boym
playing card st
the black jack t
folks, place yo
going."
At the annu where Boyum w er Saturday night guests needed t
17
Monc
They swarm their bets. The dollars.
MILKO CITY CITY HALL
The city hall in Mound City was built in 1868 and houses the old city jail.
Mound City retains small-town values,
BURGER
Continued from p. 4
to tired, cranky vacationers why we didn't have the MeRib they could get at a McDonald's in Illinois. And I tried to figure out why little kids like to mash up their French fries and put them in the potted plants.
--captures its enemies' base each player is awarded 200 points. Each player loses 50 points when the team's base is captured.
It's strange. Even though I worked at a McDonald's for three months of my life, I still don't know everything about the place. The company has its secrets. I called an area supervisor in Kansas City for a little information, but some things he just wouldn't disclose to the public.
I still don't know how they make those burgers so perfectly round and flat. I can't make them that way at home.
Why did they make us put the ketchup, mustard and pickle in a little spot on the middle of the burger? Don't people like ketchup on the edges of their burgers, too? I do.
Well, if I gained anything from my McDonaldland experience, it has to be respect for those people in (polyester) blue. Now on those few rare occasions when I go into a McDonald's, I recall the days that I spent as McJane. I'm patient with the person behind the counter and I throw away my trash.
Jane Zachman, Russell senior, is a journalism major.
And why do they put sesame seeds on the bun? They always fall off before they hit your mouth anyway.
LASER
Continued from p. 12
At Laser Chase Arena, if a player shoots his opponent six times, he is credited with a "kill" and is awarded 1,000 points. The player wins 100 points for each hit, and gets a 500-point bonus for the sixth hit.
If a player plays at least three times during the week, he is eligible to win $25 for scoring the most points at Laser Chase Arena.
In today's society, the childhood game of tag is a money making prospect that is keeping pace with technology.
Today, instead of kids running around trying to tag each other by hand, they are paying to aim laser light guns at an opponent to accomplish the same thing.
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---
Hagman/KANSAN II agricultural
e attracting
e into Scott's
id residents e new sewer is putting ination of the
D, p. 8, col. 1
business in food the drink.
e liquor laws
s and private
Wallace said,
ant chains that
food require-
an's, might do
nd Under will ie-drink estaboon as July 1,
ng its menu to meet the 30 he said. It's of the other become liquor-needs. And it's gins law will awrence.
DE
KANSAN MAGAZINE/April 10, 1987
lob Stanciffe
ne defensive
yhawks comile
losing two
on Saturday.
Rain, rain go away
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details, page 2
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Monday
April 13, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 131
(USPS 650-640)
Kansas House, Senate recess
By CHRISTOPHER HINES Staff writer
The state Legislature took a two and a half week recess Friday without finishing some of its homework, including several bills concerning money and programs for the University of Kansas.
"This year is exceptional in that so many bills are in conference and that so many issues are unresolved," said State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence. "This is becoming more so every year."
State lawmakers did, however,
approve a state lottery, liquor by the
drink and a bill prohibiting nuclear
waste disposal in Kansas, before
going into recess. Two weeks ago, the
Senate threw out by four votes the
death penalty, despite strong support
from Gov. Mike Hayden.
When lawmakers return on April 29 for a three- to four-day wrap-up session, they will have several appropriation bills to approve in order to allocate $3.9 billion for the state's budget, $140 million for the 1988 fee releases, 1988 budget increases, and faculty and classified employee salary raises.
A House-approved bill that would put the state's community colleges and Washburn University of Topeka under the supervision of the Board of Regents probably will not be decided by the Senate until next year.
"It doesn't address the needs of the vocational schools or Kansas higher education as a whole," said State Sen. Jim Allen, R-Ottawa, a member of the Senate education committee. "We will probably wait for a report from a joint education study committee this summer."
Two other bills, one that would eliminate open admission at state universities and another that would increase tuition based on the quality of each university and each course, were thrown back to House committees.
"These are two major policy changes," said State Rep. Elizabeth Baker. R-Derby. "We just can't jump into this without further study."
The House approved a bill supported by Hayden that would allow National Merit scholars a reduction in their state income tax if they decided to live and work in Kansas after graduating from college. The bill awaits Senate approval.
Another bill, approved by the House and Senate, would immediately allow employees and their families who transfer to Kansas for a job to pay in-state tuition. The bill also would allow 12 months for Kansas high school students whose parents move out of state, to enroll at a university and pay in-state tuition. Havden is expected to sign the bill.
"It makes recruiting for Kansas businesses easier," said State Rep. Rochelle Chronister, R-Needeshona, the education is one of Kansas's strong points.
WILKING CITY
CITY HALL
A number of joint conference committees will meet this week to work out differences between House and Senate versions of the bills.
The Senate also raised faculty salary increases from the House's proposed 1.5 percent increase for half of fiscal year 1988 to 2.5 percent for the entire fiscal year.
An appropriations conference committee will meet tomorrow to discuss KU's budget and fee releases. The House approved about a $600,000 1987 fee release, but the Senate raised that to about $900,000. Both the House and the Senate agreed on a 1988 fee release of about $600,000.
Alan Haagman/KANSAN
The city hall in Mound City was built in 1868 and houses the old city jail.
A boy jumps to make a basket in front of a grain silo.
Mound City retains small-town values lifelong residents say
A first-grader at Mound City Grade School practices his shot during morning recess. The small agricultural community is at the junction of Kansas Highways 31 and 7.
By LAURA BOSTROM
Staff writer
Alao Haoman/KANSAN
MOUND CITY — At 7:30 Thursday morning one car was moving down Mound City's Main Street. The sun was up, but the morning was still cool.
From Sugar Mound east of town, a visitor can see the land rumored to be the home of the Jayhawk legend, a century-old courthouse, trees used for hangings and three church spires rising above the dust.
At the junction of Kansas Highways 31 and 7 sits Mound City, the county seat of mostly agricultural Linn County.
The town has a colorful history. Its 699 residents still are living much the same as they did when the town had 635 residents more than a century ago. Nearly all of the churches are the same. The Town is the same. In in are the same. The attitude about small-town life is the same.
the school, built in 1922, originally was the town high school but now has 17 kindergarten through
Today's residents still are living in that history, distinctly different from Lawrence or Kansas City, although some elements of modern life have encroached upon the small town
Ken Otto, principal of Mound City Grade School, walked up the stairs of the school Thursday morning, singing.
sixth-grade students.
The memories of the earlier students linger in the unused lockers on the first floor, in the hardwood floors and in the school auditorium with its tiny stage, now used for fifth- and sixth-grade band practices.
Otto repeated what many other Mound City residents bragged about. "The people are the nicest thing about the town," he said.
People trust each other in a town this size, and it isn't imperative to know the news right away. Everyone will hear about it eventually, like the mayor's race. Actually, there wasn't a race, because no one was on the ballot, Otto said.
City Clerk Vera Murray said write-in candidate Tom Swan won with an unofficial 64 votes. Swan works for the Kansas Fish and Game Commission and was burning grass all day Thursday.
Coming to the drive-in is a ritual that began in his youth. "I've
Swan's daughter, Sara, a fourth-grader, said that she thought that her father would take her to that but that he didn't really want it.
By 8:30 a.m., City Councilman Gary Schmitz was already "at coffee" at Scott's Drive In. Schmitz and a couple others enter the restaurant's back door for their morning ritual before the drive-in opens and the 9 a.m. regulars arrive.
Thursday, Schmitz and other residents talked of the changes in Mound City.
"We had four grocery stores, now we can barely support one," drive in worker Rosemary Whiten said from over the counter.
"Our folks never went out of town for shopping."
Phil Powell, night patrolman,
said. "Groceries and gas are
always going to be more expensive in a small town. People want to shop at Price Choppers and get kiwi fruit."
Cheaper prices in the bigger towns of Fort Scott, Pittsburg and
Kansas City now are attracting Mound City citizens.
the councilman said residents were talking about the new sewer lines that the town was putting in and about the renovation of the historic band wagon.
The old-timers came into Scott's
See MOUND, p. 8, col. 1
Local beer bar changes into private club
By JOHN BUZBEE
Staff writer
Another Lawrence beer bar has changed its name and closed its doors to 20-year-olds as tavern owners scramble for customers in an ever-shrinking drinking market.
The Bottleneck, formerly Cogburns, at 737 New Hampshire St., had its grand opening as a private club Friday. The bar has been remodeled and has started serving imported beers and liquor shots to change its image, co-owner Brett Mosiman said.
most freshmen and sophomores aren't old enough to get into taverns. Every day, fewer people can get into Lawrence's beef bars, and Coburts' business had been剥削 because of their shrinking market. Mosiman said
The Bottleneck will continue to have nationally known bands such as Johnny Reno and the Sax Maniacs, he said, but it will cut down on weekend bands to keep cover charges low.
"This was always kind of a freshman and sophomore place," he said. "The juniors and seniors . . . think of this as a place they came when they were younger."
With the increasing drinking age.
"Once you get 21," he said, "I don't b
you want to hang out at a b
a hotel."
The West Coast Saloon, 2222 Iowa St., and Johnny's Tavern, 401 N. Second St., are among the local taverns that have changed to private clubs since 1985, when the state said
Johnny's still sells a lot of beer because it merged with Up and Under, which was a private club above Johnny's, co-owner Rick Baum said. Most people drink downstairs, but go upstairs to drink liquor.
people born after July 1, 1966,
couldn't drink until they were 21.
"It's just so much more profitable," he said. "It has not changed the place much at all. It's a technicality in the law more than anything else."
The Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio St., would become a private club if the city would allow it, owner Ken Wallace said. But the Hawk, the Wagon Wheel Cafe and the Rock Chalk Bar, which are bars near campus, can't become clubs because of zoning
restrictions.
Beer bars may want to become private clubs so they can stay open later and serve lice. Wallace said. The beers would be more costly beer and wouldn't change much.
Because the Hawk's business is down, however, it may be selling beer somewhere else next fall, or it may not be selling anything. Wallace said that after the state Legislature wrapped up for this year, he would consider moving the bar and changing it to a private club or closing the bar. He can't go on forever selling 3.2 percent beer, he said.
"We might ride out the football season before we make a change." he
A bill in the Legislature would allow only restaurants with at least
30 percent of their business in food sales to sell liquor by the drink.
The changes in the liquor laws could drive little bars and private clubs out of business, Wallace said. Then national restaurant chains that meet the 30 percent food requirement in Michigan's, might do well in Lawrence.
But Johnny's Up and Under will become a liquor-by-the-drink establishment, maybe as soon as July 1, Renro said.
Johnny's is expanding its menu to sell more food and meet the 30 percent requirement, he said. It's still unclear which of the other Lawrence clubs will become liquor-by-the-drink establishments. And it's unclear how the changing laws will affect competition in Lawrence.
Templin Hall turns lobby to casino at annual party
Kirk Boyum, sporting a derby hat with a playing card stuck in the hatband, leaned over the blackjack table and said, "Place your bets folks, place your bets. Let's keep the betting going."
Staff writer
By JOSEPH REBELLO
At the annual Templin Hall Casino Party, where Boyum was a volunteer blackjack dealer Saturday night, that invitation was all the guests needed to hear.
Monday Morning
They swarmed around Boyum and placed their bets. The stakes were in millions of dollars.
When the game was over, Boyum, Brea, Calif., sophomore, was a million dollars in the
Unfortunately for Boyum, they were better gamblers than he.
For about five hours, the 400 students who donned tuxedos and evening gowns to attend the Templin casino could well have been in a Las Vegas casino.
"I've never seen people get so aggressive over a game." Boyum said. "It's just play money, but they were fighting over it like animals. Everyone wanted to win so bad."
Fortunately for him, his loss was only in play money.
Only, instead of sipping a dry martini, they drank Coca-Cola, and instead of making a fortune in hard cash, they contented themselves with toy money.
The party, a 20-year-old tradition with Templin residents, takes place every April to celebrate the beginning of spring and the end of the semester, said Laird MacGregor, Templin president and organizer of the party.
"This is a deviation from the normal day-to-day life of the college student," he said. "It's a nice interruption in the routine. It gives students the chance to put the books down for a while and socialize."
Rod McIntyre, Templin Hall director, said, "I think what it really does is allow people to step into a world of fantasy for a while. You feel the freedom of being in this realist just waiting for Humphrey Bogart to step out."
McIntyre contributed to the mood of that scene by conducting the Tempelin-Lewis Jazz
The ensemble played "On Broadway" and three other songs.
Ensemble, a group of 12 Lewis Hall and Templin musicians.
Students were given $10,000 in play money as they entered the lobby, and the clatter of rolling dice quickly drew them to the gambling tables.
"It's kind of fun to be able to sit there with a stack of money." he said.
Troy Bateman, Spring Hill freshman, was in the game only 30 minutes before he made $200.000.
Bateman, and most other guests, bought raffle tickets with the money they had made.
"I think deep down people really like to gamble. But what we're using here is just play money, so nobody really gets hurt."
INSIDE
New look
KU softball coach Bob Stancill decided to make some defensive switches after the Jayhawks committed nine errors while losing two games to Creighton on Saturday. See story page 9.
2
Monday, April 13, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Around the World
Shultz meets with arms advisers to prepare for Moscow meetings
HELSINKI, Finland — Secretary of State George P. Shultz met with a dozen U.S. arms control advisers yesterday to prepare his response to new Soviet overtures that might bring the Reagan administration closer to its first arms control agreement.
In talks opening today in Moscow, Shulz hutzes to clear a major obstacle to a treaty intended to rid Europe of medium-range missiles.
The barrier is the presence of 130 shorter-range rockets in East Germany, Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union. The United States
and its North Atlantic Treaty Organization allies want the right to match that number.
In two speeches, Soviet leader Mikhail B. Gorbachev offered to negotiate a solution while the two sides complete an agreement to eliminate their medium-range missiles from Europe.
Shultz is not likely to give the Soviets a final answer when he sees Foreign Minister Edward A. Shewardnadze, beginning today, and General Secretary Mikhail S. Gorbachev, tomorrow.
Pope celebrates Palm Sunday in Argentina
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — Nearly a million cheering people waved olive branches and palm fronds in a joyous greeting to Pope John Paul II, the first modern pontiff to celebrate Palm Sunday, Mass outside Rome.
On his last day of a two-week South American pilgrimage, the pope led the Roman Catholic ceremony from an altar on a canopied tent to the Chapel of 360-foot-wide Ninth of July Avenue that runs through the capital.
The pope, in a scene similar to
Jesus' entrance into Jerusalem, rode along a path through the youthful multitude in the cheers of the crowd. "Papa!" "Long Live the Pope!"
But where the Bible has Jesus and his followers arriving on donkeys, John Paul was driven in a white, bullet-proof "pomobile" to the foot of a red-carpeted ramp leading up to the platform.
Yesterday was the final day of his three-nation tour that included visits to Uruguay and Chile before Argentina.
Across the Country
Texaco files for protection from creditors
NEW YORK — Texaco Inc. has filed for protection from its creditors under Chapter 11 of the federal bankruptcy law, its president and chief executive officer, James Kinear, said yesterday.
The action will not affect the network of subsidiaries "that constitute the vast bulk of Texaco's operations." Kinnear said.
$11 billion in security during appeals.
Texaco, the nation's third-largest oil company, is embroiled in a multi-billion dollar legal war with Pennzoil Co., which won a huge jury award in a lawsuit against Texaco.
When the U.S. Supreme Court last week rejected a lower court's ruling that freed Texaco from posting the huge bond, pressure increased on Texaco to settle with the judge for bankruptcy court protection.
A jury in Houston found that Texaco unlawfully interfered with a 1984 merchant agreement between Pennzoil and Getty Oil Co. by trying to buy Getty, and it awarded $10.5 billion in damages to Pennzoil.
Evacuees wait for workers to clean up spill
PITTSBURGH — Throughout the city's East End, churches stood silent on Palm Sunday, and thick stacks of newspapers sat unsold in the rain while about 16,000 evacuees waited for workers to remove a deralied tanker's deadly chemical cargo.
The tanker was among 34 railroad cars that toppled off the
tracks when a Conrail freight train on its way to Chicago derailed and plowed into another freight train on a sideways on-site direction Saturday afternoon.
No serious injuries had been reported by yesterday, although 14 people were treated at hospitals for breathing problems immediately after the derailment.
Elderly pair resting after being found again
IOLA — A couple who drove across Kansas and Colorado for three days, after spending almost two weeks stranded in their car by a blizzard, spent yesterday resting.
couple's 13-day stay in snowdrifts near Norton.
Nelle Obendorf, 65, was staying with her sister in Iola, and her husband, Orville Obendorf, 71, was treated at Hadley Regional Medical Center in Hays for frostbite to his feet suffered during the
The couple survived on Girl Scout cookies and diet soda while stranded. They were rescued April 28, 2013, on their way back to their home.
The couple was the subject of an all-points bulletin in two states before turning up in Quinter in northwest Kansas on Friday night.
From Kansan wires.
Weather From the KANSAN Weather Service
LAWRENCE FORECAST
---
Today will be cloudy with a 60 percent chance for rain, and a high near 57 degrees. Tonight, the clouds and rain will remain, as temperatures drop to around 38 degrees. Tomorrow will be mostly cloudy with a chance for showers, and highs in the mid-50s.
EXTENDED FORECAST:
EXPENDED FORCES
Wednesday partly cloudy 60°
Thursday sunny 66°
Friday partly cloudy 68°
DES. MOINES
50 / 38
OMAHA
46 / 38
LINCOLN
45 / 35
CONCORDIA
47 / 35
TOPEKA
56 / 41
KANSAS
CITY
55 / 41
COLUMBIA
63 / 45
ST. LOUIS
66 / 48
SALINA
53 / 39
WICHITA
50 / 34
CHANUTE
56 / 38
SPRINGFIELD
62 / 43
TULSA
63 / 44
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SUCCESS MICHAEL J.
FOX
Varsity
Daily 7:10, 9:30
Blind Date
KUM BASINGER WILLS
Mes. Sat., Jan. 28, 7:15
Daily 7:30, 9:40
Hilmeres
MIT GREENVILLE ATHLETICS
LETHAL WEAPON
Sat. Dec. 2, 2:25
Daily 7:10, 9:30
Commonwealth
Granada
THE SECRET OF MY SUCCESS MICHAEL J. FOX
IND. 12
DAILY 7:10, 9:30
Varsity
Blind Date
KIM BRUCE BASINNER WILLS
Mat. fr., Sun. 7:00, 9:11
Mat. fr., Sun. 7:00, 9:11
DAILY 7:30, 9:40
Hillcrest
MICHAEL DANNY HURN
LETHAL WEAPON
Mat. fr., Sun. 3:00
DAILY
*5:00, 7:35, 9:25
POLICE ACADEMY 4
Mat. sat., Sun. 2:15
DAILY
*4:30, 7:15, 9:30
PLATON
Mat. sat., Sun. 2:30
DAILY
*6:45, 7:20, 9:20
THREE ROAD
Mat. sat., Sun. 2:30
DAILY
*6:45, 7:20, 9:20
RAISING ARIZONA
Mat. sat., Sun. 3:10
DAILY *5:10, 7:40, 9:30
Cinema Twin
Gene Hackman (N)
HOOSEERS
Daily 7:15, 9:25
OPEN SUNDAY
Cincinnati Twin
Gene Hackman 20
Tuesday, Feb. 4th at 6:45 a.m. thru noon. 11:38 a.m.
DAILY 7:15, 9:25
SUA NEEDS YOU!
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Student Union Activities is planning an exciting '87-'88 year full of concerts, speakers, trips, all kinds of recreation and much more. You can be a part of SUA by sharing your time, talents, and ideas in these areas as a committee person.
FILMS: help plan, promote and coordinate the film program.
FINE ARTS: assist in the planning and coordinating of cultural programs; i.e., art fairs, performing arts, and literary readings.
FORUMS: help plan and promote in lecture oriented activities.
INDOOR RECREATION: help run games and tournaments.
OUTDOOR RECREATION: plan outings, workshops, lectures plus overseeing the camping equipment rental service
PUBLIC RELATIONS: excellent hands-on experience in promoting SUA programs and the Kansas and Burge Unions as a whole.
SPECIAL EVENTS: the concert producing entity is looking for help in the following areas: public relations, usher/security communications/marketing, stage manager, graphic design, and administration.
TRAVEL: help plan, organize and promote university sponsored trips.
Sign up deadline: Friday, April 17th, 5 p.m. in the SUA Office For more information, SUA 864-3477.
3
Local Briefs
Daniloff to talk about Soviet experiences
Nicholas Dandi洛, U.S. News & World Report diplomatic editor, will speak at 8 p.m today in Hoch auditorium.
Daniloff was the magazine's Moscow correspondent in the fall when he was arrested and tried on charges of espionage by Soviet authorities. He was freed 30 days later.
Stolen computers found under bridge
He will speak about that experience and the influence it has had on U.S.-Soviet relations.
Three hunters found two stolen computers belonging to the University of Kansas on April 5 under a bridge in rural southeastern Douglas County. Lt. Jeanne Longaker, a KU police spokesman, said last week.
The hunters, all from the Kansas City area, had been scouting for new hunting ground when they discovered two boxes wrapped in brown plastic trash bags under a bridge, said Loneaker.
Inside the boxes were two Apple MacIntosh computers, each with a keyboard and mouse, valued at $1,500 each, and two Macintosh disc drives, valued at $350 each, Longkaer said.
She said the computers were engraved with "University of Kansas."
The computers had been stolen from the department of computer science in Strong Hall on March 27 or 28, Longaker said.
She said that all the stolen equipment was recovered but that no fingerprints had been found on the equipment.
KU police have no suspects in the case, she said.
Graduation gowns provided to faculty
Faculty members who do not own hoods may rent them. Charges for 1987 are $14 for a hood and $15 for a doctoral hood.
Lawrence campus faculty and staff should send their orders to Cap & Gown, Kansas Union, level four, and may contact Robert Derby at 864-4099 or 864-3515 for more information.
KU Medical Center faculty and staff should return their cards to the Student Activities Office, room 3018, third floor, Student Union and may contact Dorothy Siebenhain at 368-2597 for more information.
Faculty must return their order cards by April 24 to take advantage of the offer.
Positions available on fall Kansan staff
Applications for news and business staff positions for the fall Kansan are available in 119 and 200 Staufer-Flint Hall. The deadline for news applications is 5 p.m. Wednesday, and the deadline for business applications is 5 p.m. Friday.
Those with questions may call the Kansan newsroom at 864-4810 or the Kansan business office at 864-4358.
Campus and Area University Daily Kar
From staff and wire reports.
Senate allots money to student organizations
By LISA A. MALONEY
The Student Senate allocated a total of $78,694 to 42 student organizations last week. The Senate treasurer said.
Staff writer
"I thought it was a very responsible distribution of student organization funds," said Tom Woods, treasurer.
The Senate could allocate no more than $65,000 to student groups. Student organizations received $83,119, and $6,881 was placed in the student organizations' unallocated account.
The remaining $20,575 that was allcated was taken out of the Senate unallocated account to finance large capital expenses for some groups, Woods said.
Two student organizations were denied financing; the Rocky and Bullwinkle Fan Club, which publishes the parody magazine Travesty; and AIESEC, an international group that locates foreign internships for students.
Michael Foubert, graduate senator, said the Fan Club had said last year it would produce two issues of the magazine but that it had produced only one, so the Senate decided
Woods said that because AISEEC's main purpose was to locate internships for a small number of students, the Senate denied financing.
not to finance it this year.
"That's kind of using Senate money for personal gain," Woods said.
The student organizations and the amounts approved by the Senate were: Pharmacy Student Organization, $909; HALO, $555; Free Theatre Company, $1,720; KU India Club, $432; International Folk Dance, $580; Korean Student Organization, $330; KU Slavic Language, $350; KU Squash, $160; and KU Vietnam Association. $520.
Also financeeed were Model United Nations, $2.515; Le Corte Francais, $295; NSAE, $149; SCOfMMEBE, $250; Amnesty International, $657; Jayhawk course Source, $7.940; Biology Club, $190; Chinese Student Association, $291; Committee on the Status of Women, $978; KU Rugby, $7.024; KU German Club, $245; and KU Table Tennis, $870.
Senate allocated to KU Hockey Club,
$9,630. Enviro, $860. Free China
Club, $440. Latin American Student
Association, $242. Gay and Lesbian
Services of Kansas, $355. International
Club, $439. KU Crew, $22,415.
KU Coalition for Peace and Justice,
$171; KU Amateur Radio Club,
$1.342; KU Cricket Club, $952; and
Slightly Older Americans for Freedom,
$370.
Senate financed the Men's Scoce-
Club, $2.375; Women's Soccer Club,
$1.071; Society for Fantasy and Scien-
ce Fiction, $281; Society of Women
Engineers, $210; Student Health
Organization Officers, $2,472; Student
Health Advisory Board, $1,309;
Women for Educating KU, $245;
Expressions, $540; Malaysian Asso-
ciation, $305; and Engineering
Student Council, $2,320.
HICA
Amy Rhoads/KANSAN
Moodv Bluebooks
David Gottlieb, professor of law, left; Tanya Treadway, Lawrence law student; and Stan Davis, associate professor of law, perform to a standing room only crowd with their band. The Moody Bluebooks. KU faculty and
students gathered last night for "Pub Night" at the Jazzhaus, $926^{1/2}$ Massachussetts St., to relax and see law professors and students perform to raise money for scholarships.
Engineering groups to compete in olympics
Staff writer
By TIM HAMILTON
Students and faculty from the School of Engineering will give up their calculators for ball gloves this week.
The Engineering Olympics, a two week athletic competition among the faculty and students of the school's departments, begins this week to determine which engineers are the best outside the classroom.
The competition is sponsored by
the national engineering honor society, Tau Beta Phi, to raise money for Special Olympics.
Mark Russell, Kansas City, Kan.
senior and president of Tau Beta Phi,
said he hoped the event would raise
more than $500.
He said the event also was a good opportunity for the different departments to become better acquainted and to relax before finals.
"The main goal is to get people to participate," Russell said. "The last
day is kind of like a field day for the students. We hold it on the lawn of Learned Hall."
Preliminary softball, basketball and volleyball competition will be this week, with the finals next week. On the last day, April 24, the competition will culminate with the special field events in front of Learned.
The special events include a gunny sack race, tug of war, scavenger hunt, water balloon toss, calculator race, a nerd look-a-like contest and a
faculty pie-eating contest.
Departmental teams win points for their finishes in each event, and the team with the most points wins. Departmental teams win teams that include faculty members.
Don Green, Conger-Gable distinguished professor of chemical and petroleum engineering, said he would compete on his department's softball team and would enter the faculty pie-eating contest, as he did last year.
New city commissioners poised to take posts
By TODD COHEN
Staff writer
Students of government can witness a democratic transfer of power tomorrow night when three new members of the Lawrence City Commission are sworn in and a new mayor is chosen.
The commission will meet at 7 p.m. in Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts street.
The outgoing commission will act on business left on the agenda from
last week's meeting. Then City Clerk Valeria Mercer will administer the oath of office to Bob Schumm, Mike Johnson, and Jonathan's selection in the winners last week's contest.
Schumm, a restaurateur, and Rundle, a secretary in the KU design department, will serve four-year terms. Constance, the new house manager of Oliver Hall, will serve a two-year term.
Mike Amyx, whose terms expire in 1989.
They will join the two remaining commissioners, Sandra Praeger and
Praeger, who has served in the most ceremonial post of mayor for the past year, also will relinquish her position and center seat on the commission.
Either Schumm, who finished first in last week's election and served on the commission from 1979-81, or Amyx, who was mayor from 1985-86, is expected to be elected mayor by the new commission.
The brief inaugural in the commission's chambers will dramatically shift the commission's majority opinion against a proposed enclosed mall in the 600 block of downtown Lawrence.
In the election last week, voters overwhelmingly rejected the mall proposal and elected the three new commissioners, all of whom opposed the mall.
Police play basketball for hungry
By PAUL BELDEN
Staff writer
That could have been Manning, Hunter and Turgeon running that fast break.
It wasn't, but Larry Brown would have approved of the way the KU police basketball team beat the New England 46 underdog in Allen Field House.
The KU team, in the best KU basketball tradition, scored most of its points with fast break layups. My team did the off the long pass after the rebound.
In scoring, three KU players stood out. Mark Rutledge scored 30 points, and Sylvester Birdson and Ralph Oliver each had 12 points.
Jim Miller was the high scorer for the Lawrence police team with 19 points. Vic Schmile help out with ten points and Fred d'Ercole with six.
Lt. Jeanne Longaker, KU police spokesman, said that about 400 cans of food had been donated for the Ballard Community Center, 708 Elm St. The food will go to feed hungry people in Lawrence.
Although the players played seriously and hard, there were several lighter moments, such as the end of the first half.
Not a player or coach made it out the door, to the amusement of the crowd.
The two squads were heading toward the locker room when the half-time entertainment was announced; the finalists for the KU Crimson Girls.
in the second half, one referee waved his arms and loudly booed a traveling call made by his counterpart that nullified Rhonda Birdsong's only basket for the KU team. It was the one time in the game the KU fans cheered a referee.
But underneath the frivolity, the game was for real.
Tim Cochran of the KU team could attest to that. Although he scored only seven points coming off the bench, Cochran sacrificed his body again and got up smiling each time.
At the end of the first half, Cochran, chasing a loose ball, dove headlining into the KU bench. Several bone-jarring colllisions here, he got the ball at the top of the key, drove the lane and was hit by a crossfire of bodies and slammed to the floor. Twenty seconds later, on KU's next possession, Cochran again drove the lane and ate the wood.
Most of Cochran's teammates applauded this gutsy display, but someone on the KU bench shouted, "You want to get killed?"
The violence was all accidental, however, and both teams took it and dished it out. Everyone was in good spirits at the end of the game.
"They cheated," Dave Davis of the Lawrence team said, "And we did not."
THEY MIGHT BE GIANTS
two Johns from NYC a duo-cum beatbox rock attraction NY's version of Timbuk 3 Musician 3/87 what do they sound like? Don't ask me CALL (718) 387-6962 T.M.B.G. song of the day hotline ask for John Sure they're in ROLLING STONE isn't everybody? they're in Lawrence ...
on their "Bring Me the Head of Kenny Rogers" Tour 8
APRIL 15 HOMESTEAD GRAYS THE BOTTLENECK a premium drinking establishment
Attention Graduate Students!
A meeting of the Graduate Student Council has been called for Monday April 13th,5:30-7:30 p.m. in Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union.
All graduate students are welcome.
for further information call 864-4914
Teams Sponsors Contributors
1. ATΩ K.C. Comets All-Star Dairy
2. ΔT (WSU) Miller Lite All-American Indoor Sports
3. ΔTΔ KLZR Brands Mart Kansas, Inc.
4. BОII John & Janet Patterson
5. KΣ (Baker) Ken and Betty Scott
6. ΦΚΘ David & Stephanie Schipser
7. ΦΚΨ Leroy & Diane Seiler
8. ΦΔΘ Dan and Mary Williams
9. ΣAE G. Nelson Van Fleet
10. ΣΕE (KSU) John H. Shore
11. ΣΕE (KU) ADΠ
12. ΣX AXΩ
13. TKE (Rockhurst) AΓΔ
KAΘ
KKΓ
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AOΠ
4
Monday, April 13, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Opinions
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Jayhawk Course Source began as an attempt to give students an idea of what to expect from their classes before they were enrolled in them. It would list class requirements, tests and paper formats.
Put Source on course
For the few classes outlined in the Course Source, the information ranges from detailed syllabuses to blurs that offer little more than the listing in the undergraduate catalog.
But, after the recent release of the second issue, the Course Source has turned out to be an ineffective waste of time and money. It was released too late to be of much assistance to anyone and includes information on only 37 classes.
The idea and goals of the Course Source are not flawed, the trouble lies in their execution. The forward to the spring issue explains that it "represents the completion of a year and a half long, ongoing development process." But if this is the best that can be done, either the development process needs to kick into high gear or the project should be scrapped.
If this is to be accomplished, though, the Course Source needs to get information on considerably more than 37 classes. It also needs to be distributed before the enrollment process is well underway.
The Course Source has the potential to be a big help to the students of this University. Students who are aware of what they are walking into before enrolling are less likely to drop out or be surprised by a class.
Don't cheat yourself
If not, it is only a drain on Senate funds that could be put to better use elsewhere.
The education offered at the University of Kansas does not stop when class ends, when all of the homework is completed or even at graduation. The opportunity to learn continues in the lectures, recitals, films and other similar events.
Daniiloff, diplomatic editor for U.S. News & World Report,
In the next two weeks, faculty, staff and students will have three great opportunities to learn about international politics and the inner workings of an author's mind. These opportunities come in the form of lectures by journalist Nicholas Daniloff, author Tom Wolfe and Elliot Abrams, U.S. assistant secretary of state for inter-American affairs.
will speak at 8 tonight in Hoch Auditorium. He gained the world's attention in August 1986 when Soviet officials arrested him on charges of spying and detained him for 30 days.
Wednesday at 8 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium, Wolfe, author of "The Right Stuff" and "The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test." will talk about his writing.
And last but not least, Abrams will speak at 1 p.m. April 21 in the Kansas Union on "Central America: What Are the Alternatives?"
The opportunities are there, available to everyone. Don't cheat yourself by missing them.
Stressing human rights
Pope John Paul II paid a visit to Chile last week, his holy image contrasting greatly with the image of the country's military dictator Augusto Pinochet.
Pinocheth has ruled Chile since he led a successful coup in 1973, toppling elected Marxist President Salvadore Allende. During his reign, he has ruled with an iron hand. His government is facing unquestionable accusations of unjustly imprisoning, torturing and killing thousands of ordinary citizens. Human rights groups around the world have denounced the present regime, describing it as the model of the national-security-state.
The pope's visit was intended to press human rights, which continuously have been violated in Chile by Pinochet's repressive regime. The visit once again turned the eyes of the world to the discontent of the Chilean citizens living under his rule. Hopes that the government would consider opening elections and foresaking violence were renewed.
But the United States government, among others, largely has closed its eyes to these atrocities. In many cases, the government thinks, the iron hand may be more tolerable than the iron curtain of communism. So, Pinochet remains.
Throughout Chile, the pope encountered the turmoil that has resulted from mounting antagonism toward Pinochet's rule. "We want a dignified life without dictatorship" was a familiar plea and indicated that the citizens' understandable frustration with the government soon may make other forms of rule increasingly appealing. The movement toward those forms of government soon may become more violent.
Pope John Paul II urged the Chileans not to indemnify in to injustice, but to avoid being seduced by violence. He also reminded that love was stronger than hate. Perhaps Pinochet, who claims to be an avid Catholic, was listening.
News staff
News staff
Frank Hansel ... Editor
Jennifer Benjamin ... Managing editor
Juli Warren ... News editor
Brian Kaberline ... Editorial editor
Sandra Engeland ... Campus editor
Marike Siebert ... Sports editor
Diane Dullmeier ... Photo editor
Bill Skeet ... Graphics editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Lisa Weems ... Business manager
Bonnie Hardy ... Ad director
Denise Stephens ... Retail sales manager
Kelly Scherer ... Camara sales manager
Duncan Calhoun ... Marketing manager
Lori Coplee ... Classified manager
Jennifer Lumianski ... Production manager
David Nixon ... National sales manager
Jeanne Hines ... 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. Letters should be longer than 700.
Guest shots should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansan reserves the right reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stairfather Flint Hall, Kansas, Kan. 60454, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and on Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage paid in Lawton, Kan. 60454, by mail are $40 per year in Douglas County and $40 outside the county. Student subscriptions are $3 and are pay through the student activity fee.
POSTMASTER Send address changes to the University Daily Kansas, 118 Stauffer-Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045
Distributed by King Features Syndicate
The Miami Herald
U.S. EMBASSY
State commended for standing ground
Wyoming deserves congratulations. At last, a state legislature has stood up to the bullying of Congress. Wyoming legislators recently refused to raise their state drinking age from 19 to 21. Including Wyoming, there are eight states that have not complied with the federally mandated drinking age of 21.
John Creighton
PETER LUNGE
Guest Shot
Each state has a few restrictions. These states have not complied, despite the fact that they may lose significant amounts of federal highway funds. The highway funds that might be withheld were generated by taxpayers, including the taxpayers from these eight states.
The Wyoming legislature was not willing to sacrifice the human rights of a group of its citizens. This stand, taken by Wyoming, should be a message to the nation's leaders that Wyoming has the courage to defend not only human rights but also state rights. They are doing this even in the face of federal blackmail. Some of the holdout states are feeling the pressure. The Colorado legislature,
for instance, now is considering a bill that would raise the age to 21. Others may follow.
The federal government has a history of mandating legislation upon the states. In recent years, it has forced states to impose a 55 mph speed limit, asked them to implement mandatory seat belt laws and raise the drinking age to 21. Congress recently passed legislation permitting states to raise the speed limit to 65, after overriding a presidential veto.
In all of these examples, federal highway funds are used to blackmail states. Legislatures throughout the country have bowed down to Congress and have done their bidding. Wyoming probably does not have the power to make Congress change its ways, but it is a start. Maybe now, more states will have the courage to stand up and demand that states retain the power to legislate for themselves. If other states do not follow Wyoming's lead, then states' rights may weaken to the point where they do not exist.
Raising the drinking age to 21 is a violation of human rights. In this case, Congress and the states that have passed the legislation have singled out a specific class of citizens and are discriminating against them.
The rationale behind the higher drinking age is highway safety. Young drivers are responsible for the majority of drunk driving accidents in this country.
Drunk driving is a serious problem, and lawmakers should seek a way to protect the public from this hazard. They should address the problem of drunk driving. States should make drunk driving such a serious offense that people of all ages will stop doing it. Young people, just adults, are averse to risk. The risks now are not great enough to keep people from attempting to drive after drinking.
Prohibition imposed on 18 to 20 year-olds is certainly not the answer. Prohibition did not work in the 1920s, and it is not working now. All the higher drinking age has done is to create a greater burden on this country's justice system.
Law enforcement has a larger task. When it does its job and arrests "minors" in possession of alcohol, that only adds to the load of our already overcrowded court system. The offenders are then given only a slight slap on the hand.
The offense of "minor in possession" is also hypocritical. Lawmakers must decide at what age citizens should become adults. Granting partial citizenship at age 18 with all the responsibilities but not all of the benefits is not the proper way to go about it.
the blame for the new drinking age does not lay solely on the shoulders of the lawmakers. People under 21 years of age must accept part of the blame. Politicians faced a large public outcry to do something about drunk driving. Raising the drinking age was an easy, politically popular move. At the same time, legislators knew they would not have to face the wrath of the 18- to 20-year-olds because for the most part, this age group does not vote. Lawmakers need fear removal from office by non-voters. This is a prime example of why the right to vote matters.
There are problems in government. The federally mandated drinking age is one of the worst because it blatantly violates both state and human rights. We, as the country's future leaders, must remember not to make similar mistakes.
Right now, we should all thank Wyoming and the other states that have not yet wilted from federal pressure for giving us hope.
John Creighton. Atwood senior, is majoring in business administration and economics.
H. F. Fullenwider
Mailbox
Advising needed?
After reading Barbara Shear's thoughtless and contrived column,
"Fear of advisers a common phobia" (Kansan, April 9). I am wondering if an advanced math course such as MATH 101 would have saved Nicole Sauzek from awarding Milton a $100,000 scholarship on the sports page of the same issue.
and Sciences adviser
College of Liberal Arts
and Sciences admits
Tasteless editorial
adage. "Let sleeping dogs lie." The April 6 editorial "Playing Russian roulette" poured salt into the wounds of the friends and family of the four KU students who died in the tragic auto accident on March 27.
The Kansan Editorial Board would do well if it would recall the old
Daily speculation in the papers regarding the cause of the accident has brought about enough pain to those who knew the victims without the Kansan making unfounded accusations that the students were driving recklessly and irresponsibly. Although the editorial did not state directly that the students were killed because of their horseplay, it made every attempt to get the reader to draw such a conclusion.
It is amazing that while law officials are unable at this time to
determine the cause of the accident, the Kansan staff is quick to draw conclusions that blame the deceased. If the editors thought they were making an important point concerning the lessons to be learned from this tragedy, the manner in which they chose to do it was both tasteless and thoughtless.
As a close friend of one of the students who died, I sincerely hope that in the future the Kansan will avoid unnecessary cheap shots that serve only to hurt people.
Stacie Marshall Salina freshman
nesta toma stis yyit t
Letter in poor taste
lished a letter to the editor concerning something called National Orgasm Week. Our names, among others, were fraudulently listed as co-authors of that letter. We had no knowledge of this letter until after it was published. The Kansan did not contact us for verification.
Those responsible have apologized to us for what was supposed to be an April Fools' joke. We apologize to our friends and associates at the University of Kansas who thought, as we did, that it was in poor taste.
Monday, April 6, the Kansan pub-
katz
Mike Chapman Lawrence resident
We now present results of a student opinion poll. .
Question: How do you feel about the Chancellor's claim that he will "go home"
if the fees are not released?
James Strobl Lawrence resident
I THINK IT WOULD CAUSE TOTAL ANARCHY WHICH WOULD BE COOL, BUT HER WHATEVER ENDS OPPRESSION AND INJUSTICE AND ATTUNES AM MORE CLOSELY TO NATURE - COUNT ME IN.
MARIE
MARIELA
k. l. thorman
WHOS GENE BUILDING?
I- I M U J M I S T V E R Y U P S E T BY THE
WHOLE IDEA. HE'S ALWAYS BEEN
SEMIO-DIVINE TO ME, I'M SORRY
I JUST CAN'T TALK ABOUT IT NOW.
IS SNIRF!
IT'S A REAL SHOCK BUT IT COULD BE WORSE BETTER BUDIG THAN LARRY BROWN.
BLOOM COUNTY
THAT'S RIGHT.
IM THE TUBA
PLAYER.
IM PAUL
YOUNGBLATT,
ENTERTAINMENT
DIRECTOR FOR
TONIGHT'S BANQUET.
I HAVE A
REQUEST.
by Berke Breathed
THE ENTIRE MOOSE WINES
AUXLIARY HAVE ASKED
IF YOU ALL WOULD PLAY A
BARRY MANILOW TUNE.
MANILOW, EH ?
LEMME CHECK OUR
PLAYLIST ... HMM...
HMM...HOLD IT. HERE'S
ONE :
"HARI-KARI FOR BARRY"
OH, IS THAT ONE OF HIS?
1
University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 13, 1987
5
Coalitions file audits for election
By LISA A. MALONEY
Staff writer
The three Student Senate elections coalitions filed their final audits for campaign spending Thursday night, said Tom Moore, elections committee co-chairman.
According to the audit forms filled out by each coalition's treasurer, the Bottom Line coalition spent $1,109.10.
First Class spent $907.62 and Synchronicity spent $827.
Coalition spending limits are set according to the number of senators running on each coalition. A full coalition of 51 senators, such as Bottom Line, was allowed to spend $1,152.69, Moore said. The First Class candidates, with a limit of 4 candidates, had a spending limit of Synchronicity, with 26 senatorial candidates, was allowed to spend $962.
Final audit amounts are not official until the elections committee analyzes them today, said Vic Osmolak, election committee co-chairman.
All three coilitions were required to file a final audit covering all expenditures by 5 p.m. Thursday, Moore said. Initial audits, which were filed April 3, list all coalition expenditures from the beginning of the campaigns to March 31.
Moore said the elections committee toe had no complaints with the three candidates.
Today is the last day for coilitions to file requests for recounts of the ballots. Moore said two coilitions have been filed for recounts of certain school seats.
"Usually, the coalitions don't ask for a recount of the whole election, just individual voting categories," he said.
Jason Krakow, student body president-elect, said his coalition, Bottom Line, would file for a account of the races because he seats because the races were closer.
Phillip Duff, Synchronicity's presidential candidate, said, "If you go back and look at last year's race, there were several changes after the
Duff said his coalition would file for recounts of the architecture and non-traditional seats.
Brian Kramer, First Class vice presidential candidate, said that he and Jeff Mullins, First Class presidential candidate, hadn't decided yet whether they would ask for a recount.
FISHING
Lenders hope for comeback
Gone fishin'
The Associated Press
Chester Worner, of Garden City, finds a dry spot to fish. Worner was fishing throughout the weekend. Worner chose a good day to fish last week, in Clinton Lake on Thursday afternoon and planned to stay in town before a cold spell hit the area.
SCOTTSBLUFF, Neb. - Substantial losses for Farm Credit Services of Omaha in 1986, though lower than losses in 1985, are expected to decrease in 1987, said the Omaha district's president.
James D. Kirk, named district president in January, said he expects FCS of Omaha to earn a profit by 1990. Kirk said he saw substantially optimism among agricultural leaders this year than in the recent past.
"New loan activity is ready pouring up," Kirk said Friday. "We see a lot of genuine optimism out there, and those things are moving in a positive direction."
Kirk attributed the optimism to several factors, including stabilization of farmhand prices, increased demand for farmwork and minor increases in farm income.
For Farm Credit Services members-borrowers, a resolution passed Wednesday in the U.S. Senate points toward improved stock security.
Hispanics gain from KU group
3y PEGGY O'BRIEN
staff writer
To start the night off, the members introduced themselves. Then they broke up into three groups to make
Mary Padilla was a little nervous.
Mary Padilla was a little nervous. She wanted everything to go just right. Padilla, Overland Park junior and president of the Hispanic-American Leadership Organization, and President of the NAACP, is actively supportive for the all-night retreat Friday at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1294 Oread Ave
The "cultural retreat" was the first of its kind for HALO, a support group for Hispanic students. The retreat started at 10 p.m. Friday and finished about 7 a.m. Saturday.
Although the students knew each other's names and majors, the retreat was designed to give them the freedom to explore their selves in a supportive environment.
The goal of the retreat was to provide different activities that would allow the 15 people attending to each other and share goals and ideas.
posters revealing more of their personalities. Next they watched a film, "The Salt of the Earth," about male/female Hispanic roles.
Padilla said HALO encouraged a college education to Hispanic students in high school because many of them thought that college would be too hard. HALO's most important function is to help high school students once they've decided to attend KU.
HALO tries to help Hispanics develop leadership skills. Group members attend conferences and seminars to strengthen the group and improve leadership. The officers receive information about scholarships, which they pass on to members.
MECHA preceded HALO as the Hispanic student organization on campus. MECHA, which has been at KU since the '70s, was basically a dead organization until about 12 Hispanic students decided last spring to
"The most important thing is that we're here to help them out." Padila said.
The students involved in HALO said that they were proud of their heritage and that they found the group a good way to keep that heritage alive. Not all the students are Mexican-Americans. Some of the members are from Cuban-American, Peruvian-American and Colombian-American families.
revive it. They changed the name from MECHA to HALO
Since then, its small membership has doubled and it has elected officers and passed a new set of bylaws. Members have begun work on a brochure and newsletters.
With about 350 Hispanic students attending KU, Padilla has hopes that the group will continue to grow. After the office of minority affairs did a mailing on behalf of HALO to all KU Hispanics, Padilla said HALO received 90 response letters.
Although it don't have 90 active members, HALO does keep the people who responded to the letter informed about the group's activities through mailings and, starting this month, a newsletter.
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KU STUDENTS 1987 KANSAS RELAYS BUTTONS HAVE ARRIVED!!
If you purchased an All-Sports Ticket you may stop by the ticket office in Allen Field House and pick up your Relays button
If you didn't purchase an All-Sports Ticket, you can still get a button for only $2.00 until April 17.
This years Highlights include: AI Oerter, 4 time Olympic gold medalist
Over 250 high school, college and university teams from over 20 states compete for Kansas Relays championships.
- Over 250 high school, college and university teams
- Over 1,000 runners to compete in Kansas Relays marathon and 10,000 meter town and campus road race.
Stop By:
Athletic Ticket Office
Allen Field House
Lawrence Kansas, 66045
more info call 864-3141
1st ANNUAL COMEDY FILM FESTIVAL
Tues. April 14, 7:00 p.m.
Spencer Museum
La Cage Aux Folles
Wednesday, April 15, 7:00 p.m.
Spencer Museum
Woody Allen's Love and Death
Thursday, April 16, 7:00 p.m.
Spencer Museum
Marx Brothers' A Night At the Opera
KU Student and Staff $1.00 Public $2.00
6
Monday, April 13, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
OK, Hank!
Lower away!
© 1987 Lumberland Press Syndicate
4-13
How cow documentaries are made
All members of the new Lawrence City Commission agree. They say that the next mayor should be an experienced commissioner.
Commissioners want experienced mayor
Bv PAUL BELDEN
Staff writer
That narrows the field to three, because tomorrow Mike Rundle and Dennis Constance will meet as commissioners for the first time. Sandra Praeger, Mike Amyx and Bob Bray have experience on the commission.
Constance, who agrees with Rundle about the necessity of experience, said he also thought the new mayor should be someone without the anti-mail label. He said he thought Amyx or Schumm would be the next mayor.
Praeger, who is mayor now, and Amyx have been commissioners since 1855, and Schumm served on the commission from 1979 to 1981.
Rundle said, "I certainly wouldn't want to be mayor right off the bat. I think we need somebody experienced."
Amyx, who was mayor from 1985 to 1986 said, "I'd be honored to accept the position and be more than happy to be the mayor again if the commission wanted me to."
He said that having a mayor with commission experience would help the new commission operate more efficiently and smoothly. The may-man responsibility is presiding over the weekly commission meeting.
Schumm received the most votes in Tuesday's election and has commission experience. The four other commissioners considered him a good candidate for the job of mayor.
"I would be inclined to accept the position if the commission indicated that that was what it wanted," Schumm said.
Praeger said that because she was just finishing a year as mayor, she would like to see someone else have the job.
"Whatever the commission wants to do, whatever the other commissioners believe is the best direction for our work and that support that wholeheartedly," he said.
"Mike Amyx is a good candidate, and I think Bob Schumm, while not a current commissioner, has the neces- tion to take on it," she said. "I would take the job if no one
else wanted it."
Vera Mercer, Lawrence city clerk, said that in the past the tradition in Lawrence was to have the mayor's seat rotate among the commissioners.
But this year there is no incumbent commissioner who has not been mayor or governor.
In an election year, she said, the mayor's job would go to the incumbent commissioner who had not yet been mayor. The year after that it would go to the highest vote-getter in the election.
"It's kind of up for grabs at this point," Praeger said. "There's no policy or tradition that would preclude any one of us from being mayor."
Father should get Baby M custody, poll says
Recent survey indicates that most U.S. residents support the judge's decision
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Almost three out of four U.S. residents support the judge's decision in the Baby M case give the child of a surrogate mother to her father, according to a poll published yesterday.
The New York Times-CBS News
Fifteen percent said the child, known in court as Baby M. should go
Poll reported that 74 percent of the 1,045 adults interviewed by telephone from April 5 through April 8 said the baby should go to the biological father, William Stern, whose sperm was used.
Whitehead signed a surrogate contract with Stern and his wife Elizabeth, but changed her mind after birth.
The New Jersey Supreme Court on Friday reinstated Whitehead's right to visit the baby she calls Sara for two hours a week, pending a decision on her appeal.
to her surrogate mother, Mary Beth Whitehead.
A New Jersey judge stripped Whitehead of parental rights and
ruled that Stern should have custody
of the baby to take the abc
whom he named Melissa.
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Monday, April 13, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
7
KU & LAWRENCE CAMPUS AREA ACTIVITIES APRIL 13-10
M
Monday
13
4 p.m. — "Sor Juana ines de la Cruz: Author of Herself," a lecture by margaret Peden, University of Missouri, will be in the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
5:30 p.m. — KU Kempo and Karate Club meets at 130 Robinson Center. Club meets Wednesday at the same time.
5:30 p.m. - Engineering Olympics.
Softball, volleyball and basketball team competition will be at the same time daily through April 24 at Learned Hall lawn. $50 entry fee for each department. Proceeds go to Special Olympics. Call 864-3434 for information.
5:30 p.m. — Graduate Student Council meets in Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
6 p.m. — Hallmark Lecture. David Macauley, illustrator and writer of children's books from Rhode Island School of Design, will speak in the Spencer Museum of Art auditorium
8 p.m. — University and Concert Bands concert will be in Crafton-Preyer Theatre at Murphy Hall
8 p.m. — "The Daniello Affair and
Soviet Relations in Perspectives," a
lecture by Nicholas Daniello, diplomatic
editor of U.S. News & World
Report, will be in HoChi Auditorium.
8 p.m. — Reading, Hugh Hood,
Canadian writer will read from his
works in the Pine Room in the Kansas
Union.
8 p.m. — Society for Fantasy and Science Fiction meets in the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union.
Tuesday
1 p.m. — Baseball, KU vs. Emporia State University at Quigley Field.
2:30 p. — "The Impact of Legislation on Social Welfare," a lecture by Robert Harder, Kansas secretary of social and rehabilitation services, will be in the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union.
4 p.m. — Foreign Student Services informational meeting for foreign students will be in the Northeast Conference Room in the Burge Union
14
4 p.m. — "The Atlas of American Women," a women's Studies Drinks and Dialogue meeting, will be in the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
6:30 p.m. — KU Hispanic-American Leadership Organization meeting will be in the International Room in the Kansas Union.
7 p.m. — "The Right Stuff," an SUA film, will be in Woodford Auditorium in the Kansas Union. $2
7:30 p.m. — Fashion
Phonology of Yoruba Nouns," a Linguistics Colloquy, will be at 207 Blake Hall.
7:30 p.m. — Expressions dance
club meeting with special guest Marsha Paludin, Tai Chi expert will be in 242 Robinson Center.
7:30 p.m. — "Lexical and Phrase
Wednesday
8 a.m. — Kansas Relays at Memorial Stadium. Same time tomorrow and Friday. The relays will start at 7 a.m. Saturday.
9 a.m. — Art on the Boulevard, a student art show, will take place along Jiahayw Boulevard.
10 a.m. — Retirees Club coffee will be in Adam Lounge at Adams Alumni Center. Music at 11 a.m.
11:40 a.m. — "The Bureaucratization: Who's in Charge?" a University Forum, will be held at Christina Minisirez, 1204 Oread Ave.
3 p.m. — Parking Services open hearing will in the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. Discussion of closed changes to parking regulations.
15
Fictional Expressions," a philosophy lecture by Jerzy Pelc, Rose Morgan visiting professor in philosophy, will be in the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union.
4 p.m. — "Fictitious Entities and
6 p.m. — KU chapter of International Association of Business Communicators meets at 206 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
6:30 p.m. - Campus Christians Fellowship meets in the Northeast Conference Room in the Burge Union
7 p.m. - KU Dr. Who Appreciation Society meets in the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union.
7:30 p.m.—"Users and Abusers of Feat," a discussion with Doug Boyd, will be at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
Thursday
9 a.m. — "Introduction to LOTUS," a microcomputer workshop, will be at 204 Computer Center.
8 p.m. — SUA Forum with Tom Wolfe, novelist and essayist, will be in Hoch Auditorium.
11:30 a.m. — "Thoughts and Images of a Trip to Argentina," a Brown Bag Lunch Merienda, will be at
16
109 Lippincott Hall.
11:30 a.m. — 'Entry-level Success in the College and University Development Colloquium, will be at Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread
2 p.m. "Accommodating Persons with Disabilities." An Affirmative Action workshop, will be in the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union.
7 p.m. "Fellin's SATricon," an SA film, will be in Woodruff
Ave
Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
@
Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
7 p.m. — "The American Past"
Calder Picket, KANU FM-91.5.
8 p.m. — Women's Resource
Centers program will be in
Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas
Union.
Friday
"Aerodynamics
Q
Research," an aerospace conoumil will be at 3140 Wescohe St. 7 p.m. — "Ben Hur," a University Film Society film, will be in Downs Auditorium at Dyche Hall. Also at 9 and 11 p.m. today. Same time tomorrow, plus a 2:30 p.m. showing, $2
17
p. m. — Latin American Film Festival will be in Brewster Auditorium at Strong Hall. Also at 3:30 p.m. Sunday.
7 p.m. — "Opera is My Hobby"
@
with James Seaver, KANU FM-91.5
8 p.m. — Observatory Open
House will be at Lindley Hall if the sky
is clear.
8 p.m. — English department reading with Scott Cairns, poet from the University of Utah, will be in the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union.
8 p.m. — KU International Folk Dance Club meets at St. John's Elementary School gymnasium, 1233 Vermont St.
Saturday
10 a.m. - Softball tournament.
KU vs. Oklahoma State University and
University of Oklahoma will be at
Jayhawk Field. Round robin.
- noon — Baseball. KU vs. Oklaho-
18
a State University will be at Quigley Field.
6:30 p.m. — Retirees Club pot-luck dinner will be in the Summerfield Room at the Adams Alumni Center
12:30 p.m. — Baseball, KU vs.
Oklahoma State University will be at
Quigley Field.
Sunday
(2)
19
1 p.m. — Juried crafts exhibit opening will be at the Art and Design Building gallery.
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Monday, April 13, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Photos by Alan Hagman
Right: Dave Wakefield has trimmed the hair of Mound City residents and others for almost 30 years. His barber shop is on the main downtown block of the city. Below: City Councilman Gary Schmitz, left, enjoys his early morning coffee with a friend at Scott's Drive In.
THE BATHROOM AT HOME
App
Mound
Continued from p. 1
at opening time, as they do almost
at every day, got some coffee from
Whitten and sat down near
Schmitz to talk.
Bruce said he had seen "changes in the roads, more houses, less farmers."
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
Delbert Bruce, 79, wore the retired farmer's required uniform: Key Imperial overalls from Ft. Scott, a baseball cap advertising a local feed company, and a worn face.
But the teen-agers, like Teresa Nation, 16, say that the town is a little boring. She prefers to drive 30 minutes to Fort Scott or more than an hour to "the city," Kansas City, for weekend entertainment.
Jeremy Briggs, 7, said, "I have lots of friends here. It's a good town."
But the rusted street sign at Fifth and Main in downtown Mound City also has seen a few changes. Two banks have closed in the town's history, and Mound City now supports a video store and a tainting salon. The town's only other facility is the county building and still has the lines from the basketball court on the store's four aisles.
Brian Higgins, Mound City senior, was the only person from his 49-member graduating class at Jayhawk-Linn High School to enroll at the University of Kansas. Jayhawk-Linn teaches students from Mound City, Blue Mound and Prescott.
The young children enjoy the town and play in the woods or the creek. Schmitz remembered playing in a tunnel that was used during the days of slavery for the underground railroad.
"They don't want to raise child
children among druggies, hippies and
yuppies." Dawson said. "You hear
so many stories."
Most of his high school classmates had the wrong impression of
Several residents said they wanted the town to grow a little, but most were content with the way they now lived. "There's old fourth and fifth-generation people who want it to grow," Dawson said.
Randall Dawson, president of the Farmers and Merchants Bank, said that business had stabilized in town. The power plant and government offices kept jobs available, and new lake developments near town also opened jobs.
A safety factor is involved in keeping a town small, he said. Residents are more comfortable feel safer in a small population
KU, Higgins said. "They think that all you are is a number." he said.
all you are is a number, "he said. He said his classmates who stayed in Mound City still were doing the same things they did in high school — "hanging around the parking lot by Scott's."
Shannon Masters, 17, stood in her driveway listening to the radio and waxing a car Thursday evening. She wore a "Class of 1988" T-shirt, and her hands were blue from the car wax.
A little boy tried to look out over the screen door of her house. "That's my son," said Masters, a high school junior.
Saturday night after the picture show ended. "Now there nothing on Saturday," he said, "I hope a town like this doesn't blow away."
Masters smiled at the 1-year-old boy and returned to her waxing.
AKA
19 88
ROCK CHALK
Examples of a slow-paced country life are everywhere in this town.
Generations of graffiti have been cut, written and sprayed in the courthouse belly, such as who loved D.C.W on Oct. 22, 1916.
County workers often eat lunch in the bandstand on the courthouse grounds, and the only sounds accompanying their voices are a few passing cars and a lawnmower.
Mound City isn't blowing away But the residents sometimes wry that the wind is coming.
The door to city hall, built in 1868, was wide open. Behind the front room of the hall is the old jail. A shackle is attached to the wood-planking floor, and the iron gridwork of the cell now holds an old drum. Christmas decorations and a few ballot boxes.
Dave Wakefield has had his barber shop on the main downtown block for 30 years. He was reading a Kansas City paper Thursday and already had heard that a visitor was in town.
Wakefield remembered from his childhood the town barber, who worked until midnight every
Kindergarteners at Mound City Grade School start each morning with the pledge of allegiance
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Sports
University Dailv Kansan / Mondav. April 13, 1987
9
Mize wins Masters in sudden death
The Associated Press
AUGUSTA, Ga. — Larry Mize, a native son of this old southern city, turned back two stars of international golf yesterday with a spectacle at the 2015 Masters tournament and playoff on the 51st Masters golf tournament.
Mize won the coveted green jacket that goes to the Masters champion with a pitch from about 30-40 yards to the right of the 11th hole, the second of the sudden death playoff.
Mize played the shot to the fringe, then stood frozen in fascination as the ball took off, running straight into the cup. That eliminated Greg Norman of Australia, while Seve Ballesteros of Spain bogeyed the first sudden death hole to drop out.
"It's a dream come true," Mize said. "I've dreamed of winning the Masters, but I never dreamed of winning it like this — beating two of the greatest golfers in the world."
When the ball rolled into the cup, the quiet.
soft-spoken Mize leaped into the air, and then hopped around the green in elation.
"Reporters have asked me all week if I ever dreamed of winning the Masters, I did." Mize said.
It was the climax of a struggle in which six men either led or slurred the lead at one time or
They were Mize's playoff partners after all three finished the regulation 72 holes in a tie for the top at 285, only three shots under par on the Augusta National Golf Club course.
Mize beat the two dominant figures in golf today: Norman, the flamboyant "Great White Shark," and Ballesteros, the Spanish master who has won this championship twice and owns a couple of British Open titles.
Mize birdied the 72nd hole from about three
teams, finishing at 71, and was the first in the
club.
Ballesteros then saved par from a bunker,
setting up the playoff with a score of 71.
Norman, the outstanding player in world golf last year, moved into a tie with a 20-foot birdie putt on the 17th; then parred the 18th to win by 72 that included six birds and as many boveys.
The playoff, the ninth in Masters history,
began on the 10th hole.
Ballesteros was eliminated there. He three-putted for bogey, missing about a six-foot second putt.
Mize and Norman both drove the fairway.
Mize pushed his approach far to the right, and turned his back on the shot while it was in
Mize had a chance to win it all, but he left the 10-12 foot birdie attempt hanging on the lip of the tappin in. Norman, who had a birdie birdied from feet, also made par, and they went to the 11th
Norman, the current British Open title-holder and perhaps the most-feared competitor in the game today, also put his approach to the
right, on the fringe.
Mize needed to get up and down from a difficult spot to have any chance of extending the playoff.
Instead, he pitched the ball in the hole. Norman, now needing a birdie to tie, missed his long putt and became a Masters runner up for the second year in a row. It marked the third time in the last five major championships — which also include the U.S. and British Opens and the PGA — that he has been second.
For Mize, it was only the second victory of a six-year PGA Tour career. The other came in the 1983 Memphis Classic. He had a chance to win last year's Kemper, but lost to Norman on the sixth hole of a playoff.
He answered them by saving a bogey from
See MASTERS, p. 11, col. 1
'Hawks win one of four
The Kansas baseball team headed into a four-game weekend series with the Kansas State Wildcats searching for its first Big Eight Conference win.
Kansas finally won its first conference game yesterday 14-10 but lost the second game of the doubleheader 6-2.
"It felt really good," said Mike McLeod. "It would have been nice to win the other because we had the momentum going into the second game."
Baseball
The Jayhawks used a strong hitting attack to win yesterday's first game, scoring 14 runs on 14 hits.
The Wildcats jumped to a 6-10 lead after three innings before Kansas tied the game in the top of fifth with six runs.
Both Scott Seratte and Pat Karin had run-scoring singles in the inning.
Kansas took a two-run lead in the top of the sixth but then allowed K-State to tie the game in the bottom of the inning.
The Jayhawks fell behind by a run in the seventh, but three runs in the eighth and ninth put the game out of reach.
Joe Pisteer, who played during the weekend despite having suffered a shoulder injury last week, had two games in the game as did Seratte and Karlin.
The victory on Sunday eased some of the ain cause by two losses the Jaya Trust gave to
The Jayhawks went into the bottom of the seventh with a lead in the second half.
Kansas lost 11-6 and 6-4 on Saturday. In the 6-4 loss to the Wildcats, the Jayhawks suffered a last-inning defeat.
With one out, K-State's designated hitter Jerry Turtle smashed a three-run homer over the 405-foot sign in left midfield off starter and loser Mike McLeod.
McLeod struck out five batters and gave up two walks. All six runs scored against McLeed. McLeed was insured as nasas errors contributed to the loss.
"I made the wrong pitch to the wrong batter," McLead said. "I thought I did all right. Good enough to win, but I could have done better."
"It was frustrating," said Darrel M. Moore of another last-inning defen
"I hate to say it," he said, "but we are kind of getting used to it. The team didn't react too negatively because it has happened to us many times.
Kansas' record is now 11-23-1 overall and 1-11 in the Big Eight. K-State is 17-15 and 3-6.
Kansas will play a doubleheader against Emporia State at 1 p.m. tomorrow at Quigley Field.
Kansas 000 062 033—14 14
K-State 042 102 10—10 13 4
Heway, Purdy (4) Dismire (5) and Pfiler.
Haster, Iesman (5) Dismire (7) and Rude.
Turtle, W. Mormalis (1)-L, Iesman
K. STATE 6 KANSAS 2
Kansas 100 001 0 - 2 ? 2
K-State 150 000 x - 6 2
Hinkle, Murie (2) and Boeschen; M. Hinkle and W.M. Hinkle, L.B. Hinkle (1)
(1), HRBs-K-State, Turtle
(CANSAS ST. 11, KANSAS 6
KANSAS ST. 6. KANSAS 4
Kansas St 020 001 120—6 11 4
Kansas St 300 500 30x—11 13 2
Fayette Andress (7) and Kearney (8) and Kearney (9) and W.Kearney (2)
(L), T-2 Lavor (1.4): HR-Kansas St, Chadd
KANSAS ST. 8, KANSAS
Kansas 000 400 1- 4 8 4
Kansas St. 000 200 1- 4 8 0
McCloud and Boeschen, Rowley, isman (5)
and Hulse, W-isman (2-2), L-McCloud (2-3),
HR-Ranas St., Turtle
BEAR
Roanna Brazier, Kansas right fielder, tries to slide past the tag of Southwest Mississippi State's shortstop, Marcia Bisges. KU won both.
Chad DeShare/KANSAN
Kansas rebounds with two victories
games of a doubleheader yesterday at Jayhawk Field after losing a doubleheader to Creighton on Saturday.
'Hawks beat Southwest Missouri after losing to Creighton
By ROB KNAPP
Staff writer
Kansas' new-look defense didn't commit an error and Reenie Noble drove in three runs as the Jayhawk softball team swept a doubleheader from Southwest Missouri State 2-1 and 7-3 yesterday at Jayhawk Field.
The Jayhawks, 19-15, finished 2
for the weekend. They were beaten
7-2 and 6-3 by 14th ranked Creighton
on on Saturday at Jayhawk Field
Connolly, who was playing shortstop for only her second time at Kansas, said she had only a little trouble adjusting to the
Kansas coach Bob Stancill decided to shift positions among some of his starting players after his team committed nine errors in the game.
Sheila Connolly, usually the starting center fielder, played both games at stoppage and handled 10 chances without an error. Her long throw on a grounder in the third inning of the second game helped kill a Southwest Missouri State rally.
"We made a lot of errors against Creighton, so I made a few changes to get people into position that we could help them, they could help us," St clark said.
infield
"I'm not really comfortable with the different defenses and coverage. Connolly said, 'It's such a challenge for me.' Like I right up with the batter."
Another defensive shift moved regular first baseman Laura Cramer to center field. Cramer responded with errorless play, including a diving catch of a sinking line drive that robbed Southwest Missouri State of a run in the second game.
"I like playing first base, and Sheila is experienced and does a really great job out there," Cramer said. "But if it's going to help the team play better, than that's the way it's going to be."
Catcher Kelly Downs hit a ground ball up the middle that Bears second baseman Lori Dibek fielded. Dibek touched second base to force Williams and rolled the ball toward the pitchers mound, apparently thinking the inning was over.
Kansas' Reeien Powell, 6-5,
allowed only four hits and one run
in the first game, but Kansas
entered the bottom of the seventh
two outs. Connolly singled and wore second on a
bylid of Jill Williams.
The field umpire called Williams safe. Connolly, who had never stopped running, scored the game-winning run from second base.
Kansas opened the scoring in the second game with three runs in the first innning. With two outs, Downs got a double and the receiver got aboard on a scratch single.
Cramer then lifted a fly ball behind third base that no one could get to, driving home Downs. Noble followed with a double into left-center Cherie Wickham scored and Crainer was ruled sale at center as she jumped the ball lose from Bees' camera Traxy Crede.
The Jayhawks scored a run in the bottom of the third, again with two outs. Cramer singled and moved to second on a single by Wickham. Noble then knocked a single off the pitcher's glove, getting her third RBI of the day as Cramer scored
Southwest Missouri State scoree two runs against Kansas starter Sherri Mach in the fourth on a double by Kim Dean, a triple by Dilbeck and a single by Pam Gingerich.
Kansas got the game-winning run in the fourth when Connolly
tripled and came home on a sacrifice fly by Williams.
The Bears made the score 5-3 in the sixth. Dean opened the inning with a double that rolled to the wall in centerfield, advanced to third on a foul out and scored on a passed ball by Downs.
Kansas scored its final runs in the bottom of the sixth. Gayle Luecked doubled and was replaced by pinch-runner Lisa Decker. Decker moved to third base on a second hit by Luecked and a score on Connolly's single.
Connolly stole second and third on consecutive pitches and came home on Williams' triple to right field.
KANSAS 2, SW MISSOURI ST. 1
SW Missouri St. 000 100 -1 4
Kansas 100 000 -1 2 8
Johnson and Stanko; Powell and Downs
W-Powell (6-5) L-Johnson 3Bs-Kansas,
Connolly
KANSA5 7, SW MISSUOI ST. 3
SW MISSUOI St. 001 201 0 - 3 0
Kansas 301 102 x-7 11 0
Chia, Johnson (6) and Creed, Mach,
Brazier (2) and Downs, W-Mach (3),
Chia SV-Brazer (1) 28S-MSWt Loria.
Deak 2, Kansas, Luecke, 28S-MSWt.
Dibek, Kansas, Connolly, Williams
Royals defeat Yankees
The Associated Press
"I was impressed with the guys today," Gardner said after the game. "They took a pounding yesterday, then came right back today. They could have rolled over. That shows a lot of class."
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — After watching the New York Yankees defeat his team 15-2 on Saturday, Kansas City Manager Billy Gardner took special satisfaction in the Royals' 8-2 victory over the Yanks yesterday.
It was a 12-run seventh inning that led to the Yankees' conquest of the Royals on Saturday. But the Royals came back with a six-run fifth yesterday against veteran knuckleballer Joe Niekro, who lasted only 4½ innings in his first start. Big innings be a characteristic of the Yankees this season. They gave up six runs in a 9-3 loss last week in Detroit.
"Those six-run innings," Manager Lou Piniella said with a sigh. "Our starting pitching has to get to a better job than that. That's the second six-run inning of the season on us. Niekro had a good knuckler for a few innings."
Angel Salazar, battling Buddy Biancalara for the regular shortstop job, had three hits and scored two runs in his first start for the Royals. He singled twice in Kansas City's big inning.
"He waits on the ball pretty good and goes to right field more," Gardner said. "And he doesn't try to pull the ball. My thinking was that he hits the knuckleball better. We'll just give him a few blows out there and see what happens."
Salazar, Danny Tartallbu and Bo Jackson each hit RIBI singles in the fifth and Juan Benítez had a two-hit success in Kansas City's 13-hit attack.
Charlie Leibrandt, 2-0, gave up eight hits, struck out four and walked two before he was relieved by Dan Quisenberry in the seventh.
Benique, subbing for George Brett at third base, drove in three runs with two singles. Jackson was 2-for-4 in the game and finished 8-for-12 in the weekend series, which Kansas City won two games to one.
Salazar singled leading off the third and eventually scored on Tartabull's double-play grounder. The Yankees took a 2-1 lead in the fourth inning, and Randy Randolph and RBI singles by Matt Dinnicy and Bon Kittle.
Salazar's single opened the fifth, then Willie Wilson was hit in the leg by a Niekro knuckleball. Kevin Seitzer sacrificed and Tartabull singled, scoring Salazar and putting Wilson at third.
Frank White followed with a sharp grounder to third baseman Mike Pagliarulo, who was possibly distracted by Wilson's bluff move to the plate and threw wide and low to first base for an error, loading the bases for Beniquez's two-run single.
Cecilio Guante relieved Niekro and watched Jackson line an RBI single to left. Steve Balboni reloaded the bases with a soft single into left, setting up Jamie Quirk's sacrifice fly and Salazar's RBI single.
Boston 8. Toronto 3
BOSTON — Designated hitter Don Baylor drove in five runs with two home runs and Dave Henderson added a two-run homer, powering the Boston Red Sox and converted reliever Bob Stanley to an 8-3 victory yesterday over the Toronto Blue Jays.
Stanley, 1-1, pitched eight innings in his second start this season. He gave up seven hits, struck out two and walked two in his first Fenway Park start since Sept. 1, 1981.
and did the later age.
It was the 19th doctor's career he has hit two or more homers in a game. He has 317 since breaking in with Baltimore in 1970.
Van Slyke gets revenge against Cards; Braves beat Mets
The Associated Press
PITTSBURGH — Jim Morrison homered and drove in three runs, and John Cangelosi had three hits and scored three times in his first Pittsburgh start as the Pirates defeated the St. Louis Cardinals 7-4 on Sunday.
Cangelosi beat out an nifeld single in the first inning and scored on Morrison's two-out single. In the third, Cangelosi walked, stole second and went to third on catcher Steve Lake's throwing error ahead of Van Slyke's RBI single and a run-scoring by Morrison.
Cangelos, acquired last month from the Chicago White Sox for pitcher Jim Winn, went 3-for-3 and drove in a run. Former Cardinal Andy Van Slyke added a pair of run-scoring singles to Pittsburgh's 11-hit attack.
The Pirates, leading 4-3. chased
National League
Cardinals starter John Tudor, 1-1, with a three-run sixth. Rafael Babel tripped over center fielder Willie McGee's head and Cangelosi followed with an RBI single that right fielder Jim Lindeman misplayed, allowing Cangelosi to advance to third.
That brought on reliever Pat Perry, who allowed run-scoring singles to Van Slyke and Johnny Ray before off came in to get the final two out.
Bob Patterson, 1-1, got the victory despite being touched for two runs and eight hits in five innings. Barry Jones pitched 1 1-3 innings before Brian Fisher worked the final 2 2-3 for his first National League save.
Willy McGee drove in two Cardinals runs with a first-inning single
Atlanta 12. New York 4
and a bases-loaded grounder in the sixth. Tommy Herr and Jack Clark had consecutive doubles in the fifth before Lindeman doubled in the seventh and scored on Terry Pendleton's single, his third hit of the game.
The Cardinals left 13 runners on base, and Patterson twice retired Vince Coleman for the final out of an inning with two runners in scoring position.
NEW YORK — Dale Murphy hit two home runs and drove in five runs as the Atlanta Braves routed the New York Mets 12-4 yesterday in a game that hit a bird and fell for a double to set up Murphy's first homer.
It was the second straight victory for Atlanta over the World Series
Two outs later, Murphy hit his first home run of the season over the right field fence.
The Braves were leading 2-1 in the third inning when Dion James hit a routine fly to leaf. But as left fielder Kevin McReynolds moved into position, the ball struck a pigeon and James went into second as both bird and ball dropped into short left field. The bird died.
Randy O'Neal was the winner, allowing three runs and 11 hits during the first 6-2三 innings. Bob Ojeda, 1-1 who allowed four runs in four games, was the loser.
Philadelphia 9, Chicago 8
PHILADELPHIA - Glenn Wil-
champions and the fourth win in five starts this season for the Braves, who were last in the National League West a year ago.
son's bases-loaded single with one out in the bottom of the tenin ing scored Juan Samuel from third base and gave the Philadelphia Philies a 9-8 victory over the Chicago Cubs.
Von Hayes had five hits and knocked in two runs for Philadelphia, a winner for the first time after opening the season with four losses.
Reliever Steve Bedrosian, 1-0,
picked up the victory despite allow-
ing three runs on homers by pinch
hitter Alex Hicks. Durham with two outs in the ninth.
Samuel walked to lead off the 10th against Lee Smith, 0-1, and moved to third on a double by Hayes. Mike Schmidt was intentionally walked, loading the bases. Pinch hitter Ron Roeniek struck out before Wilson lined a single to right field through a drawn-in infield.
10
Monday, April 13, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
*Monday Sports Extra*
Spring scrimmage clouds quarterback race
80
KU receiver Rodney Hairstra in a pass from quarterback Kelly Donoho. Harris scored both of the blue team's touchdowns Saturday in Memorial Stadium and led all receivers with 10 catches for 172 yards.
By DIANE FILIPOWSKI
Alan Hagman/KANSAN
Staff writer
Quarterback Mike Orth was a hero for a moment Saturday when he tackled a dog that had interrupted the annual blue-white spring football scrimmage in Memorial Stadium.
The attention focused on Orth briefly, but he did not shine as he might have liked, completing only 8 of 20 passes for 87 yards with one interception.
The white team defeated the blue team 14-13, and even though Orth steals for winning the game at a team picnic yesterday and losing quarterback Kelly Donohoe ate hot dogs, it seemed that Orth had little to celebrate.
"These are the last spring practices that I will have to go through." 'Orth said Saturday after the game.
But an optimistic Coach Bob Valesente came out of the locker room after the game and joked, "They've come out the winner either way."
Valesente said he thought his team had implemented its new style of offense that would put emphasis on the running game.
Last season, Kansas rushed for a total of 806 yards, placing the Jayhawks second to last among NCAA Division I schools.
The two teams rushed for a combined 229 yards, led by Arnold Snell, who rushed for 100 yards on
White 14
Blue 13
White 0 0 7 7 14
Ryan 0 7 0 6 13
BLUE: Donohoe 14-yard pass to Harris (Smith kick) BLUE: 7-0
WHITE, Rank 76-yard pass to Vaughn (Kemp kick).
TIF, 7 all.
Fourth quarter
BLUE Donohoe 40-yard pass to Harris (kick
block) BLUE 13(7)
WHITE Shields 4-yard run (Kemp kick) WHITE
14-13
A: 500
Individual statistics
RUSHING: White — Rogers 16-91, Shields 6-18,
Orth 3, O'Gara 1, Blue — Snell 28-100, Ledford
4, Donovon 6, Brem 1-24 (hm)
PASSING White - Orch 8:208:7-01, Rank 5-6
1171-1, Vaughn 1:2-28:0-0, Blue - Donohue 12:19-2:0, Snell 0:1-1:0
RECEIVING: White - Caldwell 24, 8:40g. Vaughn 13, 100s. Shields 17, Jour丹 1, 25ges 17, Wiel德 1:33 Blue – Harris 10, 72er 3,37. Brehm 1, 31. Lambd 2, 15ter 4
PUNINTING: White — Abraham 3-115 (38.3), 2-52
(26) Blue — Reith 4-115 (37.8)
MUSICIED COLLECTIONS
TACKLES White - Long 6-1-2, Breeds 5-
2-7, Hensman 3-4-7, Dinner 3-3.5, Blue - Matix
8-0-6 (1-1), Hoover 5-0-5
28 carries for the blue team. Mike Rogers led the white team with 91 yards on 16 carries.
Both rushing performances were an improvement from last season, but were made against a defense that allowed its opponents 2,770 yards last season and was split in half Saturday.
Most of the scoring came through the air. Three of the scrimmage's four touchdowns came on 76, 40- and 14-yard passes, and the other touchdown came on a 4-yard run by Warren Shields.
Wide receivers Willey Vaughn and Rodney Harris highlighted the game with 302 yards of Kansas '656 yards of total offense and three of the games' four touchdowns. Vaughn caught six passes for 130 yards and Harris caught 10 passes for 172 yards.
Vaughn, who was named an honorable mention All-Ameica and was a first-team All Big Eight selection, quit the team last month but returned shortly thereafter. He said Saturday that he was glad he staved.
"Even though Rodney and I compete against each other, he made me feel good to be a part of this team," Vaughn said. "We are two deep at this position, and we're not going to miss a beat next season."
The quarterback battle between Orth and Donohoe never materialized. The white team did not score until Jeff Rank replaced Orth in the second half and connected on a 76-yard pass to Vaughn, which put the white team on the scoreboard late in the third quarter.
"I'm just glad that I had Jeff on my team," Orth said. "My play was not good today."
Orth finished behind Rank, a walk-on who completed 5 of 6 passes for 117 vards.
Donohoe played the entire game for the blue team and threw 40-yard and 14-yard touchdown pass to Julius Thomas on 12 of 29 yards on 17 of 28 passing.
Valeente said he still had not made a decision on who would fill the number one quarterback position for the Jayhawks next season.
Donhoe said he was not concerned with his position right now because he said Orth, who started in eight games last season, compared to his three, had more experience and Rank was a factor.
"I want the number one position really bad," Donohoe said, "but I won't worry about it until the fall."
Orth said he didn't play well and now thought Donoho deserved the number one spot.
Valesente said he also was pleased that the team played physically for the entire game, something the team lacked last season and one of his main goals for spring training.
"For 60 minutes . . . I saw as much hitting at the end of the game as I saw at the beginning of the game," Valesente said.
The white squid didn’t secure its win until the final play of the game with ‘02 seconds left when kicker was up to attempt a 26-ward field goal.
Holder John Brehm could not hold the snap and failed to run the ball into the end zone as time ran out.
accurate field goal kicking in the scrimmage, but the final field goal try and a 18-yard field goal by Smith in the third quarter missed.
Valesepte said he hoped to see
Also, the blue team lost its chance to tie the game in the fourth quarter when the extra point after Harris' second touchdown was blocked.
The Jayhawk's punting averages were not outstanding either. Scott Abraham averaged 38 yards, Rich Reith 37 yards and Allen Martin 26 yards.
"Our kicking and punting were sporadic," Valesente said. "I guess its something we are not putting enough emphasis on and maybe we need to put more on it."
Valesente said his team was not ready to contend for a Big Eight title, and before the Jayhawks can think about playing a Big Eight team, they must think about their season opener against Auburn, which is five months away.
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Steve Kueffer, assistant men's coach, said that Kansas made some strong showings and thought the trip provided good exposure.
Director: Philip Kaufman
President, Molly Wanstall — Alpha Chi Omega
Vice President for Membership, Michelle Roberts — Alpha Delta Pi
Vice President for Campus Affairs, Sara Dennehy — Kappa Alpha Theta
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Treasurer, Ping Huang — Sigma Kappa
The Jayhawks finished second, with 42% points, behind the University of California-Berkeley, which won with 94% points on its home track. Arizona State finished third with 40 and San Jose State was fourth with 19.
Scott Huffman won the pole vault with a 17 feet, $ \frac{1}{4} $ inch vault. He was followed by freshman Pat Manson, who was second with a vault of 16-6. Chris Bohanan vaulted 16-0 and finished fourth.
Kueffer said Kansas made its best showings in the javelin and the pole vault.
Men take second in California
Kueffer said Kansas' most surprising victory was the 5,000-meter run.
SUA FILMS
Monday, April 13
LATINO
"The team wanted to compete well." Kueffer said yesterday. "The trip made them feel good about themselves."
Even though the Kansas men's track team traveled to California this weekend and rode cable cars, visited the redwood forests and saw other sights in the Bay Area, it found time to compete in a quadrangular meet Saturday.
By DIANE FILIPOWSKI Staff writer
All-America Ron Bahm finished first in the javelin with a throw of 227 feet. High school All-America Vince throw placed second with a 223-10 throw.
Manson, who was a high-school All-America last season, was injured first semester and did not compete for most of the indoor season.
Staff writer
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 13, 1987
11
FESTIVAL OF BOATS
Varsity crew team members participate in the men's open eight of the Washburn Open President's Regatta III. KU's novice team placed third in the event at Lake Shawnee Saturday, and the varsity team placed fourth.
Darcy Chang/KANSAN
Kansas crew team dominates field at Washburn regatta
Staff writer
By DIANE FILIPOWSKI Staff writer
The Kansas crew continued to dominate rowing teams across the Midwest with a commanding performance Saturday at the Washburn Open President's Regatta III at Lake Shawnee in Topeka.
Even though no scores were kept, the 120 Kansas crew
members won 25 medals in the 21-team field of 14 states. Washburn won 14 medals and Minnesota followed with 9.
Coach Cliff Elliott said the performance brought the team closer to the Sunflower State Championships on Saturday at Lake Shawnee and the Midwest Rowing Championships the following weekend in Madison, Wis.
Elliott said he was pleased with the women's novice eight-man and the women's open eight-man 'A' and 'B' boats, which finished first and second in the 2,000-meter races. He said the men's open lightweight eight-man boat, which won the 400-meter race, also performed well.
Other winning boats for Kansas included the women's open
lightweight four-man boat, the men's and women's novice fourman boats, the men's open lightweight eight-man boat, the mixed novice four-man boat and the men's novice lightweight eight-man boat.
Kansas' biggest surprise was the men's 2,000-meter open eight-man race in which the novice men defeated the varsity men and
finished third
"The novice men had been coming close to the varsity boat last week in practice." Elliott said. "They just wanted to make up for their less injury in the morning to Minnesota."
Elliott said the conditions were rough in the morning, but calmed down in the afternoon.
He said he was pleased with the team's performance because it was only its second regatta this season.
In its first regatta, Kansas won the Jester Cup as the top team for the fifth consecutive year at the Heart of Texas Regatta during spring break.
Buchanan leads Jayhawks breaks two school records
By DIANE FILIPOWSKI
Staff writer
Denise Buchanan broke two of her outdoor school records Saturday and lead the Kansas women's track team at the John Jacobs Invitational at Norman, Okla.
Buchanan finished second twice to Kansas State's Pinkie Suggs. Buchanan recorded a throw of 51 feet, $11\frac{1}{4}$ inches in the shot-put, which qualified her for the NCAA outdoor nationals. In the discus, Buchanan threw 166-$10\frac{1}{4}$, just short of the NCAA qualifying distance of 168.
Suggs and Buchan also finished first and second, respectively, in the shot-put at the Big Eight Conference Indoor Championships in February and were both named All-Americans in March at the NCAA indoor championships.
No team scores were kept at the meet, but women's coach Carla Coffey said it was the team's last chance to prepare for the Kansas Relays, which begin Wednesday.
"We try to get ready specifically for this meet." Coffey said, "because the competition is good, and we like to run well at home."
Other heptathletes placed in the javelin, including Jaci Metzger, who finished fifth with a throw of 103.6, and Kim Hutoehfer, who finished sixth with a throw of 102-10. Metzger also finished fourth in the high jump
Coffey said the team's heptathletes competed in individual events to improve their performances in those events. Most of the team's field athletes competed on the track to rest up for the Relays.
Heptathletes Andrea Schwartz and Rosie Wadman finished second and fifth in the long jump with jumps of 17-9 and 17-4, respectively.
O'Connor is second at Florida track meet
By a Kansan reporter
Kansas heptathelite Ann O'Connor finished second in a field of three Saturday at the Florida Track Class in Tampa Bay.
O'Connor finished second with 4,914 points, behind Jill Lancaster, 27, who competed unattached and scored 5,030 points. The NCAA qualifying total is 5,350.
O'Connor, who was the Big Eight Conference Indoor champion in the heptathlon in February, was invited to compete in the meet last week.
O'Connor said she expected more athletes to compete, but that just having the opportunity to compete was helpful.
"It was a good chance for me to see where my weaknesses are."
O Connor said yesterday. "But I don't think I did anything outstanding."
Cliff Rovelet, assistant women's coach, said O'Connor, a junior, had not competed in the outdoor heptathlon since her freshman year and recorded her best marks in six of the seven events.
"Ann had to jump and run into the wind," Roveto said yesterday. "And I think she did well under the circumstance."
O'Connor said she would not compete in the heptathlon in the Kansas Relays this week. She will have to wait until May 15-16, when she will compete in the Big Eight Outdoor Championships in Lawrence, to qualify for the NCAA meet.
with a jump of 5-8.
Kansas made a stronger showing than usual in the sprint events. Coffey said this showed the team had been balanced since the indoor season
Mia Wickliffe finished sixth in the 100-meter dash with a time of 12.36 seconds. In the 200-meter dash, Mylene Maharaj finished fourth in 25.02. Veronda O'Hara also finished fourth in the 400-meter dash with a time of 54.75.
Maharaj teamed with Wickliffe,
Cynthea Rhodes and Yolanda Taylor
to finish third in the 4 X 100-meter relay.
Coffey said the team's time of 47.38 was a second off its best time because the baton hand offs were slow.
"We completely stopped for one hand-off." Coffey said. "We are definitely going to work on it this week for the Relays."
Maharaj, Rhodes, Taylor and Jesica Casimir finished second in the 4 X 400-meter relay with a time of 3:54.93.
Women's squad slides past Buffs
By a Kansan reporter
The Kansas women's tennis team squeaked by Big Eight Conference fee colorado 5-4 on Friday at the Allen Field House courts.
"I hope that will give us some momentum for the coming week," Kansas men's and women's tennis coach Scott Perelman said. The Jayhawks at Missouri on Tuesday and at Iowa State on Friday.
Doubles play continued to be a problem for the 'Hawks as they
Perealm said he might begin looking at different doubles combinations as soon as tomorrow.
managed only one doubles victory after winning the first set in each of three games.
"I think we legitimately need to look at some changes in the doubles." Perelman said.
Treps, last year's Big Eight champion at No. 1 singles, now has a 2-6 record in conference singles and doubles play.
Oily Barb Inman and Janelle
Bolen, the No. 3 dunk team, won
the game.
Treps, Jeanette Jonsson, Marie Hibbard and Barb Inman each won for the Jayhawks.
Mize has had a half-dozen runner-up finishes since the 1983 victory, and questions were being asked about his mental toughness.
In the singles matches, Tracey
"The whole year has been a struggle." Treps said. "It's been very frustrating."
Masters
Treps said that despite the doubles trouble, beating Colorado would give the team a boost.
Continued from p. 9
: He answered them by saving a bogey from the water behind the 15th green, gaining a playoff spot with a win, and beating the best the game can offer.
The victory was worth $162,000 to Mize, who was born and spent most of his childhood in Augusta. He now resides in Columbus, Ga
"It's the dream of a lifetime," Mize said.
Ben Crenshaw and Roger Maltbie, who shared the lead going into the final round, and Jodie Mudd each
Curtis Strange and Bernhard Langer of West Germany each got to within a single shot of the lead
Continued from p. 10
missed the playoff by a single shot
All three either led or shared the
playoff.
Track
Sophomore Craig Watchee won the event with a time of 14 minutes, 27 seconds after he broke away from the field with two laps remaining.
Also at one over par were Tom Watson, Jay Haas, D.A. Weibring and Jack Nicklaus.
"I Craig had a fast half-mile split on the end of his race." Kueffer said. "He is just running with so much confidence."
Ricky Mays recorded Kansas' only other victory in the long jump with a 12.48.
Kueffer said he thought Kansas did well in the track events, considering the team had a week of hard work.
All three either led or shared the lead during the last 18 holes.
In the 800-meter run, Gerald Harder placed second with a time of 1.54.9 and Bruce Hayes finished third at 1:55.
Team captain John Creighton, who did not compete for most of the indoor season because of knee surgery, teamed with Brad Cobb, Mike Miller and Orrin Gaines to take second in the mile relay with a time of 3:13.77.
outs before it left.
Third-place finishers for Kansas included Sharriff Hazim, who
Courtney Hawkins, who qualified for the NCAA outdoor championships last weekend at the Texas Relays, only managed a fourth-place finish in the 110-meter high hurdles with a time of 14.23.
jumped $6.11\%$ in the high jump, and Steve Hefferman, who ran the 3,000-meter steeplechase in 9:21 12.
Andrew Parker, who finished second at the NCAA indoor championships in March, won the event for Arizona State with a time of 13.74.
Net gains Men's tennis team beats Colorado
The Kansas men's tennis team went one-for-two this week, but the victory came in Big Eight Conference play.
The Jayhawks beat Colorado 9-0 on Friday at the Allen Field House courts, then lost 5-4 to Wichita State on Saturday.
By a Kansan reporter
Each individual and doubles victory in Big Eight matches translates into a point for Kansas in the conference standings.
Kansas was tied with Oklahoma for third place with 11 points before the weekend's play. Nebraska led the conference with 21 points but had played more matches than Kansas, Oklahoma or last season's champion, Oklahoma State.
Kansas entered Saturday's match with a 3-0 record against Wichita State this season, which No. 2 singles player Craig Wildey said may have affected the Jayhawks' performance.
"Colorado was a good solid win for us," Kansas men's and women's tennis coach Scott Perelman said. "We need to play like that to stay in the
"Our attitude was a little different for Wichita than it was for Colorado. I'd say, 'I don't think we were quite as prepared as we could be.'"
hunt for the championship."
Kansas played without Mike Wolf, who began to suffer back spasms in the doubles match with Colorado and
chose to sit out the match.
"In Big Eight matches you've really got no choice, but against Wichita State I felt like I had a choice." Wolf said. "I made it a lot worse if I played."
Wildey moved into the No. 1 spot and delivered a three-set victory, the second time in four matches against Wichita State that he has beaten the Shockers at that position.
"Earlier in the year I thought I had to win when I played at No. 1." Widley said. "Now I like it. I accept it—kind of a challenge."
Natural Fiber Clothing
NASA
For Men, Women, & Children
820 MASS.
841·0100
1987 KANSAS RELAYS BUTTONS HAVE ARRIVED!!
KU STUDENTS
If you purchased an All-Sports Ticket you may stop by the ticket office in Allen Field House and pick up your Relays button
If you didn't purchase an All-Sports Ticket, you can still get a button for only $2.00 until April 17.
This years Highlights include:
- Over 250 high school, college and university teams from over 20 states compete for Kansas Relays championships.
- Al Oerter, 4 time Olympic gold medalist
- Over 250 high school, college and university teams
- Over 1,000 runners to compete in Kansas Relays marathon and 10,000 meter town and campus road race.
Stop By:
Athletic Ticket Office Allen Field House Lawrence Kansas, 66045 more info call 864-3141
12
Monday, April 13, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Computers available waiting for students
By KIERSTI MOEN
Staff writer
The Computer Center has installed 10 new microcomputers, but they're not being used.
"They don't do me any good siting out there unused. I want people to come down and use these things." The center's academic user services.
The center ordered 26 computers and two laser printers, but will pay for only half of them. Harris said.
The Apple-Macintosh Plus microcomputers were installed at the center two weeks ago. But since then, people have used them, Harris said.
Thirteen Apple-Macintosh computers and a printer were brought to the University of Kansas free through a deal with Apple Computers. The center has 10 for student use, and the three others went to campus departments.
The remaining 13 computers and a laser printer will arrive in July. The center's next fiscal budget will be based on the number of the 13 computers and printers.
The computers come with mice and software for word processing and graphics programs MacWrite. The mouse buttons may be checked out at the center.
Students may find the computers useful for writing term papers,
Papers are printed on a laser printer, which produces sharp-looking copies similar to typeset printing.
The printer can reproduce from six-point to 72-point type.
"Even if the paper is bad, it looks like it ought to be good," Harris said.
Computer use is free, but cost 20 cents each to cover paper and printer maintenance costs. Users pay by purchasing $5, $10 or $15 punch cards. The center will not accept cash for single copies.
Harris said student organizations and University departments also could use the computers to publish pamphlets or similar publications.
One of the few people using the Macintoshes yesterday was Helen Meinholdt, a secretary at the department of special education. She was writing a professor's project.
"It's pretty neat compared to a typewriter," she said. "It's user-friendly and fairly easy to learn."
Meinholtbaut said she learned how to use it by reading manuals and asking questions.
Harris said the computers were easy to use. For people with no computer experience, the center provides user manuals and may organize learning workshops this summer if necessary.
"It takes just about a half hour to learn how to use it, as long as you're willing to play around with it a bit," Harris said.
Israelis set fires to avenge murder
ALFIE MENASHE, Occupied West Bank — Hundreds of Jewish settlers set fire to Arab-owned orange groves and rampaged through a Palestinian town yesterday after a firebomb killed a pregnant Jewish woman and badly burned five other Israelis.
Ofra Moses was burned to death. Her husband Avraham, their three children and a neighbor's child suffered serious burns.
The killing of the woman, Oftra Moses, 35, came on the eve of the weeklong Jewish holiday of Passover and touched off other West Bank violence in which five Palestinians were reported injured. Tensions between settlers and Arabs appeared to be at the highest level since 1980.
The Associated Press
The firebomb attack Saturday night came while the Moses family was on a shopping excursion. Attackers thought to be Arabs tossed a gasoline bomb into the family car and then apparently fled into the nearby Palestinian village of Qalqilya.
Other armed settlers entered the West Bank towns of Ramallah and Hebron where they damaged cars, according to the army and the Arab-run press service. Four Palestinians were injured in Ramallah after resisting arrest by Israeli soldiers, army spokesmen said.
Pakistani spokesmen said the settlers acted with the blessing of occupation authorities. Israeli military sources denied it.
Angry setters from Alfei Menasha and other Jewish settlements set fire to citrus gardens and then surged into Qalqilay early yesterday, damaging 20 houses and 16 cars and shouting demands for the eviction of Arabs, the Palestine Press Service said.
The Computer Center's staff, on duty from 8 a.m. to 2 a.m., will help with problems, Harris said. The Computer Center is open 24 hours a day.
DONALD G. STROLE
Attorney at Law
D & W 11.5 & Traffic
F fake ID. D & other alcohol offences
Family Law & other legal problems
16 East 13th St.
842-1133
Car event raises funds
By a Kansan reporter
About 50 Oliver residents gathered on the racquetball court outside the hall to take a swing at an old, rusted 1966 Galaxy 500.
Residents painted on the car the titles of courses they hated and the names of former boyfriend and girlfriend. Then for 25 cents a shot, they picked up a sledgehammer and mounted a semester of frustrations on the car.
The event was organized to raise money for the Kansas University Endowment Association, said Sean Pappas and sophomore and one of the organizers.
"Everyone donates money to charities." Smith said. "But not many people think of raising funds for the University. We go to school here, and we thought by raising money we'd be helping out."
Amv Rhoads/KANSAN
THE NEW YORKER
Bridgitt Mitchell, Topeka sophomore, sings "My Trust Lies in You" with the Inspirational Gospel Voices of the University of Kansas. The choir presented a gospel program entitled "There is Hope for the World" yesterday afternoon in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Songs of praise
Video Player
Four Movies
Two Days
$9.95
Videoxpress
1447 W. 23rd
Open 9 a.m.-10 p.m. Daily
WANT
PIZZA?
842-0600 DELIVERED
KU HOCKEY CLUB
CHAMPIONSHIP GAME OF
KCMHA PLAYOFF TOURNAMENT
Tonight
8:15 p.m.
Foxhill Ice Arena
I-435 & Roe
FREE
ADMISSION & BYOB!
28 BALZANE 12
MONDAY MANIA
PYRAMID
"snip, snip"
BUY 1 GET 1 FREE
Buy any Pyramid Pizza and get the second one of equal value FREE!
FRIENDLY, FAST, FREE DELIVERY
Good Mondays Only
842-3232
Exp. 4/13/87
PYRAMID
PIZZA
ANNOUNCEMENTS
IS MASSAGE BETTER THEN PIZZA? **Find out. try steam & massage from Lawrence Message Therapy and R-E-L-A X student rates** (see too) *Call 841-6062* and hold the anchors!
ClassifiedAds
TRAVEL AND TOURISM WORKSHOP
University Placement Center 149 Burge Union
Thursday April 16,1987 3:30-5:00 p.m.
LEAIN TO FLY-GT 47 jrs K U K credit In-
tention EFCight 841-HYN l rates around
EFCight 841-HYN
Application forms are available in rooms 119 (Kansan Business Office) and 200 (Journalism Office) Stauffer-Flint Hall. News staff applications are due in room 200 by 5 p.m., Wednesday, April 15. Business staff applications are due in room 5 p.m., Friday, April 17. If you have any questions, please stop by the Kansan Business Office, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
The University Daily Kansan is now accepting applications for the 1987 Fall semester business and news staffs. These are paid positions but do not require newspaper experience.
KANSAN STAFF POSITIONS
The Kanas is an Equal Opportunity / Affirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
University community Service Scholarship Award application deadline is 5 p.m., Monday, April 20 at the SUA Office, 864-3477, fourth floor of the Kamaus University.
IMMEDIATE OPENING FOR A TELEPHONE
IMMEDIATE SUPERVISION: We have an immediate opening for a telephone sales supervisor. The per-unit salary is $1,950. You will have the ability to train, manage, and supervise a crew selling subscriptions of the Journal World News. This position requires previous experience in telephone selling operations. Supervision experience is a plus. Working with customers requires some experience through Friday. This position offers a base salary plus a commission for sales. The more your crew sells the more you make as a commission. You must be availabl
Pizza Hut®
DELIVERY
MONDAY
DOUBLE COUPONS
PIZZA HUT DELIVERY
843-2211
ENTERTAINMENT
Have the Hottest Party in Town. A rent A Hot Tub.
Call Tub-to-Guil 341-2091.
SONGHAM WEA
R 7.15 & 9.30
BARGAIN NIGHT ONLY $2.50
LIBERTY HALL
245.1912
Metropolis Mobile Sound, Number one with a
ballet DJ: BJ Extraordinaire, Weddings, Dances,
Parties, Pres. Books, Presto graduation parties now
Hot Spots for Maximum Party Thrust! 841-7083
FOR RENT
$213-5 beadroom 1/4 bath, CA., washer/dryer,
turned kitchen or subunit Spring and/or
shower.
2 Bfimm Townhouse for summer special rate,
bairn facilities, fees on U-Bu; C-U-Bu.
Residence: 350 S. 8th St. m. & 3/4 st.
2 Bedroom house, CA, waher dryer, just South of KU, F. Prefer couple, 81-7, 843-8695
a restroom Apartment Summer Sublease:
bath, dishwasher spaces. Close to campus
4-Dbfm, 2 full bath, large kitchen, living room. Brand new beautiful apartment. Sublease summer. Mastercraft Campus Place, Next to Yello Sho. Cup: Cheap) 841 376
4 Bedroom in old Remodeled House. Utilities paid
1 book from KU. Lida, Lira. 749-1917, 824-2522
4 bedroom near KU. U. Available mid-May or
June 1. Hardwood floors, lots of windows.
4 Bedroom house, furnished, available June and July. Family preferred. Call for information.
Apartment for Sublet: Spacious 2 bedroom, 2 bathroom, pool and tennis courts. B417-7998
Apartments for summer and fall at Universities, two apartments on the first floor, all for summer. June and July only $190 unfurnished, furnished $250, and July only $240 unfurnished, furnished $250, plus all utilities. 1 Bedroom for fall, August to June $130, unfurnished. 2 Bedroom for fall, August to June $130, unfurnished. Bus route, large rooms, gas heat. Come at Apartartment 4B, 1607 W or 814 or 3248. Come at Apartartment 4B, 1607 W or 814 or 3248.
B Bedrooms, 3 Bathrooms. Adjacent to campus.
No pets. Call 842-8971.
YOU ARE ATTENDING SUMMER SCHOOL?
Nerkeley Plans $18,216 at 120 city
mercedes Place $18,216 at 120 city
IF YOU LIKE SPACE & QUIET WE HAVE IT AND YOU CAN STILL WALK TO CAMPUS
Spacious 2 bedroom
Laundry facilities
Waterbed fine
Swimming pool
10-12 month leases
VILLAGE SQUARE
VILLAGE SQUARE
9th & Avalon 842-3040
---
Aspen West now leasing for Summer. Energy efficient. 1 and 2 bedrooms. 3 blocks of west on 18th. Private patios/decks, ceiling fans on top. Bedroom. 749-1288. Open house Saturday 11 a.m
**Beautiful large 2 bedroom in old Remodeled house, 1 bedroom from KU. L749-7197. 842-2522. Beauty, eh?** Two Bedroom Apartment, Five minutes to Fraser. Low Utilities. Lease for Summer with Fall option. Leave message. 842-1020.
Clean studio with air conditioned room located at $2,500 per month. Paid available. Wait $2,500 per month. Call 749-2913 or 842-6453 when 6:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m.
Completely furnished 2 bdmr apt. Low utilities Sublease. Close to campus. Rent neg. Call 749-0531
Female. No smoker needed to share co-ed house for summer. B4 894-625 or B4-822-727
DON'T DELAY! Sublasee 3 story, 28ry
Glenhaven Academy. Campus 1 block. Micro
Fireplace. washer/ dryer, more. Great opportunity.
Will negotiate 841-579.
Excellent location: 2 bedroom apartments in four-plex. Carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, and low utilities. June 1: Summer tent and 14:14 conference at 104 Tennesse Avenue 1341 chilc. Ohio 842-4242
Female roommate wanted for this summer and fall at the bedroom apartment at Sunrise Place. Call 811-494-3687.
Female Roommate needed from May 20-August
29. Furnished Tangrove Apartment. Large bedroom. Great bargain for $175 a month. Call Hall. 749-4898
Fine location on bedroom basement studio space. Just equipped. Juice box, 1001 Missouri Ave.
HEATHERWOOD
VALLEY
NOW LEASING
FOR FALL
accepted
- Short term leases
- in town
- Lowest utility bills in town
- Gas heat, C-A, D-W
- FF refrig, Disposal
- Quiet location
For more info. call between 9-6, Mon.-Fri., 843-4754
---
FOR RENT: LARGE ONE BEDROOM APART
MENT, clean, directly located next to the stadium
available May 20, 2019; call 841-9662
Available May 20, 2019; call 841-9662
For Rent: Bedroom in Private home, males preferred: 841-204.
For Rent. Large rooms in private base (Hassle):
5 minutes from KU & one block from bus route. Share kitchen. Private entrance $10,000 deposit, $10 plus $0 utilities. Call 842, 347-492
Furnished, spacious one-bedroom apartment available from 5/11/87 for $90 plus electricity. Nice area walking distance to campus. Hillierest room. Call 641-8752 or 644-8038 for information.
GREAT SUMMER RATES Special incentives:
ask about our Military and ROTC Specials!
(1) $250 for one month of tuition.
Have a duplex adventure this summer? Need
have a duplex adventure this summer? Need
great location. Rent quotient 841-5800.
Rent
HEY LOOK AT THIS! Brand new 1 Beml. Apf.
for summer stay. Close to campus. D/W A/C
M/F
Help. Need summer sublease for beautiful 3 dhr props. Graduation. Will make deals; 941-671-5000.
Houses, Bedroom Apartments, Sleeping Rooms
Available June 1st: 1-2 bedroom apartments. 1-2
and 3-bedroom apartments, and sleeping rooms.
Near Campus. No pets. Call 842-8971.
Large I.b.dm. Furnished, 1126 Tenn, 875 plus
4.300 lb. Other utilities 749-5859,
964 305, or 941-5848.
Large three bedroom apartment, close to campus and downtown for summer sublease. Available May 15. Free rent through May. $350/month. Call 841-7633 or 841-1237.
Location
Located among 70 acres of rolling hills and trees, you'll enjoy the convenience of being close to campus and area shopping.
Lifestyle
Meadowbrook offers a selection of spacious and comfortable studios, 1, 2, or 3 bedroom apartments, and townhouses to fit your lifestyle.
RESERVE YOUR
UNIT NOW...
FOR SUMMER OR FALL!
meadowbrook
11th F.C. Creation 842-4200
15th & Crestline 842-4200
LEASE NOW FOR FALL *Roomy 2 BR apt.*
location; fireplace, garage, laundry. Np peta.
fireplace, garage, laundry. Np peta.
LIKE CATS? For summer. beautiful apartment
in older house. Spacious, wood floors, fireplace,
washer/dryer $300, mo. plus gas & electricity
for summer pet saturating. Ame.
749-3578
Must sublease for Summer. Short walk to campa-
2 bfm. btown, call (841 828).
Need to sublease Apple Lane Place studio apartment for the summer. Available May 1 to aesr or may be available June 1-2. One bedroom house 1800 block of Maine Street. Walk to class. prefer couple availability. 6/4
One male graduate student for attractive, quiet,
furnished apartment. Utilities paid. $200/mo.
Insurance provided.
University Daily Kansan / Monday. April 13, 1987
13
Reserve your apartment now! Just 2 short beds from university, 1.2, and 4 bedroom apartments. Furnished with some utilities paid and off street parking. No pets. 841-5000
Reserve your room now! For summer and/or fall,
Furnished with most utilities paid. Shared cooking
and bath facilities. Just 2 short blocks from
parking with off street parking. No pets.
415.590
Roommate needed for summer and 18-77 school
road. Use this route 2 story townhouse.
On call. Call Home
Share Rent, utilities, and dates; Nice house,
close to campus. washer/dryer; private room.
Available Summer and/or Fall. 749-7515.
AMENITIES
Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the amenities of Naismith Hall. Applications for fall semester are now being accepted while space remains.
NAISMITHHALL™
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
913-843-8559
SPRINT GRADES to Welchlauds duples for 3. BRK
grades with excellent condition, $47. Available
grades in excellent condition, $47. Available
Studio available for summer in super dpm, comp.
Studio available for summer in super dpm, comp.
Studio available for summer in super dpm, comp.
SUMMER SCHOOL SIGLOF NO CAFF? 2dbm免带
Rent negot. fbav, amal. May 84, 769, Kloe
SUMMER SUBLUELE extra clean furnished.
The Library, Tanglewood Apartments Call 749-3073 anytime.
SUMMER SUBLEASE Two bedroom Apt.
available mid-May New and close to campus
SUMMER SUBLAGE: Need two non-smoking females to trailback Trailrider townhouse. Call
SUMMER SUBLEASE available 4 bedrooms,
2 full baths. Furnished and owned by Mastercraft
Experience Student Cooperative Living at
Sunflower House 1406 Tenn.
Private rooms with shared housework and meals
749-0871
Inquire Now For Summer and Fall Spaces
bD-Lesson for summer Sunrise Terrace 3
bedrooms. Call for info 841-0487
Sublease for summer, studio at Hanover Place
Call 749-5440
**SUMMER SUENLEASE** 3 bdmr apl. 2 full baths.
close to campus. $52 plus utilities. Tangwell,
10 and Arkansas. Call 749-1947 I interested.
Sb Lease for summer Sunrise Terrace, 3.
Sublease one bedroom apartment. Available May 30- July 31. May rent free. $565 per month. Peerless Park. Call 749-6751. Leave message.
20-July 31 - May rent free. $45.00 per month, r-+
per tree park C179-7451. Leave message
Sublease for Summer. One bedroom, adjacent to campus, low utilities, free cable. Call 841-6833
Sublease for summer, studio at Hanover Place. Call 749-5440
sublease for summer: one large bedroom in two
bedroom apt. Mall's Olde English Village,
842-4317.
Sublease Available mid May 1.块 from camp near
front entrance, dorm room at apartment
to open here in summer. 10% down.
*FREE*
MASTERCRAFT
Completely furnished
apartments--all near KU!
Consider:
- Custom furnishings
- Energy efficient
- Affordable rates
- Designed for privacy
- Professional management Call or stop by—
CAMPUS PLACE—1145 Louisiana
841-1429
HANOVER PLACE-14th & Mass.
841.1212
SUNDANCE—7th & Florida
841-5255
TANGLEWOOD-10th & Arkansas 749-2415
OPEN DAILY 1-5
Splicele. Trailride 1 a bedroom, 2/1/2
townhouse. Available mid-May, option to lease
next fall. One large bedroom with own bathroom.
Float tennis courts. sport club facilities. $460 Call
Soblesase luxury 2BR apt, 2 bath, FW Pet, Walr.
Ppi, Swimming Pool: Tennis Court at Pepper-
ney Park, on bus route, rent negotiable. Call
749-4485, after 5:30 p.m. (c).
Skihare for Summer. Pursued one HR with
$35 plus electricity to campus (198-3628).
Summer Suburb 2, Bedroom Townhouse, Pool,
near campus. 841-6749 early arrival. 841-1287
(thursday through Saturday)
Summer Sublease 3 bedroom Apartment with 2 baths, a.c. d. w. pool. Close to Campus 841-6967
Summer Sublet Large 3 BR Townhouse. AC Near pool, bin line. House Rent negotiable.
Summer Submarine 2 Bdr. Apt. near downtown
low utilities. Spacious $79.90. Call 814.5797-39
Summer Subleagues: Near campus, great for summer school student. Low rent plus possible redesign.
Summer Sublease One bedroom luxury apart-
ment, refinished with glass windows.
jucazi. option to renew lease $300.00, 824-5168.
Sublease for summer. Furnished 2 bedrooms, full-
room apartment, near open bars in
call 841-4888.
Summer Sublet. Coolest Apartment in town. 1 row.
AC, rainwasher. Wash/Ward, Dry/Spiral Stairs,
Whirlpool. Garage. Ceiling fan, furnished w/ king size bed. $400 per room. 749-3255.
WEST HILLS APARTMENTS 1012 EMERY RD. 841-3800
DISPLAY APARTMENTS OPEN
Now taking reservations for summer & fall
Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apartments furnished & unfurnished
Great location near campus
No appointment needed Stop by office located in middle of complex by pool
Monday-Wednesday-Thursday
1:00-4:00
Summer Sublease very nice three BRd ranch style house. Near Campus. $420 month. 843-305.
Summer Subway: large bag in apartment
basket, big deck chair,
large sofa, pizza, shopping
cart, $14任意購物
$15任意購物
Summer sublease. 2 br fully furnished apartment.
Low utilities. Close to campus. Hent
Summer sublease to female 1. bifurcated femoral
Summer sublease to female 2. bifurcated femoral
Summer sublease 2. bifurcated. Close to cam-
pany.
southridge
immutable outdoor living
Southridge Plaza Aprs.
LEASING for fall
1 & 2 bedroom apartments
10 month leases water & cable paid
pool
1704 Worth 24th
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
842-1160
Summer subunit? 1: berm apartment next to campus, (10th and A Akamatsu) Available May 15. Low cost.
Summer Tenants wanted for very nice 4 bedroom
suite, refrigerator, dishwasher, microwave,
Dishwasher, beds, and some other
furniture supplied $150 per month plus 1
utilities. Cal. Erivents, evections. 5:30-10:30. 841-3481.
Kitchen, Laundry, Bathroom, basement,
basite. 9:20 and Michigan. 2 bdr. finished base-
work. 8:20 and Michigan. 2 bdr. pool, cab included.
More information. 842-9891.
vice nice two bedroom apartment available
for rent in the northwest area of the
conditioning, and washer/dryer included $30 a
day. No pets allowed.
Person to Sublet apartment for summer. Water
supply. Call Tamar at 842-3343 for further
information.
FOR SALE
guaranteed by Metric Motors. $17500 @ 841-6600
2022, 929 needs help work. 1770 Metric Accord,
excellent condition. Both run great. Call 842-4776
maintenance. Nightshawk C90, 490 speeds.
Metric Motors.
1987 Yamaha Scooter: Perfect shape. Asking
Must the motorcycle must be to appreciate
414-9633
$200 will purchase a Honda C70 with 1250 miles
841-865-86
Dinning room set. 2 twin beds, small dresser, all good condition. All available May 18. Call Scott:
For Sale. Brother HI-15 XL Letter quality daycare. Fully equipped with a full-size desk, and part for optional keyboard. Used very well. Call 612-748-4300.
Fuji 3-apd bicycle with Founders and fading
problems. Bike is in perfect condition;
asking for $450. Call 811-458-7111.
CPA EXAM Study Material. Best CPA Reviews
on CPA Exam Review sites. Inquiries only
$9.95 after 6pm, p. 911-840-2333.
For Sale Honda Express Motorcycle, Excellent condition. See at 1701 Indiana or call 843-4179 after 12:00 a.m.
Bike For Sale 525* Fuji Expree. Excellent Condition.
$175, Call 441-3383.
74 Honda 450, all stock, a classic $450.00 O B O
842-336, Dave.
IBM PC/ATX includes monochrome
computer systems, and 8-bit or 16-bit
motherboard with a 152Kb / 4 Poppy drive.
System is equipped with Intel Core
i386 processor.
BISON
Leading Edge PC, 640 K, 2 K, colorosystem, speed CPU, DOS 32, BASIC, LE Word Pro (Also available) also msdem ($60). Epson LX-80 printers (Also $195). TUR-PRO Pascal ($81.92) 4.6 p.m.
MUSEUM SHOP
Museum of Natural History
UNIQUE GIFTS
toys, posters, jewelry, books
The Good Stuff Store
Next to the Kansas Union
M-S 10-5/2015 1-5 864-4450
**** MOTHBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
Monday Friday 10:50 p.m - 3:00 p.m
Saturday 10:48 p.m - 6:00 p.m
!
Must Sell 1985 BMW K10RTT Warranty till 10/28.
New Purple Phantoms, Tail Shield, Heated Grip. Reynolds Rack with trunk Cornbelt坐椅.
Gearbox with $295.00 - Make off
452-3134. Leave message
MAX'S COMICS. Comic Books, Playboys, Penthouse, etc. 81. New Hampshire.
Music Man Sting Ray Bass w/ Hard Shell Case.
$350. Call Brendan at 843-5227
Red carpeting k & 9. Perfect for dorm rooms.
Aking, Ks01, Ca1, B24-824.
NOTES now available for variety of classes.
Enhance learning and grades. Call 843-3102
Jayhawk Study Services "We're here to Help"
Racing like Tunturi Cycle
Cycling takes 843-3102
Nice as hard typewriter, Smith-Corona Memory
Can also be used with the Need case-
implement Call Set at 749-6008
Rickenbacker bass black 4001 Excellent Condition. 275.00 B.O.B Drumming Board Professional. 290.00 B.O.B 842-7399.
SHOWER TRAVEL SERVICE
704 MASS
812-4000
SPECIAL YOUTH FARE
(Age 12-25)
CHICAGO—BRUSSELS
$499 Round trip
Departure New York 11
Space is limited!
Call today for details.
TREK 40 Bicycle In great condition! What a
Bargain! Call Paul: 843-694-684
AUTO SALES
T.V. For Sale: Paint 15" Color. Good picture.
T.W. Please Call 843-6239, ask for Mk. For Sale:
Gt.Timer-Sampl. Like new. $25. Please Call
843-6239, ask for Mk.
1977 Volkswagen Rabbit, Restored, beautiful body, rebuilt engine, 40 miles/gallon, battery/iries, long life highway car, free gas for 100 km, test drive in Lawrence, 680-2267
1978 Celica GT Liftback 5.5peed, Air Conditioned
Saturday Dave 749-3928 after 7:00 p.m on
Saturday
1979 Chevette 4 speed. Standard. New battery and charger. Some items. Needs clutch. $800 Phone
1979 Triumphe Spin Convertible 50,000 miles
Excellent condition $1200 Firm. Call 843-0194-
6676
1979 Com. VW. White body. White top, Excellent condition. $3,000 miles. 600 firm. Larry J.
1981 Pontiac Formula 70,000 Miles. New rear doors, new exhaust 301. AM/FM Cassette.
79 Ford Mustang: V-8, 302 4 Speed, Stereo.
For Sale VW Super Beetle Convertible 1977 White with white top 842 3659
Found. Fresh Water Pearl Found in front of Blake. 4/9/97 Call 864-3883 before 8:00
LOST—FOUND
Must Sell. 1782 Chevette, 4 cylinders, Automatic Hatchback 87,000 miles, 4 new radial tires, Air conditioning, Breaking lift (recently paid $90), *1300* (Firm). B41-5533
Found: Two boxes of computer packages; Southeast of Eudora Call evening; Scott;
LAST 6 gold rings, one with band of diamonds.
The second ring has a band of diamonds.
Please contact Susan at k41378. Heward
951-632-0500 or susan.heward@k41378. Heward
Lost leather black wallet with important documents. Call J. Losada at 842-5630
Listen for Treasure Hunt clues on KLR 102.
Lost: Calculator, HPice, Watson Library, Saturday
4th please. Return no questions asked. Watson
Circulation Desk or 1029 McCallum #4-6533.
Lost: female black calico cat wearing pink collar
"lee mae" MPH . please call
MPH
Last female black calf calf coat wearing pink calf coat March 17 at 4th and 6th. Please call us at (800) 523-2131.
Lost: $1,000.00 If you can find it, you can keep it.
Lost: Treasure Hunt clues on KLZR 110.
HELP WANTED
AIRLINES CRUISELINES HIRING! Summer Career: Good Pay, Travel, Call for Guide.
AMP COUNSELORS WANTED for private swimming, canning, sapling, watering, gymnastics,
are you good with children? Would you like to be
said to live with a California family and help with
children? **HELP P ARENTS** 770 Mena Ave 219,
Montaverie, PA 08425. (415) 323-2816.
taxing, training, gym
sports, rubbery, artery, clay,
patients, camping, crafts, dramas, or Riding
music, maintenance. Salary or
more plan & fla. Seagra, Sieger, 1765 Mcleod, Nl.
60093, 312-444-244
Children's Counselors, Instructor Instructors, WSI
Bus Driver, Cook, Kitchen Manager, Kitchen
Help, Dishwashing, Maintenance, Nanny for
Childcare, Child Care, P.O. Box 721,
Boulder, CO 80396 (306) 442-4557
Exchange private room and bath for evening and weekend help with blind grandmother. Flexible Preference given to older student in car giving messages at 841-1152 or leave message morning at 841-1152
Computer graphics consultants need office manager. Bookkeeping and computer experience a must. If you can think for yourself and take a class, you will call. Cell 141-1530, Designations, 1414 W. 6th
French interpreters wanted for simultaneous translation in a Grain Storage and Marketing company. They will be hired 8-July 24, 1967. Translation experience desired. Must have college degree or be enrolled at KSU. Contact Merla Brookman at (913) 532-6166. Mail resume to Merla Brookman, Inc., 1340 Fifth Avenue, April 13, 1967. KSI Instant Opportunity Immunology.
Graduate Teaching Assistant, Eastern Civilizations Department, Stanford University, languages and languages 8th-9th academic year 27 Duties: Co-teach Eastern Civilizations, and Understanding China and Japan, covering historical periods.
NANNIES - Needed on west coast. Established midwest firm with excellent reputation arranges your placement. We screen families in their homes. Licensed, No Fee, Minimum stay 1 year. Call or Write:
CALIFORNIA DREAMIN?
Join our "Nancy Network" of over 500 placed in us on CT, NJ, and Boston. One year committee, staff, and board benefits, road trips, board, airfare. All families for your satisfaction. Many families for you to choose from. Phone, fax, e-mail, etc., inc. at 203-848-1742. P.O. Box 7068, Walters & Office Magazine, at NBC Today Show & TV Magazine.
Group leader need for June and July for seven week course in Grain Storage and Marketing for professionals from developing countries. Must possess knowledge of needs of persons with different cultural backgrounds. Conversation skills in French, English. Requires collection of fees, arranging medical care, confirming travel arrangements, driving bus. Knowledge of classroom and 24 hour availability. Contact Merle Brookman at (819) 532-4161 for more information. Occupation: KEU. Date: 13月 1987. KEUqual Opportunity Employer
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16,940/bd. $25/yr. Now
867-687-6000 Extr R 878 for current
engineering jobs.
ARCHER DAWSON AGENCY
OMAHA, NEBRASKA 68104
(402) 554-1103
Naisht Hall is taking applications for a full time cook position. Schedule is Tuesday-Saturday, early shift. If interested step by step in the process and fill out an application EOE/M/F/H/AA
AIRLINE TRAINING INTERVIEWS
career with WESTERN AIRLINES, AIRLINES, AIRLINES, TWAINS, PIEDMONT, CONNENTAL, OR MIDWAY AIRLINES? These are just a few of the 109 airlines with which you if you were an International Air Academy graduate! More than 5,000 International Air Academy events evoking the excitement of the airline industry.
NANNY POSITIONS AVAILABLE: Good salary.
Nice Families, Dallas, Texas Call 831-594-2144.
(214) 831-594-2144
Phonewheelers for benefit concert. Fun company Good working conditions, Evening hours, no extras. Call 1-800-736-9922.
You could be joining them after ust 12 weeks of International Air Academy training! Find out how!
Wednesday, April 15
HOLIDAY INN
530 RICHARDS DRIVE
Manhattan, KS
7:00 p.m.
SEARCH EXTENDED: School of Education leaves DORMITORY SUPERVISOR (1) coordinate dorm staff and live in dorm. Degree and student requirements for students required DORMITORY ASSISTANTS (1) supervise high school students. Degree preferred DEADLINE: April 20, 1987. 5:00 p.m. Complete resume and names of references to: Mrs. Nettie C. Hart, Director, Upward Bound, 848 Hall Bay, R
Summer Job Opportunities available with the U.S. Marine Corps - No obligation to be a Marine! Earn both salary and benefits in Hq Call 81-941-8212 (collect)
SLEEP TECHNOLOGIST The Sleep Disorder Center is currently seeking a qualified individual for the full-time position of Sleep (polymyxial sleep disorder) and a newly expanded field in the area of many opportunities. Candidates must have a bachelor's degree and experience expiring in many opportunities. Candidates with experience in clinical polygraphic recording or encephalograph (EEG) recording will be required to have a desire to work with patients in a community environment. Responsibilities include polygraphic recording, sleep monitoring, preparation, sleep monitoring, and quantitative analysis of results. Some teaching experienced in pre-sleep training, pre-sleep preparation, sleep monitoring, and quantitative analysis of results. These taught experiences must start week starting salary $19,200 a year To apply send resume to Administrative Recruitment, Performing Arts & Medicine, Medical Center, 360 N. Rainbow, Kansas City KS 64103. Application deadline is April 30. An Equity Member, Summer JUMPS at NIH, offers club access is open.
Have a Boston Adventure
SUMMER JORS A new fifteen舞 club is opening in Lenaox. We hire cocktail waitresses and bartenders. Wtl train. Apply in person. 9 M.S. at M. Lenaox. Rent in Lenaox. Located Four Colonias Plaza.
- Live-in child care for professional Boston
area families Good Day
and Benefits
- Must love children
- round-trip air fare
- no fees
- 1 year commitment
- round-trip air fare
We make excellent matches Call
American Au Pair
(617) 244-5154
P.O. Box 97
New Town Branch
Boston, Mass. 02258
Summer Jobs for the Environment. Work with Mopiring to pass a law for safe water. Positions in St. Louis and K.C. Earn $615-225. Wk information on job opportunities in Eagle East. Mar Wed at 3:0, 3:3 and 9:0 p.m.
Summer Employment Lawn care, wood
applications. Send resume to: Job
application form. Send inquiries to
Xoxo.
The University of Kansas Budget Office has a position opening for a continuation position with the position will assist in the preparation of the University's budget. The position requires typing, spreadsheet preparation, and data analysis skills.
junior junior, senior, or graduate student status
for the job offered. A graduate applicant will pay
$1600 to $1900 plus $400 per year.
A graduate applicant will pay $2800 to $3400
plus $500 per year.
*nanted Nanny/Mother's Helper, female, in afil northern Northern New Jersey town, close to NYC Must be pleasant, good with children, energetic and have driver's license. (91-800) 901-6031
YMCA Comp. Gravass in beautiful Lake of the
Mountains, 50 miles northwest of Seattle,
cullesau, but no experience necessary. Call
(800) 637-4122.
for min 1hr but 4 hrs full Time雇员
For min 2hr but 6 hrs full Time雇员 is a feasible For information call Jana Hine, Budget Office, 804-331-6336 Applications available in 318 Strong Hall between 10:40 am - 12:00 pm. Eventual Employment Enrolment
ZZZZZZ._TIRRED OF MAKING LESSON THAT OUR FOURELAND TEAM CAN DO. School is looking for students who are, seriously looking for a good summer job, hard working with net to $300,000 thissummer. Send resume to
PERSONAL
Elaine. But I became afraid. I was afraid to jump into the aims of endless anxiety. Afraid because it became afraid. It was to good to be true. And I never doubled you. You were not the one that was on a decision that was opposite of what I really wanted. I am sorry I became afraid. I cannot. I will never happen again. A friend, D.
Susan from Olathe - Your music misses you.
Call again. Lost always, D.
Be creative in gift giving. Pullfairy with beautiful Beautiful Portraits for all occasions. Call Karen at 212-579-3048.
BUS. PERSONAL
HEADACHE, BAKCHILE, ARM PAIN, LEG PAIN Student and most insurance accepted. For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark Johnson 843-3979
Most reasonable rates in town for all your photo needs especially graduation, resumes, and portfolios. Send photos or resume to GLEASY/HEISAN! Write for KS/MO info PER GLEASY/HEISAN 900-6214. Mailed discreetly/confidentially.
Need music for your wedding? Call Jeen, 843-3794
Give nano and music lessons over summer.
WHY ARE PROCTOR & GAMBLE, IBM, AND XEROX INTERESTED IN STUDENTS WHO HAVE WORKED WITH US FOR THE SUMMER? Students selected for our summer management training program will gain excellent resume experience and above average earnings.
New Connection, 300 Elm, North Lawrence,
842-443-7 Tuesday; Thursday to 6.6, evening by ap-
piration. Mail resume to 501-842-443.
April and May. $ cuts and sets, $3 perma-
rure. Rare and Used Books. Buy, Sell, or Trade
SUMMER IN EUROPE $299 Lowest Schedulated Fairs to all Europe (from St. Louis, Call 314)
SERVICES OFFERED
AUTO-TINTING. Best scratch resistant solar
lithium Availability warranty. PRINT/TINT of
solar panels.
Conscientesus, Economical tax preparation.
841-2292
WE'RE YOUR AUTHORIZED
commodore
REPAIR SPECIALISTS
MIDWEST
APPLIANCE SERVICE
Metcalf South Mall 95th & Metcalf, O.P. Ks. (913) 341-6688
CIMISON SUN PHOTO in photo for looking young
(C) 2014 CIMISON SUN. 10% to 15% direct on coal. No set alt. calls
(C) 2014 CIMISON SUN.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest
Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20
years, driver's license obtainable, transportation
provided, 841-7749.
*Graduates and undergrads, money for college is available. Contact College Scholarship Sources, (913) 764-0299, or 1-800-USA-1221 Ext. 7079
KPHOTOGRAPHIC SERIES SERVICES Ektrachrome
Photographic Series for Commercial Use
PASSPORT $6.00. Art & Design Building,
Corporate Photography, Design &
Architecture
- Body Toning Classes:
- Tanning
- Body Toning Classes
FOR
WOMEN
ONLY
$37.50
- Tanning
- Weight Equipment
- total membership through 5-31-87
- Weight Equipment
- Whirlpool
FITNESS CLUB
BodyShapes
Hours:
M F 8:30-8:30
Sat. 9:00-4:00
Sun. 1:00-4:00
601 Kasold Westridge Shopping Ctr. 843-4040
MUSIC**** MUSIC**** MUSIC**** MUSIC
Red House Audio 8 track stage, P.A. and L.
Mobile Party Music, Maximum Audio Wizardry.
Call Brad 749-1275
PRIVATE OFFICE Obgyn Ogn and Barber Services Overland Park... 913-491-4678
Stairstream. All ladies dresses can be made here because of the high quality and versatility styles from the latest fashion magazines, I will show you all!
MATHI TUTOR since 1976, M.A. $/hr (courses
above) 199, $/hr 843 9032
TUTORING MATH STAT. $8.99/HR CALL
842-stat
TYPING
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing,
1-1-1 THO word processing. Responsible Conciensive. Reliable. Call 842-3113 for service
cientius. Reliable Call 612-784-
24-Hour Training, 10th semester in Lawrence.
Resumes, dissertations, papers. Close to camp.
Best quality and fastest service. AH-5006.
Best quality and latest service. 841-3900.
A1 professional typing. Term papers, Theses,
Dissertations, Resumes, etc. Reasonable IBM
Electronic Typewriter. 842-3246.
A-2 Word processing Service. Quality resumes,
papers, dissertations Reasonable rates. File
storage available. 843-1850 until 9 p.m.
AAA TYPING has low cost word processing/document storage starting at $19.1p (Call 842.1942 after 4 p.m. weekdays, any time weeks) Campus pickup available
Absolutely Fast Typing. Dependable and experience with reasoned calls. Call attention to the instructor at p. 23. Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard Medical school secretary. Call Mrs. Nancy Mat
For professional typing/word processing, call
n@480. 4900. special spring 11, page, double
space, n@480.
Experienced Typei: Dissertations; theses, term papers, etc. Reasonable Call. Rate 642-3201
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, maps, theses, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter quality
printing, spelled correcting. 842-7247.
Dependable, professional, experienced.
Depends on AFFER Typing Service.
TRANSCRIPTION
DISSERTATIONS THESSES. LAW*
DISSERTATIONS THESSES. LAW*
will return, but will RETURN WATCHING THIS AD
Experienced typet hpst, dessertations, term paper 842.316 after 6:15 p.m. M or F/Salam
842.316 after 6:15 p.m. M or F/Salam
GUHANTEED PERIFECT typing done on word processor Located near lawrence Hospital Call
KU SECRETARY will do your typing and word processing. Fast, accurate, quick turnaround. Quality typing excellent editing, grammar, spelling, punctuation skills. Fast, reliable.
GOOD IMPRESSIONS Typing/Word Processing Typesetting Paper Thesis Typeset Typeset
Resume Service-writepaper-10 copies ONLY
$20.749-2193 after 5 p.m.
Smart Word Processing includes editing and
checking. Very reasonable rates. Foster, 749-2740
THE WORKDOCTORS: Why pay for typing? Word processing. Legal transcription. 843-519 F.
Cellmate(s) Wanted: 1 or 2 for summer or for new year! person gets: TWO bedrooms upstairs 1 or 2
TOP-NOTII SERVICES professional word processing manuscript, memories, letters, better communication.
Typing: very reasonable rates, will also assist with spelling formulation and form. B41: 8623 762
Word Processing, prooferreading, spell checking,
NLQ printing, Reasonable 841:1940
WANTED
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses dissertations, papers, letters, applications Resumes HAVE M.S. Degree. 814-6254
Outgoing female roommate wanted to share two
cars with a male roommate. The car
$17.50 plus utilities $84.62 aftercare.
$19.75 per month.
Experienced drummer needed for established Lawrence band, primarily originals. Influences are Husker Du, U2, etc. Must be devoted. Troy, 841-6314.
Female Deposit $157.00 Summer only or into fall
Bonda Hosta *Everytime Tues* Throne or leave
Deposit
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Female grad for 2 HR apartment May 15-May
Microware, near campus; $625 bills pad
Wanted Female roommate non-smoker to share
room with student. Applicants must have
campus and downtown 110 plus 1/2 unitlalls. Call
(718) 345-6789.
Policy
Part-time housewives wanted for Spring and summer! All with a meticulous 'cleaner' Buckingham Palace needs to be prepared. Job location: London.
Want to buy Appleworks version 1.2 or 1.3 only
Call 843-1644 after 5:00.
Words set in Bold Face count as 3 words.
Classified Information Mail-In Form
Words set in ALL CAPS as 2 words
IN HILLE CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words. Classified rates are based on consecutive day insertions only No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising.
Blind box ads-please add $4.00 service charge.
Tearsheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements. Found ads are free for three days, no more than 15 words.
Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansan.
1. p.m. two days prior to publication.
Deadline is 4 p.m. two days prior to publication.
Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. two days prior to publication.
Classified Rates
Words 1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 2 Weeks 3 Weeks 1 Month
0-15 2.70 4.00 5.70 9.50 14.25 18.00
16-20 3.20 4.75 6.70 10.75 15.75 19.75
21-25 3.70 5.50 7.70 12.00 17.25 21.50
26-30 4.20 6.25 8.70 13.25 18.75 23.25
31-35 4.70 7.00 9.70 14.50 20.25 25.00
Classifications
001 announcements 300 for sale 500 help wanted 800 services offered
100 entertainment 310 auto sales 700 personal 900 tipping
100 retail 200 advertising 400 office space
Identified Mail Order Form
Address
(phone number published only if included below)
Please print your ad one word per box:
| | | | | |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| | | | | |
| | | | | |
| | | | | |
Date ad begins ___
Total days in paper ___
Amount paid ___
Classification ___
ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
JLOW KANSAN POLICY
Make checks payable to:
19 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, K6 6045
---
14
Monday, April 13, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Now there's more than one way to get through college.
Wordsworth's Prelude vs. Honda's Prelude:
Worlds in Collision
As Thomas More said shortly before his untimely demise, "There is no hurt on earth that is beyond heavenly help."
How does this simple, poignant, powerful thought relate to the inherent tension evident in the contrast between Wordsworth's immortal The Prelude and that more recent (and better recog- nized) offering from one of Japan's pre-eminent artists, The Honda Motor Corporation?
First, let's con- sider the facts.
Poem vs. Der Student Preferences
Honda's Prelude Wordsworth's Prelude
Wordsworth's Prelude vs. Honda's Prelude: Words in Collision
As Thomas More said shortly before his untimely demise, "There is no hurt on earth that is beyond heavenly help."
How does this simple, poignant, powerful thought relate to the inherent tension evident in the contrast between Wordsworth's immortal The Prelude and that more recent (and better recognized) offering from one of Japan's pre-eminent artists, The Honda Motor Corporation?
First, let's consider the facts...
File Edit Draw Move Measure Animation
alpha helix-1
Macintosh SE
If you want to get ahead in college it helps if you choose a brilliant roommate. Like a Macintosh personal computer And now there are two models from which you can choose.
First, there's the Macintosh Plus-now widely accepted by students at colleges and universities all across the country.
It comes with one 800K disk drive and a full megabyte of memory (which is expandable to four).
For those of you who need even more power, there's the Macintosh SE.
It comes with all of the above. As
well as a built-in 20-megabyte hard disk, for storing up to 10,000 pages. Or if you prefer,you can add a second built-in 800K floppy drive.
The SE also gives you a choice of two new keyboards, one with function keys for special applications.
And it has an internal expansion slot so you can add new power without performing major surgery. Like a card that lets you share information over a campus-wide network. Or another that lets you run MS-DOS programs.
With either Macintosh, you'll be
able to take advantage of the latest most advanced software.
Like idea processors that outline your thoughts. Word processors for writing, editing and checking your spelling.And communications programs that give you 24-hour access to valuable information.
So no matter which model you decide on-youll be able to work much faster,better and smarter.
KU Bookstore Burge Union Computer Store 864-5697
No two ways about it.
APPLE
The power to be your best.
© 1987 Apple Computer Inc. Apple and the Apple logo are registered trademarks of Apple Computer Inc. Macintosh is a trademark of Apple Computer Inc. MS DOS is a registered trademark of Microsoft Corp.
A sprinkle a day
Penguin is playing with an umbrella.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details, page 2
Tuesday
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
April 14, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 132
(USPS 650-640)
Daniloff tells his story in talk on Soviets
THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED NATIONS
Nicholas Daniloff, former Moscow Bureau Chief for U.S. News and World Report magazine, tells how the Soviets arrested him in August in retaliation.
for the arrest of accused Soviet spy Gennadi Zakharov. Daniloff spoke last night at Hoch Auditorium.
By PAUL SCHRAG
During Nicholas Daniello's 13 days in a KGB prison in September, he wondered: "Will I just stay here and rot?"
Staff writer
But Daniello, then Moscow bureau chief for U.S. News and World Report (now Reuters), said the move was good.
The Reagan administration obtained Daniloff's release 30 days after he was arrested by the KGB, the Soviet secret police. Daniloff described his ordeal and commented on U.S.-Soviet relations last night in Hoch Auditorium as part of the Student Senate lecture series.
"If there is anything that the Daniloff affair has taught me, it is that when something goes wrong in Soviet-American relations, we need to say so loudly and clearly and firmly," he said. "At the same time, I am sure you don't know about that don't talk to each other about the serious issues at hand."
Danioff now is diplomatic editor for U.S. News and World Report. He is on leave, writing a book about his experiences in the Soviet Union and about his great-great grandfather, a Russian who was exiled as a revolutionary in the 19th century.
Danioff said he was framed when a person he had trusted gave him an envelope containing photos of Afghanistan marked top secret. The envelope's contents constituted the evidence against him.
He spent 13 days in a cell that was three paces wide and five paces long, eating buckwheat gruel and lots of mashed potatoes. His interrogators pointedly informed him that his charge of espionage was punishable by death.
"I feel angry as hell at the KGB," he said
The Reagan administration handled the negotiations for his release well, Daniilo said. The arrangement essentially was a swap, he said, despite administration denials. In the deal, the United States released a
Soviet arrested for spying, and the Soviets also allowed a dissident to emigrate to the West.
Serving as a journalist in Moscow was a difficult assignment, Daniello said, because he had to operate in a hostile environment.
"You live with the constant realization that your room is bugged and that you are being followed by the people there's a tremendous loss of privacy."
He said he did not regret having taken the risks involved in his assignment, although he had been forced to pay a price. He said journalists in the Soviet Union could do little to avoid arrest.
"If they're going to get you, they'll get you," he said.
Daniloff said the recent scandal in which U.S. Marines compromised security at the U.S. embassy in Moscow was a disgrace and an
astounding catastrophe Marines were involved in a sex-for-secrets swap with Soviet women.
Daniloff said the policy of openness under Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev was a breath of fresh air. He added, "The way he talked about boat but that, it was difficult to
"I never doubted that U.S. Marines would commit sex, but I was surprised that they committed treason," he said.
predict how far the reforms might go.
He said he hoped for progress in the new round of arms negotiations.
"I think they're quite serious about arms control," he said of the Soviets. "They have a terrible economic problem, and Gorbachev realizes that it's important to reduce the amount of money spent on the military and refocus it to the civilian economy."
4 die in cargo plane crash near KCI
Slattery says aid safe from Congress
Staff writer
By JOHN BUZBEE
TOPEKA — Congress will ignore the Reagan administration's recommendation to slush student financial aid in Jim Slattery, D-Kan., said yesterday.
"There's no way in the world that we can justify cutting back student financial assistance," he said at a news conference in the state Capitol.
The federal budget passed by the U.S. House last week calls for a raise in student financial aid to keep up with rising tuition costs, please above inflation for Pell Grants.
Mark Tallman, director of legislative affairs for the Associated Students of Kansas, said the Senate should not be as generous to financial aid.
"The Senate comes in below the House, where there's a kind of a compartment."
That compromise might allocate the same amount for financial aid next year, but after inflation it actually could mean a loss.
The budget bill also condemns the administration's proposal to charge Haskell Indian Junior College student Liam Dufferty. Haskell doesn't charte tuition now.
"With the specter of the deficit overhead," Tallman said, "it's not time to talk about growth."
The Associated Press
Tallman lobbied for student issues in Washington earlier this year. He said financial aid was becoming a partisan issue, and Democrats favored it more than Republicans. But Republicans in Congress agree more with Democrats than with Reagan on the issue, he said.
Where the crash occurred
About 10 p.m., a Boeing 707 crashed in Platte County en route from Wichita, in a field between Barry and Hampton roads.
The cargo plane was landing in rain and fog. Magnesium parts of the aircraft burst into flame upon impact. The plane was carrying kerosene as part of its load.
Three crew members and a passenger were killed.
Kansas City International Airport
291
1435
Crash site
Amsterdam Road
Tiffany Springs Rd.
Barry Rd.
"We are opposed to the idea of putting that kind of tuition charge on students," he said.
"Student aid has been cut relative to tuition," he said. "Student aid has still not een adequate to keep up with costs."
Even if financial aid spending does keep up with inflation, students still are losing out because tuition is rising faster than inflation, he said
Slattery is also working to ensure that students in farming families get fair consideration for financial aid. They may look like they are able to
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A cargo plane crashed in light fog last night in a field near Kansas City International Airport, killing four people aboard, authorities said.
The four-engine Boeing 707 crashed at about 10 p.m. as it was preparing to land at the airport en route from Wichita, said Ron Cop, regional duty officer of the Federal Aviation Administration.
See SLATTERY, p. 6, col. 3
Rescue workers prepare to remove a body from the wreckage of a Boeing 707 that crashed last night about 10.
The bodies of three crewmen and a passenger were recovered, said Harold Knabe, a Kansas City, Mo., Fire Department spokesman.
Source: Associated Press reports
The crash occurred just southwest of the airport, about 20 miles north of downtown. Visibility in the area at crash site was limited by light fog to about one-half mile.
Knabe said that he did not know exactly what happened but that he thought the pilot was making an approach to KCI coming in from the south.
Knabe said Environmental Protection Agency officials were going to test the creek water for contamination.
Witnesses reported seeing a burst of orange flame when the plane crashed in a field, radio station KCMO reported. The fire was under control about an hour after the crash, said Deputy Fire Chief Charles then her oracle at U.S. Interstate 435 and Barry Road.
Firefighters had to smother the fire with foam, hand-carried in buckets from trucks about 125 yards from
A Kansas City, Mo., police spokesman said witnesses reported that they saw a spark in the air. They reported a minor explosion followed by another, very loud, explosion while the plane was still in the air.
Chuck McCardie of the South Platte County Fire Department said the plane carried at least one pallet of kerosene.
The fuselage was in three pieces, which were found within 100 yards of each other. Knabe said. He said the fuselage was scattered over about five acres.
The wings were in the creek bed, and the tail section was on the other side of the creek, opposite the two large sections.
McCardie said trees were clipped in a 200-yard swath.
A Kansas City, Mo., firefighter said two large sections landed on the bluff above the creek bed. One-third of the passenger section, including the cockpit, also was above the creek bed.
the site, Knabe said. Water also was used.
"We fought the terrain more than the fire," said a Kansas City firefighter of the ankle-deep mud and grassy, swampy field.
Crowd control and the terrain around the wreckage hampered firefighters.
Kansas City, Mo., Police Chief Larry Joiner said the crowd was crawling through the woods near the wreck, prompting police to have perimeter patrols around the wreck
area.
The lack of a large road into the wreck area also hampered firefighters, Joiner said. The only roads into the wreck site were small gravel and mud roads.
The plane was registered to Burlington Air Express, formerly known as Burlington Northern Air Freight. A Burlington official in Wichita said the company had been using a Boeing 707 for nightly service to its headquarters in Fort Wayne, Ind.
A woman who answered the phone at the company's headquarters in Fort Wayne said there would be no comment on the crash.
The official, who wouldn't give his
name, said the flight originated in Oklahoma City. The overnight service delivers both small packages and heavy freight, he said.
The accident marks the first time a large plane has crashed at the airport since it opened in 1972.
Kansan reporters Paul Belden and Alison Young contributed information to this story.
Kansas man sentenced to 20 years in prison
By KJERSTI MOEN
Staff writer
KANSAS CITY, MO. — A Kansas man who allegedly supplied cocaine to people arrested in a Lawrence drug roundup this summer was sentenced yesterday to 20 years in prison for cocaine-related crimes committed in Missouri.
Yesterday, U.S. District Judge Howard F. Sachs gave Norton the maximum sentence of 20 years on each count. Norton will serve the two sentences concurrently.
The man, Frederick W. Norton, 33,
of Goddard, was convicted March 2
in U.S. District Court in Kansas City,
Mo., of one count of conspiracy to sell
cocaine and one count of possession
with intent to distribute cocaine.
The prosecuting attorney, assistant U.S. attorney Linda Sybran, sales associate Norton his sentencing. "We need him to be a significant drug dealer."
Norton's crimes were not directly related to the Lawrence drug arrests that led to the convictions of former University of Kansas executive secretary Richard von Ende and Lawrence attorney Bradley Smoot. However, previous testimony indicates that Norton was in Lawrence as well in Kansas City, Mo., according to a court affidavit, Mo..
According to an affidavit filed in the Douglas County District Court, Rugles said that Norton had supported Mr. Ward's claims of cocaine through a middleman.
Samuel Ruggles, Lawrence resident, who was convicted in June in Douglas County District Court of selling cocaine in Lawrence, told the special agent who arrested him that Norton was his supplier.
In 1978, Norton and Ruggles were arrested together in Austin, Texas, and both were charged with possession of hashish.
Norton said in court yesterday that the scope of his connection with Ruggles was exaggerated.
"Some of the hearsay of the multi-
tune of cocaine such as kilos, I don't
have a problem," he said.
Ruggles received the most severe sentencing in trials resulting from the Lawrence drug investigations in the summer. He is serving a five- to 15-year prison term at the U.S. Federal Penitentiary in Leavenworth.
Sybrant said that Norton also had assisted the FIR in Wichita in 1983 and at Iowa.
Norton's lawyer, David W. Russell,
said that Norton had agreed to help the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency frame his Colombian cocaine suppliers in spite of the Colombians' threats to physically harm him and members of his family.
Court officials would not say where Norton will serve his 20-year sentence, which is expected to last about seven years. His whereabouts are being kept secret to prevent his accomplices from attempting to free him and to protect him from possible harm from his suppliers in Colombia, officials said. Norton appeared at yesterday's trial.
Russell said before the sentencing
Russell said before the sentencing
See SENTENCE, p. 6, col. 3
INSIDE
Going for the gold
The Midwest's best triathlete, Clark Campbell, a former KU student from Coffeyville, has begun to compete on the national triathon circuit, while training for his dream of competing in the 1992 Olympics. See story page 9.
Power of the mind
Jan Erland, director of MemExPan, teaches seminars to help students become better readers, writers and listeners by exercising the parts of the mind that organize and retain information. See story page 3.
2
Tuesday, April 14, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Around the World
Tutu, clergy urge others to defy new restrictions in South Africa
CAPE TOWN, South Africa — Archbishop Desmond Toul and other clergymen urged people at a special prayer service yesterday to defy new limits on speech and assembly. The U.S. ambassador was among 700 people in the congregation.
Ambassador Edward Perkins issued a statement saying, "It is sad that a government, which claims to uphold the values of human dignity and which portrays itself as secure and strong, should be so intimidated by the peaceful protestations of its citizens that it declares those protestations to be illegal."
Perkins' attendance and his statement represented one of his most vivid gestures since he
became the first black U.S. ambassador to South Africa in November.
The ambassadors of Canada, Sweden and Austria also attended the ecumenical service dedicated to people detained without charge under a nationwide state of emergency imposed by the white government 10 months ago.
Regulations issued Saturday by Police Commissioner Johan Coetzee make it a crime to call for release of detainees by word, action or in writing. Gatherings in support of detainees also are banned. Penalties for breaking the rules range up to a fine of 20,000 rand ($10,000) or 10 years in prison.
Shultz, Soviet discuss arms reductions
MOSCOW — U.S. Secretary of State George P. Shultz held three rounds of talks yesterday with Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard A. Shewdnadze, taking up the critical issue of nuclear arms reductions at an unscheduled late-night session.
There was no immediate word on the outcome. Meanwhile, presidential Chief of Staff Howard H. Baker Jr. said he would not be surprised to see a decision on a ban on shelling. The end of Shulit's three-day visit
The Soviet news agency Tass, however, accused Washington of "a fresh cock-and-bull story" of
Soviet espionage at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow. The dispatch said the Pentagon came up with the "spy scare" in an effort to undercut the State Department.
The meeting was held after a Passover Seder attended by Shultz at the U.S. Embassy with about 40 prominent Jewish "refuseniks," people who have been refused permission to emigrate.
Shultz attended the Seder, which recalls Jewish deliverance from slavery under the Egyptian pharaoh, to demonstrate continued U.S. support for Soviet Jews. He told them U.S. citizens were praying for them.
Across the Country
Texaco files for protection, gains time
NEW YORK — Texasco gained ground in its multibillion-dollar legal war with Pennzoil Co. by filing for protection under federal bankruptcy laws, analysts said yesterday.
$11 billion judgment won by Pennzoil against Texaco in a 1985 Houston jury decision.
In taking the step, Texaco relieved itself of the necessity of posting a potentially debilitating security bond against the roughly
This benefited Texaco because the more time it has, the more chance it has of winning a reversal of the decision, and the more time Pennzoil has to wait to get its money, or some part of the award.
Hart announces candidacy for president
DENVER — Gary Hart, standing coatless before the snow-capped Rocky Mountains, announced his bid for the 1988 Democratic presidential nomination yesterday and promised a return to American ideals and a "presidency you can be proud of."
mer Vice President Walter Mondale.
The 50-year-old former Colorado senator opened his second presidential candidacy stressing idealism and the power of ideas,themes that almost wrested the 1984 Democratic nomination from for-
This time it is Hart who is ahead in the early polls, with the rest of the still-increasing field of candidates bunched far back.
"I intend to be a candidate for the presidency of the United States in 1988, and I do so for one single reason: and that is because I love my country," Hart said as he stood in Red Rocks Park for the morning announcement.
Population will reach 5 billion, group savs
WASHINGTON — The rate at which people are being born is speeding up again, just as the planet's population ages past the 5 billion milestone, a population study group reported yesterday.
The Population Reference Bureau, a private organization, cited an easing of strict birth limits in China as a prime reason for the turnaround in population growth.
The bureau's new World Population Data Sheet for 1987 estimates that the July 1 population of the world will be 5.026 billion.
The United Nations also has projected that the world will pass the 5 billion milestone early in July, while another private study group, The Population Institute, calculated that the event occurred last year.
From Kansan wires.
Weather
From the KANSAN Weather Service
LAWRENCE FORECAST
Today, clouds continue to increase the chance for rain while east winds are 5-15 mph. Today's high will reach 56 degrees before dropping to the overnight low of 45 degrees. Tomorrow will remain partly cloudy the high near 60 degrees.
WEATHER FACT: Snow has only been recorded on this date once, and then it was only a trace.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday. April 14 1987
3
Local Briefs
Law students place second in competition
The KU School of Law was the host Saturday for the Midwest Regional National Appellate Advocacy Competition and a KU team placed second.
Team members Mary Ann Bumgarner, second-year law student; Steve Smith, second-year law student; and Michael Jika, second-year will attend the final competition August 7 and 8 in San Francisco
A team from Oklahoma placed first in the regional competition, in which 12 teams from seven states participated. The event was sponsored by the American Bar Association/Law Students Division.
7 Crimson Girls chosen for fall '87
Seven Crimson Girls have been chosen to dance at KU athletic events next year. Five more will be chosen in the fall during the first week of school.
The seven are Kristy Ramsey, Wichita freshman; Kathie Gunderman, Overland Park sophomore; Claire Henderson, Lawrence sophomore; Natalie Nickell, Overland Park sophomore; Nici K Weigel, Lawrence junior; Alison Knowles, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; and Keri DeMarls, Lenexa sophomore.
A panel of 12 judges chose the seven at call-back auditions Sunday. About 80 students auditioned at the first tryout Thursday.
Immigration laws focus of workshop
A workshop for foreign students on the new immigration laws will be held at 4 p.m. today in the Conference Room at the Burge Union.
The event is sponsored by the office of foreign student services and will be conducted by Clark Coan, the director.
Coan said that he hoped the workshop would dispel some of the myths that foreign students had about immigration laws.
The workshop will provide information on post-degree training for foreign students, school transfers and procedures for returning home. Coan said.
3 students elected as group officers
Three KU students were elected as officers of the Kansas Young Democrats during the group's election. They joined Washburn University, in Topeka.
Milicent Williams, Olathe sophomore, was elected to a second term as national representative for the Kansas Young Democrats. Williams is the president of the group's KU chapter.
Rick Fisher, De Soto law student, was elected to a second term as the second vice president, and Yngar Brynidssen, Palatine, III., junior, was elected 2nd district chairman, Brynidssen is the KU Democrats' membership chairman.
From staff and wire reports.
Campus and Area
Course exercises students' minds
Rebecca Mackintosh
By JERRI NIEBAUM
L. A. Rauch/KANSAN
Read the following instructions only once. Then do what the five instructions say without referring to them again.
Jan Erland, director of Mem—Expan, uses two ventriloquists' puppets to teach people how to increase their memory capacity.
1. Draw a circle around the date-line on this page.
2. Put an "X" through the name above this article.
3. Draw a triangle inside the largest ad on this page.
largest ad on this page.
4. Draw a line through the last
5. Put an "X" through the headline of this story.
Most people probably won't be able to complete this exercise without making mistakes, or without looking at instructions again, but it can be done.
Jan Jlander, director of *Men-ExPan*, 2002 Quail Creek Dr., said that by exercising the parts of the mind that organized and retained information, people could become better readers, writers and listeners.
Erland has taught grade school and junior high school children in regular classrooms and in learning disabilities classrooms. She has an undergraduate degree in education from Drake University and a master's degree in learning disabilities from the University of Kansas.
As a teacher, Erland saw students of all intelligence levels who were not exposed to any of the sciences.
"A lot of average kids were going to really lose out back on the job market," Erland said.
So Erland started Mem-ExPan in an office in her home six years ago. Now she teaches the 15-day seminar to about 100 students a year.
Mem-ExPan is designed to improve thinking skills in people aged 10 to adult with low, average and high intelligence.
Donna Griffin, Lawrence senior,
took the Mem-Expan course in the
summer. A fourth-year architecture
student. Griffin works 30 to 40 hours a week and doesn't have as much time to study as she needs.
She said the course helped her better retain information, gave her more confidence in her ability to learn and reduced her stress about
Eland said most students did not learn as well as they could because they had never exercised their mind enough. They had a poor attitude about learning.
Erland teaches a "whole-brain" learning strategy that integrates the right side of the brain with the left side. The right side controls social and creative skills, and the left side controls analytical and language skills.
Most people's minds are dominated by right-brain thoughts, she said. By using creative learning strategies that stimulate the brain's right side, the left side can be tricked into working.
One way that Erland incorporates creativity with analysis is by using ventriloquist puppets as teachers. The colorful puppets give instructions to the students in varying voices, appealing to the brain's right side.
But the instructions that the students remember are organized and evaluated in the analytical left side. In this way, the creativeness of the instructions tricks the mind into using its left side to remember.
Memorizing instructions of puppets and drawing shapes on the Kansan may not seem important, but
if the brain is not exercised it will not get better at thinking, Erland said
Erland's students take national standardized tests, such as the Woodcock Johnson Psycho Educational Battery and the Detroit Tests of Learning Aptitude, to determine where they need to start on the exercises. They are retested at the end of the 15-day seminar. Erland said the students improved by an average of 16 IQ points.
The course is taught in one- to two-hour sessions on 15 consecutive days, excluding Sunday. For $450, students receive the sessions and a packet of tapes and manuals that they use to continue the course at home.
Local restaurants battle in delivery war
Late-night deliveries provide a quick fix for hungry students
Staff writer
By PEGGY O'BRIEN
When KU students want to eat out without going out, they turn to the saving grace of the delivery person to satisfy late-night hunger pants.
Pizza holds the title of the topranked delivered food item, but it isn't the only food available for delivery.
Yello Sub, 642 W. 12th St., and the Bum Steer, 2554江a St., are alternative restaurants that compete with pizza for delivery business.
Ed Reidy, manager of Yello Sub,
said his delivery drivers averaged 50
deliveries a night. The Burn Steer
team had more than 100 night
nights and 30 to 40 on weekend nights.
Chris Lemmon, owner of the Bum Steer, said his restaurant was listed under "pizza" in the phone book. Because Lawrence has few alternative restaurants, pizza is the main competition, also is listed as pizza heading. pizza headings
The Bum Steer has been open for seven years and delivering for two. Lemmon said the delivery business had doubled each year.
Restaurants such as Mazzio, 2630 Iowa St. and Valentino, 544 West 23rd St. offer sandwiches, garlic nachos and a salad, along with pizza.
The Peking Restaurant, 2210 Iowa St., started delivering Chinese food two months ago. The Peking, which has been open for five months, is only Chinese restaurant in Lawrence that delivers, with 10 to 15 a day.
"we serve our customers that that said Gary Soo, manager of the Pekin."
Larry Friedland, owner of Checkers Pizza, 2214 Yale Road, said
Lawrence was a price-conscious town, including residents as well as students.
"The cheaper you can get it to them the better." Friedland said.
increases, which has been open two years, has doubled its business in the last year. Friedland said that pizza was the main revenue source and that he is trying to undercut everyone else.
Randy Altman, assistant manager at Pizza Shuttle, 1601 Iowa St., said the store's delivery business had increased every year.
"It's totally amazing how many people eat pizza." Altman said.
Managers said that weather and promotions were the main factors in determining the delivery business on a day, but it was still a guessing game.
On a beautiful day, managers may expect less business but end up with a
rush of people who decide to have parties. Nights such as last night, because of the weather, bring good business.
Yesterday, as cloudy skies rained down, and as thunder and lightning lit up the sky, people were calling in their delivery orders like mad.
"Deliveries are good during the winter and on bad-wather nights like tonight," Lemmon said last night.
"When it rains, the business pours," said Danny DeWalt, store manager at Domino's Pizza, 1445 N. 8th Ave., San Francisco, tree delivery within 30 minutes.
Pizza Hut has modernized its delivery system by establishing Pizza Hut Customer Service Centers. When customers phone in their orders, the center dispatches the delivery driver.
City staff examines ordinance for curfew
By TODD COHEN
Staff writer
Two proposals championed by the outgoing and incoming KU student body officers now are being studied by the Lawrence city staff and may come before the city commission within a month.
Mike Wilden, assistant city manager, said yesterday that the city staff would take about a month to review a request to repeal a curfew prohibiting minors from entering beer taverns after 8 p.m. The curfew is part of an ordinance that would allow minors to enter but not drink in taverns serving 3.2 percent beer.
Also being reviewed is a proposal to add a non- voting, or ex office, seat to the commission for a KU student representative, Wildgen said.
He said the staff also would review state law and contact local law enforcement officials about changing the 8 p.m. curfew.
Commissioner Howard Hill, who leaves office at tonight's meeting after being defeated last week for reelection, had requested that the staff review the two proposals.
Hill said yesterday that he made the requests after talking with student senators at a city commission candidate debate sponsored by the Student Senate. At the April 2 debate, candidates were asked about their positions on the proposals.
The ex officio proposal was on the platform of the Bottom Line coalition, which won a Senate majority and the offices of student body president and vice president in last week's student elections.
The ordinance change was proposed in November by Brady Stanton and Kelly Milligan in their successful campaign for student body president and vice president with the Cheers coalition.
However, Stanton and Milligan have made no official request to the city in their term, which ends April 22.
"They got bogged down in revenue code hearings and the budget situation," Jason Krakow, student body president-elect, said yesterday.
"It's something that is important to us," he said of the ordinance change.
The law separates friends and possibly could encourage use of fake IDs and illegal liquor consumption, Hill said.
"I just think we should take it off the books," he said. "There are so many opportunities for people to drink. I don't think this is going to provide any significant impetus to drink."
Minority affairs plans to merge with student affairs
Staff writer
Bv ROGER COREY
The office of minority affairs at the University of Kansas is merging with the division of student affairs, the director of minority affairs said yesterday.
Vernell Spearman, the director, said the purpose of the merger was to reduce operational costs within the administration during a time of budget cuts and to make minority effective in terms of affordable resources.
affairs, in 324 Strong Hall, has served as an advocate for minority concerns at the University.
Since 1969, the office of minority
She said some superficial changes within the office would be made to respond to the merger's creation of a larger division.
"Our goal has been to point out to the University those inequities we see taking place on campus," Spearman said.
"But those changes will enhance our office," she said.
Minority affairs previously reported to the executive vice
chancellor. Under the new arrangement, minority affairs will become the sixth services office in the department of student affairs.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said in a written statement that the merger reflected a gradual change that focused on a human relations approach to campus minority groups.
He said some minority affairs programs, such as student peer counseling, might serve as models for other services through student affairs.
Bryan Braxton, president of the association of black graduate students, said he didn't think there would be any change in the minority affairs office, although some students had questioned the move.
"We are students, black students, and there are questions as to whether our needs will be met," Braxton said.
Spearman said the merger would not necessarily add new minority affairs programs but would allow the office to reach a larger audience.
"Many students are unaware of programs in minority affairs."
She said the office sponsored a variety of projects, including a minority student graduation banquet each spring, a pre-collegiate conference, a six-week summer program, an outreach office in Kansas City, Kan., and a peer counseling program.
Spearman said. "So we're trying to increase that awareness."
"We have very bright, very capable students who can succeed with support from the faculty and administration," Spearman said.
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Tuesday, April 14, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Opinions
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A compact has been regarded as an agreement between two parties, but it would appear that some members of the Kansas Legislature do not understand this. Otherwise, they would not be pushing the Legislature to remove Kansas from the Central States Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact.
Arguments come too late
By a legislative majority, Kansas officially joined the waste compact. The compact is intended to put low-level radioactive waste from five regional states into the state best suited for the waste site. Now that studies have concluded that most of the preferential sites are in Kansas, the lawmakers suddenly want out of the agreement.
They claim that having such waste within our borders
would be dangerous for communities near the dump site. Further, the withdrawal from the compact would allow Kansas to maintain its own low-level radioactive storage facility. Of course, these arguments make clear sense — so clear that they should have been used to evade entering the compact in the first place.
But such an opportunity was lost when the Kansas Legislature approved the compact.
We hope that legislators will not wish to damage Kansas' reputation for conducting interstate associations with integrity. The compact may not have been made in the state's best interest, but now is the time for our legislators to grin and bear the decision they have made.
It's not often that people get a second chance, especially when it comes to illegal activities. But some KU students have been given a chance to get themselves out of trouble before trouble comes looking for them.
MCI Telecommunications officials are conducting interviews at the All Seasons Motel, 2309 Iowa St., about the illegal use of long distance access codes. Officials have said that they won't prosecute students who come forward and pay for the damage they have done.
Calling all offenders
After MCI found several instances of fraud with its codes, it was discovered that several U.S. Sprint codes also were being abused, so now Sprint officials are helping the investigation.
Students who do not come forward to make restitution during the investigation will be turned over to local authorities. Douglas County District Attorney Jim Flory has pledged full support in prosecuting the students.
College campuses have become prime targets for these crimes that have resulted in the industry losing more than $500 million.
Abuses at the University of Kansas can be traced back to the 1986 spring semester, and those students are not exempt from criminal prosecution because the statute of limitations for this type of crime is two years.
Students can do one of two things - pay them now or pay them later.
The president insisted.
A noble gesture
But, in the end, he didn't get his way.
Although President Reagan got his way on the surface, he actually suffered a partial defeat.
Fifty-seven U.S. representatives and 13 U.S. senators flung a $12,100 pay raise back into the U.S. treasury or donated it to their favorite charity
At the time that the House and Senate were debating the raise, giving their annual salaries a boost from $77,400 to $89,500, the public may have thought that the congressmen were playing games for appearance's sake. Although the congressmen could almost feel the extra money in their pockets, they didn't want their constituents to think that they were greedy. So the House and
Senate voted against the raise.
Here's the catch. The vote came down one day after a presidential order already had established the raise. Their vote had no meaning or influence.
When representatives and senators recently received their paycheques with the first installment of the raise, some rejected the presidential order and the extra money.
The congressmen who rejected the raise deserve to be praised. They decided not to keep money they didn't need. Instead, they put their money in places that desperately needed it.
Correction
Their constitutents should remember these good deeds. Even if the congressmen refused the money in a politics play, the act itself was nothing but noble.
Because of an editor's error, the term of office for City Commissioner Mike Rundle was incorrect in an editorial.
Rundle, who finished second in the commission race, will serve a four-year term.
News staff
Frank Hansel Editor
Jennifer Benjamin Managing editor
Juli Warren News editor
Brian Kaberline Editorial editor
Sandra Engelland Campus editor
Sport Subert Sports editor
Diane Doulmeier Photo editor
Bill Skeet Graphics editor
Tom Eblen General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Lisa Weems Business manager
Bonnie Hardy Advisor
Denise Stephens Retail sales manager
Kelly Scherer Campus sales manager
Duncan Calhoun Marketing manager
Lori Copple Classified manager
Jonathan McLainski Product manager
David Nixon National sales manager
Jane Hines Sales and marketing adviser
The Kansan reserves the right reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Letters should be type, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words and should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. Letters should be type, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stairwater Fint Hall, Lawn, Kan. 60045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and on Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage paid in the county for subscriptions by mail are $40 per year in Douglas County and $50 per 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-Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kanon. 66045
It is unfortunate that the business that is called the University of Kansas is not better at making money or distributing its available funds.
Ideas would discriminate against poor
In the interest of cost-effectiveness, minorities and others who have not had the benefit of attending high school in a wealthy suburb are being discriminated against at this public university.
1993-08-25
Jon Gregor Columnist
The loss of remedial math and English courses will greatly affect incoming freshman. Students from inner-city high schools, where adequate instruction in these areas is hard to come by, will suffer the most. Unfortunately, most of these students are minorities.
Deena Cobb, assistant director of financial aid, was quoted in the Kansan last month as saying that "we seem to attract the student that comes from a higher-income family." Now, with the loss of remedial math and English courses because of a lack of funds, on top of other proposals dealing with these courses, that reality will continue.
To help those enrolled in the higher-level math and English courses, the University has proposed a generous offer of four tutoring sessions at a total cost of $200. (I guess they're trying to fully supplement the budget through one program.) If you are a student from Johnson County, or a suburb of Chicago or St. Louis, you probably won't need these sessions, and if you do, you probably will be able to afford them. However, many inner-city students, who are more likely to need help, also are more likely not to be able to afford it.
On top of all of this stimulating news, the University is studying the possibility of making continuous enrollment in math and English courses mandatory for future freshmen. If not, according to the plan, they would find themselves on academic probation.
So, the situation for the many minorities from the poorer school systems could very well look like this: If you do not enroll in the higher level courses, you are put on academic probation. If you do enrol, but can't keep up with the work and can't afford the tutoring, the likely outcome is, you guessed it, academic probation.
Any student in this scenario most likely will be through at this University.
Robert Lineberry, de of liberal arts and sciences, said it was "essential" for the college work to with high schools before enacting these ideas. From his statement, I gathered that the high schools would expand their respective curriculums to prepare students for the University's new policies.
Guess what — state high schools are having budget problems too and may not be able to make the changes necessary to prepare students for the more stringent requirements of the University when they go into effect. The result will be a gap between the demands of the University's classes, and those of the high schools. A gap that neither may be able to fill before many students are hurt, unable to adapt.
Some people have the crazy notion that this is a public institution, responsible for making a higher level of services available to the citizens of this state.
Haskell Springer, director of freshman and sophomore English, was quoted in the Kansan as saying, "KU shouldn't be required to educate everybody, no matter what their level of preparation." Does Springer believe this is a private college catering to Suburbia USA?
It seems reasonable to me that the University shouldn't have to teach high school-level courses, but until the state high schools start teaching them effectively, the University
should keep its remedial courses intact. The "Snob Hill" reputation of this school is being perpetrated by the administration through its policies. The school claims to have an educational philosophy that ideas become policy this will cease to be an institution of equal opportunity for all.
Mailbox
KU has lost its focus on what its job is in the state. Regardless of the budget crunch, this University is not acting like a public institution. The ratio of minorities to suburban WASPs is not nearly adequate in light of the number of minorities in the state. The University does little to attract them, but "seems" to attract more students who holds. If the University caters to them, it is no suprise that they flock to our front doors.
To conclude, the University has lost touch with the people of this state. The very same people it is supposed to serve. It has become an elitist institution providing education mainly for the wealthy.
Regardless of the financial difficulties, the administration must shoulder much of the blame for letting it go this far, and for not trying to change the trend toward policies that have helped gain the Snob Hill reputation they enjoy. There are no legitimate excuses for this. The trend must be stopped.
Marriage the answer
I am writing in response to an advertisement paid for by Student Senate that appeared in the Kansan Thursday, April 9. In that announcement alerting heterosexuals to the danger of AIDS was the claim, "If you are sexually active, you are at risk for AIDS." If a student were to answer 'true' to that statement on a true/false test, I would have to deduce that the room is that of a fundamental exception to the statement: sexually active people involved in a mutually faithful marriage relationship are not at risk for contracting AIDS through sexual transmission.
Mutually faithful marriage is the only provision God has made for a man and woman to express their sexuality. The fact that this protects us from diseases such as AIDS is but one example of how wise his plan is for us.
Clay Belcher
Clay Belcher assistant professor of architectural engineering
University, Daily, Kansan
There is no direct translation of the word homosexual into ancient Greek, so, in many cases, for ease of translation, specific acts were translated as homosexual. Nor does the Bible say anything about monogamous homosexual.
Points miss the mark
UHLG
Paul Ahlenius Lawrence resident
3. Points one and two are taken so far out of context that I won't begin to start on those except to say that homosexuals are mentioned in lists that include adulterers, drunkards and thieves.
In a letter to the editor that appeared in the Kansan on April 6, Joe Vusch stated a few facts that homosexuals should be made aware of. Well, here's a few facts that you, Mr. Vusich, (and anyone else who likes to quote Bible passages) "should be made aware of":
1. ) In all of your points quoting Bible passages (points one, two and four), you begin each point by saying God has declared, stated or provided (respectively). You then use verses from Paul's letters to the Romans to explain why the greatest Christian writers, he is not God, nor are his letters Gospel. He is a human preacher relating his views of Christ's teachings.
2. ) In points one and two, you take the passages for what they say, but in point four, you interpret the passage to be about homosexuals. In Romans 3:21-24, Paul says "... for all who believe. For there is no distinction; since all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God." Paul is talking about the morality, or lack of, of all people, including you and me.
US IWO JIMA
US DA NANG
US MOSCOW
State pays out-of-work criminals
An official-looking piece of mail arrived at Erik's Deli in a Chicago suburb the other day.
Matt Mueller, the manager, opened the envelope and found some forms that the state of Illinois wanted him to fill out.
Mike Royko Columnist
A a few weeks later, something strange happened at the deli.
THE AFFECTION OF THE MAGNETIC FORCE
One of the night-shift employees was taking out a can of garbage. When he opened the door, he met three men wearing masks and surgical gloves. One had a gun.
They concerned a young man named Anthony, who used to be a busboy. He filled the water glasses, cleaned off the tables and washed his hands when he went to the bathroom.
But after a few weeks, he seemed to lose his enthusiasm and energy. He'd show up late for work, leave early, and get into the mind seemed to be somewhere else.
They grabbed the employee and dragged him inside. They quickly rounded up the other employees, and one of the masked men pointed at the night manager and said, "That's
Mueller would tell him, "Anthony, you have to work harder." Anthony would shrug and say he was doing his best.
him."
The night manager was dragged into the restaurant office and told to open the safe. When he pretended that he couldn't, they whacked him on the head and threatened to shoot him. He instantly remembered how to open the safe and they left with $7,000.
Naturally, the police suspected that this was an inside job, since one of the robbers knew who the night manager was, where the safe was, and that it could be opened and would contain a considerable sum.
They began wondering: Could it have been someone like, say, Anthony, the ex-busboy? The problem was that because the men wore masks, there was no way to prove it had been Anthony, even if they could find him.
So several cops posed as customers and kitchen workers and waited. Sure enough, when an employee took out some garbage, there were the men in masks and surgical gloves. They barged in but were rudely surprised to find a bunch of cops there to greet them.
One of them bolted out the door and sprinted away. The cops chased him and they wrestled around a bit, and a gun went off.
While they wondered what to do, they got lucky. A tipster told them that the same guys who robbed the deli were going to knock off another suburban restaurant.
"Oww," the masked man said, since the bullet punctured his leg.
When they removed his mask, they found that their hunch had been right. It was Anthony, the ex-busboy.
The cops assumed that Anthony either took the busboy job in the first
place just to case the restaurant, or later decided that robbing the place paid better than filling water glasses
In either case, he and his pals were charged with both robberies and are awaiting trial. Since they were caught on the spot, it is assumed that even a Chicago judge will find them guilty of at least one of the robberies.
Anyway, that is what went through the mind of Mueller, the deli manager, when Anthony's unemployment generation papers came from the state
And he said, "Hey, wait a minute. The reason he's unemployed is that he is a stick-up man."
So he called the state office and told them that he didn't think it was necessary to give money to someone who hits people on the head and points guns at them.
He was told that this did not disqualify Anthony from receiving jobless payments.
"They are eligible," a state employee said, "unless they are convicted of public aid fraud, not for just some crime. We don't deny someone just because they have a criminal record."
Mueller took the forms and dropped them in a can with half-eaten corned beef sandwiches.
When we mentioned this to a state welfare person, she said, "I don't understand why he wouldn't want to help me, but he just trying to verify information."
Incidentally, the reason Anthony is not in jail, and is asking the state for walking-around money, is that he was able to post bond on the robbery charges. He plunked down $2,000 in cash.
No wonder the poor guy is broke.
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5
Artist uses novel approach to architecture in his books
Award-winning author and illustrator speaks on campus
By LAURA BOSTROM
Staff writer
In 1989, an Arab sheik purchases New York City's Empire State Building, planning to tear down the building's 102 stories and reconstruct it in Saudi Arabia.
This plot allowed author and illustrator David Macauley to show the Empire State Building from a different angle. He took the building apart piece by piece in his book, "Unbuilding."
Macaulay, the creator of numerous award-winning children's books about architecture, spoke to about 250 people last night in the Spencer Museum of Art auditorium.
Macaulay's books explore architecture and show the buildings and their construction in simple terms. The books often are listed for children but appeal to readers of all ages. A KU medieval art history class currently uses some Macaulay books as part of its required study.
"I don't write for children, I write for myself," Macaulay said. "If you produce something that touches a child or an adult, that's tremend
Many publications, such as the New York Times and Newsweek magazine, have praised his work. Macaulay's books have won awards such as the Caldecott Medal for children's book illustrations and the New York Times Outstanding Children's Book of the Year.
Edwyna Gilbert, professor of English who teaches a children's literature class, said Macauay was a leading figure in the children's litera-
"He does wonderful children's books on architecture that are intricately illustrated," she said.
Macaulay's training reaches beyond literature. Tom Allen, Hallmark professor in the department of design, said Macaulay's earlier education in architecture helped him conceive and draw his books.
Macaulay showed slides to illustrate his methods for creating a book and some slides from his past, including a high school photograph of him painting a picture of George Washington at the River. He was paid $50 for his first commercial graphic work, which was hung in a neighbor's living room.
Macaulay often made references to his architecture training while showing slides of his drawings as they progressed from thumbnail sketches to full-size drawings.
Macaulay now teaches part time at the Rhode Island School of Design, in addition to writing approximately one book a year.
In "unbuilding," he experimented with numerous perspectives while trying to fit one of the world's largest buildings onto a 9- by 11-inch page.
In "Great Moments in Architecture." Macaulay satirizes architectural excesses, such as large cathedrals. He describes an inflatable cathedral that appearance-conscious neighborhoods can use to beautify a vacant lot.
His books explore and create, pushing the reader's imagination. In "The Amazing Brain," he drew the brain as a museum, complete with bathrooms, an auditorium and a restaurant in the different brain parts.
The art for his latest book, "Chicken." was finished three weeks ago.
"Why the chicken crossed the road,
on one foot for all answered."
Macauyacu
Elections Committee to release official Senate election results
The Student Senate Elections Committee will release later tonight official results from last week's elections, including the number of people who voted, the committee co-chairman said yesterday.
By a Kansan reporter
The committee's initial election vote totals for presidential and vice presidential races, released early Friday morning, were 63 votes fewer than the estimated number of voters.
votes. Since write-in candidates were not considered, those votes were not counted, he said.
Moore said the committee also had difficulty obtaining an exact number of voters, because some voters had been checked by a census worker who checked the voters' identification.
Also, poll workers gave all students who voted as many ballads as they were eligible to vote for them. Most voters knew they knew or skipped certain races. Moore said.
Both the Bottom Line and Synchronicity coalitions have requested
University Dailv Kansan / Tuesdav. April 14, 1987
recounts of individual schools, but the results of the recounts won't be announced until the April 22 Senate meeting. Moore said.
Brian Kramer, First Class coalition vice presidential candidate, said that coalition members did not request any recounts because they thought that the margins were too large.
"It would just be ridiculous to ask for a recount of the presidential and vice presidential race." Kramer said. "They're not going to find 400 more votes somewhere."
Graduate Student Council holds official meeting after long layoff
By TIM HAMILTON
Low turnout attributed to apathy or approval of policies
Staff writer
Thirteen graduate students, including five members of the Graduate Student Council Executive Committee, last night attended the first meeting of the Graduate Student Council in several years.
Graduate students at the meeting cited various reasons for the low turnout, which they said could be due to a lack of training approval of GradeEx's actions.
Sam 'Appalsamy, Durban, South Africa, graduate student, said that both rainy weather and student attendance significantly affected attendance.
"It's tragic really considering there are hundreds of graduate students, and we only had 13," said Appalsaheim, also a graduate student
senator. "But everyone's priorities are different."
All graduate students automaticall members of the Graduate Student
Mike Anderson, GradEx member and graduate student student, said the low turnout was a signal that he lacked content with GradEx's performance.
"We didn't expect a huge turnout."
Anderson said she hasn't been a shy speaker since spring.
At the meeting, GradEx members gave presentations on various issues, such as proposed revisions of the council's constitution, taxation of graduate teaching assistant's fee waivers and the council's budget.
Michael Foubert, GradEx co-coordinator and graduate student senator, briefly outlined the proposed
revisions to the constitution, which would create a graduate representative assembly to facilitate communi- tion between graduate students and GradEx.
"I would like to see wider dissemination of the proposed constitution than we have now," Foubert said. Copies of the proposed revisions now are available at the graduate school office in the Burge Union.
Foubert said the revisions would address the relationship between GradEx and its executive coordinator.
"It more specifically spells out what the coordinator can or cannot do," he said.
IRS braces for deadline
The Associated Press
"We're on target and our inventories (of unprocessed returns) are especially low," IHS spokesman Larry Gould says. Deadline is midnight tomorrow.
WASHINGTON — The Internal Revenue Service, heading down the homestretch of a successful tax filing season, is bracing for a flood of last-minute returns and reminding procrastinators that they'll have to wait a bit longer for their refunds.
Although the agency had been processing returns at a pace that produced refunds in four or five weeks, the big end-of-season push means a wait of six to 10 weeks. Batdorf said.
Through April 3, the last date figures were available, the IRS had received 58.1 million returns. The agency is forecasting 105.5 million returns for this year, although many of them will be delayed in filing by several months. From last Friday through the deadline, the IRS was expecting 23 million returns.
From all accounts, there has been no recurrence of the computer problems of two years ago in the 10 service centers where returns are processed. Those breakdowns were responsible for the worst filing season in IRS history and required millions of people to wait 10 weeks or longer for their refunds.
"This is not an unusual crunch and we expect no problems in dealing with the last-minute filers." Batdorf said.
PATIO BOOK SALE
"Read a lot for a little!"
Values to 8.95 Paperbacks 69¢
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All you can carry $24.99
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Values to 8.95
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Values to 39.95
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April 13th through April 17th
while 10,000 last!
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STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
DAY OFF
WATKINS STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
APPOINTMENT TIPS:
The appointment clerk is on duty 8.4. Mon-Fri. Here are some tips to make appointment making easier;
Have your class schedule handy, as well as your KU ID:#
Plan ahead for follow up or routine visits.
ACQUAINTANCE RAPE
Your conversation with the appointment clerk is confidential, so be specific about your day so we can schedule you for the proper clinic.
Make your own appointments.
Notify the appointment clerk as soon as you know that you can't keep your scheduled appointment.
Plan to arrive 15 minutes prior to your scheduled appointment time.
Acquaintance rape is forced sexual intercourse by a friend or acquaintance; a woman is coerced into having sex through threats, sexual assault and restraint. Studies show that acquaintance rape is high among college students. Acquaintance rape is highly among freshmen.
Know your desires. Communicate your limits. Accept an answer of 'no' as meaning 'no' and not a sign of rejection. Be assertive, patient, intelligent, aggressive act. If you are a victim of it, seek professional help.
OUR CHEMICAL WORLD
Drug abuse can affect your physical, emotional, and social health. Why do people turn to drugs? How did we become such a drug-centered society?
What can you do if you or someone close to you has a drug problem? Health educators are available to discuss substance use and abuse.
AIDS INFORMATION
The Public Health Service recommends the following steps to reduce the chance of contracting or transmitting AIDS:
2. Do not have sex with multiple partners, or with persons who have had multiple partners.
5. Do not inject injections. If you do inject drugs, your risk may be lessened by not sharing needles or syringes.
4. Do not have sex with people who inject drugs.
1. Do not have sexual contact with someone suspected to having AIDS, or known to be or suspecting of the AIDS antibody are positive for the AIDS antibody
6. Avoid anal intercourse. Studies suggest that the passive partner may be at greater risk for AIDS.
*nothing injected*
*inhale infant nitrites (poppers). Their role as a cofactor for Kapas's Sarcoma is being investigated.*
7. Protect yourself and your partner during sexual activity. If you suspect that you or your partner has been exposed to the AIDS virus.
Use condoms, which may reduce the possibility of transmitting the virus.
Avoid sexual practices that may cause injury or rips in tissue.
cause injury or rips in tissue.
Avoid oral genital contact.
Avoid open-mouthed, intimate
Sudent Health Officer Organization
avoid open-mouthed, intimate kissing.
Avoid contact with any body fluids (semen, blood, feces, urine, etc.)
HEALTH OFFICERS
The Student Health Officer Program meeting is tomorrow night (April 15) at 7:00 p.m. at the Alpha Omicron Pi Sorority, 1510 Sigma Nu Place. Craig Miller will present the program on Acquaintance Rape. 1987-88 Health Officer information sheets are due April 17th.
WANTED
CURRENT HEALTH OFFICERS
SHOO
Call for more information or to register! WATKINS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
843. 4455.ext.46
THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH EDUCATION
We're investing in something more valuable than stocks, bonds, or commodities.
We're investing in children. And in their education. Because we believe today's children are tomorrow's leaders
For this reason, we're proud to support Kansas Educational Excellence, a program founded on the belief that a child's willingness to learn can be enhanced by a teacher's creativity.
By providing grants to elementary and secondary school teachers, Kansas Education Department.
teachers to implement new and innovative educational programs. Programs that make learning more exciting for lids across the state.
At Southwestern Bell Telephone, we're glad to help sponsor this special program, along with the Confidence in Kansas Public Education
PETER DAVID KENNEDY
Dave Nichols Community Relations Manager
Task Force. Because even though this investment won't benefit us financially, we believe it will pay off in ways that are priceless.
For more information about Kansas Educational Excellence, please call me, Dave Nichols, at 1-574-7003. I'll be glad to answer your questions and help in any way I can.
The one to call on:
Southwestern Bell Telephone
6
Tuesdav. April 14, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
4-10 © 1987 Universal Press Syndicate
Thor's hammer, screwdriver and crescent wrench
that Norton's willingness to cooperate should lessen, his sentence. Russell asked Sachs for a three- to five-year sentence, but Sachs replied that Norton's crimes were too substantial for a short prison term.
Sentence
Continued from p.1
"The longer he's in prison, the better, as far as society is concerned." Sachs said.
Norton has a record of three drug-related convictions. He also has been convicted of charges of kidnapping, abduction, assault, burglary, theft, probation violations and extortion.
Sybrant said that Norton also was facing up to 15 years in prison on charges of assault.
In the March cocaine trial, witnesses testified that Norton had
Slattery
pay more of their tuition than they actually can, he said.
"Even though someone who may be farming may have significant assets, they may not have enough cash," he said.
Also, Slattery he hoped Reagan could negotiate effectively with the Soviet Union after his political damage from the Iran-contra affair.
Cassette tapes of a telephone conversation between Norton and the woman revealed that Norton threatened to harm her and her family if she did not return some cocaine Norton had supplied. That conversation led to Norton's arrest and subsequent trial.
threatened to track down and hurt the girlfriend of a cocaine dealer supplied by Norton.
Norton admitted in the trial to abuse of illegal drugs. He participated in a Kansas court-ordered drug treatment program in 1984. Responding to requests from Russell, Sachs recommended yesterday that Norton participate in a similar program this year.
"He's limping, but he's not down, and I hope he doesn't go down." Slattery said. "If he hits the dust, we're not going to be able to get an arms-control negotiation with the Soviet Union."
Slattery also reaffirmed his support for Rep. Richard Gephardt of Missouri for the Democratic presidential nomination.
Slattery said that Gephardt must do well in the Iowa caucuses in January and that he has the tools to succeed.
On Campus
The KU baseball team is scheduled to play Emporia State University at 1 p.m. today at Quigley Field.
"The Impact of Legislation on Social Welfare," a lecture by Robert Harder, Kansas secretary of social and rehabilitative services, is scheduled for 2:30 p.m. today in the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union.
A Foreign Student Services informational meeting for foreign students is scheduled for 4 p.m. today in the Northeast Conference Room at the Burge Union.
"The Atlas of American Women," a Women's Studies Drinks and Dialogue meeting, is scheduled for 4 p.m. today in the Pine Room at the Kansas Union.
■ The KU Hispanic-American Leadership Organization is scheduled to meet at 6:30 p.m. today in the International Room at the Kansas Union.
The April 25th March Committee is scheduled to meet at 7 p.m. today in Parlors A and B of the Kansas Union.
■ "Lexical and Phrase Phonology of Yoruba Nouns," a Linguistics Colloquy, is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. today at 207 Blake Hall.
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JAYHAWKER APPLICATIONS
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Student Union Activities is planning an exciting '87-'88 year full of concerts, speakers, trips, all kinds of recreation and much more. You can be a part of SUA by sharing your time, talents, and ideas in these areas as a committee person.
FILMS: help plan, promote and coordinate the film program.
FINE ARTS: assist in the planning and coordinating of cultural programs; i.e., art fairs, performing arts, and literary readings.
FORUMS: help plan and promote in lecture oriented activities.
INDOOR RECREATION: help run games and tournaments.
OUTDOOR RECREATION: plan outings, workshops, lectures plus overseeing the camping equipment rental service
PUBLIC RELATIONS: excellent hands-on experience in promoting SUA programs and the Kansas and Burge Unions as a whole.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 14, 1987
7
KU to restrict parking pass distribution
By KIERSTI MOEN
Staff writer
Misuse of parking passes has caused the University of Kansas administration to change its distribution, making it more difficult to obtain passes
Misdistribution and misuse of chancellor's passes, which allow parking in any legal parking space on campus, led the chancellor's office to outline new allocation policies to take effect this month, an assistant to the chancellor. The chancellor's office supervises distribution of the passes to selected people.
James Scaly, the assistant to Chancellor Gene A. Budig, said most cases of the misuse involved students who had wrongfully obtained chancellor's passes. He said he knew that the misuse was happening during the 11 years he had been with KU.
"I'm surprised that after so many years it's become an issue," he said. The issue arose in November after
KU parking officials confiscated a chancellor's pass from a student who said she had received it from Bradley Smoot, a lawrence attorney with no affiliation with KU.
Smoot was a former attorney of Richard von Ende, former University executive secretary, who supervised the chancellor's pass distribution until he was convicted on drug charges and imprisoned in 1986. Smoot was convicted of drug charges in the same case.
However, Scally did not think that von Ende necessarily had givenisen
Seally said the miseuse resulted from lack of control. He said nobody really knew exactly how many passages were circulation or who distributed them.
"Smoit is very well connected. He knows lots of people, and he could have gotten the pass from any number of them." Scully said.
Chancellor's passes are offered
only to members of the Chancellor's Club, and to certain members of the University of Kansas Alumni Association and the Kansas University Endowment Association, Seally said.
In some cases, KU parking service employees have confiscated passes from students who have borrowed them from parents or other relatives who rightfully own the passes. Scally said.
In those cases, the passes are returned to the owners with reminders that the passes may not be used by others, he said.
Fred Williams, director of the Alumni Association, said he had distributed passes to 42 eligible members. He did not think any of them had misdistributed their passes.
Williams said the pass design was so simple that people might easily have copied them.
"Unfortunately, there are certain types of individuals in society who will take advantage of the system."
he said.
Taking advantage of the system will become more difficult this month when the University gets stricter with chancellor's pass allocation.
Scally said that under the new system, he would have ultimate authority over pass distribution. He has prepared a list of more than 500 people who will be offered chancellor's passes, he said. Those who accept will receive numbered passes with their names printed on them.
KU parking services will have a list of pass holders and will be able to keep better track of the users. The user will be told void when the new ones take effect.
Rules for other types of parking passes also may change soon. parking services will hold its annual public meeting Wednesday to discuss, among other parking issues, new policies for medical passes, loading passes, temporary passes and departmental passes.
Libyan forces ousted from air base, Chad says
NJAMENA. Chad — Chad said Wednesday that its troops had captured or destroyed scores of Soviet-made warplanes, tanks and helicopters and killed more than 1,200 Libyans when it ousted Libyan troops from an air base in northern Chad this week.
Sunday's battle that ousted the Libyans from the base was considered a major turning point in Chad's efforts to force Libya out of northern Chad.
A statement quoting the Chadian military high command said that 1,269 Libyan fighters were killed and 438 taken prisoner, including the commander of the zone, Col. Khalifa Abou Alafat. His assistant, Col. Gassim Ali Abu Nawar, also was killed.
The military said that 29 Chadian troops were killed and 58 wounded. It called the list a partial one, subject to revision.
and weaponry. Libya constructed the air base at Wadi Doum in 1984 and used it to launch attacks against the land-locked central African nation.
The military said that it captured
11 Czech-made L39 bombers, two
Italian-made Marchetti ground-supp-
ported and three Soviet-made M175
helicopters.
The Chadian army seized an important cache of aircraft, tanks
French Defense Minister Andre Giraud on Tuesday called Chad's capture of the air base Sunday a serious reversal for Libyan leader Col. Mommar Gadhafi Chadian President Hissene Hibre began a new effort in mid-December to oust Libya from the north of his country.
The Soviet-made material that was captured included 12 T-62 tanks, 42 T-55 tanks. 66 BMP troop-transport
tanks and 18 BM21 multiple rocket launchers.
The fall of Wadi Doum leaves Faya Largeau as the largest remaining Libyan stronghold in the north.
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8
Tuesday, April 14. 1987 / University Daily Kansan
KU service helps students' legal problems
By CAROLINE REDDICK
Staff writer
A KU student returning from overseas last year was upset when his luggage didn't return with him.
He called Legal Services for Students to help retrieve the luggage and get compensation for damage to the luggage and its contents.
J Hardesty, the staff attorney who advised him, said she remembered that Ms. Schoenberg had
"We deal with students who have lost luggage on airlines a lot," she said. "This one was interesting because the student wanted compensation for baklava, food from another country that he'd received as a gift."
pastry.
The student finally was compensated for damage to the luggage, she said, but not for the baklava, a
Legal Services for Students is a legal aid service for KU students. To qualify for aid, students must be in good standing and have paid their student activity fee.
Cynthia Weolk, director of Legal Services, said that the service offered free aid to students in most cases.
On rare occasions a lawyer will go to court with a client for a landlord/tenant dispute or a consumer matter, the attorney is charged $10 plus court costs.
Woelk said that the service handled about 2,000 legal problems a year. She said that the three staff lawyers worked with students on taxes time working with students on taxes.
"We answer questions and do
research. We show the students how to do it on their own, even if they sit right here and do it," she said. "Our approach is to teach them how to help themselves."
Woelk said that the service handled all types of legal matters during the year, from copyright to immigration cases.
"As you might guess with a student population, you see lots of housing-related matters, problems with landlords and roommates," she said.
Legal Services is similar to other law offices in that only a few of the cases that reach Legal Services ever go to court, Woelk said.
The cases that do reach court usually are in small claims court, and the student goes alone after consultation with a Legal Service
attorney, she said.
"We don't have the people power here with three attorneys and 20,000 students to take everything to court," she said. "We help the students analyze what's appropriate in their situation. Often small claims court is appropriate, if the amount involved is $1,000 or less."
Hardesty said that this was her first year as a staff attorney. She was an intern at Legal Services for two years as a law student. She said she enjoyed working with students.
"They surprisingly offer a wide variety of cases," she said. "Most people wouldn't think that students would have so many diverse legal problems, but they really do. And for the most part, they're pleasant to work with."
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Two KU students told Lawrence police that a man exposed himself to them Sunday night in the 1600 block of Oxford Road.
A 1979 Mercury station wagon and a Lawrence resident's wallet, valued together at $1,067, were stolen Sunday in the 500 block of Locust Street,
A color TV and two end tables, valued at $1,100, were stolen Saturday night from the sixth floor lobby of Templin Hall, KU police said.
Golf clubs and a golf bag, valued at $550, were stolen Saturday from a car in the 2900 block of West 15th Street, Lawrence police said.
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If you purchased an All-Sports Ticket you may stop by the ticket office in Allen Field House and pick up your Relays button
If you didn't purchase an All-Sports Ticket, you can still get a button for only $2.00 until April 17.
This years Highlights include: Al Oerter, 4 time Olympic gold medalist
- Over 250 high school, college and university teams from over 20 states compete for Kansas Relays championships.
- Over 250 high school, college and university teams
- Over 1,000 runners to compete in Kansas Relays marathon and 10,000 meter town and campus road race.
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 14, 1987
9
Taking a chance
Former KU swimmer pursuing triathlete dream
KANSAS
BUD LIGHT
43
Special to the Kansan
Clark Campbell, a former KU swimmer, competes in the Chicago Marathon. Campbell left the University after his sophomore year to chase his dream of becoming a nationally sponsored triathlete.
By DIANE FILIPOWSKI Staff writer
The Midwest's best triathlete was only 19 years old when he decided last year that he wanted to compete for a year on the national triathon circuit.
Clark Campbell, a native of Coffeeville and then a sophomore at the University of Kansas, wanted national exposure that he thought might lead to sponsorship, which him to compete professionally.
His parents, William and Kay Campbell, said recently that they did not hesitate to financially support their son for a year, because they thought he could be the country's top triathlete if he could train full-time.
Campbell's father said he didn't know whether his son would become one of the world's best, yet he knew his son would train as hard or harder than anyone to achieve his goal.
"I really believe that if he is given the opportunity and if the timing is right, he could be the best," his father said.
Campbell, a member of the KU swim team as a freshman, had completed two years of credit toward a physics degree at the University when he decided to leave.
Campbell practiced with the team his sophomore year, but did not compete because he wanted to play basketball. He trialed triathlon while he went to school.
The triathlon, which combines into a single race the three aerobic sports of swimming, cycling and running, began in the mid-1970's. The sport has gained so much popularity that it become an Olympic sport in 1982.
In the past couple of years, about the top 10 men and women triathletes have become professionals through sponsorship, allowing them to train full-time and making the sport more competitive.
Campbell's travels last year to 14 races in major cities across the country resulted in a 13th-place national ranking. Campbell also earned a spot on the United States International Triathlon Team, which completed last summer in the International Triathlon Team Cup Championships in Comox, British Columbia.
Campbell finished third in the
championships. Lloyd Peters, the manager of the International Sports Training Center triathlon team, then decided that Campbell would be one of the five triathletes the center would sponsor.
"We selected Clark because he was the one person 20 or under who we thought could win a world championship." Peters said in a recent phone interview from the center in Carlsbad, Calif. "He has the potential to be the best in three years."
Kay Campbell said that because she and her husband thought their son was capable of being successful on the national and world level, they believed it was their responsibility to provide Clark with the opportunity to at least try.
Bill Campbell said he knew his son had a chance to be the best after watching the 1985 United States Triathlon Series National Championships at Hilton Head, S.C., where Clark finished 45th.
"We would have felt guilty if we didn't let him try," Campbell said. "We didn't want Clark going through his life regretting that he had seized the opportunity or thinking 'I could have been good.'"
"He was second out of the swim right behind the world's best open-water swimmer," Campbell said. "The meet officials were fumbling through papers to figure out this unknown swimmer was."
Last year, Campbell jumped from 45th to ninth at the 1966 USTS National Championships, again held at Hilton Head, and won the National Long Course Championship last summer in Bend, Ore.
Kay Campbell said she remembered when her son received his award for ninth place at Hilton Head.
"He wasn't supposed to be there because he was only 20 years old and from the Midwest, and the meet official handing out the awards let everyone know it," Campbell said.
In February, Campbell moved from the wide-open spaces of Kansas to sunny Southern California, a mea-sfer for triathletes who train
"I wake up every day and I'm motivated," Campbell said. "After six or seven hours of training each day, I'm exhausted. And
sometimes sitting and thinking about getting up and doing it all again the next day is hard. But I get a good sleep, I put my feet on the floor in the morning and I am ready to go."
Campbell begins his day at 6:30 a.m. with a seven-to-10 mile run. Then he eats breakfast, watches a little television, and leaves at 9 a.m. to ride his bike. He returns between noon and 2 p.m. and then eats lunch and sleeps for one or two hours. At 4 p.m., he leaves to lift weights in the gym and attends swim practice until 6:30 p.m. The evening consists of dinner, some rest and relaxation, and bed at 9 or 9:30 p.m.
That cycle begins again when the alarm sounds at 6:30 the next morning. Campbell said he looked toward to the weekends, a time from 7:00 to 9:00-mile rides on Saturdays and 20-mile runs on Sundays.
"It's like a weekend for me everyday, and I love it." Campbell said. "So many people go through life not knowing what to do. I have found my purpose, and here is my chance to do it."
The International Sports Training Center provides Campbell with housing, a monthly stipend, a trainer, a business manager, an assistant, which allow Campbell to totally devote his life to his training.
"his love for the sport is a definite asset," Peters said. "You cannot be a successful triathlete and not love the sport because it requires long, over-distance training."
Peters, Campbell's manager,
said Campbell was so enthusiastic
about his training that sometimes
he had a tendency to overtrain.
Campbell's roommate, Dan Banks, 24, from San Gabriel, Calif., said most triathletes took a training. But not Campbell.
Banks, who finished sixth in the 1985 Hawaii Ironman, said Campbell was so single-minded in his goal to be successful that it separated him from other triathletes. Someday, he said, Campbell would be one of the best.
"He is very precise in his training," Banks said. "He makes a schedule and he sticks to it."
See TRIATHALON, p. 10, col. 1
Cards trample Pirates
The Associated Press
PITTSBURGH — Jack Clark and rookie Jim Lindeman hit homers and Willie McGee hit a three-run triple as the St. Louis Cardinals beat the Pittsburgh Pirates 8-4 yesterday.
Jose Quendo singled with one out in the sixth and Tommy Herr followed with an RBI double into the right field corner.
The Pirates led 1-0 after five innings on Johnny Ray's RBI single in the first inning as pitcher Doug Bok, 0-1, limited St. Louis to two bats.
Clark followed with his second homer of the season and the 31st of his career against Pittsburgh. One batter later, Lindeman hit his third homer of the season and third of the series.
Danny Cox allowed six hits and three runs over six innings to improve to 2-0.
Cubs 5. Phillies 2
PHILADELPHIA — Jamie Moyer, in his 18th major-league appearance, pitched no-hit ball for eight innings as the Chicago Cubs defeated the Philadelphia Phillies 5-2 last night.
Moyer, a 24-year-old left-hander who pitched his first major-league game last June 14, was going for the first no-hitter ever at Veterans Stadium until Juan Samuel led off the ninth with a line single to center field.
Von Hayes followed with a walk and Mike Schmidt singled home Samuel. Lee Smith then got the last three outs for his first save despite allowing another RBI single, to Lance Parrish.
Moyer, who has a 7-4 record and a 5.03 career earned run average going into the game, struck out 12 Philies and walked six.
Reds 7. Braves 2
Hockey Club loses championship game
ATLANTA — Eric Davis had three hits, including a tiebreak double in Cincinnati's two-rum fifth innning, and two stolen bases over the Atlanta Braves last night.
With the score tied 2.2, Dave Concepion opened the fifth for the Reds with a single off Braves' starter Zane Smith, 0-1. Davis Parker then singled before Davis' double knocked in Concepion. Bo Diaz brought Parker home with a sacrifice fly.
Davis' grounder over the third bird, signaled the Reds to their fifth victor.
Bv RQR KNAPP
The loss left the Jayhawks as runners-up in the Kansas City Metro Hockey Association, a five-team league made up of KU and four teams representing Kansas City area restaurants and clubs.
- The KU Hockey Club fell short of a league championship last night, losing 6-2 to The Enders in front of a crowd of about 20 at the Foxhill Ice Arena in Overland Park.
Enders' center Mike Robbin and defenseman Todd Dahl each had a
hat trick, spearheading an offensive attack that Kansas could not shut down.
"We didn't play our game," Kansas goalie Andy Solen said. Solem gave up five of the Enders' goals, and Steve Hollelearn allowed the other.
Kansas center and co-captain Greg Lederer said the Enders were ready to
"They outskated us up and down the ice," Lederer said. "We couldn't keep pressure on them in their zone, and in our zone, we just didn't play together."
The teams played the first 10 minutes of the game between the blue lines, and there were no more than a handful of shots on goal. The Enders broke the ice with 7:24 to go in the period when Dahl scored off a pass from Robbin.
The Jayhawks got a break about three minutes later when it appeared they had given up another goal. The official ruled that Enders' center Dave Hickey kicked the puck into the net and disallowed the goal.
But the Enders got it back with 2:16 remaining, near the end of their one-
man advantage on a power play. Robbin missed from in front of the goal, but the rebound bounced to teammate Jim Smith in the corner. Smith got the puck back to Robbin, who scored from close range.
Early in the second period the Jayhawks fell behind on Robbin's second goal of the game. Robbin took a centering pass from Nick Borman and put the puck past Solem's left side.
Bosworth misses deadline for April draft
The Associated Press
OKLAHOMA CITY — Oklahoma
nnebacker Brian Bosworth did not
make contact with the National Football League by yesterday's deadline and thus is ineligible for the April 28 draft, a league official said.
had not submitted the required written statement saying he wished to be included in the regular draft.
"We don't have anything, and it has to be in writing," Bussert said. "A phone call would not be sufficient."
Joel Bussert, director of player personnel for the NFL, is shortly to retire.
Bussert said that he had not heard from Bosworth at all.
he had not made up his mind. Efforts to reach him in Norman and at his parents' home in Irving, Texas, later in the day were unsuccessful.
Bosworth may now choose to enter a supplemental draft to be held later this year, or he can return to Oklahoma and has one year of eligibility remaining.
Earlier yesterday, Bosworth said
If the two-time All-America
returns to school, however, it likely won't be to play football. Oklahoma coach Barry Switzer has said Bosworth will not be back, and the linebacker has not taken part in spring drills.
Bosworth, 6-feet-2-inches tall and
240 pounds, was expected to be one of
the biggest in the city.
Pekar wins tourney after three-year wait
Staff writer
Bv DIANE FILIPOWSKI
KU golfer Susan Pekar had to wait three seasons before she won her first collegiate tournament.
Pekar, a junior from Wausau, Wis. shot a 75 twice for a 150 total Saturday and Sunday at the University of Missouri Invitational at Columbia, leading the Jayhawks to a third-place finish.
Kansas' score of 635 left them two shots short of runner-up Iowa State. Missouri, the tournament champion, finished with 617.
Todd Brunmeier, assistant coach, said Pekar was tied for the lead after the first day and had to wait until the hole before she won the tournament.
Missouri's Barbara Blancher also shot a 75 the first day, but she scored a 76 for the next round after bogeying the last hole and finished second overall with a 151 total.
"It was a thrill for Sue to win because she has been consistent all
Going into Columbia, Pekar had led the Jayhawks in all three of their tournaments except one, the Suzie Holtz playoff final on April 11-12 in Norman, Okla.
Pekar said she was disappointed with her play in Norman and that it made her motivated to play well in Columbia.
season and she was ready for a win, "Brummeier said."
"I knew that I could play better
with them." I had some
think in " prove to myself."
Because Pekar accomplished what she had wanted to last weekend, she said expectations of herself would increase.
Coach Kent Weiser said Pekar started playing with more confidence at this time last year and that her game improved tremendously.
"She got over that hump." Weiser said. "Once she did this, I knew she would stay."
Should women sportswriters go into men's locker rooms?
The closest thing to nakedness I've been exposed to in a men's locker room was when I was interviewing Danny Manning and he went and stood by a guy who was urinating.
Nicole Sauzek
I don't suppose you could call it thrilling. At most, it was embarrassing.
Associate sports editor
Men have not been thrilled with the idea of women invading the sports media and, especially, the locker rooms after games.
Still, it was part of my job, something that any sportswriter would have had to do.
But, believe me, if you're a woman in the male-dominated sports world, it's not easy.
toward female sports reporters.
In fact, many athletes on the professional level have been rude and disgusting with their conduct
According to the January issue of The Quill, a live rat in a pink box was delivered to Susan Fernoff, an architect, from Oakland. It was from Oakland's slagger Dave Kingman. A note attached said the rodent's name was "Sue."
In that same issue of the magazine, Lisa Nehus Saxon, a reporter for the Los Angeles Daily News, said that, while covering the Dodgers, some of the players would fondle themselves in front of her. Others have stuck dildos in her face as she tried to conduct interviews. The Quill reports, "In the Dodgers' locker room, dildos-amicphones is a state-of-the-art humor."
Later, during a press conference, Kingman spotted Fornell in the crowd of reporters and stopped. He said he wouldn't resume the interview until after Fornell had left. Fornell left.
And, instead of the male reporters standing up for Fornock or leaving with her, they just let her and went on with their business.
I don't see the humor.
The reason behind the lack of men in women's locker rooms unfortunately is probably because they have a tendency to the media as men's events.
Fortunately, that situation hasn't become a problem.
At KU, the women's basketball
locker room is open to the media
for an allotted time, but after
the game, there is time to shower
and get dressed.
Men really haven't been confronted with the issue of locker room access as of yet.
In 1985, the NFL created the equal-access rule and most professional sports follow suit on the ruling
At the college level, though,
there is no standing rule for access
to locker rooms. But that may be
unacceptable. It hasn't been
much of a challenge.
During KU's men's basketball games at home, the players are brought by request into a separate room for interviews because of the lack of working space inside the men's locker room.
Usually, I am the only woman to cover KU basketball, and I like to think that if I were allowed into the gymnasium, I would do it with the same respect as the men.
But, that doesn't always happen. Early in the season when I was not able to attend an away game, the Kansan had to send another team to play the game. She'd never interviewed any of the players before.
When she entered the locker room after the game, one of the
My reporter was close to tears when she told me and asked to never be sent into the locker room again.
Said the coach, "What's with the woman in the locker room?"
Even after one of the football coaches made a cute remark about her first appearance in the locker room after a game.
Said a player, "Welcome to the Big Eight, coach."
One of my female colleagues covered Kansas football last semester and handled the pressure just fine.
players took to teasing her by lifting his肩膀 up to expose his jock and painted to parts of his shoulder. He might the might have been interested in
I guess maybe it's true that if you can't stand the heat, get out of the kitchen. But, when a deadline looms and interviews are crucial, playing pansy isn't going to be the answer.
Said the coach after she turned to walk away, "They're never around when you need them."
Nice. If women can show professionalism in their careers as sportswriters, then why can't men play tennis in their roles in the sports world?
I'm happy to say that she never had a problem with the players on the football team. She told me she thought they had treated her with a lot of respect and that they handled the situation well.
I think if a woman has enough guts to want to cover sports and to enter locker rooms and deal with men, she should be treated with the same respect that she would give them as journalists.
Maybe the problem isn't in allowing women in the locker rooms. Maybe it's trying to find a way to keep those few men who make clothes like boys from making things more difficult than they should be.
10
Tuesday, April 14, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Triathalon
Continued from p. 9
Continued from p. 9
most triathletes took a break when they didn't feel like training. But not Campbell.
"He is very precise in his training." Banks said. "He makes a schedule and he sticks to it."
Banks, who finished sixth in the 1985 Hawaii Ironman, said Campbell was so single-minded in his goal to be successful that it separated him from other triathletes. Someday, he said, Campbell would be one of the best.
Campbell's parents, Peters and Banks all agreed that internal motivation allowed Campbell to be so focused in his goal.
"All of my life, I have wanted to be the best at something," Campbell said. "After doing as well as I did last year, and on my own, I realized that this was something that I could be the best at."
Campbell said he was patient and careful not to overtrain or compete in too many races because he did not want to injure himself or become disinterested in the sport. He said he wanted his improvement to be gradual.
"I don't want to be an overnight sensation," Campbell said. "I don't want this to burn myself out before I leave." It is one of my age as an advantage for later.
Campbell's main advantage is his age. Because the sport is so new, what Campbell has learned at 20 has been what the world's best triathletes learned at 26. How successful Campbell could be is not known because few triathletes have been in his position.
Campbell said he was part of a second generation of triathletes. He said the first generation that currently dominated the sport was Dave Scott, five-time winner of the Hawaii Ironman; Mark Allen, five-time winner of the World Triathlon Championships in Nice, Frace; Scott Molina, four-time winner of the USTS National Championship; and Scott Tinkley, who has won all of these races at least once.
These top triathletes, who are 24 to 26 years old, are supposedly at their
peak, and Campbell is the candidate most likely to succeed them.
Campbell, who swims with Tinley and Allen for the San Diego Swim Masters at the University of California at San Diego, said he had become friends with the triathletes that he used to read about.
Campbell said he was not in awe of his competition and did not let their previous successes affect the way he thought about himself when he trained with them or competed against them.
"I have a saying," Campbell said. I fear no one, and I respect every one.
Even though Campbell improved last year, he said that he could still improve more because he had never had a race where all three portions of it - the swim, the ride or the run - had been good.
"The more racing I do, the more I will learn about myself and how to prepare myself for them." Campbell said. "Again, it will just be a matter of time before I have more experience and will be able to put my races together better."
Campbell said he was preparing for three races this year: the National Long Course Championships on August 30 at Muncie, Ind.; the USTS National Championships on Sept. 27 at Hilton Head, S.C.; and the National Short Course Championships on Nov. 15 at Boca Raton, Fla.
Campbell's current goal is to win all three national championship races. These victories might not come this year, he said, but may in
But, Campbell said he had one goal that superseded any other.
in 1992 Campbell will be 26 and supposedly at his peak, just in time for the Olympic games.
"It has always been my dream and my family's dream for me to compete in the Olympic games," Campbell said. "It's always in the back of my mind that I might be able to do it."
Campbell said he wanted to return to KU some day and earn a degree in physiology. But for now, he said he would follow his dream as long as it lasted.
Wednesday, April 15th 6:00 p.m.
Room 202, Stauffer-Flint
Meeting
KU/IABC
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT
IRVING, Texas — Baseball Hall of Famer Mickey Mantle was in fair condition yesterday afterbeing hospitalized for chest pains, a hospital spokeswoman said.
in JOHNSON COUNTY Available for: Typists * Word Processors File Clerks * Data Entry Light Industrial
The men, 2-1 in the conference, defeated Colorado 9-0 on Friday but lost a non-conference match to Wichita State 5-4 on Saturday.
Mantles condition upgraded
BOSSLER-HIX TEMPORARIES
Sports Briefs
Contact your campus representative Stacy France at 843-7874.
Men's golf team plays in California tourney
Donner Mountain. Walking Comfort For The Great Outdoors.
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tice much last week because its members needed to use practice time to catch up on homework since their tournaments are usually held during the week.
Mantle's condition was upgraded from serious to fair early yesterday, said Sharon Peters, spokesman for Irving Community Hospital. She was in the intermediate coronary care unit.
The Kansas men's golf team competed yesterday and will compete today and tomorrow in the Western Intercollegiate tournament in Santa Cruz, Calif.
Coach Ross Randall said this would be one of the best tournaments the Jayhawks would compete in this season because of the competitive course. Pasatiempo, that they would play on.
The 24-team field includes the top west coast teams and teams from the Pacific Ten Conference, including fourth-ranked Arizona and seventh-ranked Arizona State.
"We are fortunate to have been invited."
Randall said, "We will politically be invited back next year."
The former New York Yankees' great released a brief statement through hospital officials. "I'm tired, but I'm feeling fine." he said. Peter Sweeney little indicated he would have no other comment.
"We thought that was the most important thing to do right now," Randall said. "We don't think it will hold us back."
Randall said golf was a mental game and the team did well at its last tournament, the All-American Intercollegiate, April 2-4 in Houston. That would help them out, he said.
SUNFLOWER
804 Massachusetts • Lawrence, Kansas 66044 • 913-843-5000
Randall said the team was not able to prac
From staff and wire reports.
Kansas finished 10th in the 24-team field that Randall said was one of the most competitive in the country.
Tennis teams face Missouri
The women's team is 2-2 in conference play after its 5-4 victory Friday over Colorado.
The Kansas men's and women's tennis teams take on the Missouri Tigers today at Columbia in a Big Eight Conference dual match.
PIZZA PIZZA 842-0600 PIZZA PIZZA DELIVERED
ANNOUNCING THE CMLA
may 1-2 1987
HOMESTEAD GRAYS
ALTERED MEDIA
BROKEN INGLISH
EBELING BROS.
OUTDOOR MUSIC FESTIVAL OVER A SCORE OF AREA ACTS WILL PLAY.
THE RED ZONE
COMMON GROUND
THE LONESOME
HOUNDOGS
THE POVERTY WANKS
THE L.A. RAMBERS
FOR THE PRESERVATION OF WILD LIFE IN LAWRENCE
WANTS TO HELP YOU STUDY FOR FINALS, AGAIN!!
THE COMMITTEE
You Ought to be in Pictures!
---
SUA IS LOOKING FOR DEDICATED, ENTHUSIASTIC FILM LOVERS TO WORK ON
SUA Films Committee!
FOREIGN FILMS • WEEKEND FILMS
(POPULAR) • CALENDAR • TICKETS.
MIDNITE MOVIES • AMERICAN CLASSICS
Apply at SUA... (4th Floor Union)
SUNRISE PLACE
9th & Michigan
9th & Michigan
Featuring: Luxurious two bedroom townhouse living
- Prices start from $385
- Energy efficient
- Free cablevision
- Free cablevision
- Swimming pool
- Swimming pool
- Within walking distance to campus
We are open for show
Monday—Saturday 1:00—6:00 p.m.
Please stop by our office or call
841-1287.
IF YOU'RE PREGNANT AND YOU NEED HELP NOW...
call
Birthright
Hours:
M-T-TH: 6-8 P.M.
W-F: 1:3 P.M.
Sat.: 10-12 Noon
- Free pregnancy testing
843-4821
204 W. 13th
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The pregnancy test for your eyes only.
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Private, portable, and easy to read. e.p. Plus can tell you when your phone is overloaded and when it if you're not. You can use it as soon after a day one as a missed period. e.p. Plus a fast and easy
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ClassifiedAds
KANSAN STAFF POSITIONS
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The University Daily Kanan is now accepting applications for the 1987 Fall semester business and news staffs. These are paid positions but do not require newspaper experience.
Application forms are available in rooms 119 (Kansan Business Office) and 200 (Journalism Office) Stauffer-Flint Hall. News staff applications are due in room 200 by 5 p.m., Wednesday, April 15. Business staff applications are due in room 200 by 5 p.m., Friday, April 17. If you have any questions, please stop by the Kansan Business Office, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
The Kansan is an Equal Opportunity / Affirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
IS MASSAGE BETTER THEN PZZA?! *Find out. try steam & massage from Lawrence Massage Therapy and R-E-L-A. Student rates, Gift Certification tool! Call 841-6626 and bad the
IMMEDIATE OPENS FOR A TELEPHONE SALES SUPERVISOR: We have an immediate opening for a telephone sales supervisor. Theperformant should be capable of the ability to train, motivate, and supervise a crew selling subscriptions of the Journal World Supervisory experience is a plus. Working hours are from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. on weekdays. You will receive a base salary plus a commission for sales. The more your crew sells the more you make as a supervisor. Don't hesitate to contact us to find an interested in earning some extra cash for part-time hours. Call 843-100-700, and ask for Eddie.
THE TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION PROGRAM. As taught by Maharihani Manesh Yogi is the most simple, profound, and effective self-development program ever developed. By expanding the conscious capability of the mind and eliminating stress and fatigue, TM can dramatically improve the quality of your life. Learn it now
FREE INTRODUCTORY LECATURE. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15th, 8:00 p.m. PINE ROOM, KANSAS UNION.
LEARN TH FLY-GET 47 brs K U credit in
Korea Plumb 414 FLY-N LW
Korea Plumb 414 FLY-N
Women's Recognition Program, Thursday, April 18th, 8:00 p.m. in Aldershot Auditorium
TRAVEL AND TOURISM WORKSHOP Univer-
sity of Illinois $30 barge Union Thurs-
day, April 16th at 10am
University Community Service Scholarship
Award deadline is 5 p.m. Monday
office, Office 844-7360; fourth floor of
the Kansas Union.
ENTERTAINMENT
At Your Requests Lawrence's Bent and Most Afl
D. J. Sound and Lights for Any Occasion
(215) 346-2978
Private parties for all occasions, for more information call
843-0510
*** DANCE-O-GRAM ****
Have the Hottest Party in Town: Rent A Hot Tub
Https://www.hot tub.com
SOMEBODY
WILL
R 7:15 & 9:30
BARGAIN NIGHT ONLY $25
448-1812
LIBERTY HALL
Metropolis Mobile Sound One with a
battery; DJ EXtradinaire Weddings, Dances,
Parties, Proms. Books on graduation parties now
Hot Spots for Maximum Party Thurst 14073
FOR RENT
2 Bdm Townhouse for summer special rate,
laundry facilities, swimming, tennis, K U Bus-
Call 843 019 between 8 a.m. & 5:00 p.m.
2 Bedroom house, CA, WA
2 Bedroom house, CA. washer/dryer, just South of K.U. Prufer couple 81-493-8065
3 Bedroom Apartment Summer Sublease 2
Bedroom apartment, spacious. Close to campan
Bldl 841-6000
4. 8ftm, 2 full bath, large kitchen, living room.
3. Brand new furnished apartment. Sublease sun-
Master: Mastercraft Campus Place, Next to Yellow
Sub Cheap) 841-317
4 Bedroom in old Remodelled house. Utilities paid.
1 Back from KU. Lida, Lida 1947, 842-2252
4 Bedroom house near K U. Available mid May or June. Hardwood floors, lots of windows. WD Tile flooring.
4 Bedroom house, furnished, available June and July. Family preferred Call for information.
o. classrooms, 3. Bathrooms, Adjacent to campus
No pets. Call 842-8971
fortensions for summer and fall at University
Tearace Apartments. 1607 W. 9th I Bedroom for
summer, June and July only $190 unfurnished,
furnished all plus utilities. 1 Bedroom for
summer, June and July only $240 unfurnished,
furnished $250, plus all utilities. 1 Bedroom for
fall, 10 month lease. August 1-June 1; furnished
furnished all plus utilities. 1 Bedroom for
furnished fall; August 1-June 1; $110 furnished,
$290 furnished, plus all utilities. Central air,
on bus route, large rooms, gas heap. Come see
at University. W. 9th or 1632. If no answer call
nurse 843-1433.
ARE YOU ATTENDING SUMMER SCHOOL?
Special summer rates starting at $210 disc.
Berkeley Flats: 843-2116
Aspen West now leasing for Summer. Energy effi-
cient, 1 and 2 bedrooms. 3 Blocks west of ona
winds. Private patios deckes. ceiling fans, no pets.
$200-$400/month. 749-188. Open house Saturday.
BEAUTIFUL Townhouse for summer sublease.
Great for 2, 3, or 4' Terrific kitchen with microwave and dishwasher. 2 bedroom with patio
Dry Rooms: 2 Bedrooms - 1 Bathroom
Dry Rooms: 2 Bedrooms - 1 Bathroom
Beautiful large 2 Bedroom in old Remodelled house 1 block from KU. Ludi 749-191, 842-252
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 14, 1987
11
One Bfrm apt, for Summer Sublease. Nice Apts.
Fully furnished, dishwasher, etc. Rent
negotiable. Tanglewood. 10th & Arkansas.
843-2391
One male graduate student for attractive, quiet,
turned apartment. Utilities paid $290/month.
Credit card required.
One bedroom house 30 block of Maine Street.
to class, prefer couple available 6-14
843-982-7777
Reserve your apartment now! Just 2 short blocks from university, 1, 2 and 4 bedrooms apartments. Furnished with some utilities and off street parking. No pets. 841-5500.
Reserve your room now! For summer and/or fail.
Furnished with most utilities paid. Shared cooking
and bath facilities. Just 2 short blocks from
parking, off with street parking. No pets.
841-500
spare item, utilities and duties. Nice house,
close to compare with dryer, private room
and basement.
IF YOU LIKE SPACE & QUIET
WE HAVE IT AND YOU
CAN STILL WALK TO CAMPUS
Spacious 2 bedroom
Laundry facilities
Watered fine
Swimming pool
10-2 month leases
Roommate needs for summer *9:30-9:58* school year. $13/month, on bus route 2, story low-income girl. No deposit required.
MASTERCRAFT
Completely furnished
apartments--all near KU!
Consider:
- Custom furnishings
- Energy efficient
- Affordable rates
- Designed for privacy
- Professional management
CAMPUS PLACE—1145 Louisianna
841-1429
HANOVER PLACE—14th & Mass.
841-1212
SUNDANCE—7th & Florida
841-5255
TANGLEWOOD—10th & Arkansas 749-2415
OPEN DAILY 1-5
SPHING GRADS to Weicha duplex for rent, 3 BR, 1/2 bath. kitchen, appliances, close to park, centrally located, excellent condition. $475. Available June 1. Call 316-862-3697
Spacations : Peppertree 28H, 2 bath. Pool/Chaise Tennis. Bus RL Casuals.
Studio available for summer in super apt. compile, great maintenance, recreation facilities and laundry availability I will assume part of expenses. Call 824-9750 after 6:30 p.m.
SUMMER SCHOOL 7. NO CAR'2 dbrb admit. QR
room requests. Rent帮. Messages
QR room requests. Messages
QR room requests. Messages
SUMMER SUBLAGE extra clean, furnished.
Lakeview. 300-749-3012. Anglopee Apartments.
Call 749-3073 anytime.
SUMMER SUBLEASE Two bedroom Apt
available mid-May. New and close to campus
SUMMER SUBLEASE Need two non-smoking females to suitlease Trailroad townhouses. Call
SUMMER SUMMERLEASE: 3 ldrm apt. 2 full baths.
SUMMER SUMMERLEASE: 4 plus usable. Tangrove
and Africanamerican.
SUMMER SUBLEASE: 3 Bedroom, 2 bathroom apartment Clean, pool, laundry facilities. Call 843-8266
SUMMER SULLEASE available. 4 bedrooms. 2
bathrooms. Mastercraft.
Adjacent to campus. Call 814-494-9930.
SUMMER SUBLEASE Malls Apts May-Aug 1
One Bedroom 842-4517
AMENITIES
Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the amenities of Naismith Hall. Applications for fall semester are now being accepted while space remains
NAISMITHHALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
913-843-8559
SUMMER SULLESAE, Spacina two bedroom,
Malta. Apia HALF of first month rent.
It is a cool day.
Sub-Lease for summer Surise Terrace 3
bedrooms. Call for info 811-0497.
Sublease for summer, studio at Hanover Place.
Call 749-5490
Sublease Available mid May 1. Block from campgrounds, apartments to open in summer.
Sublease for summer* a large bedroom in two bedroom apt. Mali's Olde English Village.
Sublease one bedroom apartment Available May 17th 2015 at 6pm. Parking free at Parkeer Park. Call 749-0751. Leave message.
Sublease for Summer 'One bedroom, adjacent to campus, low utilities, free cable Call 841-6053.
Sublease for summer, studio at Hanover Place. Call 749-5440.
Sublease for summer. Furnished 2 bedrooms, full bath, garden campus, new open bars in hotel room. Buiton 814 4908
Sublease. Trailridge 3 bedroom, 2/1/8
townhouse. Available mid-May, option to lease
next fall. One large bedroom with own bathroom.
Two additional sports club facilities. $460 per
unit. 794-8348.
Sublasse laurier in 2 BAP apt, 2 bath, FP, Wal Bar,
Pool, Swimming Pool; Tennis Court at Pepperery
park, on bus route, rent negotiable. Call
749-4485 (after 3. 50 m.)
Sublease for Summer. Furnished one BR with
Lift arm extension. $35 plus electricity.
Refrigerator. Cabinet. TV-199. 78-250.
Summer Subnet Large 3 RB Townhouses AC-
nity pool, bus hins campus. Negotiable
addresses.
Summer Submarine 2. Bdr. Apt. near downtown.
Low utilities. Spacious. $79.50. Call 841-5797.
Summer Sublease. one bedroom luxury apartment with洗衣/dryer, microwave, access to jazuzi? Option to renew lease $300.00 # 821586
Summer Sublease very nice three dbrd style spring
Low utilities. Spacious. $2750 call. Call 814-579-
Summer Sublease. Near campus, great for summer school student. Bedroom plus possible reductions. Call 814-3741 after 5:00 p.m.
house. Near campus. $420 monthly. 843-3365.
Summer Sublease. Large bedroom in apartment on bas route; priv bath, deck, cable, microwave, dishwasher. $179. pizza, shopping center. $150. lge palpable. 749-0734.
BEST VALUE!
Large size 1, 2, 3 bedroom apts, on bus route. All have gas heat, appliances, carpet and draps. Extra baths, balconies, carports are optionally available. Room for room for your family, then come see us a 2166 W. 26th or call 843-6446.
Gatehouse
Summer Sublease: Furnished 1 bdmr apartment.
Call 841-1384.
summer Sublease: Need one or two females for 3 bedroom apartment, completely furnished, $165 monthly, 1/3 utilities, close to campus. Call 749-2732. Summer sublease. 2 bd. furnished. Close to campus.
Summer subterm 1: bibr apartment next to campground. After call 842-6508. After call 842-6508.
Summer Tenters wanted for very nice 4 bedroom house 2 miles from campus near bus route.
Microwave, dishwasher, and some other equipment supplied 15 per room.
Utilities. Call Erwin, evenings, 10:30-10:40, 30-10:41, 30-10:42.
Located among 70 acres of rolling hills and trees, you'll enjoy the convenience of being close to campus and area shopping.
Lifestyle
Meadowbrook offers a selection of spacious and comfortable studios, 1, 2, or 3 bedroom apartments, and townhouses to fit your lifestyle
RESERVE YOUR
UNIT NOW...
FOR SUMMER OR FALL!
meadowbrook
Martha C. Castillos 843-1290
Beauty, eh? 7 Two Bedroom Apartment. Five
Bedrooms. 800 square feet. Maximum fall
with Fall option. Leave message. 842-1020
clean studio with air conditioning located close to campus. Water and electricity paid Available May 1, 8:20am/month. Call 749-2913 or 841-5845 between 6:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m.
Completely furnished 2 bdm apt. low utilities
room. Located on campus. Reneg call
749-003.
Excellent location, 2 bedroom apartments in four-plex. Carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, and low utilities. Available June 1. Summer Rate: $399.00. Admission to A110 Tennessee and 1411 Ohio. Call 842-423-9211.
Female. Non-smoker needed to share co-ed house
for summer. B4 864/923 or B4 827/927.
Female nonmommy wanted for $78,380 school fees. B2 bath roomry or bedroom. Please answer. Please leave message on answering machine at $195.00 Gas, Wt, Dr, Pa. Female Roommate needed from May 0- August 20. Furnished Tanglewood Apartment. Large bedroom. Great bargain for $18.74 a month. Call
Female roommate wanted, June 1 August 1
room with balcony in 2 bdrm. apt. pool. $125
plus 1/3 utilities. Rose Plane Call 842-0969 after
1 p.m.
Fine location on bedroom basement studio apartmenet, CA equipped kitchen. Low utilities. Available June 1, $175 at 1801 Mississippi Call 421-4323
FOR RENT LARGE ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT MENT clean, identically located to the stadium. Rent includes water, heat, and cable television. Available May 20, $390/mo. Call 841 5062.
For Rent: Bedroom in Private home, males preferred. 843-204-9.
IEY LOOK AT THIS! Brand new 1 Bdm. Apt for summer暑休. Clever to campus D / W / A C
Bammer, a great place in town.
Get Out of the Dorms! Enjoy living with 30 other students in a Cooperative Housing. Have the pleasure of living at SUNFLOWER HOUSET. Rent $160-$240. Spaces open for Summer and Fall -749-40724 ask for
Have a duplex adventure this summer? Need female student to spacious superspace, great room, large family with kids.
Furnished, spacious one-bedroom apartment available from 5/11/87 for $90 plus electricity. Nice area, walking distance to campus. Hillcrest and downtown. Call 841-6737 or 844-6288
GREAT SUMMER RATES SPECIAL incentives,
special allowances, and special fees for
Crest Specials (April 28th - June 20th)
*arge 1-Idfm* Furnished, 1230 Tenn. $725 plus
$10 electric! Other utilities付495-769.
argive three bedroom apartment close to campus
on the same street as home day 15. Free rent through May. $35/month.
Prices include: room, kitchen, bath, car park,
gasoline.
Help Need summer sublease for beautiful 3 hdr photos Graduating. May make desks! 841-705-2600 841-705-2600
LEASE NOW FOR FALL. Roomy 2 BR apt. good location; fireplace, laundry, laundry no peta. Large closet. Walk-in closet. LIKE CATS? For summer. beautiful apartment in old house. Spacious, wood floors, fireplace, washer/dryer $300, plus gas & electricity for summer kit. set-sitting: Amenity 749-3578
houses, Bedroom Apartments, Sleeping Rooms,
available June 1st: 2-bedroom apartments. 1,2
and bedroom apartments, and sleeping rooms,
ear camas. No eets. Call 842-8971
Need to substitute Apple Lane Place studio apart
from our location. Please contact the above after May 1; Water and cable paid Call 846-7227
Person to Sublet apartment for summer. Water paid, close toCampa; Call Tamar at 845-384 or
phone 846-7227.
FOR SALE
$200 will purchase a Honda C70 with 1250 miles.
843-865-900
1987 Yamaha Scooter: Perfect shape. Asking
$460. Negotiable. Must see to appreciate Call
841-8963
14. 6 & 6.5 Mobile Home, 2 bedroom, remodeled, nice carpet, carpeted home. Partial owner financing
Droom set room, 2 twin beds, small dresser, all gown condition. All available May 18. Call Scott. (704) 955-3233.
1974 WV Bug. Shiny in inside and out. New engine guaranteed by Metror Motors. 17570 x 034 - 6600
Bet Tourstar helmet, Red. 7/1/4, $40 794-0167 after
7:30 p.m.
1978 2002, needs minor work. 1977 Hosta AC6576,
excellent condition Rost run great! Call 843-477-676
1984 Hosta Nighthawk S T 7006R, 450 miles, Still
brand new. Must sell $2,300. 841-4762
For Sirius Brother BR 15X LY, quality data
support. Standard parallel interface, 32
buffer, and port for optional keyboard. Used very
little $200. 749 1128 at 6:30 p.m.
(CAP EXAM) Study Material. Best CPA Review course with Cassette tapes. Serious inquires only 840, 842, 9525; after 6 p.m. 841, 8606.
Bianchi Sport 1986 10 speed Blue Alloy Wheels
Great Condition. Must Sell. 843-6431
50-70% of Oakland Airline Ticket Credit cards
60-70% of Hartsfield-Jackson 450, all stocked, a classic; $50.00 to 1.00.
For Sale: Honda Express Motorcycle, Excellent condition. See at 1701 Indiana or call 843-4197 after 2:30.
Music Man Sting Ray Bass w/ Hard Shell Case.
$50. Call Brendan at 943-5277.
Leading Edge CPU, 640 K, 2 KD, colorestation, speed CPU, DOS 2.11, BASIC, LE Word PROC, $12.00. Also, 300 band melded (400) Epson LX-80 printer ($180), gamesmgr ($18), TUR-killer ($18).
IBM PC/XT compatible, includes monochrome graphics, monochrome monitor, switchable Turbo motherboard w/ 512K. 1 Flippy drive. $875. 9 months warranty include. 842-5405
MAXS COMICS. Comic Books, Playboys, Pen
house, etc. 811 New Hampshire.
Must Sell 189 BMW KIORT Warranty t/10.8
New Pirelli Phantom, Tailboards, Shielded
Grips, Reynolds Rack with trunk, Cornbat seat
Rear Seats, Rear Mirrors, $285 or make offer.
423-214-1334
Make a sound investment: Medal Silver Flute From China Lade new. Includes full music stand. (602) 857-1400.
**** MOTHBALL, GOOD USED FURNITURE
Monday-Friday 10:5 3:0 p.m. Saturday 10:2 2 p.m.
512 E. 9th, 749-9618
Rickenshack bass black 4001 Excellent Con-
tent 3000 A 3000 Grassland Board. Professional
Quality 3000
NOTES now available for variety of classes.
Enhance learnings and grades. Call 843-3102
www.harvard.edu/teach
TREK 400 Bicycle In great condition! What a Bargain! Call Paul: 843-6848
AUTO SALES
for sale: Zenth 15' Color Good picture
for sale: Zenth 20' Color Good picture
Gt Timer-Sunlamp. like new, $25. Please Call
Racing Bike Tunturi 23 lbs i25 with lock Cyclo computer more $100 takes 864-2813
1977 Volkswagen Rabbit, Restored, beautiful body, rebuilt engine, 40 miles/gallon, battery/tires, long life highway car, free gas for 100 km, test drive in Lawrence, 699-2267
19:32:58 Certainia CIC GT Lifesack, s-5appet, AFC Certification
19:32:58 Certainia CIC GT Lifesack, s-5appet, AFC Certification
1979 Chevette 4 speed Standard new battery and alternate some. Needs clutch. $800 Phone
$295
76 Pace AT, A/C, 6 Cyl, excellent condition
G good gas mileage, 17 'S Color TV Sony B-141-838
B
1979 Conv VW. WV. White body, WB top. Excellent teamwork. 33,000 miles $6000 larry, Larry, Dennis, James.
1979 Triumph Shift Convertible 50,000 miles
1980 Triumph Mileage 3900 First 843-9149
Excellent Milestone Mute Set
For Sale VW Super Beetle Convertible 1977
White with white tgp. #924 2659
Must Shift 1782 Chevette, 4 cylinders, Automatic Hatchback 87,000 miles, 4 new radial tires, Air conditioning, Break lining (recently paid $90); 1300 (Firm). 81-553 153
LOST-FOUND
Found. Fresh Water Pearl Foundation Found in front of blake. 4/7/87 Call 894-5633 before 8:00
LOST: 2 gold rings, one with band of diamonds.
Last seen in Ladies room at Summerfield. If found please contact Suzanne at 843-7874 Reward being offered.
Lost $ 1,000.00. If you can find it, you can keep it.
Lost for Taste Hunt clues on KL126 10-7
Lost female black calice cat wearing pink pencil
Last seen March 27 at 41 and Ohio. Please call
(312) 859-2500.
HELP WANTED
AIRLINES CRUELINES HIRING! Summer.
Career Gap, Graduate Info.
Explore. Guide.
History (911) 844-2760, www.airlines.com
FULL AND PART TIME HELP! *National Firm*
preparing for Spring and Summer work. If accepted, you will earn 8.10 start. Some evening and weekend positions are available and some
weekend positions are required to qualify, corporate scholarships are awarded, internships are possible, and you may earn 2.34
credit(s) or qtr. semester. During summer break
are offered programs (341) 936-7850.
Mon-Feb with 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Are you good with children? Would you like to be paid to live with a California family and help with children? HELP 4 PARENTS 770 Menlo Ave. 219, Milpitas Park, CA 94503 (415) 322-8168.
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach: swimming, canoeing, sailing, water sports, gymnastics, camp art, crafts, pet camps, painting, campers, crafts, dramas, OR riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary $70 or more plus MAR. Marge Harvey, 1765 Mile, Nifl.
Children's Counselors, Instructor instructs, WSI,
Bus Driver, Cook, Kitchen Manager, Kitchen
Help, Dishwasher, Maintenance, Nanny for
(cook) Mountain Summer Camp, P.O. Box 711,
Mountain Brook, NY 10503.
Graduate Teaching Assistant, Eastern Civilizations *Department of Language and Literature, East Jerusalem* 27 Duties Co-teach Eastern Civilizations, and Understand China and Japan covering the history of China.
GOVERNMENT JOB. $18,040-$19,200/yr. Now Hiring. Call 805-687-4000 Ext. R-9758 for current federal list.
--total membership through 5-31-87
Summer Job Opportunities available with the U.S. Marine Corps - no obligation to be a Marine! Earn between $1,300 and $2,100; plus meat & seafood.
Part-time food service positions available now. If
you are interested in an Nairnshit Mall jobkey
jobE/E/M/F/A/A/A/
Naisim Hall is taking applications for a full time cook position. Schedule is Tuesday-Saturday, early shift. If interested stop by EOE/M/F/HAA
Join our "Nanny Network" of over 500 placed by us in CT, NY, NJ, and Boston. One year commitment for top salary, benefits, room and board, airfare and your satisfaction. Many families for you choose from: Contact Helping Hands, at 303-834-1742; NBC Today Show & Hour Magazine; on NBCs Today Show & Hour Magazine.
NANNY POSITIONS AVAILABLE: Good salary
many positions Dallas Call 9:39 m. (214)
426-2570
SEARCH EXTENDED: School of Education seeks DORMITORY SUPERVISOR (1) coordinate dorm staff and live in degree. Degree and supervise DORMITORY ASSISTANTS (4) live in dorm and supervise high school students. Degree preferred. DEADLINE: April 29, 2018. 5:00 p.m. Complete application to the Admissions Department at Bayall Hall. Send letter of application, current resume and names of references to: Mrs. Nettie C.H.art, Director, Upward Board, 648 Balley Hall, Lawrence, Lawrence, KS 68035 (803) 6841-345 EOE AA
Phoneworkers for benefit concert. Fun company. Good working conditions. Evenings, no enrolment.
SUMMER JOBS A new fiftie dress club is opening in Lenaea. You need hiring cocktail waitresses and bartenders. Apply in person, 9 M.S. at J. I. S. Hosts, 7920 N. Klinica Located in Four Colonies Places.
SUMMER CAMP JOBBS in the Northeast. For free list send self-address stamped (38) envelope to Midwest Camp Consultants, 1785 Red Coat, Maryland Hgts, MO 60343.
Summer Jobs for the Environment. Work with Mopirg to pass law for safe water. Positions in Kansas University, Carmen 452-259 Wk. Info sessions in Kansas University East. Mon-Med at 2:30; 3:00 and 4:00
The University of Kansas Budget Office has a position opening for a continuous half-time student assistant. The person in this position will monitor and manage the budget budgets and other financial reports, do word processing, typing, spreadsheet preparation, and perform receptionist duties. This position re-requires a Bachelor's degree.
...anted Nanny/ Mommy's Helper, female, in affluent Northern New Jersey town, close to NYC Must be pleasant, good with children, energetic, good humor, paid holiday pay, good Summer or permanent. (201) 930-9012
AIRLINE TRAINING INTERVIEWS
Would you like a career with Air
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Academy graduate! More than
5,000 International Air Academy
graduates are already enjoying the
scholarship.
You could be joining them after just 12 weeks of International Air Academy training! Find out how! Attend the special two hour session.
Wednesday, April 15
HOLIDAY INN
530 RICHARDS DRIVE
Manhattan, KS
7:00 p.m.
ZZZZZZ... TIRED OF MAKING LESS THAN YOU
JOURNEY
Company is looking for students who are seriously looking for a good summer job, hard working, with met to net $4000 this sum. Send resume to jobs@company.com
Grace, jeons, June 15, Red, White, Black
Backyard, Christmas 86, shiver, Navy, March 14,
55 mph, New Years, relaxing, flowers, shake, in-
credible, burgundy, of, white, favorite peak
Just one year ago / 41/18 my mom went to bewaft to be with my Dad and my two sisters, Lola and Shirley. We all love and miss them so. But one of these days when my time comes I hope to meet her. She is beautiful and sweet. Roses are Red, Violets are Blue, Angels in Heaven, Know I love you all. I love McClurc McClurc
Susan from Oatate - Your musician misses you
Call again. Last always. D.
Sigma Kappa
Lock out time is here; at 7:30 get your gear. Tonight the house is ours, while you sleep beneath the stars.
To My Little Jambalaya, glad you didn't need to the gators or sell me in Alabama. He hopes this will help me and we waddle in New York. I'll feed you now and Colorado mountain lions. Your Atchafalaya Baby
BUS. PERSONAL
Be creative in girl gifting Fulfillant with funnes Call Mike or Grace at Phi Plus. 789-306
TEA BOX
SUMMER TRAVEL?
INTERESTED IN STUDENTS WHO HAVE WORKED WITH US FOR THE SUMMER?
- Lowest possible rates to Europe.
- Make Plans Now!
- Lowest air fares to get you home.
WLEGLIBISAN" Write for KS/MO info PER
sabatilla Matriciae discreetly/confidently
sabatilla Matriciae discreetly/confidently
HEADACHE, BACKACH, ARM PAIN, LEG
INJURY, DIPRONIC HEADACHE, complete quality chiropractic care Dr. Mark
Wolfe
Students selected for our summer management training program will gain excellent resume experience and above average earnings.
For an interview call 749-7377
- World wide travel information.
Need music for your wedding? Call Jean. 843-3704
Give piano and voice lessons over summer.
Most reasonable rates in town for all your photo needs especially graduation, resumes, and portraits. See our listing.
SERVICES OFFERED
...ew Kconnection, 300 Elm, North Lawrence,
4021 Tuesday训季 to 6, eighth by ap-
ply 8 p.m. Fri to Saturday. April and May $ cuts and sets, $ perms
Rare and Used Record Bus, Sell, or Trade
Conscientious, Economical tax preparation
841-2292
On campus location in the Kansas Union and 831 Mass.
- Eurail, Britrail passes.
See us TODAY!
See us TODAY!
Maupintour travel service
749-0700
CRIMSON SUN PHOTO is looking for young women interested in developing a modeling portfolio. 15% over direct cost. No set fees. Call 841-9608
5 Levels Notebooks
Body Toning Classes
Tanning
- Weight Equipment
- Whirlpool
Body Shapes FITNESS
Hours:
M.F 8:30 8:30
Sat. 10:40 9:00
Sun. 10:00 4:00
501 Kuala Lumpur Shopping Cry. 833-000
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest
DRIVING ASSISTANCE offered thru Midwest,
years driver's license obtainable, transportation
assistance
*Graduates and undergraduates, money for*
*study at UW-Madison.*
*Source: University of Wisconsin,
9113, 744-7099 or 1 SCOU USA1211 ESM.
Wild Wednesdays
Haircuts $5.00
with Cindy only at
Guys & Dolls
841-8272
---
Guys O Bonds
2420 Iowa 841-8272
---
K PHOTOGRAPHIC SERIAL MACHINE
BUFFER processing
950x700mm - Complete B/W setup
950x700mm - Art + Complete B/D building.
MATH TUOR since 1976, M.A., $/hr (courses
above 199) 187, $/hr (bases 903-902)
AUTO-TINTING. Best scratch resistant soler
wireless warranty. PRO-TINT of WA-
ltonia 941-7878. 941-7878
**MUSIC******* MUSIC******* MUSIC**
Red House Audio 8 track studio, P.A. and Lights,
Mobile Party Music, Maximum Audio Wizardry.
Call Brad 794-1795.
1101 Mass.
Suite 201 749-0117
PRIVATE OFFICE Obj Gyn and
Borber Services
Overland Park...9131-4878
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841.236
Lawrence, 411.7/788
TUTORING MATH STAT. $8.00/HR CALL
914.253.3000
DONALD G. STROLE
Attorney at Law
1-1000 pages. No job too small or too large.
Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing.
Easy to use.
A3 professional typing. Term papers, Theses.
IBM Electronic Typewriter 842-342-366
cientious. Reliable. Call 842 1311 for service.
24-Hour Typing. 12th semester in Lauerville.
Resumes, dissertations, papers. Close to campus
Best quality and fastest service. 841-506.
DISSE RATTIATO
THE PRESSURE IS in Australia but will return. KEEP WATCHING THIS AD.
A-2 Word processing Service. Quality resumes, print assignments, Reasonable rates. File Management.
Experienced Typeist Dissertations, theses, term papers, etc. Reasonable Calles. Rate 842-3203
Dependable, professional, experienced JEANETTE SHAFFER Typeing Service TRANSCRIPTION also. standard tape. 843-8677
THURSDAY THESES LAW
Absolutely Fast Typing. Dependable and flexible typing. Available for 8:49 a.m., 5 p.m. and 7:09 a.m. after 5 p.m. Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard medical school secretary Sarah N. Marye, Nancy Matsui.
AAA TYPING has low cost word processing/document storage starting at $19.1p; Call 842-1924 after 4 p.m. weekdays, any time weeksend. Campus pickup available.
For professional typing/word processing, call Myra 414-490. Special spring special 1-800-guage, double
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, termials, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter quai
ty printing, spelled correcting. 842-724-274
Experienced typist; tesis, dissertations, term paper 942-8210 after 6:15 p.m. M F or S/Sat/ Sun
GOOD IMPRESSIONS Typing/Word Controls
Typesetter Resumes spelling corrected. 841-242
***
Quality typing, excellent editing, grammar,
spelling, punctuation skills. Fast, reliable.
Willing to work with clients.
GUARANTEDE PERFECT typing done on word processor. Located near Lawrence Hospital. Call 915-346-2700.
Smart Word Processing includes editing and spelling checking with very reasonable rates. Foster, 479-2740
(800) 215-2301. www.smartwordprocessing.com
Resource Service-laserwritten 10 copies ONLY
6.749.289 after 5 h.
THE WORKDOCTORS. Why pay for typing? Word processing. legal, transcription: 843-1417.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
**WRITTING LIFELEVEL** 814-3469
*NOW.* Paper 1 $50/page *Resumes* 15. *Writing Lifeline* 814-3469
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing, manuscript resumes, theses, letter writing.
Typing: very reasonable rates will also assist with spelling punctuation and call. Call 842-6292.
Word Processing, proofreading, spell checking.
NLQ printing, Reasonable. 841-1940.
WANTED
Policy
Celmate(5) Wanted: 1 or 2 for summer or for
a week of spring; 6 or 8 for summer bookings;
$85 plus $100 for cash.
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes Have M.S. Degree. 814-6254
Experienced drummer needed for established Lawrence band, primarily originals Influences are Husker Du, U2, etc. Must be devoted. Troy. 841-6314
Female Deposit $15.00 Summer only or into full
message Bonds Anytime Tues/Thurs or leave
deposit
Female grad for 2 BR apartment May 15 (Dec)
Microwave, near campus; $60.15 bills paid
Part-time housekeeper wanted for Spring and Summer. Day or evening hrs If you are a meticulous cleaner. Buckingham Palace needs your talents. Call 842 6264
1
Wanted: Female roommate non-smoker to share
spacious 2 bedroom apartment next fall. Close to
campus and downtown. $150 plus 1/2 utilities. Call
(289-3801).
words set in ALL CAPS as 2 words.
Words set in Bold Face count as 3 words.
Policy Words set in ALL CAPS as 2 words.
Vant to buy Appleworks version 1.2 or 1.3 only
all 843-4164 after 5.00
Classified Information Mail-In Form
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count Classified rates are based on consecutive day insertions only No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising.
Blind bid ads please add $4.00 service charge.
Prepaid Order Form Adds
Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment
and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansan.
Tearsheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements. Found ads are free for three days, no more than 15 words.
Deadline
Deadline is 4 p.m. two days prior to publication.
Deadline is 4 p.m. two days prior to publication.
Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. two days prior to publication.
Classified Rates
| Words | 1 Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | 2 Weeks | 3 Weeks | 1 Month |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 0-15 | 2.70 | 4.00 | 5.70 | 9.50 | 14.25 | 18.00 |
| 16-20 | 3.20 | 4.75 | 6.70 | 10.75 | 15.75 | 19.75 |
| 21-25 | 3.70 | 5.50 | 7.70 | 12.00 | 17.25 | 21.50 |
| 26-30 | 4.20 | 6.25 | 8.70 | 13.25 | 18.75 | 23.25 |
| 31-35 | 4.70 | 7.00 | 9.70 | 14.50 | 20.25 | 25.00 |
Classifications
001 announcements 300 for sale 500 help wanted 800 services offered
001 entertainment 310 auto sales 700 personal 900 tipping
001 gaming 600 sports 800 entertainment 900 tipping
Classified Mail Order Form
(phone number published only if included below)
Please print your ad one word per box:
| | | | | |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| | | | | |
| | | | | |
| | | | | |
| | | | | |
ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Date ad begins.
Total days in paper.
Amount paid.
Classification
Make checks payable to:
University of Kansas
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
12
O
C
UPON
--expires 5-14-87 with this coupon only void with other offers
Sub&Stuff Sandwich Shop
S
FREE MEDIUM SOFT DRINK with the purchase of any sub 1618 W.23rd St.
Full Service Salon and Tanning Center
Full Service Salon and
Silver Clipper
Hairstyling & Tanning Center
for Men & Women
FREE MATTRESS PAD a $34.95 Value
10 25 Minute Tanning Sessions for $25^{50}$
2201 P W. 25 Business World
3 Month Membership for $100 No Charge Per Session
842-1822
w/purchase of a sheet set at our low everyday prices (starting at $24.95)
on a Message System
Expires May 15, 1987
The Bed Bug System
retail value $39.95 now
only $14.95 with coupon
SAVE $25.00 on a Message System
exp. 4/18/87
Waterbed Works
710 W. 6th
--at KIEF's 25th & Iowa
842-1411
Easter Special $40.00 Curl
MARIAN'S HAIR PLACE
Friday 17 & Saturday 18 only
745 New Hampshire Inside the Market Place Specializing in Black Haircare 843-3010
Luncheon Special Hot Slice 2 for $2 with this coupon
Hot Slice
$1.00 VALUE
Mon-Fri. 11:30-1:30
Dine-in or On-call Only
Not valid with other promotional offers
One coupon per person per visit
Expires 4-24-87
Expires 4-24-87 Offer good in Lawrence only.
2 for $2 with this coupon
GOOD OWNERS
HOT SLICE
PIZZA
--at KIEF's 25th & Iowa
$1.00 VALUE
$1.00 off Evening Buffet (Sun—Thurs)
50¢ off Luncheon Buffet (7 days a week)
544 W. 23RD
749-4244
FREE DELIVERY
PIZZA LASAGNA SALADS
SPAGHETTI MANICOTTI
Valentino's
Restaurant
Valentino's
Ristorante
FACTOR-E AEROBICS
SUMMER SPECIAL MONTHS FOR ONLY $65
3 MONTHS FOR ONLY $6 (good thru the month of May)
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
Compact Disc 25% off one day only 4/14/87
842-1983
Classical Music on
1 LB SPAGHETTI plus SA
429 0600
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
MZZA
Shoppe
1 LB SPAGHETTI plus SALAD
Garlic Toast
and 32 oz. Pepsi
$595
plus tax Expires 6-30-87
DELIVERED 842-0600
$2.00 OFF
Any 3 or more pizzas
842-1212
THE GUARDER MAN
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
50¢ OFF
ANY SANDWICH
Expires 6/3/87
(one offer per coupon)
Exp. Dec. 19, 1987
704 Mass.
PIZZA Shoppe
KING SIZE PIZZA
$7.95
plus tax
Single topping
32 oz. Pepsi-
Extra toppings only 90*
DELIVERED!
842-0600
Expires 6-30-87
$100 OFF
Any 2 or more pizzas
842-1212
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
Figure 6.1/887
WENDY'S
Expires 6/3/87
FREE regular french fries with the purchase of any sandwich & a medium drink.
Please present coupon when ordering. One coupon per customer per visit. Not Valid with any other offer. Cheese and tax extra.
Good at 523 W. 23rd St.
Expires April 30, 1987
CHECKERS
PIZZA
Large Deluxe Pizza and 2 Pops
$7.99 + tax
Expires 4/27/87
2214 YALE RD.
841-8010
---
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
Pendragon
$100 OFF
Any Pizza Ordered
11 a.m.-4 p.m.
842-1212
Pendragon
Buy 1 Card Get 1 Free!
9th & Mass. Exp. 4/18
843-6533
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
Expires 6/3/87
CHECKERS
PIZZA
16" Two Topping Pizza & 2 Pops
$6.99 + tax
Expires 4/27/87
2214 YALE RD.
841-8010
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST - FREE
DELIVERY
---
50¢ OFF
Any 1 pizza
842-1212
Dine in • Carry out • Delivery Coupon good thru April 30,1987
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
Canton, IL 61709
NOW YOU CAN
CHARGE FOR DELIVERY!
VISA
MasterCard
THE ORIGINAL Minsky's Pizza
Expires 6/3/87
2228 IOWA 842-0154
CHECKERS
PIZZA
2—12" Two Topping Pizzas & 2 Pops
$7.99 + tax
Expires 4/27/87
2214 YALE RD.
841-8010
---
1/2 PRICE MOVIE RENTAL
Expires 4-25-87
not to be used with any other promotion
VIDEO BIZ
832 Iowa Street
Lawrence, KS 66044
(913) 749-3507
VIDEO BIZ
Buy One No. 1
Texas Burrito and
get the second one for .50¢
BORDER
BANDIDO
expires 4/27/87
1528 W. 23rd 842-8861
MEXICO CITY
WE KNOW BURGERS SHOULD BE.
LAWRENCE IS A BURGER KING TOWN.
FREE WHOPPER Sandwich
With the purchase of a Whopper Sandwich, Regular Soft Drink and Large Fries
Expires April 28, 1987
Please Present This Coupon Before Ordering Limit One Coupon Per Customer. Not To Be Used With Other Coupons Or Offers. Void Where Permitted
1107 W. 6th St.
1301 W. 23rd St.
FREE FRY OR ONION RINGS!
BURGER KING
With the purchase of any sandwich and a large drink.
Expires April 28, 1987
RUNZA
DINE & DINE
RESTAURANT
Let It Roll!
At The Jungle
2700 IOWA
749-2615
25¢ BOWLING
This coupon
entitles bearer
to one 25¢ game
during open bowling
25 $ ^{¢} $ BOWLING
Coupon Coupon
Bocky's
Two Banana Splits
$1.99!
Coupon Bockys Coupon
Level 1 THE KANSAS UNION
Call 864-3545 JAYBOWI
Expires April 29.
THE
BUM STEER
BAH-B-0
THE BUM STEER
BAR-B-O
Lawrence's only Blue Ribbon BBQ $1 off any Sandwich or Dinner
We deliver 2554 Iowa $5 minimum 841-SMOKE
A
842-2930 2120 W. 9th offer good through Sunday. April 12.
REFLECTIONS MANE TAMERS $5.00 off
841-5499 842-1253
2338 Alabama 1031 Vermont
841-5999
2323 Ridge Ct. Expires 5/11/8
- Shampoo/Haircut/Blowdry
* Perm
* Highlight
* Ear Piercing
Expires 5/31/87
MONEYSAVER
Unlimited Use
$2.00 per visit
$10.00 per month enrollment
or
MONEYSAVER
Unlimited Use
$2.00 per visit
$10.00 per month enrollment
or
$15 Off Packages
exp. 4/28/87
25th & Iowa
841-6232
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
---
Rain-bo
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details, page 2
Wednesday
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
April 15, 1987 Vol. 97, No. 133 (USPS 650-640)
KU fee release. salaries stuck in joint committee
Staff writer
By CHRISTOPHER HINES
TOPEKA - Deadlock
That's how much progress a state legislative conference committee made yesterday toward deciding the University of Kansas 1967 fee release, statewide faculty raises and a proposal to slash the state's travel budget.
A joint appropriations committee met for about seven hours yesterday to work out budget differences between bills passed by the state House and Senate.
In an example of legislative give-and-take, the University of Kansas lost about $70,000 so that Kansas State University could keep $100,000 in its budget.
The Senateate of the committee, led by State Sen. Gus Bogina, R-Lenexa, offered $30,000 from KU's 1988 state work-study program and about $41,000 from the School of
Law's budget. The House side then rescinded an amendment that would have transferred $100,000 from K-State's 1988 operating budget to its school of veterinary medicine.
"That's just it how works," Bogina said. "And it's only just begun."
Both the House and Senate stood strong on their KU 1987 fee release recommendations, putting the issue off until today or Thursday.
When the committee finishes its report, the full House and Senate will have to approve its recommendations when legislators return from their recess.
"The decision is whether the money is needed more by the University or other programs supported by the state's general fund, said Robert M. Hope, executive director of the House side of the computer
1987 fee release request for KU. But the Senate had raised that to about $900,000.
Bill Bunten state representative
We're making cuts in all other areas of the state budget, it's only fair that the universities take their share.'
Bogina said, "It would seem somewhat logical that since the money comes from
students, they should get some of it back. The 75 percent is accepted by considerably more people than the House's position."
The University generated about $3.2 million in additional student fees last year, none of which the state now will allow the University to spend.
Bunten said, "I think we're doing everybody a favor in these uncertain economic times by trying to keep the state in sound fiscal shape."
A bill concerning Regents institutions' 1988 operating budgets came before the committee, but faculty salary increases were left undecided.
The House had proposed a 1.5 percent faculty salary increase for half of fiscal year 1988, but the Senate had raised that to 2.5 percent for the entire fiscal year.
"We have a number of major differences in
all areas of higher education," Bunten said.
Bogina said the Senate had taken a very responsible position concerning higher education and had asked the House to do the same.
"We have to look at higher education and understand what we're doing to it." Bogina
Bunten replied. "You can't spend it if you don't got it. We're making cuts in all other areas of the state budget, it's only fair that the universities take their share."
Bogina questioned a House-approved amendment, proposed by maverick Republicans during a recent wave of budget cuts. He also asked the state two-thirds, from the state's 1988 travel budget.
"Was this thing ever studied in committee?" Bogina asked. "It's ridiculous - how would you enforce it?"
1895
Amyxelected as new mayor
By TODD COHEN
Staff writer
David Longhurst, former city commissioner, and Sandra Praeger, outgoing mayor, exchange a hug before Longhurst steps down from office. Commissioner Mike Amyx was elected mayor, and three new commissioners were sworn in at last night's meeting.
L. A. Rauch/KANSAN
After emotional farewells, the three Lawrence city commissioners defeated in this spring's city elections relinquished their seats to their successors last night, ending four years together on the commission.
The new commission then moved quickly to elect Commissioner Mike Amy as Lawrence's new mayor, replacing Sandra Praeger, who remains on the commission.
An overflowing crowd at City Hall watched as Bob Schumm, Mike Rundle and Dennis Conway came in to handshake and recited the gate of office.
Rundle and Schumm, who was elected vice mayor, will serve four-year terms, and Constance will serve a two-year term.
The new commissioners were sworn into office by Vera Mercer, city clerk. Merck, who retires in June after 20 years in office, administered the oath from memory.
Constance, who nominated Amxy, said, "He represents the leadership that can send a message to the entire city that we are a team."
The vote and swearing-in ceremony came after outgoing commissioners Howard Hill, Ernest Angino and David Longhurst said goodbyes to the commission and lauded the city staff.
Longhurst, appearing on the verge of tears, read a three-page statement praising the city staff and each commissioner personal-
"To all of you, as colleagues on the Lawrence City Commission, I thank you, good luck and love, my friends." he said.
But Longhurst also delivered what he termed "parting shots" to new commissioners and reflected defeat in the March 3 primary.
"I must confess to being absolutely stunned at being denied the opportunity to continue on theence City Commission," he said.
"Because I know for a fact that I care more for Lawrence than
anyone else, or at least as much as anyone else. I couldn't understand why the people of my community wouldn't support my candidacy. I know in my heart and mind that I made right decisions," he said.
Referring to the possibility of a suburban mall, Longhurst said, "I don't envy you the fight, and I don't envy you the result, unpleasantness that will result."
Angino said, "I hope that the commission follows the will of the people as this commission did and not be a nunet commission."
As the three prepared to leave, Angino, looking toward Praeger, said, "Well, what do we do now?"
Longhurst replied, "Take a hike."
INSIDE
I
Tough times
Foreign students who have trouble understanding, the new immigration bill, which takes effect May 6, should contact officials at the foreign student office for advice and correct information. See story page 3.
Baseball coach Marty Pattin wants to leave KU with a winning baseball program, but life on the baseball field has not been easy because of the losing streak his team has faced. See story page 11.
Legal advice
Midnight tonight is the deadline for filing federal and state income tax forms. To help handle the rush, the main Lawrence post office, 645 Vermont St., will have two additional collection boxes, and all returns filed by midnight will be postmarked April 15.
Uncle Sam's deadline
New state residents to pay in-state tuition
By ROGER COREY
"We're pleased," Bruce Lindvall, director of admissions, said yesterday day of the law, which becomes effective July 1. "We think the law will be a positive motivator for families and students moving into the state."
Staff writer
The law will allow people who move to Kansas in order to accept or retain a full-time job to immediately attend an action at Board of Regents schools.
He said that when people considered transferring to another state, they added up the costs.
Administrators at the University of Kansas are enthusiastic about a law signed Friday by Gov. Mike Hayden.
"The savings in tuition could be a factor that makes them decide to continue their education."
Lindvall gave an example of a high school senior in Indiana whose parents recently moved to Kansas. The student has considered enrolling at Purdue University. But because her father moved to Kansas, she will lose her resident status in Indiana in one year.
"If she chooses to go to Purdue, she will pay in-state tuition for one year and then three years of out-of-state tuition." Lindvall said.
Out-of-state tuition at KU is $3,200 a year. In-state tuition is $1,290
He said the student would pay $16,000 tuition at Purdue for a four-year degree. At KU, given a constant tuition, she would pay $5,000.
"That has to be a deciding factor-
."Lindvall said.
Ted Ayres, Regents general counsel, said it would be difficult to verify whether a student or his family had moved to Kansas on a valid job transfer or whether the parents had found employment after moving.
The original House bill said that anyone who came to Kansas for employment would be eligible for instate tuition. This was changed, through the insistence of the Regents, to anyone who moved to Kansas from another state to installment. Full-time employment is defined as 1,500 hours a year.
In the past, students who had questions of residency were handled by the department of educational services. Now, residency problems will be handled by Carla Rasch, assistant director of admissions.
Lindvall said, "We've always been the office to raise questions of residency, but, in the past, we turned the department of educational services."
Ayres said he did not expect the law to have a big effect on KU or Kansas State University.
"I expect the long-term effect to be minimal." Ayres said
The Regents may authorize students to pay in-state tuition under the following provisions:
"The statute says 'may,'" Ayres said. "The Regents have the discretion and flexibility to accept or not accept the ruling."
Cargo jet came in too low, was warned before crash
By PAUL BELDEN
Staff writer
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The crew of a Boeing 707 cargo plane that crashed and exploded Monday night didn't answer a tower controller who twice tried to warn them their airplane was too low, a federal aviation spokesman said yesterday.
"The airplane was on its final approach, and the tower controllers had the plane on radar when the radar screen went off with a low-altitude alert," said the spokesman. Bob Kline, the federal Aviation Administration
"When an airplane gets too low, the radar screen flashes and an alarm sounds," Raynesford said. "This happened twice during the airplane's final approach. The controller warned the pilot both times, but the pilot never acknowledged the warnings."
The airplane crashed and burned about 10 p.m. Monday in a muddy
field about two miles southeast of Kansas City International Airport and a half mile north of Barry Road, killing four people on board.
The airplane was owned by Texasbased Buffalo Airways but was under a short-term contract to carry
'The controller warned the pilot both times, but the pilot never acknowledged the warnings.'
Bob Raynesford FAA spokesman
unspecified freight for Burlington Air Express, of Fort Wayne, Ind. It had taken off earlier Monday from Oklahoma City and had picked up freight in Wichita. Its eventual destination was Fort Wayne, a Burlington spokesman said.
Killed in the crash were the pilot, Clarence Ray Brenner, 52, of Henderson, Nev.; the co-pilot, David Lee Zupancic, 40, of Flower Mound, Texas; the flight engineer, Nicholas P. Pennell, 20, of Axtell, Texas; and a passenger, John Lemery, 36, of Wichita.
The crewmen were employees of Buffalo Airways, and Lemery was a 12-year employee of Mid-Continent Airlines, a Burlington spokesman said.
Six investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board in Washington, D.C., arrived in Kansas City yesterday morning to try to determine the cause of the crash.
Harold Donner, who is in charge of the investigation, said at a news
See CRASH. D. 6. col. 3
SNAKES
THE CLASSIC BOOK ON SNAKES AND THEIR LIVES
编著人
Danny Ray/KANSAF
Susan Novak, Chicago graduate student; Richard Seigel, researcher with the Savannah River Ecology Laboratory in South Carolina; and Joseph Collins, KU zoologist, pose with two of their subjects. The three co-edited the book "Snakes: Ecology and Evolutionary Biology."
Snakes sliding into research roles
By NOEL GERDES Special to the Kansan
You're hungry, but your feet are tied together, your hands are pinned behind your back and you're lying belly down on the floor. In front of you looms the refrigerator, and to eat, you must open the door.
If you can imagine this, then you can imagine what snakes must go through to catch a meal, said Joseph Collins, KU zooolist and editor with the Museum of Natural History.
After years of slithering on the earth, snakes finally are coming into their own as research animals. Collins said.
And Collins should know
Collins, Susan Novak, Chicago graduate student and Richard Seigel, researcher with the Savannah River Ecology Laboratory in South Carolina, spent about two and a half years compiling "Snakes: Ecology and Evolutionary Biology."
The 529-page text, released April 8 by Macmillan Publishing Co., is the most comprehensive book
about snakes available today, Collins said.
it attempts to summarize knowledge of snake biology and to serve as a launching point for research in the future." Collins said.
"If you take about four or five people out and lift rocks, you'll get a snake about every 50 rocks," he said.
Some scientists also may hesitate to use snakes because they are uncomfortable around them. Novak said that when she began working for an ecology laboratory, she was afraid of snakes but overcame her fear quickly.
Some snakes common in Kansas are the racer, the bull snake, the milk snake and the ringneck. Collins said that these species were harmless and would make excellent research animals.
If scientists want to research snakes, they must either catch the reptile themselves or order them from biological supply houses. Collins said that snakes were not aggressive toward humans was willing to use local species.
Scientists have overlooked snakes as laboratory animals, he said, because of a bias toward white mice and rats, which are readily available, cheap and easy to breed in captivity.
Collins said that snakes offered research opportunities that rats and mice could not.
Collins said that Takeru Higuchi used black rat snakes for his experiments. Higuchi, Regents distinguished professor of chemistry and pharmacy and former chairman of the department of pharmaceutical chemistry, died of heart failure March 24.
"For example, how does an animal without arms and legs go about eating?" Collins said. "How do snakes manage to survive and reproduce without any of the appendages we consider normal?"
Although the book is geared for biology researchers, professors and their students, Collins that said anyone with a casual interest in snakes might find parts of it useful.
See SNAKE, p. 6, col. 5
2
Wednesday, April 15, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Around the World
MOSCOW — Mikhail Gorbachev offered during his visit yesterday with Secretary of State George P. Bush to meet Iran in a range nuclear weapons in Europe.
The effect of the latest proposal was not immediately clear. The two sides have been working toward an agreement on weapons with a range of 600 to 3,000 miles, but the lack of coordination with a range of 350 to 600 rules.
Charges of espionage by both sides have surrounded the Shultz visit, but nuclear arms dominate Gorbachev's agenda. U.S. and Soviet arms experts have held separate meetings in an attempt to narrow differences.
A dispute over the 130 short-range Soviet weapons has delayed an agreement on medium-range missiles.
Before the discussions began.
Shultz handed Gorbachev a new invitation from President Reagan for a summit in Washington, but the Soviet leader said, "Generally, without reason, I do not go anywhere, particularly America."
Gorbachev, 56, has steadfastly resisted Reagan's invitation, although the two leaders decided at their 1985 meeting in Geneva to hold summits in both Washington and Moscow.
The espionage issue is more volatile. Shultz confronted Foreign Minister Eduard A. Shevardnadze at the start of his visit Monday with charges that Soviet spies helped by U.S. Marine guards had access to sensitive files at the U.S. Embassy.
Soviet officials maintain that there was extensive U.S. bugging of their diplomatic facilities in Washington and New York.
Across the Country
Five more Marines recalled for questioning
WASHINGTON — The investigation of an espionage scandal that has rocked the Marine Corps' elite embassy guard force broadened yesterday with the announcement that four guards formally started overseas countries were being recalled from Austria for questioning.
Robert Sims, chief Pentagon spokesman, said the Marines, now assigned to the U.S. Embassy in Vienna, were suspected of possible improper fraternization with foreign citizens while posted to other embassies in Warsaw Pact nations.
The four will return to the Quantico, Va., Base, where the espionage inquiry is being conducted.
A fifth Marine is being replaced for unrelated violations of "local security regulations" in Vienna,
Sims said. A sixth was recalled to appear as a witness at a pre-trial hearing Wednesday for Sgt. Clayton J. Lonetree, the guard whose arrest touched on the current investigation.
Sims told a news briefing that he could not release the identities of the Marines who had been recalled nor disclose at which embassies the men had served before serving in Vienna. He stressed that none had been formally charged with wrongdoing.
Lonetree, who has been charged with espionage, was arrested in December at the Vienna embassy.
The Marine Corps has formally accused Lonetree and a second former guard, Cpl. Arnold Bracy, of allowing Soviet agents inside the Moscow embassy on numerous late-night spying forays last year.
Senate wants a look at Secord's accounts
WASHINGTON — The Senate urged a federal judge yesterday to order retired Air Force Maj. Gen. Richard V. Secord to release foreign bank records believed linked to the Iran-contra arms deals.
learn about the flow of money through the bank accounts.
Senate attorney Michael Davidson said the Senate Iran-contra committee wanted the records to
The Tower Commission's report said a chart found in the safe of fired National Security Council aide Oliver North indicated that contributions to the contras were made by two individuals or organizations, some of them linked to bank accounts controlled by Secord.
The Senate voted last month to seek a contempt of court citation that would threaten Secord with imprisonment if he did not give investigators access to bank records in Switzerland, the Cayman Islands and Panama.
Secord's attorney, Thomas C. Green, said yesterday that such an order would violate Secord's concession to self-incrimination against self-incrimination.
Green said the Swiss authorities could refuse to honor the directive, knowing that Secord objected to signing it.
Bundy says he got letters from Hinckley
WASHINGTON — Triple murderer Theodore Bundy told Secret Service agents that he received three or four letters from presidential assailant John W. Hinckley Jr. during an exchange of correspondence last year, prosecutors said yesterday.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Roger Adelman said in court that Bundy, awaiting execution in Florida for three 1978 killings, told the Secret Service that Hinkley began writing him in May 1986.
Bundy says he has written Hinc
kley two or three times, but says that the correspondence was initiated by Hinckley. Adelman said.
Bundy told the Secret Service that he threw out the letters he received from Hinckley, Adelman said.
The government is seeking the letters to document its opposition to Hinckley's bid to make an unscorted family visit from St. Elizabeth Hospital, where he was for shooting Reagan in 1981.
Hinckley has requested to leave during Easter weekend.
From Kansan wires.
Weather
From the KANSAN Weather Service
LAWRENCE FORECAST
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
Today will be mostly cloudy with a chance of showers in the morning. It will become partly sunny by late afternoon with a high near 60 degrees. Tonight will be partly cloudy with light winds and a low near 45.
Tomorrow will be sunny with a high near 70. WEATHER FACT: The warmest low temperature recorded on this date was 63 degrees.
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LINCOLN
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SALINA
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61 / 49
COLUMBIA
60 / 48
ST. LOUIS
58 / 48
WICHITA
68 / 47
CHANUTE
64 / 45
SPRINGFIELD
62 / 46
TULSA
75 / 59
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesdav April 15, 1987
Campus and Area
Local Briefs
Author Wolfe will discuss writing tonight
Tom Wolfe, "new journalism"
writer and author of "The Right
Stuff" and "The Electric Kool-Aid
Acid Test," will talk about his
writing at 8 p.m. today in Hoch
Auditorium.
Wolf's lecture, which is free, is sponsored by the Student Union Activities forums committee and the Student Senate lecture series. He will answer questions from the audience after his speech.
Date, location of concert changed
Retired professor elected to AAAS
The date and location of a concert sponsored by the April 25th March Committee have been changed. The concert will raise money for students to travel to Washington for a march protesting U.S. policies in Central America and South Africa.
A retired KU geography professor has been elected a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
The concert will be at 8 p.m.
April 21 at the Jazzhaus, $925%
Massachusetts St. The bands Com-
panions will perform Media and
Manna will perform
George F. Jenkens, was one of 306 fellows elected to the association last month at it annual meeting in Chicago. The association describes a fellow as a "member whose efforts on behalf of the committee have resulted in its applications are scientifically or socially distinguished."
Jenks came to KU in 1949 from the University of Arkansas, where he was an assistant professor of rural economics and sociology for one year.
He conducted research at KU and taught undergraduate and graduate courses in computer mapping, map development, symbolization and other topics.
Applications due soon for Kansan
Applications for fall semester news and business staff positions on the Kansan are available in 119 and 200 Staffaur-Flint Hall. The deadline for news applications is 5 p.m. today and the deadline for business applications is 5 p.m. Friday.
Interviews for news staff positions will be conducted tomorrow, Friday and Sunday. Applicants must sign up for interviews in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint.
For more information, call the newsroom at 864-4810 or the Kansas business office at 864-4358.
KU leads way with five-year teaching program
A national organization designed to improve teaching may follow the lead of the University of Kansas in teacher education, the KU associate dean of education said yesterday.
By BENIAMIN HALL
Staff writer
KU joined the organization, known as the Holmes Group, in November. The group includes 94 institutions. Each paid $4,000 to belong.
One of the group's goals is to promote five-year programs in education.
From staff and wire reports.
KU already has a five-year program.
Jerry Bailey, associate dean of education,
said yesterday that he expected other institutions to follow KU's lead.
"My hunch is that sometime in the future there'll be a lot of institutions that have programs like ours," he said.
But Bailey said the Holmes Group didn't yet have a specific model for a five-year program. "Practically everybody has his or her own idea of what that model looks like," he said. "The group is so young that it hasn't conceptualized what a program ought to look like."
Edward L. Meyen, dean of education, said last spring's graduates were the first education majors to complete KU's five-year program.
KU education students spend two years taking courses in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, two years in professional education courses and student teaching, and a fifth year in professional courses and internships
"We're already a step ahead." Meyen said.
KU is one of the very first to go to this model. Messen said we are watching from monitoring their programs.
"We're going to benefit from what they learn," he said. "We're going to be influenced by teacher education reform in general."
pleted a five-year program could be classified as professional teachers.
The Holmes Group's proposal for teacher education reform would require prospective teachers to earn a bachelor's degree in a related field. Teachers must also degree in education. Only students who com-
But Meyen said the group recently had become a little more flexible in its agenda. The group's first meeting was in January.
Bailey said, "People have all kinds of different programs."
Some education schools now require about nine semesters of courses and others require a four-year liberal arts degree and two years of professional education courses. Bailey said.
The University of Florida in Gainesville is the only major institution with a program like the one at KU, Bailey said.
Club helps students organize business
By PEGGY O'BRIEN
Staff writer
Ideas, motivation and contacts are the building blocks for the Association of College Entrepreneurs, a network of students who are interested in starting their own businesses.
ACE, an international organization founded by a Wichita State University professor, gives its members the opportunity to meet people with similar interests.
Josef Schulte, Lawrence senior and treasurer of the KU chapter of ACE, said many of the club's members had joined their group and found its speakers inspiring.
Beth Larson, St. Louis senior and president of the KU chapter, said ACE helped her focus on what she wanted to do, made her aware of aspects of business she'd never considered before and warned her of mistakes she could avoid.
Larson, who has a real estate license and plans to work in real estate after she graduates, said that through ACE she had met people who had taken business risks and come out on top.
"ACE is a good place to hook up with people," said club secretary Diane McGuire.
Schulte said that ACE almost had been more useful than school. He said that he had learned through ACE about applying techniques he had learned in college, such as marketing and promotional skills.
'ACE is a good place to hook up with people.'
E. J. McKenna Lee's Summit junior
Several of the club members have used a new marketing concept to start a firewood business.
Brad Snyder, Hutchinson graduate student, a founder of the KU chapter, said the students who work together have never would have met without ACE.
Schulte said the club started about two years ago, dropped for a while and then rebounded.
Larson, Schulte and McKenna said that they were impressed by the group's speakers, who offered insight into the business world. The speakers of entrepreneurs who have taken risks and succeeded with their business ideas.
Members of ACE meet once a month to listen to guest speakers or participate in round table discussions. Dues are $17.50 a year.
A girl walks along a path in a park.
Sharon Calvin, Linwood junior, makes her way up the hill near the Spencer Museum of Art. Calvin needed a raincoat to battle the rainy conditions that Lawrence has had this week. The rains are expected to continue today.
Welfare director says budget shift is key to survival
By CAROLINE REDDICK
Rain lane
Staff writer
The Kansas welfare program can survive budget cuts by cutting the eligibility of some groups and by rearranging existing budget money, a state official said yesterday.
Robert Harder, secretary of the Kansas Department of Social and Rehabilitative Services, spoke to about 100 people in the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union on the effect of current legislation on social programs. His speech was sponsored by the School of Social Welfare.
"I think we actually fared well as far as the Legislature went," Harder said, referring to state legislative committee recommendations on the welfare budget.
“If you break even, you feel as if that’s a relatively good year,” he said. “We do not get enough dollars to pay for services on the social demands are at the time.”
He said that after a thorough examination of the budget, state House and Senate committees recommended transferring $500,000 of transitional general assistance used to support community kitchens. Harder said the department was phasing out transitional assistance.
They also proposed that the state make direct payments to day care centers for children whose parents receive Aid for Dependent Children. Parents now pay the bill and are reimbursed later by the state. Harder said the Legislature wanted to encourage single parents to work by making day care affordable.
"They think that since so many mothers of welfare are working,
mothers on welfare must as well be working too." Harder said.
Harder said the agency wanted to increase family support systems and thereby reduce the number of abused children in institutions.
"We'll be working with more kids in their own home and working to stabilize the family," he said. "But we still don't have enough staff in the field. We have difficulties in getting the Legislature to see that putting additional workers in the field is not just building the bureaucracy."
"We have a problem in our state." Dutton said. "Welfare is low on the priority list. We have to look to social action. We need citizen action."
After Harder's speech, Ed Dutton associate professor of social welfare, told the audience that it needed to get involved in community programs.
The area manager of the Topeka-Lawrence SRS, Faith Spencer, said she thought Topeka and Lawrence wouldn't suffer from budget cuts.
"The budget people have indicated that by switching things around there is enough money, and I feel it's important to know what they're doing," she said.
"It's going to make it a lot harder for people to receive assistance," he said. "I think they ought to reduce spending in some other areas and get more federal money in the programs."
New immigration laws confusing, official says
David Boehnek, Lenexa sophmore in social welfare, said he attended the speech because he was concerned about budget cuts.
Staff writer
By JOSEPH REBELLO
Foreign students who take the advice of other students pretending to be experts on new immigration laws may be playing a dangerous game, the director of foreign student services said yesterday.
"We have some students at KU who perceive themselves as immigration experts, and we've had students burned because of what they've been told," Clark Coan, the director, told about 25 students who attended a workshop on the new immigration laws in the Daisy Hill room at the Burge Union.
Coan said that the changing immigration laws were difficult to understand even for those familiar with them. Students in doubt should consult the foreign student office, he said.
"If you get the wrong information you could get into trouble," Coan said. "And our aim is to keep foreign
students out of trouble."
The new immigration bill was signed by President Reagan November 6 and goes into effect May 6. The bill is designed to stem the flow of illegal aliens into the United States, although parts of it affect foreign students who are in the country legally, Coan said.
The law makes it easier for foreign students to change schools or to undertake a second or third degree, he said.
After May 6, universities' foreign
student offices will be authorized to
guide students.
Previously, students who wanted to transfer to another school or enter another degree program were required to apply to the Immigration and Naturalization Service at least 60 days in advance.
Students learn practical training permits also will have an easier time under the law, Coan said. Practical training opportunities in the United
States now are available for all foreign students who can show that the same opportunities are not available in their countries.
However, the period of training cannot exceed one year, and students who apply for work permits under a practical training visa may not take a job that is unrelated to their field of study, Coan said.
Under the old law, students had to apply to the INS at least 60 days before training began. Now, foreign students offices will be authorized to give that permission, Coan said.
But unless students apply for permission within 30 days after graduation, they may lose their practical training opportunity, he said.
The new law also places some obstacles in the way of students who plan to extend indefinitely their stay in the United States, he said.
Students who receive practical training visas are now obliged to return to their home country after
one year of training. Once they have been on a practical training visa, they will not be able to apply for a temporary work permit, or a H-1 visa, Coan said.
The law also puts a cap on the number of years foreign students can take to finish their studies. Whether they plan to complete a bachelor's or master's degree, doctorate or all three, they must finish within eight years.
Coan said the largest beneficiaries of the immigration law were not students but foreign nationals who had been in the U.S. illegally from before Jan. 1, 1982
"That's an irony of the immigration law," he said. "If you've been legalized, you will be benefits. Some are to five million illegal aliens are going to be made legal."
"Persons who have followed the law and kept their noses clean, they're not going to have that privilege."
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Wednesday, April 15, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Opinions
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Libraries in a bind
The University of Kansas has attained a strong academic reputation over the years, and one reason has been its commitment to a healthy library system.
Now that system is being threatened by budget cutbacks and the declining value of the dollar overseas. Because of this, students and professors may not have as much information at their fingertips as they once had.
Last week, Jim Ranz, dean of libraries, said the libraries were starting to cancel as many as one-quarter of the periodical subscriptions. In the last two years, the libraries have lost $843,000 in net buying power and the University libraries would run up a $900,000 deficit next year if they tried to maintain the current periodical subscriptions and the level of book acquisitions.
Despite the 3.8 percent cutback, which cost the libraries $58,000 this year, it has been
the decline of the dollar's power that has hurt the most, said Ron Francisco, chairman of the University Senate library committee.
The University needs to take preventive measures to preserve the KU library system.
Fee release will help some, but that may not be enough. In order to keep the library system strong, the University needs to take additional steps such as a contigency fund like Francisco has supported. This fund would be financed either by the state or through endowments. It would collect interest and dividends when the dollar is strong and release money to the library when the dollar is weak.
Steps such as these to maintain the strong tradition of the KU libraries will keep librarians from saying, "I'm sorry, we don't carry that anymore," when students and faculty need publications for research.
Handle with care
Only a short time ago, one of the state's mental hospitals, the Winfield State Hospital and Training Center, came under the scrutiny of federal inspectors after problems, including patient abuse, were reported at the facility. The hospital ended up losing its eligibility for more than $700,000 a month in Medicaid. Federal officials said the state could have until summer to improve the center.
Now, a new set of problems are plaguing another state hospital.
State inspectors have uncovered problems with patient care at the Norton State Hospital. The hospital was told to make improvements in "its treatment of mentally retarded adults and to reduce its reliance on medications as a substitute for trying to make
the clients more self-sufficient." These improvements must be made by June 15.
Running a state hospital, especially one that takes care of mentally retarded individuals, must be done with a lot of caution and attention. The lax care that has been given at these hospitals not only puts the welfare of these patients in jeopardy, it also is a disgrace to the state.
The state has begun to take some steps towards improving conditions, but not enough. They need to take a firm stand and crack down on the inefficiencies at these and similar institutions. The state has a responsibility to look after the well-being of those citizens who can't take care of themselves. They should be doing a better job of ensuring that responsibility.
Freedom to obey
The anti-apartheid protesters in South Africa have not given up their struggle for freedom despite the harsh attempts by the Pretorian government to silence them.
And each time the South African government tries to restrict the people, they come back with greater strength.
The government recently outlawed any actions or expressions that protest the detention people without a trial or call for the release of those detained.
President Pietter Bothe gave the police additional power when he declared a state of emergency that was intended to quiet the general public. The police are restricting the public's rights to speak, write and assemble, because the public might offend the government and its policies.
But the protesters in South Africa refuse to let the government take away their basic freedoms, Protesters, including Anglican Archbishop Desmond Tutu, continue to plan church services to pray for those who have been jailed.
They continue to violate the government's attempts to deny them free thought and expression. The problems in South Africa are not over, nor will they be until the people of the country, black and white, rid it of the despicable system of apartheid.
Any support to the South African government is support for apartheid. The U.S. government, and U.S. universities and companies, should cut all ties with the South African government.
The United States should be a leader and encourage other countries to break ties, until the dehumanizing system of aparthief is conquered.
Frank Hansel
Jennifer Benjamin
Juli Warren
Brian Kablerine
Sandra Engelland
Mark Subert
Diane Dullmeier
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News staff
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words and should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the organization, the name of the organization should be included.
Guest shots should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
of Santiago, continues to compile the gruesome figures about tortures, detentions and disappearances.
The Kansan reserves the right reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
It is too soon to figure out whether the pope's visit will have any effect on the government of Chile. Authoritarian regimes such as those in the Philippines and Haiti continued many years after papal visits. Later, both regimes were overthrown by the opposition.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawn, Kan. 6045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and on Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage paid in Canadian dollars by mail are $40 per year in Douglas County and $50 per 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-Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kanen, 66045.
To make sure that everybody in the world fully understood his message, Pope John Paul II repeated it in at least five languages: The military government of Chile is "dietorial," and the Roman Catholic Church will continue to fight for political freedom in Chile.
Pope's visit promotes hope for freedom
Carlos
Chuquin
Columnist
In his recent visit to Chile, the pope's effort was to "proclaim the malicious dignity of a human person." This was a big slap to the government of Augusto Pinochet, which is responsible from numerous human rights violations since coming
The Roman Catholic Church has been taking the position that the Pinochet government should enact constitutional changes so a quick transition to democracy can take place in 1989, the year of the next national elections.
to power in September 1973.
With political parties, unions and professional organizations strictly controlled by the state, the church has become the last hope for the Chilean people to restore democracy.
President Pinochet has made it clear that he intends to present himself as the only candidate in those national elections. This would mean an extension of his term until 1997.
government "has been inspired by the superior objective" of restoring political stability and institutional government.
When Pinochet welcomed the pope, he said his politically troubled country had sought stability in the face of "the most extreme materialistic and atheistic ideology ever known to man." Pinochet insisted that his
Chileans think the pope's presence in their country has renewed their confidence and hopes for freedom and justice. At least during the pope's stay in Chile, the people experienced a rare taste of civil freedom.
But Pinochet's unbelievable statements have not demoralized the church as they have other opposition political forces. The church in Chile has emerged as a vocal opponent of the military regime, with the only hope that what happened in the Philippines a year ago will occur in Chile.
The church's role in the Philippines became important in the ouster of Ferdinand Marcos.
The church itself is seeking the total restoration of democracy and respect of civil liberties. A total of 3,778 citizens of Chile are still forbidden to return to their homelands. The Chilean Human Rights Commission established in 1973 by Cardinal Raul Silva Henriquez, former archbishop
As John Paul said, "the church is in Chile to promote the victory of good over evil." Sooner or later, Pinchet will realize that his days as a dictator are over, and the real democracy will be restored.
Mailbox Biased coverage
Racism is alive and well at KU especially in the Kansan.
During the International Festival, Arabs were among the most who participated, both in the exhibitions and the cultural show. The Palestinians were co-awarded first prize overall. Did the Kansan devote any space to their table or why they won? No. Neither did they devote any attention to the other Arab participants. Let's give credit where credit is due.
We would like to challenge the Kansan to give unbiased and non-racist coverage to Palestinians as well as the other Arabs in Lawrence and abroad.
Whenever the Palestinians have a demonstration or march, the Kansan invariably asks someone from a Jewish organization their opinion. Why don't you consult the Palestinians about Jewish activities on camps or when the Palestinians are killed in war? After all, the Palestinians here do have relatives in those camps.
We, among many, are tired of the poor coverage of the "other side of the story." We especially are disappointed by the lack of interest the Kansan displays in an issue that even now commands international headlines.
It seems as though everyone here is afraid of being labelled anti-semitic. Let's get something straight. Arabs are semitical people too. Perhaps the Jews here would accuse the Kansan of anti-semitism if it printed something against Israel.
Let's hear less about what happened 40 years ago in Europe and more about what is happening now in the Middle East.
But what about the Palestinians? We thought freedom of the press included reporting the whole truth, not just selective pieces that minimize the importance of racism against Arabs and Palestinians both in Lawrence and around the world.
Yes, it was too bad about Hitler and the Jews. But that was 40 years ago. How about Begun, Sharon and Shamir and the Palestinians? This is the present we live in.
Hundreds of thousands of innocent Palestinian men, women and children are being murdered no less atrociously, yet they are still unheard above the cry of the Zionist Jews who want blood for derailing the Palestinians and are making the Palestinians pay it.
Prove to us that the Kansan is not racist against Arabs and Palestinians in particular. We have seen little evidence to the contrary.
Beth Wiens Lawrence senior
Mahmoud Abu-Ali Nazareth, Palestine junior
AND WHILE WE'RE AT IT...
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EMBASSY
MOSCOW
Program should end discrimination without eliminating talented people
One result of a recent Supreme Court decision is that employers now can promote women over men who may be more qualified. Another result will be to cast an inevitable suspicion over women who get promotions: Did they get their jobs
PAUL
GREENBERG
Columnist
through the classifieds or through sex discrimination? It probably will be that much harder now for deserving women in the work force to get the respect due them.
The same thing happens when some bright student gets into Harvard or Yale nowadays. Somebody familiar with the prevailing favorisms is bound to wonder: "Was it because the kid is black?" That's scared fair to the truth, which he whispers in a creed color or national origin. But that's the effect of college admissions weighted by race and sex.
Preferences like these on the job or in education used to be called discrimination when they favored men or whites. When, when women or blacks are favored, that's called Reverse Discrimination. But discrimination is still discrimination. And one result hasn't changed: Confidence in those favored is undermined and standards made suspect.
"It's probably the worst Affirmative Action decision ever issued by
Once upon a time, Affirmative Action meant searching for the highest quality among victims of prejudice, rather than promoting people without their qualifications being the most important consideration. The country needs to eliminate such discrimination on the grounds of race or sex. Instead, the Supreme Court has united the nation about how ownership it. Only in terms of thought is this decision not very discriminating.
the Supreme Court," says Linda Chavez, who as staff director of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights helped make it a commission for civil rights and not just a lobby for the more popular minorities. As usual, she went to the root of the problem, and injustice, of favoritism: "I think, with many of these decisions, that in a sense it does a great disservice to the intended beneficiaries. In my view, the women's movement was aimed at allowing women to compete on an equal footing without regard to their sex, and I think what this decision does is return us to the nineteenth-century concept that says women are the weaker sex and need special protections in order to be able to compete."
If this is the worst Affirmative Action decision ever delivered by the Supreme Court, that may be only because it's the latest. The court's opinions on the subject seem to be going from worse to outrageous. While this approach may gain a job or a point for a favored plaintiff, the most obvious result is to turn seethement reentiment into vocal outrage on the part of those who are now being discriminated against. Charles Murray, the politician, has used this strategy; "put it this simple, graphite way:" Affirmative Action is just leaking a poison into the system. "What a sad end for a good idea. Affirmative Action is becoming one of those phrases that can no longer be said without a smirk. The same process that turned Welfare into a bad word is at work here, and it is not pleasant to watch.
Defenders of this decision argue that gradations of quality really aren't important in the workplace, anyway. That's the same line the majority opinion took. To quote Drew S. Days, III, a professor of law at Yale: "The opinion is very important because it emphasizes the fact that in most job situations, the differences between candidates are rather insignificant. To say that someone who scores a 75 is better than a person who scores 73 does not understand essentially how most employers
function, which is to look at a pool of qualified people and select from that pool. . . ."
If true, that observation would explain a lot about the gray patina of mediocrity that has attached itself to much of American working life. If employers really don't care about measurable differences in the quality of their work force, of course quality will slip — regardless of sex or race. Can this be how they choose students at Vale Law School? If not, would Professor Days recommend that they do so, overlooking differences on test scores and discriminating by race or sex among all the qualified? Or does this gross approach to job preferment not apply to the education of firefighters, police officers, or, as in this case, road dispatchers for a county transportation agency? The professor's analysis of this issue would seem to combine the worst aspects of both sobribness and apathy.
When a society doesn't much care whether its road dispatchers or plumbers make perfect scores or are just barely qualified, that is bound to be reflected in the workings of that society. It already is to a great extent. Far from aiming for excellence, such a society may have to sacrifice simple competence. It comes as no surprise to learn that Professor Days was an assistant attorney general in the Carter Administration, which was known for many things but not competence.
Perhaps the most dismal sentence of this dismal decision is to be found in the concurring opinion from John Paul Stevens, who seemed perfectly aware that the court was ignoring the clear purpose of the act in question, but chose to do so anyway. "I must admit that I am very conscious of the act that is at odds with my understanding of the actual intent of the authors of the legislation."
That's not an exercise of law but of power. It isn't an expression of authority but of arbitrariness, which, come to think, is perfectly consistent with what this decision forebodes for U.S. society.
BLOOM COUNTY
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday April 15. 1987
5
Officials begin hunt for Rhodes scholars
Bv PAUL SCHRAG
Staff writer
Few KU students have been selected as Rhodes scholars in recent years, but honors program officials say they hope to reverse that trend soon.
"I think there are a lot of good Rhodes candidates at KU," said Randa Dubinck, assistant director of the college. "Our problem is finding them."
A meeting to inform students about the Rhodes Scholarship selection process will be at 3 p.m. April 27 at Nunneraker Center.
The Rhodes scholarship was established by Cecil Rhodes, an Englishman who made a fortune in South African diamonds in the 19th century. He colonized the area that later became Rhodesia and now is Zimbabwe.
Only two KU students have won Rhodes scholarships in the last 13 years, in 1974 and 1983. Sharon Brehm, chairman of the KU Rhodes Scholarship selection committee, said she hoped that giving more early publicity to the program would attract more interest and end KU's record of relatively poor showings in recent years.
Rhodes scholarships are awarded annually to 32 U.S. students. The scholarship pays full tuition, fees and travel expenses.
plus an allowance of more than $6,000, for two years of study at Oxford University in England. A Rhodes scholar studies at Oxford after receiving a bachelor's degree in the United States.
“It’s an enormous honor.” Brehm said, “It’s worth delaying almost any plan if you get one of these two options for one's life and one's career.”
Competition for 1988-90 scholarships will be this fall, and honors program officials are increasing their publicity efforts to get as many qualified students as possible to enter the competition.
KU's selection committee, composed of Brehm, Dunick and six other professors and administrators, will select two or three Rhodes candidates who will advance state councilmen in turn on to district competition, where final selections are made.
Brehm said the selection committees were looking for people with leadership abilities and additional to academic achievement.
"They feel they don't match the stereotype," she said. "But their stereotype is too narrow."
"What they're after is an allaround person, a Renaissance person."
After spending thousands of hours on the telephone for the 1987 Greater University Fund national telephone campaign, faculty and students have raised a record $158,307 in alumni pledges for KU.
Volunteers set telethon pledge record
By TIM HAMILTON
Staff writer
This year's total exceeded the campaign goal by more than $8,000 and last year's campaign total by more than $51,000.
Kim Forehand, assistant director of the Greater University Fund and telethon coordinator, said that the record total was a result of the addition of the Schools of Pharmacy, Education and Law to the telephone portion of the Greater University Fund's overall fund-raising campaign had 75 more student and faculty volunteers than last year.
Forehand also said that the campaign had 75 more student and faculty volunteers than last year.
"I think it is a lot of fun for callers to talk to alumni about their schools and how it was 20 years ago," Forehand said. Topics of conversation included students and alumni ranged from the college to what the money would be used for.
She said that the campaign staff took steps to help make the volunteers' task enjoyable.
Campaign headquarters were decorated with posters, streamers and Jayhawks. Volunteers were treated to popcorn, pizza and soft drinks while working To sustain enthusiasm, the KU fight song was held on the a volunteer received a donation of $100 or more. Forehand said.
amounts were posted to promote friendly competition throughout the campaign, she said.
Group and individual total dollar
Linda Morris, Abilene senior and School of Education volunteer, said that she wasn't aware of all the special treatment that volunteers would receive at the time she volunteered.
Morris said that she enjoyed the campaign and that she raised the most money on both of the nights that she volunteered.
"It was kind of a challenge to see if you could get the top amount of donations from donors."
More than 225 campaign volunteers from 10 fraternities, 10 sororities and the Schools of Architecture and Urban Design, Pharmacy, Business, Education and Law called alumni across the country to solicit
donations to be used as unrestricted funds.
Unrestricted funds can be used for anything from scholarships to student loans.
Total amounts for the six parts of the campaign were $76,028 for the University as a whole, $23,124 for education, $15,485 for law, $10,604 for architecture, $9,600 for pharmacy and $23,450 for business.
Paul Haack, associate dean for the School of Education's graduate studies, said that the school would use money primarily for scholarships.
Lois Clark, associate dean of architecture and urban design, said their money would be used to sponsor scholarships, student and faculty travel and to supplement the lecture series.
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THE FAR SIDE
4-18 Davidson
© 1971 Davidson and Sons Publishers
"Won't talk, huh? ... Frankie! Hand me that scaler."
Crash
conference that the investigation team yesterday found the crash-proof boxes containing the cockpit voice recorder and the flight data recorder. The boxes will be shipped today to Washington for analysis.
Continued from p.1
Donner said the cause of the crash. was still unknown.
"When we're in this phase of the investigation, we're really just a fool."
The team spent the day interviewing witnesses to the crash, examining wreckage and trying to reconstruct what led to the crash. he said.
Several people who saw the airplane just before it crashed said that its signal lights were working and that nothing about the airplane's appearance was unusual. Donner said.
At the time of the crash, the weather was foggy, with overcast skies and clouds 100 feet above the airport at KCI was 6,000 feet. Donner said.
The airplane apparently clipped some trees with its right wing, Donner said. It was heading east when it crashed, although the runway is to the north.
The crew told air traffic controllers they were descending to an altitude of 10,000 feet, and then to 5,000 feet, he said.
Although the pilot had control of the airplane, he was guiding it by instruments rather than by sight, Donner said.
At that point, the airplane was about 5 miles south of the runway. Controllers heard nothing more from the crew, Donner said.
He said it might be six months before his investigation team sent its report to board members.
Continued from p.1
Snake
"For instance, in the last chapter there is a list of endangered snake species. And for people who keep snakes as pets, there's a wonderful table that lists all the known foods that snakes eat," he said.
Collins said that hundreds of Lawrence residents kept snakes as pets, primarily out of curiosity in the limbless reptiles.
When Collins had a pet snake as a child, he expected it to be more like other pets.
"However, I quickly got serious and realized that snakes aren't affectionate at all." he said.
Snakes have a fear-fascination element for most people, Collins said.
"Most adults are afraid of
snakes, and they typically react to snakes by killing them.' he said.
However, he said, the reptile house was usually the most popular attraction at zoos and that people liked to look at snakes as long as they were safely behind glass.
Novak recommended that people first consult an expert and then begin handling small, non-poisonous snakes to overcome their fear of snakes.
Novak is studying Russian language and culture so that she will be able to translate Russian research on snakes and other reptiles into English. Russian is the most frequent language besides English used in scientific papers, she said.
On Campus
The Kansas Relays are scheduled to start at 8 a.m. today at Memorial Stadium.
■ "Art on the Boulevard," a student art show, is scheduled to start at 9 a.m. today along Jayhawk Boulevard
"The Bureaualization of Government: Who's in Charge?" a Uni
versity Forum, is scheduled for 11:40 a.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
professor in philosophy, is scheduled for 4 p.m. today in the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union.
A parking services open hearing is scheduled for 3 p.m. today in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union. "Fictitious Entities and Fictional Expressions," a philosophy lecture by Jerzy Pelc, Rose Morgan visiting
today in the Northeast Conference Room of the Burge Union.
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Sat. 11:30 a.m.-3:00 a.m.
Sun. 11:30 a.m.-1:00 a.m.
CHECKERS
FREE DELIVERY
(Limited area)
PIZZA
2214 Yale Road • 841-8010
NEW HOURS
M-Tb. 4:00 p.m.-2:00 a.m.
Fri. 4:00 p.m.-3:00 a.m.
Sat. 11:30 a.m.-3:00 a.m.
Sun. 11:30 a.m.-1:00 a.m.
DINING AREA
CALLEY KITCHEN
8-8
CLOSET
ENTRY
NH
FULL BATH
HALF BATH
LINEN
WALK IN
CLOSET
950 SQUARE FEET
CLOSETS
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Looking for a large 2 bedroom Apartment? Look here!
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950 SQUARE FIRST
LIVING AREA
14.0' x 17.0'
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DISPLAY APTS. OPEN MON/DEW/THUR 1:00-4:00
or by appointment
Now taking reservations for Summer and Fall
Furnished or unfurnished, 1/2 baths, dishwasher an disposal, swimming pool, laundry. Close to campus and on bus route large enough for 3 or 4 to share comfortably. ONE BEDROOM UNITS AVAILABLE
ONE BEDROOM UNITS AVAILABLE ALSO
sidewalk sale!
* Kansas Basketball Sweatshirt 11.95 (Reg. 16.95)
T-shirt 6.95 (Reg. 9.50)
* Clearance sweatshirts 10.00 each or 2/18.00
- Official KU Football Jerseys- Half Price
- "Punching" Jayhawk Puppets 6.95 (Reg. 9.95)
- Cliff Notes- 50¢ off
- Far Side Posters 3/2.00 or 1.50 each
- Assorted Youth Clothing up to 75% off
- Assorted Glassware up to 75% off
- Many more specials
BOOKS- Paperbacks 69¢ Hardbound 1.99 All you can carry 24.99 while supplies of 10,000 last!
while supplies of 10,000 last!
Now through April 17th, weather permitting.
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd. Mon.-Fri. 8-5 Sat. 9-5
"At the top of Naismith Hill" 843-3826
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd. Mon.-Fri. 8-5 Sat. 9-5
"At the top of Naismith Hill" 843-3826
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 15, 1987
7
IRS gets 19 more work days for taxes in 1987, report says
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Just when you had finished your 1986 return and thought it was safe to forget about taxes for a while, the Tax Foundation predicted yesterday that the typical American would have to work another 19 days to pay up for 1987.
Economists at the non-partisan research organization calculated that if every cent a worker earned during the first part of the year was earmarked for federal, state and local taxes, he or she would have to May 3. Viewed by average person would have to work two hours and 43 minutes of each eight-hour day to pay taxes.
Tax Freedom Day 1987 is May 4, two days later than last year.
"This year, the American taxpayer has returned to the same point he was at prior to passage" of the 1981 federal tax cut, the foundation said. Those across-the-board reductions were wiped out by subsequent federal tax increases and a growing tax burden at the state and local levels,
the analysis said.
The news came a day before the deadline for filing federal tax returns, a chore that about 10 million people were putting off until the last hours. Returns must be postmarked by midnight today.
As the deadline approached, financial institutions were doing a booming business in Individual Retirement Accounts, which no longer will be universally deductible after these returns. Professional returns preparers had all the business they could handle, and Internal Revenue Service offices were swamped with last-minute pleas for advice.
The IRS expects 6.5 million couples and individuals to avoid the deadline by mailing a Form 4868, which will bring a four-month extension. But that form must be accompanied by a check for any estimated tax due.
There's another way to postpone the inevitable. Any taxpayer who is out of the United States or Puerto Rico on April 15 gets an automatic two-month extension to file and to pay any tax.
The IRS has been processing returns without any serious hitches this year, but the agency said anyone who waited until the last day to file should expect to wait longer for a refund. Although most refunds will be processed in six to eight weeks, RS spokesman Larry Batdorf said some might require about 10 weeks.
Through April 3, the IRS had received more than 58 million returns, and 78 percent of them had resulted in refunds totaling just less than $30 billion. For all of 1967, the IRS expects 105.5 million returns.
This year's filing season is the last before the big new tax overhaul takes effect. Accountants report that because of widespread news coverage of passage of the new law last year, many people have mistakenly concluded that the provisions affected their 1986 returns.
directed them to take responsibility.
In fact, virtually nothing in the new tax law will change the way a typical taxpayer files 1986 returns.
TOPEKA — The State Board of Education failed to reach a consensus yesterday on what approach Kansas schools should take to combat the spread of AIDS and the incidence of teen-age pregnancies.
The Associated Press
Sex education policies debated
The board is scheduled to act on the recommendations in May, when members also will take up a position as chair of the current sex education guidelines.
The 10-member board grappled for more than an hour with eight staff recommendations that called for requiring some form of comprehensive sex education program in each of the state's 304 public school districts by September 1988.
Other recommendations say the state should set guidelines for the sexuality courses, encourage districts to provide similar voluntary programs for parents, and require teachers, school administrators and education students to undergo basic sex education training.
The proposed policy change, which had been scheduled for a vote today, would delete language
that discourages instruction in public schools on specific birth control methods.
Sharon Freden, assistant education commissioner for education services, presented the staff recommendations to the board and said that a survey conducted in 1980 showed 10.1 percent of all Kansas girls aged 15 to 19 had become pregnant.
Freden said that studies have shown that pregnancies lead about 40 percent of all female high school dropouts to leave school.
"The data related to acquired immune deficiency syndrome, or AIDS, are of even more concern," Freden said. "While there has been an increase in sexually transmitted diseases in general, it is AIDS which catches our attention because there is no vaccine to prevent it and there is no known cure." Freden said.
She said the number of AIDS cases in Kansas, while still small, has risen at an alarming rate. Freden said there was only one reported AIDS case in the state in 1982, compared to 14 new cases in
1985 and 35 new cases reported last year.
However, at least half of the board members said they had strong reservations about forcing local schools to provide sex education, especially if the state was to set guidelines on what students should be taught about sex.
Board member Marion Stevens, a Wichita Republican, said that making sex education a requirement was like a "red flag" to him because it seemed to violate a tradition of leaving as many decisions as possible to local school boards.
"We're not going to leave it up to the local boards." Stevens said. "We are going to draw up the guidelines. To me, that's like talking out of both sides of our mouths."
Frieden and Education Commissioner Harold Blackburn said the guidelines would serve as suggestions on what material the sex courses should cover, but local districts would be free to disregard the state board's advice.
TACO GRANDE
Special
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regularly $.50 a taco
Sanchos &
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regularly $1.40
Wed. & Sun.
11 a.m. to 11 p.m.
Two locations:
1721 W. 23rd
and
9th & Indiana
T
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E
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Watermelons
4 p.m. - 3 a.m.
$1.00 cover
THURS: 75º Pitchers 4 p.m. - 3 a.m.$1.00 cover
the Sanctuary
7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 843-0540
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
We are proud of our people
Lisa Osment Retail Sales Representative
Missy Plein Campus Sales Representative
These outstanding individuals are deserving of special recognition for their superior efforts in sales, layout and ad design, client relations, job knowledge, staff participation, and complete dedication. That is why they are the top Sales Representatives for March. Thanks and congratulations to Lisa and Missy from the KANSAN Ad Staff.
SUA Forums and
Student Senate present
a lecture with
TOM WOLFE
THE RIGHT
STUFF
8:00 p.m. Hoch Auditorium Wednesday, April 15, 1987
KU STUDENTS
1987 KANSAS RELAYS BUTTONS HAVE ARRIVED!!
If you purchased an All-Sports Ticket you may stop by the ticket office in Allen Field House and pick up your Relays button
If you didn't purchase an All-Sports Ticket,you can still get a button for only $2.00 until April 17.
This years Highlights include: Al Oerter, 4 time Olympic gold medalist
- Over 250 high school, college and university teams from over 20 states compete for Kansas Relays championships.
- Over 250 high school, college and university teams
- Over 1,000 runners to compete in Kansas Relays marathon and 10,000 meter town and campus road race.
Stop By:
Athletic Ticket Office
Allen Field House
Lawrence Kansas, 66045
more info call 864-3141
8
Wednesday, April 15, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Officials examine higher radiation levels in Europe
The Associated Press
BONN, West Germany — West German officials said yesterday they would ask Moscow about higher levels of radiation in Europe that some experts believe may have been caused by a nuclear power plant accident in the Soviet Union.
West Germany, Sweden, Switzerland, Norway and France yesterday confirmed varying increases in atmospheric radiation last month. The Soviet government denied that it was the source of the emissions, which officials said caused no damage or injuries.
The Soviets were criticized after the Chernobyl nuclear disaster for failing to quickly report the power plant accident, which killed 31 Soviets and spewed radiation around the world nearly one year ago.
Officials in Bonn said unusual levels of the radioactive element iodine 131 and four to five times the normal amounts of xenon gas were measured in West Germany between March 9 and March 15.
Environment ministry spokesman Claudia Conrad said the radiation posed no health threat, but the government also told Soviet Union for further information.
Foreign ministry spokesman Klaus-Hermann Ringwald said the request was on its way to the Soviets not yet been formally presented.
"The experts are all saying it was almost certainly a nuclear power accident," Heinz-Joerg Haury, a spokesman for the government, said. "We're building and Environmental Research in Munich, told The Associated Press.
A Western diplomatic source in Moscow said Tuesday that the Soviets were asked about a possible radiation leak after some Scandinavian countries registered an increase
in emissions last month. The source, who spoke on condition he not be further identified, said the Soviets denied any such leak.
The source said it was unlikely a nuclear power plant accident had occurred, since it would have caused an inactive isotopes, not just iodine 131.
In Moscow, foreign ministry spokesman Gennady Gerasimov said the Soviet Union's radiation detection equipment was "functioning well". The Russian government emissions have been registered on the territory of the Soviet Union."
Erich Oberhausen, chairman of the Bonn-based Radiation Protection Commission, said a government study indicated that the radiation came from a minor Soviet nuclear weapon or an underground nuclear test.
He said in a telephone interview that a nuclear accident was the more likely cause.
Tommy Godaas, chief inspector of the Swedish National Radiation Protection Agency, said the radiation could have been released in the burning of radioactive isotopes used for medical purposes, or in the cleaning of a nuclear reactor.
"Considering the small amounts, an accidental minor reactor leak was possible, but it might as well have been a deliberately increased emission while cleaning a reactor," he said.
Sweden recorded abnormal radioactivity between March 11 and March 13 and traced it to an area near the Gulf of Finland, southeast of the Soviet city of Leningrad, officials said. France said it recorded small increases in iodine 131 and xenon gas from March 9 to March 15.
In Switzerland, elevated radiation levels were measured on March 14 for six hours only.
Meeting
Wednesday, April 15th 6:00 p.m.
KU/IABC
Room 202, Stauffer-Flint
U.S. will sell, donate advanced fighter jets to Honduran forces
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras — Honduran officials announced yesterday that the country would accept delivery in December of four advanced fighter jets from the United States, the first of up to 24 it is to receive through sale and donation.
U. S. officials here had confirmed in March that negotiations almost were finished on the sale of F-1SE fighters to Honduras, a key American ally in Central America and home base for many U.S.-supported contra rebels fighting Nicaragua's leftist government.
The Associated Press
Honduran military officials had considered buying Kfir fighter jets from Israel but gave up that idea because of technical details, Col. Manuel Suauz Benavides, the armed forces' public relations director, said yesterday.
Sources in the U.S. Embassy and President Jose Arizona's office confirmed the sale but declined to reveal the price.
The delivery of the advanced fighters would assure Honduras' continued air superiority in Central America.
But embassy sources, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the first four jets would cost Honduras a total of about $50 million, with
the rest to be donated under a 1954 mutual assistance treaty.
The Honduran air force is built around a core of 12 French Super Mystère B-2 light bombers, first flown in the late 1950s, and the Hondurans have long sought to update their air fleet.
Honduras expects to receive 18 to 24 of the U.S.built jets over 18 months, according to sources close to President Jose Azona.
In recent years Honduras also has received approximately 30 UH-1H helicopters from the United States, and U.S. troops have built eight airstrikes in the country since 1982.
Honduras has one of the smallest armies in Central America, about 17,500 men, and has long relied on its air force as its primary line of defense.
Although Nicaragua has the region's largest army, estimated at more than 100,000 troops, and a larger force, it does not have any fighter jets.
The only other country in the region with a sizable fleet of jet fighters is El Salvador, but most of its planes are outdated and little used.
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Fri.&Sat. - 11 a.m.-3a.m.
Sunday - 11 a.m.-1a.m.
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Student Senate Office
(in the basement of the Burge Union) is now accepting applications for the following positions:
- Jayhawk Course Source Director
- Associated Students of Kansas Campus Director
- Executive Secretary
- Administrative Assistant
- Treasurer
- Student Executive Committee Chair
Applications are due 5:00 p.m. Monday, April 20th
paid for by the Student Activity Fee
JAYHAWKER APPLICATIONS
for the 1988 Editor and Business Manager positions for the Jayhawker Year Book are now available at:
S. U.A Offices and Activities and Organizations Offices
DEADLINE: 5:00 p.m.Friday, April 17
For more information CALL:
864-3728
between 1 and 5 Mon.-Fri.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 15, 1987
9
Campaign will fight tampering
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — The scene is a phone booth, and a caller is threatening to poison a food or drug product.
The TV commercial is part of an advertising campaign to curb the growing number of product-tampering threats.
"Make a product tampering threat from this box," warns the voice of actor Dennis Franz, Lt. Norman Bunt on "Hill Street Blues," as the scene shifts to a prison cell, "and you'll end up in this box, for five years."
"More than $1 billion in perfectly good products had to be destroyed because of threats that people phoned in," said Bill Weintraub, vice president of marketing for Kellogg Co. in Battle Creek, Mich., and one of the coordinators of the ad campaign.
The campaign, being launched this week in Chicago, where seven people died in 1982 after taking cyanide-laced Tylonol capsules, is a cooperative effort by the Food and Drug Administration, the FBL, the Advertising Council and several industry associations.
Last year, 1,692 tampering threats were reported in the United States, up from 128 in 1985, according to FDA statistics.
Industry sources said most of the threats were phony.
Psychiatric studies indicate that product-tampering threats tend to come from males age 20- to 30-years old who usually have no criminal record, said George Schott, vice president of the National Institute of U.S.A., in Chicago, the agency that volunteered to develop the anti-tampering campaign.
Drug companies are spending $500 million to $1 billion a year on protective packaging, he said.
The ads focus on the consequences of product tampering under federal law — up to five years in prison or a $10,000 fine for making a threat, and up to life in prison or a $250,000 fine for carrying out the threat.
"It's the people who think it's a joke or a lark — that's who we're trying to dissuade." Weintraub said. "The FBI is pretty effective in tracking down people who actually tampered with products. But the people doing it as a joke are more difficult to trace. We think the public doesn't understand the severity of the problem."
The campaign, which includes racecards and boardrooms, will be expanded and finally marketed.
I'll just use the text from the image.
Danny Ray/KANSAN
Boxed in
Jeff Daymont, Hinsdale, ill., freshman, juggles cigar boxes to prepare for performances at festivals across the country. Daymont practiced yesterday at Robinson Center.
Bomb injures 16 during drug trial
The Associated Press
KOKOMO, Ind. — A man on trial for dealing drugs was believed killed yesterday when a briefcase he was carrying exploded in the Howard County courthouse, and at least 15 other people were injured, including the sheriff, officers said.
The defendant, Robert Gray of Marion, was believed to be dead in the blast, prosecutor James Andrews said at a news conference. However, he refused to comment further, and other law enforcement officers would not comment.
Andrews said confirmation of a fatality would come only after the county coroner was allowed into the blast site, but by late evening the coroner still was not allowed into the building.
injured by the blast. Gray's attorney and two other law officers were hospitalized, and 11 people were treated and released from hospitals.
Police said the courthouse was sealed off because they feared more explosives might be inside. Authorities also feared that the building had received severe structural damage that could endanger searchers.
Sheriff John Beatty was seriously
Katherine Walsh-Miller, a spokeswoman for Methodist Hospital in Indianapolis, said Beatty was in serious but stable condition and would undergo surgery to clean the wounds.
The other injured were listed in either good or fair condition at St. Joseph Hospital in Kokomo, said spokeswoman Mary Lindgran.
Med Center offers testing for AIDS to some patients
By JENNIFER WYRICK
The University of Kansas Medical Center recently began offering free acquired immune deficiency syndrome testing to pregnant patients and those undergoing elective surgery.
Staff writer
The Med Center staff routinely draws blood from patients when they check into the hospital, said Kermit Krantz, chairman of the department of gynecology and obstetrics. The staff now will offer some patients the opportunity to have the AIDS test
This early testing could prevent the spread of AIDS. The American Red Cross, as well as other health agencies, has published research that says pregnant women who carry the AIDS antibodies run a high risk of infecting their babies.
Krantz said that the test eventually might be available to all Med Center patients.
If the Med Center staff receives a positive reading on a patient's test, they will then offer counseling to the patient, Krantz said. The patients will be notified of the test results in absolute confidence.
"If the patient is positive, he or she is susceptible to many infections in an overwhelming way." Krantz said. "We protect those patients in advance."
develop an AIDS infection.
Researchers estimate, however that among those in certain high-risk groups, a mortality rate ranging from 50 percent to 100 percent exists for individuals who test positive for AIDS antibodies.
For this reason, Eugene Staples vice chancellor for hospital administration, said that he thought the AIDS test was a necessary measure. He also said an obligation to inform patients of any risk that they might carry, be said
The AIDS test is conducted at the Med Center, Krantz said, but tests were double checked by other laboratories if the one-day test comes back positive.
"It has become evident that heterosexual men and women can contract the AIDS virus with only one sexual encounter." Staples said.
A positive test for AIDS antibodies indicates only contact with the virus.
On the Record
A personalized license plate valued at $40 was taken Monday from a motorcycle parked in the 706 block of West 23rd Street, Lawrence police reported.
■ A bank card was taken from a person in the 900 block of Ohio Street and used to withdraw a total of $320 on several different occasions between Feb. 8 and 20. Lawrence
police reported.
A car stereo cassette player and equalizer valued at $700 was taken Sunday from a car parked in the 1500 NU Place, Lawrence police reported.
reported.
A gold watch valued at $100 and five quarters were taken between Sunday and Monday from an office in Murphy Hall. KU police reported.
A white truck and its contents, valued at $825, were taken between April 3 and 5 from the 1300 block of West 24th Street, Lawrence police
■ Unidentified persons threw penn on the walls, ceiling and carpet on the south side of the second floor in Wescoe Hall on Sunday morning between 3:15 and 3:30.
A boy and girl in a boat
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10
Wednesday, April 15, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Japan may eliminate quotas on few imports
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Japan is being told to overlook its traditional rice calling for self-sufficiency and open the door to imports as a gesture of international trade harmony.
Agriculture Secretary Richard E. Lyng, who is headed for Japan for two weeks of trade talks, said the elimination of quotas on Japanese imports of beef and citrus also are top priority items.
"The policy of Japan toward rice does have some mystical characteristics," Lyng said yesterday. "There will be no way that we can suggest that the door be completely opened on rice."
Lyng was joined by U.S. Trade Representative Clayton Yeutter in a meeting with reporters at the Agriculture Department.
Reuter says he expects Japan to join the United States in putting "all of our trade policy on the negotiating table" as part of what is known as the Uruguay Round of negotiations under the General Agreement on Geneva, Switzerland. And that includes Japan's rice policy.
"We do not believe that it is any way unreasonable to expect other nations to put their agricultural trade on the negotiating table." Youtter said.
Lyng added that one of the aims of
"For too long, they have had the ability — not just the idea, but the ability — to export pretty much as they wish, and import pretty much as they wish." Lyng said. "That hurts us in agriculture, it hurts us in a number of other areas. They can't continue to do that."
his visit will be to get Japan's fuller cooperation in the Uruguay Round of trade talks.
Lyng said Japan's unyielding policy of self-sufficiency on rice is "a symbol of protectionism in a country where it's totally inconsistent and out of character with their ability to trade" in the world market.
Last year's trade deficit with Japan was $88 billion, meaning Americans bought that much more from Japan than they sold to that country. Japan is the largest single foreign customer of the American farmer, buying about $1.1 billion worth of products last year.
"In the face of a $50 billion-plus trade surplus, Japan retains import constraints that we feel are completely unjustifiable." Yeutter said. "It happens that a lot of those are in the agricultural area."
A special federal panel yesterday concluded two days of hearings into sanctions the Reagan administration says it will impose at the end of this week on $300 million in Japanese electronics imports.
The Associated Press
Surgery may help treat disease
He predicted that U.S. doctors would rush to adopt the procedure. The surgery involves transplanting into the brain nerve-like cells from one of the patient's adrenal glands, located above the kidneys, to replace degenerating brain cells.
NEW YORK — Brain surgery developed in Mexico to treat Parkinson's disease is a dramatic advance that could lead to new treatments for strokes and Alzheimer's disease, but it requires more study because two of the 11 patients who had the surgery died, a U.S. doctor said yesterday.
Abraham Lieberman, chairman of the medical advisory board of the American Parkinson Disease Association, went to Mexico last week to examine the patients and said he was enormously encouraged.
It has been less than three weeks since the first report of the surgery
"I think I witnessed history." Lieberman, a professor of neurology at New York University, said at a news conference in his office. "I think this is the approach you're going to take to Alzheimer's, to spinal cord injuries and to strokes."
appeared, and George Allen at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tenn.. already has performed the operation on one patient there. The patient is in satisfactory condition, and improvements in her Parkinson's disease have been reported yet.
New York University is preparing to do its first transplant in May, and Lieberman said other hospitals likely would follow suit.
But he warned that hasty adoption of the procedure could be dangerous. "My fear is that there will be a number of deaths, and the government or the states will come in and say 'What is going on here?' " he said.
Lieberman said one patient died from brain seizures 45 days after surgery. Although the Mexican doctors claim the death was unrelated to the surgery, Lieberman said it was not possible to rule out such a link without further study.
The patient was given anticonvulsant drugs to prevent seizures, which sometimes are known to follow brain surgery, but the patient had the seizures while taking the drugs, Lieberman said.
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Fact: You may know it in 6 months. Or it might take several years. The AIDS virus can lie dormant in your body for several years before becoming active.
More people have survived cancer than now live in the City of Los Angeles.
Even people who do not know they have AIDS, can infect others!
Please support the AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY
We are winning.
If you are sexually active, you are at risk for AIDS. For information, call: Watkins Hospital 843-4455, ext.46 Funded by the KU Student Senate
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Student Union Activities is planning an exciting '87-'88 year full of concerts, speakers, trips, all kinds of recreation and much more. You can be a part of SUA by sharing your time, talents, and ideas in these areas as a committee person.
FILMS: help plan, promote and coordinate the film program.
FINE ARTS: assist in the planning and coordinating of cultural programs; i.e., art fairs, performing arts, and literary readings.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 15, 1987
11
Bo!
Jackson homers twice in Royal rout
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — After striking out Bob Jackson three times on breaking pitches in spring training, Detroit's Dan Petry, quite logically, threw him curveballs and sliders last night.
More American League scores p. 12.
But Jackson, the 1985 Heisman Trophy winner, was one thought ahead of Petry. And before the night was through, the rookie outfielder had a three-run home run and a grand slam, and the Kansas City Royals celebrated a 10-1 victory over the Tigers.
"If I'd never faced him in spring training, I don't think I would have done what I did," said Jackson, who leads the league with 13 RBIs and the
because he struck me out three times. That really got me down."
Looking for a breaking pitch, Jackson singled in the second innning. Still concentrating on a curve or slider, he drew a three-run homer in the third.
Royals with three home runs. "Petry is the only pitcher from spring remembered that I know. I remembered him
Then, facing reliever Nate Snell in the sixth, the 24-year-old former renter burr burn hit his run grand slam, giving a team record-reting seven RBI.
"I knew he was going to come with his breaking pitches because that's what he struck me out on three times," Jackson said.
Everyone knew Jackson was expecting the breakling ball, Petry
"The whole philosophy is, you do that until he's proven he can hit it." Petry, 0-1, said. "After the first two at-bats, he proved to me he can hit it. Now it's just a matter of me adjusting more."
Jackson raised his average to .500 and in seven games this season he has 14 hits, including the three home runs.
"Everybody doubted But bo but," he said. "I like to make a liar out of people who doubt me."
ning streak
Jackson, given the left field job despite playing in only 53 minor league and 89 college games, said he was pleased but not shocked at his success.
Kevin Seitzer, the Royals' rookie first baseman whose own hot start has been overshadowed by Jackson, and raised his average to 431, 13 for 27.
Wilson singled off Dan Petry, 0-1,
leading off the first and scored on a
triple by Seitzer, who scored on
Brett's sacrifice fly.
Petry walked Seitzer leading off the third, and one out later Frank White was safe on Coles' first error. With two out, Jackson hit his first homer of the game over the fence in left-center.
With two out, Jackson drove a 1-0 pitch from reliever Nate Snell high over the wall in right-centerfield for his first grand slam.
Pattin frustrated by team's losing ways
es
Darcy Chang/KANSAN
Kansas baseball coach Marty Pattin, coaching his last season with the Jayhawks, watches as his team loses to Missouri Western in the first game of a doubleheader earlier this month. Kansas is 11-23-1 so far this season.
Ousted baseball coach wants strong program
By DAVID BOYCE Staff writer
Staff writer
With his head down, Kansas baseball coach Marty Pattin walked aimlessly on the field, searching for answers after a recent game.
Kansas had just suffered its 12th loss in 13 games to Washburn earlier this month.
Another loss. Pattin remained on the field about 20 minutes after many of his players had showered and left the field.
Eventually, Pattin walked into the locker room to think about another game that Kansas let slip in the ninth
Hugh Stanfield, Kansas' leading hitter, put his arm around Pattin and offered him some words of encouragement.
But after another stinging loss, Pattin had few words for his team, and even fewer words for the press.
Recently, life on the baseball field has not been easy for the 44-year-old Pattin.
In late March, the Athletic Department informed him that it would not renew his contract for next season. After that announcement, his team went 15 games without a loss in the conference and the streak was tying Missouri, Western, an NIAA team.
In the midst of this turmoil, Pattin at times has been reluctant to talk with the press after disappointing losses.
And after a 7-1 loss to Missouri Western on April 1, Pattin went to his office and threw a chair and drinking glasses against the wall, according to one of his players. He stayed in room for a half an hour, declining to be interviewed.
The losses have taken their toll on Pattin during the past three weeks, a time in which his team was able to win only three games.
A desire to win
Pattin's actions may be a result of his desire to win. Even though he knows he will not return next year, Pattin wants to win. He wants to win, badly.
"I am a sore loser, yet I know I am not always going to be successful," he said.
Pattin wants to leave the program strong. He is working as hard as ever to make this year's team a winner.
"I feel the program has gotten stronger, and when I walk away, I want to feel good about the job I did," he
Pattin, who became the Jayhawks' coach in 1982, is finishing his sixth year at Kansas and has a 118-158-1 overall record. This season, the team is 11-23-1 overall and 1-11 in the Bie Eight Conference.
"I am not happy with my win-loss record, but I came in here with a program and did the best job I could," he said.
Some players say that Pattin's pride in the program may be one of the reasons why Pattin has been angry with the team's performance and why he sometimes is reluctant to talk with the press.
See PATTIN. n. 13, col. 1
Applications pouring in for baseball post
By LAURA BOSTROM
Staff writer
A note in the sports section of USA Today and advertisements in other publications have attracted more than one million in the position of baseball coach.
"We have them from California to
York." Gary Hunter, associate
athlete.
The Athletic Department informed present head baseball coach Marty
Pattin March 24 that his contract would not be renewed after this season ended.
Hunter said he expected 100 to 150 applications to arrive in his office before the 5 p.m. April 28 deadline.
Junior outfielder Rocky Helm said that knowledge of the game, motivational and recruiting skills were necessary in a head coach.
"You want one who knows how to win, or finds ways to win." Helm
"I am pleased by the number of qualified applicants." Hunter said
The position requires, among other qualifications, a thorough knowledge of baseball and coaching experience at the high school, college or profs-
sional level, according to the advertisements.
Hunter said the search committee for the new baseball coach now included only athletic department
administrators. Later a member of the baseball team and a KU alumnus who is knowledgeable in baseball will be added to the committee.
After the April 28 deadline, the search committee will review the applicants and narrow the field to the final three to five. Hunter said.
If everything stays on schedule, the committee then will interview the top applicants the first week of May and announce the new coach by May 10.
62nd Kansas Relays gets running today
From Kansan staff
Let the Relays begin.
The 62nd Annual Kansas Relays will officially begin at 10 a.m. today with the first event of the season, the men's 108-meter dash
Only the collegiate men and women entered in the decathlon and the heptathlon will compete today. The women's 100-meter hurdles, high jump, shot put and long jump, all take place today, as will the long jump, shot put, high jump and 400-meter dashes for the men.
The rest of the events will be held tomorrow, and the first Relavs winners will be decided.
Twenty-eight athletes are entered in the two events, including seven Javahwks
Todd Schultz and Jim Strauss are the two men competing in the decathalon for Kansas.
Kansas' Ann O'Connor, the Big Eight Conference indoor pentathlon champion, will not compete because she participated during the weekend in a special heptathlon event in Tampa Bay, Fla.
Jule Hall,'Kim Hutohee, Jaci Metzger, Andrea Schwartz and Rosie Wadman are the Kansas women entered in the heptathlon.
About 2,600 athletes will have competed in 89 college, high school and open events by the meet's conclusion on Saturday.
track events will begin at 8 a.m.
Friday. The finals for all races will
begin at 8 a.m. Saturday.
The collegiate and high school
Kansas Relays Schedule
The preliminaries and finals for the high school field events will begin at 8 a.m. Friday and 9 a.m. Saturday. For collegiate field athletes, prelims and finals will begin at noon Friday and 9:30 a.m. Saturday.
Today
Today Jim Bausch Decathalon Men
Intatlon - Women
10 a.m. Men's 100-meter dash
10:30 Women's 100-meter hurdles
10:50 Men's long jump
11:20 Women's high jump
12:40 p.m. Men's shot put
1:50 Men's shot up
2 Men's high jump
3:10 Women's 200-meter dash
4:30 Men's 400-meter dash
Jim Bausch Decathalon — Men
Henstethian — Woman
TOMMOBROW
Heptathlon — Women
10 a.m. Men's 110-meter hurdles
10:50 Men's discus
11:30 Women's long jump
11:55 p.m. Women's pole vault
1:20 Women's javelin
1:30 Women's 800-meter run
3:15 Men's javelin
5:05 Men's 1500-meter run
Navy alters rule affects McCallum
The Associated Press
In announcing that decision, however, Webb said he would honor a different type of commitment given to another Naval Academy standout, basketball All-American David Robinson.
"Secretary Webb does not foresee Ensign McCallum participating in professional athletics without special accommodation," the Navy said in a statement. "And he will be treated the same as his peers."
WASHINGTON — Navy Secretary James H. Webb yesterday reversed his predecessor's decision and ruled that young naval officers would not receive any "special accommodation" in the future to play pro sports.
Webb, who was sworn in Friday as the Navy's 66th secretary, said he would insist that graduates of the U.S. Naval Academy fulfill their responsibilities as naval officers on a ship or as part of special arrangements or duty assignments that would allow them to participate in professional athletics.
The ruling, which essentially re-established a traditional policy, will have an immediate impact on Napoleon McCallum, the Naval Academy football standout who played pro football on the weekends last season with the Los Angeles Raiders.
Webb's predecessor, John F. Lehman, had ruled that Robinson had grown too tall during his four years at the academy to serve as an "unrestricted line" officer and thus would
be expected to serve only two years on active duty.
Webb said that after reviewing that decision, he decided that Lehman had given Robinson a firm commitment that Webb would not disturb.
As for McCallum, Lehman had authorized him to play with the Raiders on a "not-to-interfere basis" in August after the ensign was assigned as a supply officer to a ship in nearby Long Beach, Calif.
McCallum, an All-American who set 26 school records, subsequently worked during the day as an ensign and played football on the weekends
After the football season, McCallum received a routine reassignment to the Navy Supply Corps School in Athens, Ga., where he is expected to graduate later this summer.
Navy insiders had speculated ever since Webb's nomination as Navy secretary that McCallum would have a difficult time winning another duty assignment that would place him close to the officers. But Navy sourced information that was not asked not to be said yesterday that Webb decided to confront the issue directly.
"The military in general, and the duties of commissioned officers in particular, constitute a full-time profession." Webb said.
No individual "will be given special preference with regard to choice of assignments or any other decision regarding his military responsibilities.
Mantle to return home
The Associated Press
IRVING, Texas — Former baseball star Mickey Mantle was cheerful and ready to go home after tests showed that chest pains he suffered probably stemmed from stress syndrome, a doctor said yesterday.
"Mr. Mantle has had no previous history of heart problems. He does have evidence of bronchitis and has had physical symptoms suggesting stress syndrome — chest pains, shortness of breath and dizziness," said Michael Rothkopf, medical director of Irving Heart Institute.
He said Mantle's heart appeared
normal and his condition was probably caused by 'too many pressing letters' in the language.
The former New York Yankees star, 55, underwent cardiac catheterization, a diagnostic procedure that can diagnose heart chambers for abnormalities.
"He's in good spirits and ready to go home. As far as medical advice, we've recommended he rest and slow down." Rothkopf said.
Mantle probably will be discharged from Irving Community Hospital today, Rothkopf said.
Expos spoil Cards' home opener; Mets beat Phillies
ST. LOUIS — Jeff Reed drove in four runs with a bases-loaded double and a single, leading the Montreal Expos to their first victory of the season, a 9-4 decision over the St. Louis Cardinals last night.
The Associated Press
Expos right-hander Jay Tibbs, 1-1,
took a three-hit shutout into the ninth
inning, but Tommy Herr had a two-
run double and Jack Clark an RBI
single for the Cardinals before Bob
McClure got the last three outs.
McClure surrendered a sacrifice fly
to Jim Lindeman.
The Expos, who have yet to play at home, got their first victory in six games with a 10-hit attack against Greg Mathews, 0-1, and three St.
National League
Mathews, an 11-game winner in
1986 as a rookie, walked three
straight batters with two outs in
Montreal's four-run first inning.
Louis relievers.
A Busch Stadium crowd of 48,458 looked on in a steady drizzle as the Expos snapped St. Louis' three-game win streak in home openers.
Mets 7. Phillies 5
PHILADELPHAI — Mookie Wilson singled in Len Dykstra with the first of two ninth-inning runs as the New York Mets nipped the Philadelphia Phillies 7-5 last day.
With the score tied at 5-5 in the ninth, Dykstra batted for Rafael Santana and drew a leadoff walk from loser Steve Bedrosian, 1-1. Dykstra stole second before scoring on Wilson's hit.
Wilson went to third as his hit was misplayed by Ron Roenicke and scored when Juan Samuel threw the ball on Wally Backman's grounder.
Reds 6. Braves 3
Ron Darling, 1-0, allowed 11 hits in eight innings for the win. Jesse Orosco pitched the ninth for his third save.
ATLANTA — Kal Daniels drove in two runs, including a leadoff homer
in the sixth inning that broke a 3-1 tie, and three Cincinnati pitchers held Atlanta at bay in a 6-3 win over the Braves last night.
Giants 3 Padres 2
Daniels' homer off starter David Palmer, 0-2, just cleared the right field fence at the 330-foot mark and sends to their sixth win in seven games.
Eric Davis, hitting 478 going into the game, smacked a three-run homer in the first after Palmer issued consecutive walks to Daniels and Terry Franca. Davis also had a single and two stolen bases.
SAN DIEGO — Bob Melvin hit his fourth home of the year as the San
Dodgers 3. Astros 2
Francisco Giants defeated the San Diego Padres 3-2 last night.
The victory boosted the Giants' record to 7-2, equaling their best start since 1979. The Padres dropped to 1-7, their worst start since 1974.
All of Melvin's homers have come against the Padres.
The Giants scored single runs in each of the first three innings off starter Joaquina, 0-1. Scott Garrelts led the fifth time his forks in his second victory.
LOS ANGELES — Pedro Guerrero's two-out single drove in Mariano Duncan from third base with the winning run in the 12th inning last night, giving the Los Angeles Dodgers a 3-2 victory over the Houston Astros.
Duncan opened the 12th with a walk off loser Charlie Kerfer, 0-1, and was sacrificed to second by Dave Anderson. Ken Landreaux was walked intentionally before Duncan added to third on a fly ball by Alex Trevino.
Guerrero, who had singled in the tying run in the eighth inning, then laced Kerfeld's first pitch into center field for the game-winning hit.
Tom Niemeyer pitched the final two innings, allowing three hits and six runs.
Houston starter Danny Darwin took a four-shutout into the eighth
12
Wednesday, April 15, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
TOKYO JUNIOR JUDO CLUB
Overthrown
Danny Ray/KANSAN
a new bug, Mission, S.D., junior, throws Chris Stephens, Overland Park sophomore, in their intermediate judo class. The class met yesterday afternoon at Robinson Center.
5 homers leave Brewers 8-0
The Associated Press
BALTIMORE — Five Milwaukee players homered as the Brewers remained unbeaten in eight games with $a_4$-7 win over the Baltimore Orioles last night.
Paul Molitor, Robin Yount, Jim Gantner, Rob Deer and Greg Brock each homered as the Brewers continued the best start in the franchise's history.
Molitor led off the game with the first of four home runs allowed by Baltimore's Ken Dixon, 1-1, who pitched to the sixth inning.
Yount and Gantner hit their homers in the second, and Deer hit his in the sixth. Brock's came in the sixth off reliever Tony Arnold.
Dale Sveum had three of Milwaukee's 14 hits. His third, an eighth-inning single, drove in the final Milwaukee run.
Red Sox 4. Texas 1
BOSTON — Don Baylor hit a three-run homer in the first inning, and Al Nipper scattered nine hits over eight innings as the Boston Red Sox defeated Texas 4-1 yesterday, handing the Rangers their fifth straight loss.
Nipper, 1.0, lost his bid for his first career shutout on Pete Incaviglia's third hometown of the season with one out in the eighth. Nipper struck out five and walked two before giving way to Calvin Schiraldi, who pitched the ninth for his first save.
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Yankees 10, Indians 6
NEW YORK — Joel Skinner hit a grand slam off Cleveland reliever Steve Carlton that broke a fifth-inning tie last night and gave the New York Yankees a 10-6 win.
American League
With two outs in the fifth and the score 3-3, Carlton walked Dave Winfield, and Mike Pagliarulo doubled. Carlton, 0-1, then walkied Wilde Randolph and fell behind on Skinner 2-0. Cleveland Manager Pat Corales visited the mound, and Skinner hit the next pitch for his first career grand slam.
Blue Jays 4. White Sox 3
TORONTO — Rick Leach's single through the infield in the 13th inning scored Wiltse Upshaw and gave the Chicago White Sox over the Chicago White Sox last night.
Upshaw and Ernie Whitw were walked by Joel McKeon, 0-1, to lead off the 13th. Leach, who entered the game as a pinch-hitter in the eighth
inning, slapped McKeon's first pitch up the middle, and the ball deflected off the pitcher's glove and through the left side of the infield.
Mariners 6. Angels 4
SEATTLE — Phil Bradley, who entered the game with just one hit in 22 at-bats, and Ry Quinones both hit home runs in the first two innings last season. The Seattle Mariners held on for a 6-4 victory over the California Angels.
Bradley hit a two-run homer in the first and Quinones led off the second with his first home run in a Manrins' uniform for a 4-1 Seattle lead off California's Don Sutton, 0-2, who lasted just 2% innings.
Right-hander Scott Bankhead, 2.0,
acquired by the Mariners in an off-season trade, went six innings, allowing two runs and seven hits.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 15, 1987
13
Pattin
Continued from p. 11
"You have to understand why he doesn't want to talk after disappointing games," said Stanfield, Jayhawk outfielder. "With everything that has been happening lately, it has been tough."
Third baseman Darrel Matthews said, "He is busting his tail and not giving up. He is a good coach and a good person overall. I have really enjoyed playing for him."
And once Patin is away from the baseball field and in street clothes in his office, he seems relaxed and his staring intensity is nowhere to be seen.
Athletic Director Monte Johnson
because of his caring personality.
"Pattin is one of the nicest guys around," Johnson said.
Pattin's life in baseball began at age five when he started playing baseball.
Little League start
"I started playing in the Connie Mack League, and I really loved the game," he said.
It was then that Pattin first dreamed of playing major league baseball.
“It’s every boy’s childhood dream to play major league baseball,” he said. “I had the desire to participate in sports and be successful.
"Playing baseball helped me along the way because I did not have a mom and dad from the fifth grade on. It was tough."
At age five, his parents divorced and left him with his grandparents, William and Pearl Roberts from Charleston, Ill. By the time he was a junior in his school, Pattin was living on his own.
But he said he received a lot of fatherly advice from his high school baseball coach, Marvin Baker.
"Growing up is not easy, but I had a lot of help from him," he said.
a lot of help from him," he said.
During high school, Pattin played football and basketball also, but baseball was his favorite of the three sports.
After high school, Pattin decided to pass up playing in the minor leagues and went to pitch for Eastern Illinois without a scholarship.
"I could have gone straight to the minor leagues, but I wanted to get an agent."
He started college with little money, but Walt Warmth, who met Pattin during high school, offered
Warmoth said Pattin could throw a baseball well in his high school days.
him a job and financial help.
"He is really a nice guy." Warmth said from his home in Charleston. "Hate to see him leave coaching, and I hone things work out for him."
Warmoth hired Pattin to work while in high school at the restaurant he owned. Pattin kept the job through college.
"It itt good to have someone care for me," Pattin said. "It was probably the greatest experience I had in my life.
"Warmth always made sure I had enough spending money. I remember when I got married to my wife, Vera, during my junior year, and I did not have enough money to buy clothes one time. One day a clothing store offered me and said I had $30 to spend on clothes, later found out that it was Walt."
Pattin said he received two educations at Eastern Illinois. One was the degree he earned, and the other was working with Warmth.
"Walt probably put over 300 people through college. This was a man who could have been a doctor, but he decided to help people in another way." Pattin said. "That's why he chose to open a restaurant."
The help he received from Warmoth also played a part in Pattin's move into coaching after his pitching career.
"When I was done with the game, I wanted to give something back," Pattin said. "You get into college coaching to help the kids.
"I like to see them do well in the classroom and on the field."
Minor league ball
Pattin graduated from Eastern Illinois with bachelor's and master's degrees in education and was drafted by the California Angels, who sent him to the Angels' AA team in El Paso, Texas.
Pattin had a tough time moving from college ball, where he was an All-American, to AA ball, and he played his first season with an 6-4 record.
"I almost quit, but Gene Autry
was strong," he said of the
Angels' inspiring.
Pattin spent a year in AAA ball at Quad City, Iowa, and then got his first opportunity to pitch in the major California Angels as a relief pitcher.
The Angels traded Pattin to the Seattle Pilots in 1969. The team moved to Milwaukee and became the Brewers the next year. Pattin became a full-time starter and
recorded a 14-14 record.
The Brewers then traded him to the Boston Red Sox, and he won 32 games during the next two years before being traded to Kansas City. He was later put in a pitching position in four American League playoffs, from 1976 to 1978 and in 1980.
At Kansas City, Pattin became known as "Duck" because of his imitation of Donald Duck. He was known on the team as a jokester, who, for example, sometimes would barbecue in the bullpen during games.
games. He said his biggest thrill with the Royals happened in 1980 when the Royals defeated the Yankees in three games in the best-of-five playoff series.
"When Brett hit that home run, I jumped so high in the bullpen I cracked my head against the ceiling," Pattin said. "We had finally beaten them."
The Royals went on to the World Series, where Pattin pitched the final game of his career, pitching in relief during game six against Philadelphia.
"A lot of things were going through my mind when I was walking to the mound in that game," he said. "I was thanking the Lord for giving me the ability to pitch at this level for 13 years.
Pattin pitched one inning and struck out Mike Schmidt and Greg Luzinski.
"I think the 1980 group really reat the stage for the '85 team to win it all," he said. "We were a very close-knit group."
"When I came in, I was really pumped up."
Pattin finished the 1980 regular season with a 4-0 record and four saves. He ended his career with a record of 114-109 and 25 saves. Once retired, he was able to spend more time with his family before taking the head coach job at Kansas.
As for playing baseball, Jon said his dad gave him tips on being aggressive and keeping a mentally tough attitude.
Pattin got the chance to coach his son when Jon graduated from Lawrence High two years ago and decided to come to KU.
"I had more reservations than anyone about his coming." Pattin said. "I probably work him harder than anyone, and I am no more when he gets a hit than when another member of the team gets a hit."
Pattin has two sons, Jon, 19, who plays on the KU baseball team and Jeff, 14, who attends Lawrence High School.
But this will be the last season that Patina will get to teach his son at Kaplan.
Pattin said he would be leaving KU satisfied with the support he received from Johnson, the entire administration and alumni.
Jon Pattin said he enjoyed being the son of a big league baseball player.
"It was nice traveling around with all the ball players." Jon said.
Desktop Publishing by the Hour
Rent time on our Macintosh and Laser Writer system. You get near-typeset quality documents without the expense of conventional typesetting.
kinko's Great copies. Great people.
"I'm going to take time and sort out what is best for Marty Pattin and my family," he said.
904 VERMONT 843-8019
23rd & IOWA 749-5392
12th & INDIANA 841-6177
Like father, like son
PATIO BOOK SALE
"Read a lot for a little!"
Values to 8.95 Paperbacks 69¢
Values to 39.95 Hardbound $1.99
All you can carry $24.99
April 13th through April 17th while 10.000 last!
"I don't look back with any regrets. I am looking forward to my next visit."
G
Jayhawk Bookstore
"At the top of Naimish Hill" 843-3826
1420 Crescent Rd. M-F 8-5 MAT. 9-5
Mexico
BORDER
BANDIDO
WEDNESDAY SPECIAL
ALL YOU CAN EAT $3.79
$3.79
5-9 p.m.
All you can eat from our wide selection:
- tacos
- taco salad
- enchiladas
- burritos
- chili
- tostada
- refried beans
- Spanish rice
- chili conqueso
- salad bar
1528W.23rd Across from Post Office 842-8861
(Paid Pol. Adv.)
My sincere thanks to the voters of Lawrence who have expressed their confidence in me for City Commissioner. A special thanks to all who contributed their support in time, money,and energy during the campaign.
ALEXANDER GILBERT
Paid for by the Mike Rundle for Lawrence Committee
Neva Entrikin, Treasurer
MIKE RUNDLE City Commissioner
CAFE
SPACHETTI
PRECISELY PASTA. EXACTAMENTO ITALIANO. SIMPLY SPAGHETTI.
Choose among 12 thick and savory sauces to top your tender spaghetti. With salad and garlic bread included, its a great meal.
1021 MASSACHUSETTS
Sports Briefs
- Open for lunch and dinner seven days a week!
Sun.- Thurs.—11 a.m to 9 p.m. *F*; Sat.—11 a.m to 10 p.m.
Entries accepted until Saturday for Kansas Relays Marathon, 10K
Running enthusiasts will have a chance to enjoy the Kansas Relays as participants and can share the top track athletes in the nation.
The first events run Saturday, the 10K road race and the Kansas Relays Marathon, are open to all track enthusiasts. Both races are scheduled to begin at 7 a.m. They will end at Memorial Stadium.
Meet officials are expecting
1. 000 participants in these events, making them the biggest road races in the area this year.
Entry forms are available at the men's track office in Allen Field House and can be returned there before the race. Runners also can attend the opening ceremony in Memorial Stadium beginning at 5:30 a.m. The entry fee is $10 for the 10K race and $15 for the marathon.
Emporia State doubleheader rained out
ia State April 28th in Emporia.
The Kansas baseball team's doubleheader against Emporia State scheduled for yesterday was rained out.
The Jayhawks will play Empor-
Kansas' next game is tommorow against Washburn in Topeka. Washburn beat Kansas 5-4 on April 6.
After 35 games, Kansas has an 11-23-1 overall record and is 1-11 in the Big Eight Conference.
From staff and wire reports
KU's next home game will be this weekend against Oklahoma State, the No.1 team in the country.
DIAMONDS
Before you buy any diamonds or jewelry,
check our quality. We realize that you are
smart enough to know that 50 to 60 per-
cent discounts can't be given from quality,
honestly priced jewelry.
For a good deal, and a good deal more, please stop by.
At Marks we don't try to mislead you. We want you to know what you are buying and we'll take the time to explain the four c's–cut, color, clarity and carat weight. We'll give you the service you won't find at other stores.
We guarantee it.
We will meet or beat any price on similar quality diamonds. gold or pearls.
In business since 1889
Marks JEWELERS
OUTBACK RED
Introducing a New Line!
Chambray Skirts only $19.99
Chambray or White Blouse with lace collars only $19.99
Ten Button Shirts only $22.00
Famous Label Fashions For Less HARPER'S
945 Mass.
Downtown
or
331 Poyntz
in Manhattan
Hours:
9:30 a.m. 5:30 p.m.
Monday-Sat
9:30 a.m. 8:30 p.m.
Thursday
14 Wednesday, April 15, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Hayden outlaws smoking in public
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Smoking will be banned starting July 1 in all retail stores, restaurants and public buildings, except in specially designated areas, under a bill Gov. Mike Hayden signed into law today.
During a brief ceremony in his Statehouse office, Hayden said that the state has an obligation to protect the health of its citizens.
Hayden also said that he hopes the new law will help cut down on drug abuse among young people.
"The use of alcohol and tobacco are often a gateway to the use of illicit drugs," Hayden said.
The Rev. Richard Taylor, leader of Kansans for Life At Its Best! the state's temperance organization, attended the ceremony, Taylor, who lost a vocal cord to cancer 12 years and advocate of the measure this session
"I cannot choose to breathe," Taylor said. "May this law be a step forward in guarantee that Kansans someday will live in total freedom from suffering caused by seco-
ndhand smoke in all public places.
State law currently prohibits smoking in elevators, libraries, museums, theaters, many governmental meeting rooms and waiting rooms of doctors' offices 'The Office' ban restaurants, scabs and almost every place open to the public, including the State house.
systems wise.
Proprietors who fail to post nosmoking signs could face a $50 fine.
The new law also sets a $20 fine for anyone caught smoking in a non-smoking area.
Smoking restrictions currently imposed by cities and counties will not be affected by the new law as long as the local regulations are at least as strict as the state law.
However, the law also will give owners or operators of public places a great deal of latitude in designating smoking areas. It does not specify where or how large smoking areas must be, except to say they should use existing barriers and ventilation systems whenever possible.
Girl's death prompts Winfield inspection
The Associated Press
6TOPEKA — State officials have received an investigation into the death of a 4-year-old girl at the Winfield State Hospital, which has come under fire recently for its medical care.
Gerald Hannah, commissioner of Mental Health and Retardation Services, said Monday that he requested the investigation after receiving a call from the federal Health Care Administration asking for details of the death.
The girl, whose name was not released, died April 7 after aspirat-
ing, a medical term for what happens when bodily fluids are sucked into the lungs, disrupting breathing.
The death came only weeks after a team of federal inspectors issued a report sharply criticizing the hospital's medical care.
"Dr. Hannah has asked the Winfield superintendent to look into the matter and an investigation," said Hannah. Hannah's administrative assistant.
Vega said such an investigation is not standard procedure for all deaths at state hospitals, but was ordered in 2017. "We don't know," she said, "this was not an expected death."
Legal Services for Students
Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE!
- Advice on most legal matters
- Preparation & review of legal documents
fun, creative, dedicated individuals to bring the arts to KU.
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT
APPLICATIONS AT
SUA OFFICE
KANSAS UNION
Available for:
- Notarization of legal documents
8:30 to 5:00 Mon. thru Friday
117 Burge (Satellite) Ui64-5665
JOHNSON COUNTY
SUA FINE ARTS COMMITTEE WANTS YOU!
Typists * Word Processors File Clerks * Data Entry Light Industrial
BOSSLER-HIX TEMPORARIES
- Many other services available
Contact your campus representative Stacy France at 843-7874.
Funded by student activity fee
- Notarization of legal documents
BALLOONS 'N' MORE
Call or drop by to make an appointment.
- Easter Egg Balloon
- Costumed Bunny
- Dolls
- Baskets
INTERESTED IN THE
ClassifiedAds
Deliveries
We are open for show
Monday—Saturday 1:00—6:00 p.m.
Please stop by our office or call
841-1287.
- Singing Telegrams
Is
- Within walking distance to campus
- Prices start from $385
ANNOUNCEMENTS
9th & Michigan
- Helium Tank Rental
Featuring: Luxurious two bedroom townhouse living
SUNRISE PLACE
"We Deliver Smiles"
- Energy efficient
603 Vermont Southern Hills Mall
749-0148 749-4341
- Energy efficient
- Swimming pool
- Free cablevision
LEARN TO FLY-Get 4-7 hrs. K.U. credit. In introductory lesson just $15; lowest rates around EconFlair Flight 414-FLY-N
AUCTION
AUCTION
AUCTION
AUCTION
TUNE IN
TONIGHT
7-11 PM
KJНЯ
F M 91
THE TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION PROGRAM As taught by Maharishi Manesh Yogi is the most simple, profound, and effective self-development program ever developed. By expanding the conscious capability of the mind and eliminating stress and fatigue, TM can dramatically improve the quality of your life. Learn it now
Application forms are available in rooms 119 (Kansan Business Office) and 200 (Journalism Office) Stauffer-Flint Hall. News staff applications are due in room 200 by 5 p.m., Wednesday, April 15. Business staff applications are due in room 200 by 5 p.m. If you have any questions, please stop by the Kansan Business Office, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
FREE INTRODUCTORY LECTURE.
WEDNESDAY, APRIL
15th. 8:00 p.m. PINE ROOM,
KANSAS UNION.
The Kansan is an Equal Opportunity / Affirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry.
The University Daily Kansan is now accepting applications for the 1987 Fall semester business and news staffs. These are paid positions but do not require newspaper experience.
KANSAN STAFF POSITIONS
Women's Recognition Program, Thursday, April 16th, 8:00 p.m. in Adlerson Auditorium.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Gay & Lesbian Services of Kansas: General meeting, Plans for Summer and Fall Semester: this Thursday, April 16, 7:30 p.m. international conference. All Welcome! next meeting Thursday, April 21
IS MASSAGE BETTER THEN PIZZA? **Find**
try. steam & massage from Lawrence
Message Therapy and R-E-L-A-X. Student rates,
too! call (341) 6621-662 and heal the
anchors!
TRAVEL AND TOURISM WORKSHOP • University
Travel and Tourism 189 Boreg Union Thurs,
April 5, 2016 at 7:30 a.m.
MARRIAGE AND DIVORCE
"M marriage must be a union of the body and of the spirit as well. for here both are enamored of the same matchless Face, both live under the same sky. For both are illuminated by the same glory. This connection between them is a spiritual one, hence it is a bond that will abide forever. Likewise they enjoy strong and powerful physical world as well — Abdul'l Baha
Baha'i Faith, 842-4406
University Community Service Scholarship
through August 2018
April 24th to April 30th (MTA Office) 96-347-1474, four-forth of house
ENTERTAINMENT
At Your Requests Lawrence's Best and Most Afraid D J. Sawyer and Lights for Any Occasion
DANCE-O-GRAM
Private parties for all occasions, for more information call
843-0510
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
SOMEBING WORLD
R
7:15 & 9:30 PM
$3.00
LIBERTY HALL
248-1812
Have the Hottest Party in Town: Rent A Hot Tub
Call Tub to Go: 841-2691.
Metropolis Mobile Sound. Number one with a
baili DJ! DJ Extraordinary, Dances, Dances,
Parties, Proms, Booking graduation parties now
Hot Spins for Maximum Party Thrust! 841-7086
MidWeek Music Series
Presents THE
L.A.
RAMBLERS
WEDNESDAY
APRIL 15
NEW SPECIAL!
Refill your HAWK Glass
4 bedroom house near K.U. Available mid May or
August. Hardwood floors, lots of windows.
W.D. 789-6156
W.D. 789-6156
All Day Friday & Saturday (including I.C.I.F.)
It Could Only Happen at.
$1.25
4 Bedroom house, furnished, available June and July. Family preferred. Call for information.
Aspen West now leasing for Summer. Energy effi-
cient, 1 and 2 bedrooms. 3 Blocks of west on wowa
15. Private patios/decks, ceiling fans, no pets
18. Kitchen, 749-1288. Open house Saturday,
11:3 p.m.
2 Ibid Townhouse for summer special rate,
10% off. Call 845-937-0866 or U-Home
Call 845-937-0894 between 8 a.m. & 5 p.m. (morning)
It Could Only Happen at...
3 Bedroom Apartment Summer Suitebase 5 bathroom, dishwasher, spacious Closer to baths
THE HAWK 1340 OHIO
Apartments for summer and fall at University Terrace Apartment, 1607 W. 9th; 1 Bedroom for summer, $250 plus all utilities. 2 Bedrooms furnished $205, plus all utilities. 3 Bedrooms summer; June and July only, $240 unfurnished, furnished $200, plus all utilities. 1 Bedroom for summer, $250, furnished $255, plus all utilities. 2 Bedrooms for summer; August 1-June 1, $181 furnished, $290 unfurnished, plus all utilities. Central air, on large rooms, large heat. Goose see at Apartment W., 9th W. or 841-3200. No answer call 843-1433.
FORRENT
2 Bedroom house, CA. waher dryer, just South of K.U. Proper comp. 81, 843-8605
a-kidm. 2 full bath, large kitchen, living room.
Master's Campus Place. Next to Yelloy
Master's Campus Place.
8 Bedrooms, 3 Bathrooms. Adjacent to campus.
No pets. Call 842-1071.
BEAUTIFUL Townehome for summer sublease.
Great for 2, or 4; or Terrace kitchen with microwave and dishwasher. 2 bedroom with patio yard. Call 641-9629 NOW!
B bathroom in old Remodded house. Utilities paid
(Book form KM, LAda, LR0A, WA17327)
Beautiful large 2 Bedroom in old Remodeled house 1 block from KU: Lida 749-197, 842-253
AKE YOU ATTENDING SUMMER SCHOOL?
I'll be attending at *210* disc Borealis Flakes, 842-3219
offers
MASTERCRAFT
- Custom furnishings
Consider:
apartments--all near KU!
- Energy efficient
- Energy efficient
- Affordable rates
- Variety of floorplans
- Affordable rates
* Variety of flooring
- Designed for privacy
- Many great locations
- Professional management
Call or stop by
CAMPUS PLACE—1145 Louisiana
841-1429
HANOVER PLACE-14th & Mass. 811-1018
SUNDANCE-7th & Florida
TANGLEWOOD—10th & Arkansas
OPEN DAILY 1-5
Beauty, eh? Two Bedroom Apartment. Five minutes to Fraser. Low Utilities. Lease for Summer with Fall option. Leave message. 842-1028. Clean studio with air conditioning located close to campus. Water and electric账付. Available from 6:00 p.m. to 9:41 a.m., or 9:41 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
Completely furnished 2 berm apt. low utilities.
Susquehanna Campus to campus Rent call Neg. (312) 875-9000
Excellent location: 2 bedroom apartments in four-plex, carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, and low utilities Available June 1. Summer Rate and low utilities Available at 1048 Tennessee and 1341 Ohio. Call 843-4242
Female nonmusic winner need at 87, 88 school year 2. Br. 2 bath room apt. Right off 28th street. Please visit www.kleenberg.com for details on answering money $155 on Gas, Wt.Tr, pt.
Female Roommate needed from May 20-August 20. Furnished Tanglewood Apartment Large Room. Bargain for $75 per month. Call 749-4809.
Female roommate wanted, June 1. August 1. Owner
wants to move in and work as a nurse for 4+
7 units. Surprise Place: 842-995-0890
Fine location on bedroom toaster station studio
on the second floor. Call 212-730-5674.
Available June 1, j$, 875 at 100 McCallum, Cali
FOR RENT. LARGE ONE BEDROOM APART
Rent includes water, heat andable television.
Rent requires 2 car payments.
For Rent: Bedroom in Private home, males preferred: 843-204-09
Furnished, spacious one-bedroom apartment available from 5/11/187 through 8/26/19 for $900 plus electricity. Nice area - walking distance to the airport, known call 841-672 or 848-404 for information.
Get it (while it's hot!) 1 Bedroom Apt. Summer Sublease. Sublease to campus and downtown. Call (504) 827-5633.
Get Out of the Dormer! Enjoy living with 30 other students in a Cooperative Environment Share the space with others SUNFLOWER HOUSE RENT $160-$240 Spaces open for Summer and Fall -749-807-ask for information
GREAT SUMMER RATES Special incentives
Officer Awards 49-2022
Pinecrest Amputation 49-2022
AMENITIES
Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the amenities of Naismith Hall. Applications for fall semester are now being accepted while space remains.
NAISMITHHALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
913-841-8559
Have a duplex adventure this summer? Need female hosts to manage guestelephants, great interpersonal interactions. Call 841-739-6200.
IHEY LOOK AT THIS: Brand new 1 Bemp Apt for summer暑休, Close to campus D W/A P
Help Need summer sublease for beautiful 3 barge on golf course. Graduation, make deals with parents.
HOT Summer Sublease: nice, new, four bedroom
$2d and 10th Avenue. Available mid- May $640
Large 1-Bdmf. Furnished, 1200 Teen, $735 plus about $40 electric. Other utilities pay: 749-585.
You pay you $12 to sublease Westfill furnished 3
Balcony. $200 to mop all fall option A/C.
Balcony. $290 to mop all fall option A/C.
Houses, Bedroom Apartments, Sleeping Rooms.
Available June 19th - 3-bedroom apartments. 1,2 and 3-bedroom apartments. and, sleeping rooms.
New near, no nets. Call 842-8871.
Large three bedroom apartment; close to campus and downtown for summer sublease. Available May 15. Free rent through May. $35.00/month. Call 841-7633 or 841-1327
LIKE CATS? For summer, beautiful apartment in older house? Spacious, wood floors, fireplace, washer/dryer. $350; mo. plus gas & electricity account for summer spring-sitting. AING 749-3578
IF YOU LKE SPACE & QUET
WE HAVE IT AND YOU
CAN STILL WALK TO CAMPUS
Spacious 2 bedroom
Laundry facilities
Waterbed line
Swimming pool
10-12 month lenses
VILLAGE SQUARE
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Must Sublease for summer. Available mid-May.
Mies 2 Berm apartment in house, Large Kitchen,
Bath, and Living room. Partially furnished.
$320/month plus utilities. 749-858
Need to Sublease 2 bedroom, close to campus
apte. June to Aug. 350 per month 749-5444
Need to sublease Apple Lake Plaza house
apte. August to December for a sapp
after May 1. Water and cable paid 641 8142 751
WEST HILLS APARTMENTS 1012 EMERY RD. 841-3800
Now taking reservations for summer & fall
Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apartments furnished & unfurnished
Great location near campus
DISPLAY APARTMENTS OPEN
Monday-Wednesday-Thursday
1:00:4:00
No appointment needed Stop by office located in middle of complex by pool
One Bdm apt. for Summer Sublease. Nice Apts.
Fully furnished, dishwasher, etc. Rent
negotiable Tanglewood, 10th & Arkansas:
843-2391
One bedroom house 1800 block of Maine Street
Walk to class. prefer couple available, 6.1.
FREE LUNCH
Several 2 BR's All new carpeting, cabinets and windows
Reserve your apartment now! Just 2 short blocks from university, 1, and 2 room bedrooms Furnished with some utilities paid and off street parking. No pets. 841-5500
One male graduate student for attractive, quiet,
unfurnished apartment. Utilities paid $260/mo.
Payments are made by credit card.
COME TAKE A LOOK!
Under New Ownership & Management
All new cabling capabilities
**Cable TV**
Cable TV on bus route
Laundry facilities
Gas and fire energy efficient
Gas head and fire energy efficient
PINECREST
Pinecrest
749-2022
2563 Redbud Lane
block E. of Iowa on 28th
Furniture by Thompson Crawley
Pinecrest
749-2022
Share Rent, utilities, and duties. Nice house,
close to campground, room,
room and campfire. Call 749-733-6131.
Reserve your room now! *For summer and/or fall*
Furnished with most utilized paid. Shared cooking and bath facilities. Just 2 short blocks from the building with off street parking. No pets. 841-5500.
SPHING GRADS to Wichita duplex for 3 BRL, 1/2 bath, bath, appliances to close, park nearby located, excellent condition $475. Available June 1. Call 316-682-3679
Spacious . . . Peppertree 2BR 2 bath.
Furnished. buses Bus TU Subleane for
adults. 400-838-2651
Studio available for summer in super apt, complex great maintenance, recreation facilities and laundry available. I will assume part of expenses. Call 842.969 after 6:30 p.m.
Location
Located among 70 acres of rolling hills and trees, you'll enjoy the convenience of being close to campus and area shopping.
Lifestyle
Meadowbrook offers a selection of spacious and comfortable studios, 1, 2, or 3 bedroom apartments, and townhouses to fit your lifestyle
RESERVE YOUR
UNIT NOW...
FOR SUMMER OR FALL!
meadowbrook
15th & Crestline 842-4200
SUMMER SCHOOL II. NO CAR? 2 b诫 before
posemate models in my campaise! Nugget, noset,
pencil, eraser, glue, scissors, tape!
SUMMER SUBLAGE extra clean, furnished,
two bedroom apartment at Tangweng Apart
Mansion.
1
SUMMER SUBLEASE: Need two non-smoking females to sublease Traditional townhouse (Call 212-356-7888)
SUMMER SUBLEASE Mall's Apts May-Aug 1
One Bedroom 843-4137
15
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday. April 15, 1987
SAVE TIME
SUMMER SUPERLEASE available 4 bedrooms, full bath. Furnished and equipped. Mastercraft.
822-756-0193 814-4904
SUMMER SUMMER SUMMER:
3 bdm alp. 2 full baths.
2 rooms in Aransas.
Call ARansas. Call F919F if interested.
SUMMER SUMMER SUMmer:
3 Bedroom, 2 bathroom
apartment clean, pool, laundry facilities. Call
Find your apartment or rental home in the Kansas City area.
- FREE SERVICE
- 50,000 CHOICES
- ALL LOCATIONS AND PRICES
*VIDEO PREVIEWS
Call or stop by.
6600 College Bvld.
Overland Park. Ks.
GREAT PLACES (913) 345-8777
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Sparcous two bedrooms, Malea, Alps. HALF OFF first month's rent.
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Roommate needed.
Sunrise Terrace 3RD, 2 bath, own room, close to campus.
Cheap rent. Call Chris. 842-8666, Leave message!
SUMMER SUBLEASE Very nice new! row
of off-street parking NEGOTIABLE Available
off-street parking NEGOTIABLE Available
Berkley FLATS
843-2116 11th & Mississippi
- Over 40 New Units
* Great location
Great location
Great location walk anywhere
- On KU Bus Route
- Laundry facilities
1123 Indiana Furnished by Thompson-Crawley
SHORT LEASES AVAILABLE
Sub-Lease for summer. Sunrise Terrace 3
bedrooms. Call for info. 841-0487
Sublease for summer a large bedroom in two bedroom apt Mall's Ole English Village.
Subleave for summer. Furnished 2 bedrooms, full bath, A/C. Close to campus, new open bars in the kitchen. Parking available.
Sublease for summer, studio at Hanover Place.
Call 799-5440
Sublease history 2 BH agt. 3 bath FP, Wal Den-
gress park, 5 bth. 1 bth. 2 bth. 3 free park on land, rent见的答應 Call
(404) 826-7930
Sublease: 4 bedroom, spacious, excellent location next to Yelp Sub. (Call 841-387)
--mer school student. Low rent plus possible reduc-
tion. Call 841-7347 after 5:09 p.m.
Sublease for Summer. Furnished one BR with Lost use as second BR, 85% plus electricity.
Summer Subway Large 3 BH Townhouse. AC
Neer pool, basn line, busine Rent negotiation.
*Sublease.* Trailridge 3 bedroom, 2/1/2 bath
townhouse. Available mid-May, option to lease
next fall. One large bedroom with own bathroom.
Two bedrooms, sports club facilities. $84 Call us:
749-4384
Summer Suitebags. 2 Bdrs. Apr. apt downtown
Summer Suitebags. $599.00, $699.00, Apt C4, $750.00,
Summer Sublease: one bedroom luxury apartment has washer/dryer, microwave, access to kitchen, laundry room, balcony.
southridge
unwindable natural living
Southridge Plaza Apts. LEASING for fall 1 & 2 bedroom apartments
Summer Sublease very nice three BRd brule style house. Near Campus. $420 monthly. 843-3305.
Summer Sublease. Large bedroom in apartment
bus route; bus priv, deck, cheek, microwave,
dishwasher, pool; near grocery, pizza, shopping
center; $145 negotiable 749-673-07.
Summer Sublease. Furnished 1 bdmr apartment.
Kall 841-1384
Summer Sublease. Need one or two females for a bedroom apartment, completely furnished, $165 month, 1/2 years, comp sale. Call 749-2723 or email sublease@fall.fall.edu for Fall 2. bd. AC gas, water paid. 722-785-1803
Summer Subase: three or four person furnished
adjacent to campus. Available May 18.
Submit your reservation.
Summer Sublease 2 bfmr townhouse, 2 baths,
1 bedroom, dishwasher, available mid-May
Call 841-797-6300
Summer Sublease: Furnished, 3 bdmrt; 2 full
room space to campus, low utilities. Mid May
Call 641-9498
Summer sublease. 2 bd. furnished. Close to cam pus.
841-3932
Summer subterm 1: birm apartment next to campus, 10th and Arkansas) Available May 15 Low
Summer sublease to females: 3 bbm furnished
apr 1/7 blocks from campus Call 841-5708
Summer sublease 10,iemit call
Summer sublease 10,emit Call 841-7049
Summer sublease. 3 bedrooms. Ap3 2, bath.
completely furnished, available starting May or June
through July. Low rent plus reduced pay-
back.
tions Close to campus Need 2 people. 843-4942
Summer Tennants wanted for very nice 4 bed
house 1 miles from campus, cheap,
expensive, beds, and some other
furniture supplied $150 per month plus 1/4
bedroom.
EDDINGHAM PLACE
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- 10 or 12 month
- contract
- Free Showtime
Satellite TV
- Swimming pool
* Free Showtime
- Satellite T.V.
- Exercise Weightroom
- Laundry room
- Laundry room
- Fire place
- Energy efficient
- On-Site Management
Open Daily 3:00-5:00
Saturday 9:00-12:00
841-5444
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Professionally managed by
Person to Sublet apartment for summer. Water paid, close to school. Camat Call at 843-3543 or 843-2903.
FOR SALE
14 x 6 Mobile Home, 2 bedroom, remodeled, nice
financing possible, 5700 - 891 963 Keep in view.
1978 2020, needs minor work. 1977 Honda Accord,
excellent condition. Both run great (Honda B4 437-678)
1881 Honda CB 750 Custom. Excellent condition.
low mileage, with extras. Cuxl Ruck 8447-7131, Jon
Scheffler.
1984 Honda Nightshift S 700KC 450 miles, Still brand new. Mug gift $2.300 841-6762
2 RICKENBACKERS I, Collector's 12 string
in ten. Serious Buyer only. John B41-3768 or
J69-3768.
Chicago
24 Hondaids all, stock, a classic $3500 or
$3500 on a Ask for the Midnight Express. a
Cars on Cars on
24 Hondaids all, stock, a classic $3500 or
$3500 on a Ask for the Midnight Express. a
Bell Tourstar helmet. Red, 7/14, $40.749-067 after
7:30 p.m.
Biancini Sport, 1986 10 speed. Blue, Alloy Wheels
Great Condition. Must Sell. B43-6431.
CPA EXAM Study Material. Best CPA Reviews
www.cpaexam.com.au/cpa-valley-reviews
requirements on p. 84 m. p. 849. 5252; p. 84 m. p. 849. 5252.
Cusmart Food Processor 792 JC Penney
Cusmart Food Processor 792 JC Penney
typetooler $190 TD Computer, games, joypack
typetooler $190 TD Computer, games, joypack
Dining room set. 2 twm beds, small dresser, all
dining room. All available May 18. Call Scott:
841-6731.
Fly Los Angeles May 17th. For the cheapest one way ticket, Call 842-7729
For Sale. IBM HR-1S XL Letter quality data files, buffer, and port for optional keyboard. Used very well with 1995/1996 Siemens.
For Sale Honda Express Motorcycle, Excellent
Condition. See at 170 Iliana or call 845-4197 after
payment.
For sale: 10 speed. Used occasionally, occasionally
purposes only. Good condition. $3 Call
855-799-6242.
IBM PC/XT Compatible, 64KH, monochrome graphics, monochrome monitor, 1200 Band modem, 3 button mouse, turbo, 2 drives, 5 month warranty, $850, 842-149 after 8 m.
Fuji 3-sided bicycle with Founders and folding
complements a compact bike in perfect condition:
ask $30. Cars, trucks, motorcycles and more.
IBM PC/XT compatible, includes monochrome
hrm keyboard and mouse.
Is motherboard x86, driver disk
available? Yes.
Must sell Infinity insurance $130. Surrender
receive $100. Marriage turntable ($40 or
total $250)
Must Sell 1658 IBM KW100W Warranty to 10/88.
New Pirelli Phantomts. Tail Shield. Heated
Seats. Airbag. Trunk. Cornbat. Seat
Belt Helmet and Rainsuit $250. Mase of offer.
452-3134. Leave message
MAX'S COMICS. Comic Books, Playbills, Pn.
thouse, etc. 811 New Hampshire.
NAD 5158 integrated amplifier 2$; Carver M-500
M-500; Call Mark 749-268; channel 2, months
Music Man Sting Ray Bass W/ Hard Shell Case
King, B.C. Collbradg 943.587.3027
*** MOTHBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
Monday-Friday 10:5:30 p.m. SUNED 12:02 p.m.
WEDNESDAY 10:45 p.m. THURSDAY 10:30 p.m.
Musicman 412-GS Speaker cabinet. Sounds great.
Steve 842-2419.
TUXEDOS: After Six formal wear TUXEDOS ALL SIZEST: Jackets with tails or plain, complete set with pants, vest, or cumberband, bowie tie-ess expensive to own than to rent. Come to E everything you want in the room for that special spring fling! TUXEDOS. Have your size but hurry! Everything But Ice
Rickshaker baseball black 4001 Excellent
375.00 G B P Drilling Board Professional
375.00 G B P Drilling Board Professional
NOTES now available for variety of classes. Students can visit the Jawahrah Jayhawk Study Services. We're here to Help
1977 Volkswagen Rabbit, Restored, beautiful
body, rebuild engine, 40 miles/gallon, new
battery/trees, long life highway car, free gas for 1000
km, sold in Louisiana, 669-798
Sailment for Sale: 2019 Olympic Class Flying Dutchman
Titanic 150.00 or best offer Call e-mails:
900-000 or best offer Call e-mails:
Racing Bike T tutti 21bs Ibs *with lock* Cyclo
computer more $30 need $15s 864-283-1
TW for sale. Zeush 13" Color. Good picture
TV. Tum-Sunlamp. Like new, $25. Please Call
TU Center-Sunlamp. Like new, $25. Please Call
AUTO SALES
1979 Chevette a speed. Standard New battery and
1979 Chevette Some dent. Needs clutch. 800 Phone
and CD.
1974 Volvo 142 Good condition. Very dependable
100.00 ml. Available from Jail 10, $1,000
Available from Jail 10, $1,000
1974 WV Beetle with new tires. Great college car.
Must call 547-2830 or 841-6212. Also nice士车.
Call 547-2830 or 841-6212.
1974 VW Superbeetle. Runs Good. Yellow.
1960-65 5000 miles. Must sell. Call Shawn.
842-7380
1979 Conv VW, White body, White top. Excellent
condition. 5,000 miles $600 lorry. Larry,
845.
LOST-FOUND
HQ Chevy Impala Very Relieving, good looking car HQ Chevy Impala Very Relieving, good looking car 76 Paer. A T.A.C. 6 Cyl. excellent condition G gas mileage 17. Sony Color BV 41483 For Sale WV Super Beetle Convertible 1977
Found. Fresh Water Pearl Necklace Found.
8-10 m. to identify.
4-97/7 Call 845-803-8631 before 8-10
m. to identify.
80 Chevy Impala. Very Relable, good looking car.
Tiny amount of rust. 70% ngey. Tone 84-3280
115
Lost: $1,000.00 If you can find it, you can keep it.
Lost for Treasure Hunt clues on KLRZ 106
Lost: 6 month old CHOW/SHEIPARD dog. Red
hair/Black face. Wearing Choke Chain. Call
Lost: female black calcea cat wearing pink pencil
earn in March 27 at 14th and Ohio. Please call
013-879-6151 or www.delivery.ie.ie
Lost: Large gold Notre Dame de sion class ring.
Call Jan at 864-2108.
HELP WANTED
Are you good with children? Would you like to be paid to live with a California family and help with children? HELP I PARENTS 770 Mena Ave. 219 Menlo Park, CA 94035 (615) 421-328-81
CAMP COUNSELORS WANTed for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterkings, gymnastics, tennis, swimming, camping, patriches, camping, crafts, dramatics, OR riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary $70 or more. plus MHS. Mar. Searge 1765, Mild Nl.
AIRLINES CRUISINELS IJH1 Summer! Summer!
Guide Guide
Cassetta, Newseye 9916 (816) 9444-4444
Artist Needed for Next Semester: Graphic Design and Illustrations. Please Call 842-3338 and ask for Jon Hofer.
Cocktail Waitresses Needed Part-time weekends
Apply in person. Just A Playhouse. W 24th
W 25th St, New York, NY 10016.
DA TELEPHONE Sales needed in our office.
Call between 9-53
p. ask for [Fern, 792-362]
Summer Job Opportunities available with the U.S. Marine Corps—No obligation to be a Mannel Earn between 60 and 75 hours/week, or housing *Cal 913-841-1821* (collect).
EVENINGS OR SATURDAY Telephone Sales in our Office. No experience necessary. Good Poor Credit. Please Call.
★★★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
FULL AND PART TIME HELP!* National Firm preparing for Spring and Summer work. If accepted, you will earn 8.10 start. Some evening and weekend positions are available and some evening positions require a qualifying, corporate scholarships are awarded, internships are possible, and you may earn 2.34 credits (qr. or semester). During summer break you can call *Call* (913) 345-8675. Mon fr. to a.m. 5 m.
GOVENMENT JOBS. $16,940 $49,250.yr. Now
88-677-600-690 or RYR for current
federal list!
Graduate Teaching Assistant, Eastern Civilization Department, Duke University, 68-year academic year. Dead April 27. Duties: Co-teach Eastern Civilizations, and Understanding China and Japan, covering China's political history.
our "Nanny Network," of over 500 placed by us in CT, NY, NJ, and Boston. One year commitment in exchange for top salary, benefits, room and board, airfare. All families prescreened for Nanny Network.
Kansas Sports Bar & Grill taking applications for power, energetic bartenders and cocktail waitresses. Evening shifts. Experience prefer 8-12pm. 9th, 8-13rd. Eldridge Hotel, 7th & Massachusetts.
From, Contact Handling Group, in acct. 6034817437.
From, Contact Handling Group, in acct. 6034817437.
From, Contact Handling Group, in acct. 6034817437.
NBC Today - Show & Hour Magazine
Naisim Hall is taking applications for a full time cook position. Schedule is Tuesday-Saturday. Job may shift if interested stop by Lois, Rob and fill out an application EOE/M/F/HAA
NEED a change of pace & environment? Spend a year or summer in the New York City area caring for children. We're looking for responsible in-person care and supervision of a professional family. Call or write Midwest Nanny, Inc., (914) 478-4655. 8 Jordan Road, Hastings-on-Hudson, N.Y. *N 7036* for more
NANNY POSITIONS AVAILABLE Good salary
Families, Dallas, Texas Call 9-519. (214)
718-600-3277
NEED MONEY?
*EOPLE NEEDED IMMEDIATELY for light
Hustave have our transportation.
Call KAYLEN
Here's the Solution!
Part-time food service positions available now. If interested, fill out an application at Nasmith Hall (3210) 554-8996.
accepted male range, cannot breastfeeding, and inactive females. Special training is required to accept males as we are an active recruiting agency. No exp required to receive a good communication role or promotion. Reqs for positions are applying and requesting applicants are welcome.
ENTERTEL
SEARCH EXTENDED SCHOOL of Education
(EDUCATION) Bachelor's degree or
domal staff dive and live in dorm. Degree and
superior high school students. Degree preferred.
SUPERVISED HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS. Degree preferred.
SUPERVISED HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS. Degree preferred.
SUMMER CAMP JOB'S in the Northeast. For free travel to West Coast, Midwest Camp Consultants, 1785 Red Coast.
job description application at Upward Bound, 801 Bailey Hall. Send letter of application, current job description, to C. Hart, Director, Upward Bound, 801 Bailey Hall. University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 6945 (913) 801-7492
Summer Job-College age female as companion for seven year old girl. Old transportation needed. Hours 8:15 m - 4:55 p.m. M-F. References reeled on: weekdays 8:14 - 8:48 a.m. weekdays on, weekends 8:14 - 8:48 a.m.
SUMMER JOB'S A new fifties dance club is opening in Lenexa. You need hotel cocktail waitresses and bartenders. WT train. Apply in person. 9:3 M.-S. at College Rd. Reno Lakes. Located in Four Colonnades Plaza.
- 1/2 years devoted to assisting individuals & businesses in financial planning through insurance & investment products.
MBA or JD Metropolitan Executive Training Program.
Summer Jobs for the Environment. Work with Moprg to pass law for sale water. Positions in St. Louis and K. C. Care IG525-IBW. Info lectures on water quality. West Med at 2:30, 3:00, E. 5:00 p.m.
Wanted Nanny/Mother's Helper, female, in af-
fient Northern New Jersey town, close to NYC.
Must be pleasant, good with children, energetic,
can work on computers, good pay good
pay or permanent. (301-803-6257)
641-1200
E.D.E. m/s
YMCA Camp Gravys in beautiful Lake of the Oarks now hiring summer staff. Desire for excellence, but no experience necessary Call (816) 2654-9623 Keith Miller
- Accelerated program to provide background in marketing management.
- Starting income open.
- Comprehensive management training.
For Interview call our Overland Park, Ks. office.
(913)345-2063
FOF
Metropolitan Life AND AFFILIATED COMPANIES
+
ZZZZzzz TIRED OF MAKING LESS THAN
WWW.ZZZZzzz.COM
The Company is seeking for students who are; seriously looking for a good summer job, have excellent communication skills this summer. For an interview, mail: 847-263-5000.
MISCELLANEOUS
Summer softball men's division D team seeks
players and play ball in Overland Park, Park
State 833-750-9797
SUNWLOVER
TRAVEL
SPECIAL YOUTH FARE (Age 12 and over)
Depart May 29 or June 11 Space is limited
Call today for details
PERSONAL
Geek, roses, June 15, Red, White Black. Backyard, Christmas 86, james Navy, March 14, 35 mph, New Years, relaxing, flowers, shake in, favorite flowers, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite,
2-8:3-2-1-5-4-4-3-19 Nirrson
Julie, four months, it's a long time, it's the best time I love you, David
Mary Lynn You're just too good to be true. Can't
take my eyes off of you.
PAULA SUE. Let's celebrate your birthday with
crunchy beer! Knee & Stime P S, So, anyy
Here is a toast to: Jill Juana, Kate (Yes, Kate you're in the personals), Michelle Sharon, Julie, Tim, Heather, Chad, Steve, Kirk, Chris, David, Cheryl, Caroline (Where are those pictures?) and to the many others I couldn't afford to put in.
Here's to the best of us.
Here's to the rest of us.
Here's to our friendships
old ones and new!
Here's joy and wealth to you.
Peace and good health to you.
Here's to a good life—
Susan from Oatle - Your musician misses you
Call again. Last always, D.
To My Little Jambalaya, glad you didn't need me to the gators or sell me in a marketplace. Hope this goes for Ma in Jersey and the wonders in New York. Your Athletic Colorado mountain lion. Your Athletic Colorado mountain lion. Your Athletic Colorado mountain lion.
Need music for your wedding *Call Jean, 843-3704*
Gives piano and lessons over summer
Takes students on a trip to NYC
842-4103, Tuesday-Saturday at 9 o'6, eventures by appointment.
Hair design done on your way Through NYC.
To the AGD's in the back seat: Hope you had fun on walkout Can we see you again? The car BEHIND you.
THE COMIC CORNER
NE CORner of 23rd & Iowa, 841-4294
Broom Co. & Farrade T-Shirts
1000s of Miniatures & Modules Spring Cleaning Sale Now Lots of items for Hair Price or Less
BUS. PERSONAL
WHY ARE PROCTOR & GAMBLE, IBM, AND XEROX INTERESTED IN STUDENTS WHO HAVE WORKED WITH US FOR THE SUMMER? Students selected for our summer management training program will gain excellent resume experience and above average earnings.
Be creative in gift gifting. Fulfill your fantasies with beautiful Bodysuit Portraits for all occasions. Call us at (800) 555-2222.
GAY/LEISSON! Write for KS/MO info PER
GRADUATE. Please visit www.gaylesson.com
9801-9218. Mailed discreetly/confidentially.
Most reasonable rates in town for all your photo
meets especially graduation, resumes, and part-
nerships. Call 714-533-6233.
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquaters.
We're here because we care.
841:2345 1419 Mass.
We're always open.
Furniture Barn, 1811 W. 6th Street. Just arrived
incorner-sectioned with corner table $89.00.
Mattress sets $59.00 each. Dining startings at $88.00
drawer desk. $79.00. $8 used soils $42.00. Vibrating
For an interview call 749.7377
Conscientious, Economical tax preparation
841-2292
SERVICES OFFERED
BEADACHE. BACKACHE. ARM PAIN. LEG
HAMES. COMPLETE quality orthopaedic care Dr. Mark
complete quality orthopaedic care Dr. Mark
Rare and Used Records. Buy, Sell, or Trade Quantrill's 811 New Hampshire.
CRIMSON SUN PHOTO is looking for young women interested in developing a modeling porti-
folio 15% over direct cost. No set fees. Call
841-9899
"Graduates and undergraduates, money for college is available. Contact College Scholarship Program."
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
DONALD G. STROLE
Attorney at Law
W.H.'s & Name
* Fake ID's & other criminal offenses
* Family Law & other legal problems
16 East 13th St. B42-1133
KHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ekachrome processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W services. PASSPORT $6.00 Art & Design Building, Room 206, 864-7457
MATH TUCR for 1976, M.A., $/hr, courses
above 19.98 | $/hr | 843.902
FOR
WOMEN
ONLY
$37.50
- Body Toning Classes
- Tanning
- Weight Equipment
- total membership through 5-31-87
- Weight Equipment
- Whirlpool
- Spauna
BodyShapes
Hours
M-F 8:30-8:30
Sat 9:00-4:00
Sun 10:00-4:00
501 Kasidow Westridge Shop Ctr. 843-4040
PRIVATE OFFICE (Ogni 9314-6878
Services. Overland Park . . . Ogni 9314-6878
MUSIC
Red House Audio 8 track studio, P.A. and LIGHTS,
Mobile Party Music, Maximum Audio Wizardry
Call Brad 749-1275.
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your
completion completion. Transportation provided.
WE'RE YOUR AUTHORIZED
REPAIR SPECIALISTS MIDWEST
commodore
APPLIANCE SERVICE
Metcalf South Mall
95th & Metcalf, O.P. Ks.
(913) 341-6888
TUTORING MATH STAT. $8.00/HR CALL
403-TAST
TYPING
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing library. 842-7945 or 784-2341.
1-1-1 TRID Word processing. Responsible.
Conscientious. Reliable. Buf 842 3113 for service
Daita quality and master service of
A-1 professional typing. Term papers, Theses,
Dissertations, Resumes, etc. Reasonable. 1BM
Electronic Typewriter 842-3246
24-Hour Typing, 13th semester in Lawrence
Best quality and best campers - campus
Best quality and best campers - 941-806-7550
A-2 Word processing Service. Quality resumes.
File storage available 843-1800 until 9 p.m.
Database availability 843-1800 until 9 p.m.
Absolutely Fast Typing. Dependable and革
新. Typing speed up by 20% in 4800-9600 w.
p. at 5m and at 7294-2604 after 5 p.m.
Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard
student secretary Cailr Mrs. Nancy Matl
h. 841-1323
Experienced typist - after 6:15 p.m. dissertations, term pass
942 3210 afore 11:35 p.m. M/F or Sat/Sun
A TYPING has low cost word processing/document storage starting at $11/pg. Call 842-1942 after 4 p.m. weekdays, any time weeks. Campus pickup available.
Expired Typept : Dissertations; theses, term papers, etc. Reasonable Calles. Rate 842-3203
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing.
Donna paper, terms, essays, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter quality
printing, spelling corrected: 842-7244.
Dependable, professional, experienced
TRANSCRIPTION also; standard tape. 843-8677
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW
TRANSCRIPTION also; standard tape. 843-8677
will return. KEEP WATCHING THIS AD
Resume Service-laser-written 10 copies ONLY
829-749-1293 after 5 p.m.
GUARANTEED PERFECT typing done on word
H48-7547. Located near Lawrence Hospital. Call
488-7547.
KU SECRETARY Typing and word processing,
affordable, fast, accurate. Spelling corrected,
letter quality. Pickup on campus. Monica 841 8246.
weekends-events.
Quality typing, excellent editing, grammar,
reliable Pickup, type available 845-0247
Smart Word Processing includes editing and spell checking. Very reasonable rates. Fork, 749-2740
For professional typing/word processing, call
1-800-4460. 4900 Spread special $30 per page, double
space.
THE WORLD DOCTORS: You pay for typing 'Word'
and 'Photoshop'. Activate the program.
ACT ONLY. Papers $1.50/paper. Resumes $1.75/paper.
ACTION NOW: Papers 1$1/50p Resumes $15
WRITING LINEBACK 8143469
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes. HAVE M.S. Degree. 842-6254.
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional work pro-
gression resumes, these letter
quitting materials, etc. 483-7206
Typing; very reasonable rates, will also assist with spelling punctuation and form. Call 842-3629.
Word Processing, proofreading, spell checking, NLQ printing, Reasonable. 842-1940.
BABYSISTER WANTED in my home for 2 young
children-W F-windows beginning early May
841-436
WANTED
Cellmate(s) Wanted: 1 or 2 for summer or for next year 1 person gets TWO bedrooms upstairs Only $15 plus $5 utilities. Greg. 842-1775
Experienced drummer needed for established Lawrence band, primarily originals Influences are Husker Du, U2, etc. Must be devoted Troy. 841-6141
Female. Deposit $157.00 Summer only or into fall.
841-1906. Anytime Tues/Thurs or leave
Policy
Non-smoking, responsible female roommate for summer and/or fall semester. Room with 1/2 bath attached, microwave, washer/dryer. Must be vaccinated. Utilities. Calls 749-392 or 849-496 for Sandy.
Part-time housemaids wanted for Spring and autumn vacations. Attractive meticulous cleaner. Buckingham Palace needs a dedicated cleaner.
People to Join the Fun with SUA's Canoe Trip Down the Kaw. 864-3474 For Info
ROOMMATE WILD-FALL 1897 Need 2 people to share 4 BR house, W/D, bus route or walk to campus; quiet neighborhood, near 21st & 22nd floors, more than 60 month plus 143, 749 733, keep trying
Wanted: Female roommate, nonsmoker, for Fall or Summer to share three bedroom apartments.
Words set in Bold Face count as 3 words.
Classified Information Mail-In Form
Words set in ALL CAPS as 2 words.
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising.
Blind box ads please add $4.00 service charge.
Tear sheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements. Found ads are free for three days, no more than 15 words.
Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansan.
Deadlines
Deadline is 4 p.m. two days prior to publication.
Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. two days prior to publication.
| Words | 1 Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | 2 Weeks | 3 Weeks | 1 Month |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 0·15 | 2.70 | 4.00 | 5.70 | 9.50 | 14.25 | 18.00 |
| 16·20 | 3.20 | 4.75 | 6.70 | 10.75 | 15.75 | 19.75 |
| 21·25 | 3.70 | 5.50 | 7.70 | 12.00 | 17.25 | 21.50 |
| 26·30 | 4.20 | 6.25 | 8.70 | 13.25 | 18.75 | 23.25 |
| 31·35 | 4.70 | 7.00 | 9.70 | 14.50 | 20.25 | 25.00 |
Classifications
Classified Mail Order Form
800 services offered
900 typing
990 wanted
---
Name.
(phone number published only if included below)
Please print your ad one word per box:
Please print your ad one here per row.
| | | | | |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| | | | | |
| | | | | |
| | | | | |
ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Date ad begins
Total days in paper
Amount paid
Classification
DLOW KANSA PUBLIC
Make checks please to:
191 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66043
---
16
Wednesday, April 15, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Double Coupons
Double Your Savings On All Manufacturer's "Cents Off" Coupons Up To & Including 50c In Value.
Dillons
FOOD STORES
EAGLE
Dalmont
95%
PRESENTS
GOLDEN CLASSIC
Sliced Cheese 3 Pounds
200g (680 calories)
Made in Canada
NET WT. 300g (11.7 oz)
Super Coupon!
Bonus Special Dillon Classic Boneless Half Ham
Limit 1 With Coupon
Limit One Coupon Per Customer
19, 21 1987
Super Coupons Only in Double Coupon Program
95% Fat Free, Ham & Water Product
Dillon Classic Boneless Half Ham $439 Each
Rillows
SINCE 1920
Limit 1 With This Coupon
Rillons
MADE IN IRELAND
0 41260 09852 9
0 41260 09852
Seafood
Shoppe
KU
-Bonus Special-
Dillon Classic Boneless
Whole Ham
Ham Sliced Free!
95% Fat Free.
Ham & Water Product
Taste 'O Sea Perch Fillets 16 oz. Pkg. $329
Taste 'O Sea Fish Cakes 16 oz. Pkg. $139
Taste 'O Sea Fish Sticks 16 oz. Pkg. $269
Taste 'O Sea Fish Squares Sandwich, Breaded. 15 oz. Pkg. $329
Fresh Rainbow Trout Boned. 8-9 oz. Avg. Lb. $289
"Rock Chalk Jayhawk"
Look For Our Recipes At Our Seafood Counter. Lobster And Shrimp Spiced And Steamed Free.
Super Coupon!
No Seafood Shoppes In These Towns: McPherson, Wellington, Augusta, Pratt, Arkansas City, Greensburg, El Dorado, Winfield, Larned, Derby, Mulvane, St. John or Sterling. Some Seafood Items Available In Dodge City, Hays, Great Bend, Junction City or Emporia.
Limit 1 With Coupon
Limit One Coupon per Customer
Coupon Good April 15, 21 - 1987
Received in Double Coupon Program
In Double Coupon Program
Dillon Classic Boneless
Whole Ham
$799
Each
Limit 1 With This Coupon
Dellbus
0 41260 09851
Wells Fargo
MADE IN USA
0 41260 09851 2
Bonus Special
Aurora Fish
FRESH EGGS
LARGE
GRADE A
one dozen whole
Food Club U.S.D.A. Large "A" Eggs
Additional Purchases 79c Doz
Deli & Cheese Shop Try Our... Deli Quarter Pounder
With Lettuce,
Tomato, Onion
& Pickle
99¢ Each
from our... Deli
$1.00 Off "Let The Deli Do It!" Any Party Tray Of Your Choice
Limit One Party Tray Per Coupon. Limit One Coupon Per Customer. Coupon Good April 15-22 1987 Not Included in Double Coupon Program
Rillons
(NO DELI SHIELS) In These Towns: Prakt. Arkansas City, Maysville, Winfield Lared, Merlene, Mulvane St. John or Sterling.)
-Bonus Special-
"Heat & Serve" Holiday
Ham or Turkey Dinner
(Order Forms $24.99 Each Available at Deli.)
(Available In All Dillon Stores.)
Decorated
from our
Plant Dept...
Easter Planter $1199
Cymbidium Orchid Corsage $199
6" Mums $69
3 - 6 Bloom Lily $599
6 Bloom Lily $849
Flower Shop... Bunny Bubble
899
Floral Deliveries Twice Daily, Morning & Afternoon, Sunday Afternoon Only. (Available Only In Stores With Flower Shops.)
Arrangement
Cash & Carry
Super Coupon!
Dillows
Limit 1 D dozen With Coupon
Limit One Coupon per Customer
Coupon Good Not Attached
1987 All Good Not Attached
In Double Coupon Program
41260 09056
Food Club U.S.D.A.
Large "A" Eggs
Wells Fargo
MADE IN U.S.A.
41260 09056
Limit 1 With This Coupon
39¢ Dozen
Bonus Special
THE FLEURIE NON-HAIRY
Whipped Topping
8.5 oz
12 fl. oz.
Top Frost Frozen Whipped Topping
8 oz. Ctn.
Additional Purchases 49c
Super Coupon!
Limit 1 With Coupon
One Limit Coupon Per Customer
Coupon Number 15, 21, 1987
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details. page 2
Thursday
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Darcy Chang/KANSAN
April 16, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 134
(USPS 650-640)
SUMMER OF THE YEAR 1986
Tom Wolfe, author of "The Right Stuff," compares morals and values from the 20th century with his predictions for the next century. Wolfe, a journalist and critic, spoke to about 700 people last night at Hoch Auditorium.
Journalist analyzes relearning of values
Staff writer
By JOHN BUZBEE Staff writer
Journalist and critic Tom Wolfe stood before the students of the University of Kansas last night and said condom.
Six months ago, he said, he wouldn't have done that. But the times are changing. Wolfe told an audience of about 700 in Hoch Auditorium. Condoms are discussed on the nightly news, he said. Some universities are handing them out to their students.
"This is the nature of the real revolutionary, radical developments of the late 20th century." Wolfe said.
People have thrown out their moral values, rules and regulations, he said. "It's just a matter of time."
"I propose, in all modesty, to tell
me about the 21st century," he said.
About the 21st century, he said.
After speaking for about an hour, Wolfe made his prediction. The 21st century will be boring.
Tom Wolfe
Wolfe's most recent work was "The Right Stuff," the story of fighter jocks and America's space program. He also has written about teenagers, custom-car shows, hippies, radicals and the elite of white society.
"Given the history of the 20th century," he said, "maybe boredom isn't so bad."
The 21st century is beginning already, he said, and it's a time of relearning forsaken rules governing everything from sex to furniture.
'Given the history of the 20th century, maybe boredom isn't so bad.'
German designers in the 1920s threw out the old conventions for making chairs, he said, and designed chair backs that were too vertical.
"In one stroke," he said, "they took us straight back to the medieval chair and they gave us a century of lower-back pain."
iournalist and critic
Wolfe has published criticisms of architecture, art and design. Art students today, if they want to be shocking, should emphasize sentiment and love, he said. That will be the emphasis of art in the 21st century.
The sex of the next century will be safe. Wolfe said.
"The relearning is coming very rapidly," he said. "It's like running into a stone wall. And we can sum it up in one word: AIDS."
Wolfe said that while he was searching for an aspirin in Cincinnati in the middle of the night, he went into a pornographic bookstore. He bought some methadone and a aspirin, but also clothes, panyhose and a variety of convenience items.
"I was witnessing the relearning of the virtues of the general store," he said. "It was being born in a pornographic bookstore in the middle of Cincinnati."
Sports also are set for a return to older values, he said. Although professional hockey players will be allowed in the next Olympics, the trend of sports turning professional will end, he said, because professionals have already been教 Hockey players from the Soviet Union don't have that problem.
"They go through the National Hockey League like a knife through water because they have an unfair advantage," he said. "They're not hung over."
Historically, he said, sports were a substitute for war. And paid soldiers don't fight as well as soldiers fighting for their beliefs.
"If you train your athletes not to be amateurs, not to be the athletes fighting for home . . . then you get mercenaries," he said. And mercenaries rape, loot, pillage and occasionally use drugs.
Wolfe is the chief innovator and advocate of New Journalism, which uses subjective analysis and literary devices traditionally left to novelists.
Wolfe's works include "The Electric Kool-Aid Aid Test," a 1968 book about the hippie movement, and "The Kandy-Kolorized Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby" in 1965, a book about custom-car shows. Wolfe holds a doctorate in American Studies from Yale University.
Rick Musser, associate professor of journalism, said some of the country's newspapers, such as USA Today, could learn a little from Wolfe.
"There's still a place for moving information with a little style and wit," he said.
Regents examine budget increases for universities
Bv ROGER COREY
Staff writer
A three-year plan to increase financing for Board of Regents universities will be presented today at a special meeting of the Regents in Emporia.
The plan's goal is to bring the Regents schools up to 95 percent of the financing of their peer institutions by fiscal year 1991. Each Regents university has a different group of peer institutions.
The plan also will raise faculty salaries at the Regents schools to 100 percent of their peer schools aver- increasing them to the same level.
The plan will adjust university budgets for enrollment changes, additional physical facilities, faculty salaries and improvement of existing programs and services.
At present, the Regents universities are 14 percent below the average financing of their peers. Faculty salaries are 8 percent below and the operating budget is 30 percent below the peer average.
"It will take a substantial bit of salesmanship to convince the governor and the Legislature," said Stan Koopik. Regents executive office
He said the plan would allow Kansan to remain competitive in faculty salaries.
"The faculty deserves the increase." Konlik said.
"We're not talking about high salaries, just the average." he said.
The six state universities and the Salina Technical Institute are under the Regents jurisdiction.
Tom Rawson, KU director of business and fiscal affairs, said the University of Kansas would require an additional $12.4 million over the next three years to bring it up to 95 percent of its current institutions. He said $6 million of that amount would be used for faculty salary increases.
"This amount is additional to the annual increase," Rawson said. "The peer institutions are increasing
their budgets, too."
Under the old system, the Regents schools submitted a list of program proposals to the Regents and asked for a specific amount for each proposal.
"A university might request $3 million for a program and the Regents would recommend half that amount," Rawson said. "There was a certain amount of padding involved."
Under the new system, the Regents will recommend a base budget increase for each of the Regents universities based on peer averages. The Regents will submit a proposal to the Regents stating how they intend to use the money.
"The new plan will allow the Regents to annually review university programs," Rawson said.
He said the plan also would increase equity in the system. In the past, the Regents schools were not all at the same percentage of state financing. Under the new plan, all the Regents schools will be increased to the same percentage of peer financing.
"It was only a question of a few percentage points," Rawson said. "But now, all the Regents schools will be the same."
He said the Regents would not ask state legislators to put the plan into legislation.
And in terms of new money, it will not significantly increase the Regents budget recommendations to the state Legislature, he said.
"You have to remember," Rawson said. "in fiscal year 84, the operational budget of the Regents was immediately reduced by $12 million."
The Regents hope the additional money will help Regents universities aid in the state's economic development.
He said there was a direct link between a state's economic vitality and the level at which it supports public higher education. And Kansas seems to mirror that relationship.
Filers beat midnight tax deadline
Staff writer
Taxpayers had to have their federal and state tax returns postmarked by midnight to avoid penalties unless previously had filed for extension.
Bv PEGGY O'BRIEN
A steady stream of bleary-eyed taxpayers trailed into the Lawrence Post Office, 645 Vermont, last night, coming in just under the wire for the 1986 tax return deadline.
The post office was open until midnight with two extra workers. Distribution clerks Jana Tucker and Larry Allen, who had been on duty for a day yesterday, stamped and weighed envelopes for about 100 people every hour.
Most of the taxpayers seemed to be in good spirits, said Bill Reynolds, Lawrence postmaster. Reynolds said he was surprised by many years that the post office had
remained open late. Most customers seem to appreciate the extra hours, be said.
"Usually people on the 15th owe money, but they've been in a good mood all evening," Reynolds said.
Jamestown Widow, Lawrence resi-
suit
Jamestown Widow, Lawrence resi-
suit
10:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Wisdom didn't know until 1 p.m. yesterday that he uled $1,600. He said he had tried to mail his returns while in Olathe earlier in the evening, but couldn't because the Olathe post office had been closed.
This was the first year Wisdom owed money. He said he didn't think he'd file early next year because he probably would owe again and wanted to hang on to his money as long as possible.
said she would file earlier next year so she could get her refund earlier. She said she was late this year because she didn't have much time and had to send the forms home to Leavenworth to be done.
But not all taxpayers last night owed money to the government. Karen Klaus, Leavenworth senior.
Brian Courtney, DeSoto senior,
said about 10:45 p.m. that he had
almost forgotten to file his state
exam papers and has not yet
taxes at work required. Courtney
Theola Taylor, Lawrence resident, said she felt bad about waiting so long.
"I've been thinking about it since January," Taylor said.
Reynolds said that when he was working, in Wichita several years ago, a man arrived at the post office at 8 p.m. April 15th. The man sat on the floor of the post office and filled out his tax returns on the spot. The man received a post mark with two minutes left in the day, he said.
INSIDE
Rain forced competitors indoors for the start of the 62nd Annual Kansas Relays, and Kansas holds three of the top five spots in the women's heptathlon after the first day of competition. The heptathlon and men's decathlon will conclude today. See story page 13.
Wet Relays
Only one person voiced opposition to the proposed increase in KU parking fees at the Parking Ser. center, having yesterday. See story page 3.
Lone protester
Grad student's book studies edible plants
Bv PAUL SCHRAG
The place was Mount Oread. The time was during any of the timeless centuries before modern civilization except away most of the native prairie.
Wild flowers were sprinkled among the grasses of the treeless prairie. Kansa Indians came to the hill to collect wild onions for seasoning their stew of buffalo meat.
Staff writer
Kelly Kindersh, Lawrence graduate student, has an emotional and scientific attachment to such pastoral memories. He's studied prairie plants for more than 10 years, and his book, "Edible Plants of the Prairie," will be published by the University Press of Kansas in late May.
"I see the book and my work as a way to promote our historical past," he said yesterday. "I want to help people realize the need to preserve the prairie and be at attention to where they live.
'What's the value of a biological
Before settlement, the natural prairie stretched from Texas to Saskatchewan and from Missouri to the Rocky Mountains. Now, cities, parks and universities have restricted many prairie plants to areas such as the Flint Hills.
Edible prairie plants have been the subject of Kindscher's greatest interest. More than 120 prairie plants can be eaten.
community such as a prairie? It's too great to quantify."
He likes the taste of purple poppy mallow roots and wild plums. But others, such as white prairie clover roots, have a woody texture, he said.
"the majority are palatable, but only a few are tasty," he said.
Kindsher sampled many of the prairie's natural foods during an 80-day, 690-mile journey on foot from Montana to Wyoming to maintain foothills in the summer of 1983.
Alan Hagman/KANSAN
He didn't live off the land,but his
Phil Minkin and Pat Kehde, founders of Citizens for a Better Downtown, led the fight against a proposed downtown mall. Lawrence voters squeaked the proposal in last week's city elections.
See PLANTS, p. 6, col. 5
Mall referendum proponents consider downtown options
Staff writer
In February, Pat Kehde and Phil Minkin had a question for Lawrence residents.
They had asked many questions of the residents before in "The KU-Lawrence Trivia Quiz Book," which they wrote and published in 1984. But this question was not regarded as trivial by residents.
By TODD COHEN Staff writer
The question asked whether the city should prohibit the closing of Massachusetts and Vermont streets for construction of a proposed downtown mall. The mail would have closed both streets in the 600 block.
ALEXANDRA E. BROOKS
AND MARGARET C. BROOKS
Last week, in a record turnout for a city election, voters answered the question. "Yes to open streets and 'no' to the $5.7 million project being developed by Jacobsi & Jacobs of Cleveland.
"Pat and I have got a lot of positive feedback that .. democracy works." Minkin said yesterday.
Yesterday, a week after their victory, Kehde, the coordinator of the KU information center, Minkin, a cook at the local Headstart program, were still unwinding from their two-month campaign.
Kehde said, "The mail that was planned for downtown would have killed downtown."
Neither had anticipated that they would get involved in a mall fight. Keisha is ready now to step back for awhile. Minkin, however, was invigorated by the landslide victory and is ready to help the city work on new downtown development.
Unknown to them, the two old friends were in a large, although at the time, silent, majority when
"I'd been in McGovern campaigns . . . it's real fun to be in the majority," Minkin said. "I thought I was in the minority."
they decided in January to do something about the mall.
"We wanted some way to let the commission know the sense of the community." Minkin said.
Kehide said, "I said," Hey, why don't we hold a meeting." We didn't know if anyone would come or not.
The group needed 2,216 signatures. In nine days, they collected 4,430.
Feb. 3, more than 200 residents showed up to help form Citizens for a Better Downtown. After the group agreed to Minkin and Kehe's proposal to have a public vote on the street closings, the two led 236 people in circulating a petition to force a vote on the mall.
"It snowballed once it got started," Minkin said. "It was widespread across the city."
Then came arguments about the petition's legality and whether the vote could be binding, as CBD
4
Kedhe said, "There was a strong sentiment from the people we talked to against closing the building, the one thing we could agree on."
wanted. Feb 24, after a three-hour debate, the city commission voted to put an advisory, or non-binding, referendum, with CBD's question and two others formulated by commissioners, on the April 7 general election ballot.
After that, the mall and the referendum issue dominated the commission campaign. CBD, the candidates, the mall developer, several political action committees and individuals joined the fight.
"There were enormous amounts of people starting to do things on their own," Kedhe said. "It was cool and funny, but a funny sense, it was real easy."
The mall was rejected easily by a 3 to 1 margin, and three mall opponents were elected to the incumbents. All the incumbents were defeated.
One of the incumbents, David Longhurst, said, "CBD didn't create this sentiment, but they did focus it.
"They may have fanned the flames a little bit."
2
Thursdav. April 16, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Around the World
Shultz optimistic about reaching agreement on nuclear missiles
BRUSSELS, Belgium — Secretary of State George P. Shultz expressed optimism in Moscow about reaching an accord on eliminating medium-range nuclear missiles from Europe and flew to Brussels to consult with NATO allies.
"We will consult, and I am sure come to a good conclusion," Shultz said before leaving Moscow, where he held three days of meetings with Soviet officials, including Kremlin leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev, who made new arms proposals.
Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard A. Shevardnadze told Shultz yes-
terdary that the Soviets would eliminate their shorter-range missiles in the Soviet Union within a year after Senate ratification of a proposed treaty on medium-range missiles.
The Soviets have 80 shorter-range missiles on their territory.
North altered papers, memos, source says
The Soviets have about 50 medium-range launchers — with a range of 350 to 600 miles — in East Germany and Austria. They could be scrapped on the signing of a treaty to rid Europe of hundreds of U.S. and Soviet medium-range missiles, which have a range of 600 to 3,000 miles.
Across the Country
WASHINGTON — Before Lt. Col. Oliver North was fired last November, he and his secretary destroyed so many documents, that their White House shredding machine broke down under the load, government investigators have been told.
The shredder became backed up and jammed as North and his secretary, Fawn Hall, shoved memos and other documents into it, a source familiar with the Iran-contra investigation said yesterday.
Meanwhile, sources said that investigators for congressional
committees and independent counsel Lawrence E. Walsh have obtained numerous materials from North's office, including a record of his telephone calls, meetings and other contacts, and original versions of four documents that were altered by his secretary.
The sources said the alterations appeared to be an attempt to conceal North's program for raising money and supplying arms to the rebels opposing Nicaragua's government. Mr. Sánchez was familiar with the investigations, spoke only on condition of anonymity.
Espionage hearing for Marine recesses
WASHINGTON — A pre-trial hearing for a Marine embassy guard accused of espionage recessed yesterday without any decision on whether he should be bound over for court-martial.
Lt. Col John Shotwell, a Marine Corps spokesman, said the prelittal hearing for Sgt. Clayton J. Lonetree recessed at about 4:30 p.m. EDT. He said proceedings likely would be completed this morning.
embassy late at night last year.
Lonteire and his defense attorneys went behind closed doors at 9 a.m. yesterday to hear prosecuting attorneys present witnesses and other evidence in a bid to justify the start of a court-martial.
Lonetree, 25, is a former guard at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow. He has been accused of becoming involved romantically with a Soviet woman while working in Moscow and then allowing Soviet agents to roam frequently the
During a break in the proceedings, one of Lonetree's defense attorneys told reporters his client had not denied having a relationship with Violetta Sennaa, the woman who worked at the embassy.
Jury finds Carter, 13 protesters not guilty
But Michael V. Stuhff, the attorney, added he was prepared to present evidence that such fraternization was "a very common accepted practice."
NORTHAMPTON, Mass. — A jury found Amy Carter, Abbie Hoffman and 13 other protesters not guilty yesterday of charges stemming from a demonstration in the fall against CIA recruiters at the University of Massachusetts.
cleared the chamber after the reading of the first verdict was greeted with thunderous applause.
The six-member jury announced the verdict to a courtroom packed with 130 spectators about three hours after they began deliberations. Hampshire County District Court Judge Richard Connon
Hospital officials deny Hinckley's request
"The people of Northampton, a jury of six in Northampton, have found the CIA guilty of a larger crime than trespassing and deceit," she said. "We had a legitimate right to protest." the daughter of former President Jimmy Carter said as she left the courthouse.
WASHINGTON — Officials of a mental hospital today withdrew their request that presidential assailant John W. Hinckley Jr. be given a 12-hour pass to visit his family Easter weekend.
The hospital said it needed time to study writings and other materials discovered in a court-ordered search of Hinckley's room Tuesday night.
The application was withdrawn after prosecutors revealed that Hinkley corresponded last year with Florida killer theorese Bundy. Two of Bundy's letters to Hinkley were found in Hinkley's room at St. Elizabeth's Bundy who is an assistant to the three 1978 murders, told authorities that he received three or four letters from Hinkley.
From Kansan wires.
Weather
From the KANSAN Weather Service
LAWRENCE FORECAST
Today, the weather changes for the better with partly sunny skies and a high near 70 degrees. Tonight, the clouds will leave town and the low will be about 46 degrees. Tomorrow, the weather will be better with a high in the mid-70s.
sunny skies and a high in the mid-70s. WEATHER FACT: Every state has had a tornado touchdown. Most occur in the plains states and the West has the fewest.
DES MOINES
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OMAHA
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LINGCOLN
71 / 48
CONCORDIA
73 / 47
TOPEKA
74 / 49
KANSAS
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72 / 51
COLUMBIA
69 / 50
ST. LOUIS
66 / 53
SALINA
75 / 50
CHANUTE
75 / 48
WICHITA
78 / 47
SPRINGFIELD
70 / 49
TULSA
79 / 55
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Local Briefs
Student caught and charged for possession
A KU student was charged in Douglas County District Court this week with possession of marijuana, a class A misdemeanor.
Chad Duane Branson, 19, Ozakwie freshman, was arrested April 7 by KU police after police received an anonymous tip the day before that he was growing marijuana in his room at Hashinger Hall, said Jeanne Longaker, KU police spokesman.
Branson was taken to the county jail and released about an hour later. A bonding service posted $500 for his release.
He is scheduled to appear in court at 4 p.m. Tuesday.
A class A misdemeanor is punishable by up to one year in the county jail, up to a $2,500 fine or both.
KU student pleads guilty to forgery
A KU student pleaded guilty last week in Douglas County District Court to two counts of misdemeanor, court documents showed.
The student, Vince L. Bommari,
Prairie Village freshman, is
scheduled to be sentenced at 1:30
p.m. May 8.
The charges, filed Feb. 9, originally were class E felonies, but after Bommarito pleaded not guilty on April 3, they were amended to include bail by up to one year in the county and up to a $250 fine or both
The charges were amended April 9, and Bommarito pleaded guilty Friday.
Bommarito forged the first check Nov. 6, for $10.45, the charges state, and the second check Nov. 30, for $8.25.
Both the original and amended charges state that Bommarito forged two checks belonging to him, R. Porter, Neodesha freshman.
At the time, Bommarito and Porter both were living in Joseph R. Pearson Hall. Bommarito has since moved to Oliver Hall.
Jeanne Longaker, KU police spokesman, said the checks had been used to pay for pizzas.
The proceeds will go to Women's Transitional Care Services, which operates a house in Lawrence for women who have been abused or faced with other difficult circumstances.
Fraternity sponsors male fashion show
Campus and Area University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 16, 1987
The show will feature business, casual and athletic fashions, and other entertainment such as poetry and singing. Women who attend the revue also will receive free travel to 2.o. a.m., in the Kansas Room.
KU prof is awarded a research grant
Shih I Chu, professor of chemistry, recently was awarded a grant from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation to continue his research in nonlinear multiphoton dynamics.
Chu is one of 273 Guggenheim fellows selected from 3,421 applicants.
From staff and wire reports.
OVERLAND PARK — A multi-faceted bill that legalizes the sale of liquor by the drink at public restaurants, and overhauls a variety of Kansas liquor laws, was enacted yesterday by Gov. Mike Hayden.
Hayden signs bill approving liquor by the drink
The Associated Press
ceremony in Overland Park, calling it landmark legislation which makes "historic changes" in state liquor policies.
The new law takes effect next week upon publication in the Kansas Register. However, the actual start of public drinking will be delayed
Upon receiving a license, any bar or restaurant that derives 30 percent of its profits from the sale of food will sell it directly to customers on a per-drank basis.
Hayden signed the bill into law at a
until licenses for the new drinking establishments are issued July 1
ber's overwhelming voter approval of an amendment to the Kansas Constitution that lifted the ban on saloons.
tion," Hayden said in prepared remarks.
"I commend the Kansas Legislature for its hard work and dedication in responding to the voters' wishes by sending me this enabling legisla-
The law is a response to Novem
The bill will only affect the 36 counties in which the constitutional amendment carried in November. In the other 69 counties, the private club system will remain for those wanting to drink with their meals.
Parking fee hike opposition slight at public hearing
By KJERSTI MOEN
Staff writer
A proposed jump in KU parking fees received one protest yesterday at a parking services public hearing at the Kansas Union.
William Scott, professor of English, was the only person at the hearing to voice opposition against a proposed 30 percent overall increase in parking fees, which would take effect this fall.
"I think it is unfortunate to have you jump at this bad time." Scott said.
The largest jump in parking fees will be in blue permits and campus passes, which will increase respectively by 35 percent and 76 percent. Faculty members are the heaviest users of that combination of passes, which allows owners to park in any blue zone on main campus.
I think it's unfortunate to have this large jump at this bad time.'
William Scott professor of English
Raymond K. Moore, parking committee chairman, said the fee increases went hand in hand with the need to find the most desirable parking spaces.
Scott objected to the timing of the increases because faculty salaries may go up by as little as 1.5 percent next year. He said the increased were unfairly distributed in terms of users' ability to pay.
Under parking services' proposal, the cost of a blue pass will increase from $52 to $70. The price of a campus pass will almost double, from $17 to $30.
Del Shankel, acting executive vice chancellor, said in a prepared financial impact statement, "persons have the option of selecting less expensive permits if they are willing to sacrifice some convenience."
Don Kearns, parking director, said that parking fees had not gone up in
10 years and that a fee increase was needed.
The fee increases will help pay for a $5.1 million parking structure to be constructed by fall 1988. Moore said.
The University plans to finance the 600-800 space garage by selling revenue bonds. Repaying the bonds and maintaining the parking garage will cost about $600,000 a year for 15 to 25 years, or until the bonds are paid back, Moore said.
Those costs must be covered by income above and beyond parking services regular revenue, he said. The cost means an increase in parking fees.
Parking officials also proposed that red permits would increase from $45 to $55, yellow permits from $35 to $40, residence hall permits from $20 to $23, blue motorcycle permits from $25 to $30 and red motorcycle permits from $20 to $25. Parking meter fines would increase to 25 cents an hour.
Also, loading zone passes would be replaced with loading zone meters, which would charge 25 cents for 20 or 40 minutes. Group I and II parking violations would increase from $7.50 to $10.
The Board of Regents will consider KU parking services' proposals and protests against them at the Regents May 14-15 session.
Parking services would be able to charge multiple fines at parking meters and restrict rules for obtaining medical, temporary and departmental passes. Medical passes would be valid for one year only. Now, passes can last several years. Temporary passes would be valid for six weeks, and departmental passes would be tougher to obtain.
Parking officials also want to give visitors one extra hour of access to main campus by allowing traffic until 8 a.m. and after 4 p.m. Now, campus is closed between 7:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Visitors would no longer be able to pay to park in the building and the Spencer Museum of Art. Instead, parking meters would be installed.
Donna Hultine, assistant parking director, said the parking office had received only three letters protesting the proposed changes in parking regulations. But several people had complained to parking service attendants about the new rules.
843-2533
WREEDRING SERVICE
KAW MOTOR CO.
KAW REEDRING
Jerri Niebaum/Special to the Kansan
What goes up. . .
Randall McDaniel of the Kaw Motor Co., of North Lawrence, connects a cable to a 5,000-pound electromagnet. The magnet slipped off the loading dock at Malott Hall yesterday while the wrecker service was removing it. The magnet was an outdated device owned by the physics department and used to measure vibrations in the nucleus of an atom. The wrecking company used a low truck to pull the magnet back onto the truck and took it to its wrecking yard, where it will be used as scrap metal.
Hunger strike brings in 13 letters
Staff writer
By JOSEPH REBELLO
In the rotunda of Strong Hall where Michael Maher sits alone on the 16th day of a hunger strike, the late afternoon stillness is interrupted only by the sound of doors being locked as administrators leave for the day.
That, Maher says, is a lonely sound. But it reminds him that he must be making a point to several people as they end their day.
"This is the time that people in the chancellor's office go home for dinner," Maher said. "Many of them have to pass this way on their way out, and I think that makes them aware of what I'm doing."
Maher, Roeland Park senior; began his hunger strike March 31, saying that he would not end it until at least 50 KU alumni wrote letters to the Kansas University Endowment
Association asking it to divest its interests companies that do business in South Africa.
By yesterday evening, Maher had received only 13 letters. And, although he feels tired and sluggish after living on no more than a gallon of milk and fruit juice every day, his efforts are paying off, he said.
"The message is beginning to get across by word of mouth," he said. Also, we've got better media coverage this week. I think we'll get the letters."
Some letters may have gone to the Endowment Association, Maher said, although he had asked that they be sent to his address at 2129 Ohio St. If that was so, he would have not have the correct count, he said.
He said he would not call off the strike until all 50 letters were received at his address.
"I'd been discouraged by the response not coming as fast as we'd hooed," he said.
Maha said he had taken the advice of a KU assistant professor of health, physical education and recreation before going on his hunger strike. He said of milk and fruit juice he could keep for at least another 16 days, he said.
He said since the strike began, he had lost 10 to 15 pounds.
But some of Maher's friends said they were worried that his hunger strike might seriously threaten his health if it went on for too long.
Libby DeBauge, Kansas City, Kan., junior said, "There's always a question of where you draw the line between continuing a hunger strike for a long time and realizing that it could begin to damage your health permanently."
84-year-old loses $13,800 in card game with con men
By PAUL BELDEN
Staff writer
An 84-year-old Lawrence man gave $13,800 to two alleged men Thursday after he lost a single game of three-card monte, Lawrence police said yesterday.
The man, who asked not to be identified, said,
"Oh, they were slick. They were too slick for me. It's just a case of me being honest and them being liars."
The victim of the scam said that a man approached him Thursday morning in the parking lot of Wal-Mart Discount Cities, 2727 S. 10th St., near the intersection of another man approached and joined them. The
two men acted as if they didn't know each other, the victim said.
The victim then drove the two men to a parking lot in north Lawrence, where one of the men brought out a roll of money and suggested a card game, he said.
"There were three cards, two reds and a black one," the victin said. "Except the black one."
David Reavis, Lawrence police detective,
said there were several variations of three-
card monte, but nearly all of them involved a
The object of the game was to pick the black card, but when the victim picked the card with the crease in it, that card was red.
card switch.
card switch.
After he lost the game, the victim drove to a branch of Capitol Federal Savings and Loan, withdrew an unspecified amount of money, returned to the north Lawrence location and gave it to the men.
"Then they wanted to know if there were any other branches of the Capitol Federal bank in town," the victim said. "I told them, and they wanted me to go get money out of there, too."
"The guy at Capitol Federal tried to talk me out of it, but he didn't say the right things."
but he didn't say the right things.
After withdrawing money from the other Capitol Federal branch in Lawrence, the victim gave the men the money.
The victim reported the confidence game to Lawrence police Monday after talking to people at the bank, he said.
Reavis said con men typically traveled around the country, making a hit and moving on, time and time again. Lawrence police generally receive about two reports a year of con men in town.
The victim did not recognize any faces from police mug sheets, Reavis said.
"I don't know why I did it," he said. "They let me have every chance to get away from them. They sat and waited while I got the money."
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Thursday, April 16, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Work before play
The boys and girls in Topeka are going out to recess, but they haven't finished their homework yet.
The two-week recess that the legislators started Monday couldn't have come at a worse time for the University of Kansas. Now final action on the fee release cannot come until the legislators return.
In the meantime, the University is left in a bind because it doesn't know how much money it will receive. The House approved a release of $600,000 to the University, and the Senate approved a $900,000 release of the Board of Regents $12 million 1987 fee release requested by KU.
While many legislators are enjoying a break from the political world, a conference committee is meeting this week to try to hammer out a compromise between the House and Senate. If a compromise is reached, it still won't do KU any immediate
good, and that is cause for concern for KU officials.
The uncertainty has made KU budget planners conservative about their spending, Ward Zimmerman, director of the KU budget office, said recent summer class closures were due to a lack of money in KU's budget.
This and the rest of the budget matters are reasons that legislators should have finished their work on the fee release issue before heading out to recess.
Legislators have said they are concerned about the state's fiscal stability, and with such large sums of money involved, there will be much deserved debate over how to allocate it, but it can't be done from the living rooms of legislators' homes.
And while legislators take a break, KU officials are forced to sit around and wait to see just how much money they will have.
Jeers to the jugs
Hey, has Kansas got a deal for your out-of-state friends.
If they spend enough money and collect enough stickers in a new state of Kansas coupon book, they may leave Kansas with a free Coleman beverage jug, compliments of the state of Kansas.
All they have to do is pick up a coupon book at an official Kansas information booth, spend a night in a participating Kansas motel and visit a Kansas tourist attraction. And if they validate the coupon book at each stop, they win a free jig, valued at $20.
The coupon book is the latest tourism promotion thought up by the whiz kids at the state Department of Travel and Tourism in Topeka. Officials claim that their "Linger Longer" campaign will effectively divert travelers who are driving across Kansas to the state's most popular tourist attractions, like the world's deepest hand-dug well and the world's largest ball of twine.
And the department says that while all those tourists stream out of the Rocky Mountains to the Land of Ahs to collect their jugs, they will be fueling the state's economy with out-of-state money.
If this lame idea is indicative of the department's overall plan to to attract visitors to Kansas, it is no small wonder that Kansas is among the least popular of states to tour.
Instead of this dumb plan, the department should invest its limited resources in improving Kansas's existing recreation areas and developing new vacation areas that travelers and native Kansans will want to visit on their own.
Stop the name-calling
Let's hope that this time President Reagan has been paying attention to recent events,
Libyan leader Col. Moammar Gadhafi has been taking a softer line toward the United States in recent months. Last week, he urged the Reagan administration to do the same and to meet him halfway in developing smoother relations between the two countries.
After the United States bombed Libya last April and failed in its attempt to assassinate Gadhafi, tensions were high between the two countries. Fear of retaliation by the Libyans further strained relations. The United States was blaming the Libyans for all terrorist activities in Europe, and there was a complete lack of trust between the two countries.
Now, Gadhafi is taking the initiative toward promoting better relations. He is urging the two countries to respect each other's territory. He also said he thought that when a new president was elected and a new administration was appointed, relations would improve.
Whether the Reagan administration can take Gadhafi's proposal with complete sincerity is not the issue. The point is that Gadhafi did make an effort to be civil, and the United States should do the same.
If Libya hopes to regain some respect from the United States, it must earn it. But in the meantime, the United States has little to lose by merely stopping the name-calling that has marked its relations with Libya.
News staff
News staff
Frank Hansel Editor
Jennifer Benjamin Managing editor
Juli Warren News editor
Brian Kaberline Editorial editor
Sandra Engelland Campus editor
Mark Sebert Sports editor
Piane Quiltmeier Photo editor
Bill Skeet Graphics editor
Tom Eblen General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Lisa Weems Business manager
Bonnie Hardy Advisor
Denise Stephens Retail sales manager
Kelly Scherer Campus sales manager
Duncan Calhoun Marketing manager
Lori Coppel Classified manager
Loren Lindersmani Production manager
David Nixon National sales manager
Jeanne Hines 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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Guest shots should be writer will be photographed.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, Kann 181 Staffer-Finl Hall, Lawen, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and on Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Subscriptions by mail are $40 per year in Douglas County and outside the county. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student bank.
should spend some of their television revenue on giving young athletes a chance to stop wasting their time and the resources of universities.
Opinions
POSTMASTER. Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
Minor league farm systems in these sports would serve a dual purpose. They would not interfere with student-athletes who want to attend universities, and they would give those who hope to play professional sports the best schooling possible — experience.
Because of the recent SMU football scandal, many people have been examining college athletics. Some have proposed that players be paid while they are attending universities because athletes have no time to take another job to earn spending money
Time to separate school and athletics
Presumably because the players needed disposable income, boosters and coaches at SMU made cash payments to players. Cash payments to players seem like a good idea, if these players are not students also
Minor leagues also would give to those players who can't make it to the big leagues a chance to earn a place in them so they use the best skills they have.
I
John Benner
After high school, some students choose to go to college and some realize they are better suited to careers that require technical training instead.
Columnist
The probable result of minor leagues would be that the overall talent of college athletics would remain flat, but college athletes would remain as at fair as it is now.
It is time for the establishment of football and basketball farm leagues.
because the competition for the sports and study time of a student-athlete has corrupted the system of sports, it is time to separate the two
Carpentry and auto mechanics, for example, are no more part of college curriculum than are basketball and football. Why, then, have universities become the minor leagues for professionals? Because they precisely what relationship exists between a liberal education and professional sports?
Carpenters and auto mechanics, in general, normally do not consider attending a university to prime themselves for their careers. Is that a mistake? Perhaps, but that depends on the value of a liberal education. To a carpenter, Shakespeare doesn't put bread on the table.
In the case of athletes in nonrevenue sports, scholarships allow them a chance to get a college degree by taking a sport at which they are skilled.
Nor does it feed the professional athlete.
The arguments in favor of college sports range from the increased student and community spirit that
But in the big-money sports such as basketball and football, colleges simply allow professional leagues to make a big investment without making a big investment.
they can foster to the fact that they can be a means for underprivileged students to get a higher education.
Furthermore, the income earned by basketball and football often can help to finance other non-revenue sports.
Scholarships enable a university to draw and keep the best athletes so that it, instead of a rival university, can watch the hired talent perform.
For of these reasons, college sports should be preserved, but the makeup of leagues and the distribution of scholarships must be changed.
The National Football League and the National Basketball Association
And perhaps this would cut down on the number of college athletes who do not complete their degrees and are taught by their schools and are out of work.
Letter innaccurate
Mailbox
In her response in the April 1 issue of the Kansan to Paul Campbell's column on Nicaragua, Meg Polz-Mears made some disturbing and inaccurate comments. She claims that the "myth of equality under socialism" is better than the "reality of inequality under capitalism." She is absolutely right: Equality under socialism is a myth.
Nicaragua is nothing more than a communist-controlled Soviet client-state. That's right, clinical tests show that 99 percent of the countries that accept Soviet "gifts" of military hardware somehow become Soviet-controlled communist governments.
Equality under communism is a joke. The only thing that communism makes equal is the level of poverty. Many nice changes come with this equality, such as re-education camps, slave labor farms and few of their rights, and free doms that we can count for granted, unless you want to take free elections with one candidate for office as a constitutional right.
A society has two choices, it can be true, or it can be equal. It cannot both.
If the freedom fight by the contras in Nicaragua is lost, the Soviets will have a secure Central American base. Their Sandinista government claims that it will spread its equality under socialism to neighboring countries. Their primary objective is obvious — Mexico.
If a communist regime is able to overthrow the weak Mexican government, the new leaders would default on $150 billion in loans to the "gringo banks," causing bank closings and a possible collapse of the U.S. economy. This would cause the greatest point of fault and economic turbulence in the United States since Civil War as 40 to 50 million Mexicans pour across the border to flee the equality of the new communist government.
Communism in Nicaragua poses the greatest single threat to democracy, freedom and our way of life. The television series "Amerika" is a chilling example of what really can happen in the United States if we let down our guard and stop supporting the anti-communitist fight around the world. If aid to the contras is cut off, it would mean no democracy, no freedom and few human rights in Nicaragua and possibly other parts of Central America. Maybe, even here. "The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing."
Bible is the last word
It is very important to remember that God’s word, the Holy Bible, has always been the final word on morality and right-living. It seems that people only wish to interpret it when they disagree with its teachings.
Scott Damewood Rossville freshman
receive seemingly clouded attention from the biblical writers. Homosexuality, however, has always been and will continue to be WRONG. The Bible is very clear on this topic; God hates it. There can be no other proper religion. There can be no whether monogamous or otherwise, is neither natural nor tolerable.
Secondly, if one refuses to accept certain portions of the Scriptures, he or she does not accept the Bible at all; they wholly truth or wholly falsehood.
Neither God nor the church are bound by the fickleness of human opinion to change morality or the truths found in the Bible. Manth, though, is required to adapt biblical truths to his life in order to conform to God's standards.
It is stated in II Timothy 3:16 that, "All scripture is given by inspiration of God and is profitable for . . . correction and instruction." We must let the Bible speak for itself and respond to what we hear.
Lawrence graduate student
Granted, some ethical issues
Protect free speech
Two of the basic rights under the Constitution are the rights of free speech and press. However, a few students on this campus have taken it upon themselves to judge who is privileged to those rights.
Three thousand copies of the KU Stalwart were stolen from the campus distribution boxes around campus sometime on April 6. I received permission from the Student Senate office to use those boxes. The papers haven't been found and are presumed destroyed.
Were this to happen to a publication that runs even more extreme than the Kansan's editorial policies, we would have heard no end to the cries of censorship and the lack of freedom of the press. Kansan editors would have demanded an investigation and that those responsible be kicked out of the University. Rallies in front of Strong Hall would cry out for the administration to do something to protect their rights.
However, attacks against conservative students have occurred on many other campuses as well and I have written previously about those attacks. But I was brushed aside. Now, just a very few students have decided to censor something they don't think other student should read. The Berkeley's of this nation have reached the heartland of America.
What is worst of all, is that the overwhelming majority of students on this campus welcome other points of view and enjoy reading something other than reprocessed editorials from the Washington Post. Sadly, since most of their information about books is taken from Kanehaus and from a letter like this that it is likely to get information that otherwise would go unnoticed.
prevent further attacks
We must make sure that freedom of the press is guaranteed on this campus and I encourage the University administration to take action to
It is a sad commentary on our society that such censorship still exists, even on universities where a diverse number of opinions used to be generated openly.
Victor Goodpasture editor and publisher Kansas University Stalwart
Keep the women out
I've heard of all types of professional sports figures — football, baseball, basketball, soccer, etc. But I have to admit, I never have heard of the professional locker room interviewee referred to in Nicole Sauzek's article of April 14. What does it take to become one? Years of practice undressing in front of various members of the opposite sex?
In case you haven't noticed, I don't believe women reporters should be allowed in men's locker rooms. I don't read sports articles written by women because I disagree with the policy. Women reporters have said they shouldn't have to be in and "gotten used to it." I don't think they should have to. Why? It's mentioned several times in Sauzek's article. Respect.
Respect, unfortunately, goes both ways. Women reporters want respect from the athletes but they don't respect players' rights to privacy. Undressing, showering and dressing, seem to be fairly private acts. A person whose rights of privacy are being respected should have the right
to say who will be present during these acts. These are athletes, not male strippers.
the KU women's basketball team locker room is "open to the media" but not until the players have showered and dressed. Why not allow anyone in during the showers and dressing rooms for women into the locker rooms, they would have to allow men also. Check with the office of affirmative action.
They don't want to do that. Are they behaving like immature girls? Sauzek claims men uncomfortable undressing in front of women reporters are acting like boys. shouldn't go both ways? I find it hard to believe women have cornered the market on modesty.
Women reporters have said that if players were truly professionals, it wouldn't matter who sees them undress in locker rooms. What does not being a professional have to do with requesting privacy?
Perhaps women reporters should prove their professionalism by undressing and showering along with athletes while in men's locker rooms during interviews. This would put them on an equal setting with the players.
Come on, let's see what you're made of.
Brian Courtney DeSoto senior
MR. BADGER
by AD. Long
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday. April 16, 1987
5
Fear slows progress study director says
Bv IERRI NIEBAUM
Staff writer
Fear and defeatism can lead to unhappiness and lack of progress, the director of a cross-cultural studies program in Tucson, Ariz., said last night.
"It always furthers the problem and obstructs the solution," Boyd said about fear.
Doug Boyd, director of the program, spoke on "Uses and Abuses to about 25 people at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
He defined two types of fear. One type, he said, is an irrational fear of unchangeable circumstances. Death creates this type of fear. Death making this inevitable fact of life is critical to overcoming fear, he said.
"Once you've done that, you can put your thumb on fear," Boyd said.
He said the second type of fear was rational but needed to be overcome by action. One could eliminate the fear by visualizing the end of the circumstances causing it. Fear of nuclear war and poisonous snakes are these types of fears.
Tim Mirkin Nufire, Kansas City, Mo., senior, said Boyd's speech had given him a sense of control over issues like nuclear war that previously had seemed hopeless. He doesn't have any solutions, he said.
"I still don't know how to do it," Mirkin Nufire said, "but I now have a sense that there is a way." Boyd has been an activist for
social change since he was a boy growing up in California.
"We are all responsible for much more of the human potential than we express today," he said.
Boyd started the Cross-Cultural Studies Program, which was originally based in California, in 1974 as a format for giving workshops and seminars to teach people how to regulate stress. He said he had encountered many people with defeatist ideas, even children.
"They believe the world is going to end," he said. "And the grown-ups are going to do it."
Boyd put his hands in front of his face and backed away from his audience to show how he thinks people cut themselves off from the rest of the world in fear, thus allowing themselves to be isolated from nature.
"In India, you walk right up to animals," he said. "In our society, everything wild and natural runs from us."
Boyd lived in the Far East for about 10 years, studying foreign cultures. He later toured India as a researcher for the Meningeration Foundation of Topeka. He also has lived and worked with American Indian medicine men and traditional tribal leaders.
He wrote the books "Rolling Thunder" and "Swami" to increase popular understanding of Native American and Oriental spirituality and healing.
North filled void in scandal, prof says
By BENJAMIN HALL
Staff writer
Lt. Col. Oliver North probably was not a self-serving cowboy in the iron-contra affair, but a bureaucrat who tried to fill a void left by the president, an associate professor of public administration said yesterday.
Melvin Dubnick, associate professor of public administration, spoke to about 40 people at a forum at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204
Dubnick said the U.S. government's recent arms deal with Iran demonstrated that government leaders should recruit recruits to carry out their policies.
By far the most scandalous part of the Iran-contra affair was the president's abdication of responsibility for governance." Dubnick said.
Dubnick showed the group a copy of Fortune magazine featuring a picture of President Reagan and the
headline, "What managers can learn from manager Reagan."
The issue was published several weeks before publicity about the Iran affair, in which the United States sold arms to Iran in an effort to free hostages. Some of the money from the sale was funnelled to the contras
"I think Fortune is trying to collect as many of these as they can so they can burn them," Dubnick said.
He said North and former national security adviser Robert McFarlane became involved in the operation to fill a vacuum that should have been filled by Reagan.
"The image of North as a wild cowboy running around trying to take control doesn't fit," he said. "North and McParlane felt a responsibility to fill in for the president and other major policy makers."
Professional bureaucats like North and McFarlane may have too much devotion to the president, Dub-
"When we abdicate our governance responsibility, we should not complain too loudly about the actions of bureaucrats who feel obliged to step in," he said.
nick said.
But Edward Shaw, professor of biology who attended the forum, said, "It should not have been the responsibility of McFarlane to take action."
The National Security Council is supposed to be an advisory group to the president, he said. "He was behaving as though it was a managerial group."
Dubnick said, "I think McFarlane and North knew they were stepping in where they shouldn't."
Howard Baumgartel, professor of communication studies, said, "Isn't there a problem with our expecting the president to have a policy on every single issue?"
The security council is supposed to help the president by providing information and advice, Dubnick said.
Jack Bremer, director of Ecumenical Christian Ministries, asked Dubnick whether public apathy contributed to policy problems.
Dbnick said, "I think it does."
The Iran-contra affair and Watergate both may have been consequences of an apathetic public, Dubnick said. "It's only when the consequences of that atmosphere come up do people say, 'Why weren't we more involved?'"
E. Jackson Baur, retired professor of sociology, said Reagan seemed to use whatever means available to reach his goals of democracy in Central America and freedom for hostages in the Middle East.
"I have no doubt that Reagan is convinced of the nobility of his goals," he said.
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Thursday, April 16, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
HELP!
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© 1987 Universal Press Syndicate
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Kelly Kindscher, Lawrence graduate student, shows some of the edible plants that can be found on Kansas prairies.
SUNRISE PLACE
9th & Michigan
- Prices start from $385
Featuring: Luxurious two bedroom townhouse living
- Energy efficient
- Free cablevision
- Swimming pool
- Within walking distance to campus
We are open for show
Monday—Saturday 1:00—6:00 p.m.
Please stop by our office or call
841-1287.
Plants Continued from p
Continued from p. 1
COME TO THE INDONESIAN PARTY Parks Inn International (Formerly Masters Inn)
Saturday April 18th 8 p.m.-1 a.m.
diet included wild onions in soup,
milkweed, lamb's quarter shoots and
beebalm leaves for tea. He collected
the seeds from all the plants and
developed the idea for his book.
Refreshments Provided
TICKETS
$3.00 in advance
$4.00 at the door
For more information and tickets call:
Ali (749-1214); Lisi (864-6076); Andy (841-7163);
Hendrick (843-1495)
Each plant has a story to tell, Kindscher said. He wrote about those stories, relating how prairie plants were ashed as food by Indians and settlers.
Rare as prairie remnants are, the University of Kansas has an acre on campus, untouched by plow or grazing. Kindscher said.
Known as the prairie acre and located southwest of the chancellor's residence north of 16th Street, it has retained only about 20 percent of its original species of plants, he said.
Lack of fires, which keep a prairie
Kindscher, 29, earned a bachelor's degree in environmental studies from KU in 1979. He began master's studies in systematics and ecology in the fall. He now is researching medicinal uses of prairie plants.
Frank Denoyelles, chairman of environmental studies and professor of systematics and ecology, said he would like to see the prairie acres developed into a full-fledged prairie preserve.
On Campus
neatty, and the intrusion of shade trees have caused many of the acre's species to die.
"Preservation of any natural habitat is important because we are losing so much of it already," he said.
The History Club will have an organizational and planning meeting
- "Thoughts and Images of a Trip to Argentina," a Brown B Bag Lunch Merienda, is scheduled at 11:30 a.m. today at 109 Lippincott Hill.
- "Entry-level Success in the College and University Workplace," an adult development colloquium, is scheduled at 11:30 a.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
at 12:30 p.m. today in the history department lounge at Wescoe Hall.
■ "Accommodating Persons with Disabilities," an Affirmative Action workshop, is scheduled at 2 p.m. today in the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union.
A women's recognition program by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center is scheduled at 8 p.m. today in Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas Union.
GAMONS SNOW
GAMMONS SNOWMEN
DON'T MISS
DOW JONES &
THE INDUSTRIALS
DOW JONES &
THE INDUSTRIALS
PETER THORN
TONIGHT AT... GAMMONS SNOW
GAMMONS SNOW G
SUA NEEDS YOU!
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Student Union Activities is planning an exciting '87-'88 year full of concerts, speakers, trips, all kinds of recreation and much more. You can be a part of SUA by sharing your time, talents, and ideas in these areas as a committee person.
FILMS: help plan, promote and coordinate the film program.
FINE ARTS: assist in the planning and coordinating of cultural programs; i.e., art fairs, performing arts, and literary readings.
FORUMS: help plan and promote in lecture oriented activities.
OUTDOOR RECREATION: plan outings, workshops, lectures plus overseeing the camping equipment rental service
INDOOR RECREATION: help run games and tournaments.
PUBLIC RELATIONS: excellent hands-on experience in promoting SUA programs and the Kansas and Burge Unions as a whole.
SPECIAL EVENTS: the concert producing entity is looking for help in the following areas: public relations, usher/security communications/marketing, stage manager, graphic design, and administration.
TRAVEL: help plan, organize and promote university sponsored trips.
Sign up deadline: Friday, April 17th, 5 p.m. in the SUA Office For more information, SUA 864-3477.
Sigma Delta Tau Presents: Fraternity Men of KU
...a 1987-88 school year calendar
come vote for your favorite Calendar Man!
when: April 15 - 17
where: Wescoe Beach
25 $ ^{c} $ per VOTE
All proceeds go to National Prevention of Child Abuse.
7
Lawrence dancer's work is love of his life
Bv IERRI NIEBAUM
Willie Lenoir came to Lawrence in 1964 to study math and French at the University of Kansas.
He received his degrees and since has lost track of his diplomas
Lenoir found something at college that became much more important to him than a degree. Lenoir found a way for creating and performing dance.
F
When he came to KU, Lenoir lived in a basement apartment below a French graduate student who danced with Tau Sigma, then the KU dance club and performing company. He also quickly learned to waltz. But the dancer saw that Lenoir had potential to dance more than just the waltz.
Tau Sigma needed men to dance in its spring concert, and Lenoir liked pies. SoLenoir's friend convinced him to dance in the show for a peach pie.
"I have yet to see that peach pie." Lemoir said, laughing.
"I instantly at it," he said.
Dance became an outlet for Lenoir. "I would go in there for two or three hours at night and just dance, and just dance," he said.
But once he got his toes wet, Lenoir never again would be without dance. "I instantly became addicted to it," he said.
Kristin Benjamin, director of Lawrence School of Ballet, 205 1/2 W. Eighth St., was a dancer with Tau Sigma when Lenoir joined. She remembered watching Lenoir as he watched her and the other dancers in their way after it was watched for a semester before he stepped up to the barre.
"I was always afraid to walk in," he said.
But he finally did, and he stayed.
"Once he was bitten, he just lived the rest of his life."
The two dancers soon became friends on and off the dance floor.
"We would be the last two in the building and just sort of waltz out," Beniamin said.
Elizabeth Sherbon, dance department director at KU from 1961 to 1975, was Lenoir's first teacher. She said Lenoir had a gift for dance that she learned while playing. She was pie-bribed into dancing. So she encouraged him to develop his gift.
"She just put her claws into me and sait. "I'll see you next fall," the Lenoir said.
Sherbon did see Lenoir in class that next fall and every fall after that until she retired. She said that Lenoir rarely made the same mistake twice and that he constantly was developing his style.
"He seemed to have a style of his
didn't need to try to copy me."
Sherbon salsa.
Lenoir started choreographing as soon as he started dancing. His ideas came from pictures, people's movements, anything with a shape.
"A lot of times I can see music itself," he said. "I cannot listen to
music without dancing to it in my mind. I'll go to a symphony and just sit there and choreograph the whole time."
Lenoir's work can be lyrical, melancholic, sometimes melancholy, 'mall-sack' 'Wille'.
With a short torso, long legs and "arms that go on for a year," Lenoir said he choreographed for his body, creating moves that sometimes weren't possible for more petite dancers.
Cheryl Wagner-Bodle, Lawrence resident, has performed about 10 of Lenoir's pieces as a member of Kaw Valley Dance Theater and has taken his jazz classes at Lawrence School of Ballet.
She said Lenoir's dances had a fluidity and a momentum that was compelling. And working with Lenoir didn't matter, it didn't seem like work, she said.
"he genuinely loves to dance," she said. "It's not work. It's more like a hobby."
Willie Lenoir dances "Sorceress" from the 1985 Kaw Valley Dance Theater production of "Willie, Won't You Dance With Me?"
Lenoir is known by dancers of all ages for his playfulness and his painty.
When the dance is done and the dancers meet for notes on their performances, Lenoir adds levity to the scene by dancing a little soft shoe as he enters the studio. Then he usually cracks cumps during the notes.
Lenoir tried to contain his giggles by covering his mouth with his hands at a recent rehearsal for "Pops on Pointe," for which Lenoir choreographed a duet called "Serenade A'Deaux." Everyone knew he was laughing because his shoulders were shaking.
It didn't matter why he was laughing. The dancers would sooner wonder why he wasn't laughing.
Benjamin directed the show and was giving notes while Lenoir and his small band of followers giggled together.
"Willie, leave the room," Benjamin ioked to quiet the laughter.
With a sparkle in his eye, Lenoir
wrote, "is that another word for black out."
Benjamin laughed with the rest of the company, and Lenoir did not leave the
Lenior's sense of humor is more subtle, but sometimes more obvious. George
"You can see the glint in his eye," Beniamin said.
She remembered one performance in which she was partnered with Lenoir and almost fell. She went into an extended movement on pointe, expecting Lenoir to catch her, and he wasn't there.
"I heard 'whoops,' and there he was," she said, spilling
"Frankly, I've even started laughing onstage," he said.
Lenoir said he talked onstage because he was nervous.
Benjamin, director of the recently defunct Kaw Valley Dance Theater
pany to "Willie, Won't You Dance With Me?" in the fall of 1895.
"I thought a retrospective was due," she said. "The company has grown up on a lot of his work."
Kaw Valley has grown up with Lenoir, but while he was growing up in Kansas City, Kan., he never imagined becoming a dancer.
"Culturally, it just wasn't there," he said.
His father, who still lives in Kansas City, has never seen Lenoir dance. But his mother, who died in 1974, to see him perform several times
"One of the last things she said to me before she died was, 'I won't be able to see you dance this year,' " Lenoir said.
When he was a child, Lenoir thought he probably would become a teacher. He liked school. He liked it so well that he didn't like summer vacation.
"I wasn't hyperactive, but I was
always wanting to do something,
he said."
Now Lenoir thrives on the atmosphere of the University, where he has access to academics and the arts.
He is a principal dancer with the Scott Morrow Dance Theatre, in performance at KU, and also takes Morrow's advanced modern dance class
"He wouldn't settle for anything else," he said.
Morrow said he encouraged Lenoir to work beyond his limits.
Krodinger said she and Lenoir both had grown as dancers while working on the piece. But they don't discuss the emotional and technical depth that they continue to add to the piece.
"Every time that we go onstage, it like we're meeting for the first time as they're here."
Morrow plans to choreograph a three-part song for Lenoir titled, "A Man Ain't Supposed to Cry." The man is also portray the stages of a man's life.
"Once I get home, I want to be by myself." he said.
Friends don't visit Lenoir at home. Benjamin said she had been to his apartment about 10 times in all the years she had known him.
"He won't let you in very often," she said.
When he's home, he says he likes to relax, listen to music and choreograph.
Besides choreographed, dancing with Morrow's company and teaching jazz at Lawrence School of Ballet, Lenoir teaches jazz at the Granada School of Performing Arts in Kansas City, Kan. And he works at McDonald's, 1309 W. Sixth St., about 30 hours a week. He has worked there about as long as he's lived in his little apartment.
"I find myself dancing in the living room," he said.
"That is really sad," he said, and it doesn't plan to work there indefinitely.
He said he had seen many dancers and actors come and go from the
hamburger business.
"Quite a few of them have left and gone professional." he said.
But he's glad to see McDonald's offer healthier food on its menu, he said.
"I eat a lot of salads now," he said.
A fast food employee, a teacher, a punster, a friend — Lenoir has many
roles. But most of all he is a dancer and a choreographer. He is happiest when he is listening to classical music, with the steps he achieves to dance.
"At times, I have insomnia because I'm lying there choreographing," he said, "and I cannot get it out of my mind."
Dance
Laura Krodinger, Desoto, Mo., junior, is the 1987 Elizabeth Sherbon Dance Scholarship Award winner.
KU dancer wins scholarship
By JERRI NIEBAUM
Staff writer
After eight years of dance training, a University of Kansas student has earned a pat on the back that she says is like an approval to stay on stage.
Laura Krodinger, Desoto, Mo.
juniur, has been awarded the Elizabeth Sherbon Dance Scholarship Award.
The $170 scholarship is awarded annually to a junior dance major who has shown outstanding achievement academically and artistically. Krodinger's name will be listed on a plaque in the Elizabeth Sherbon Dance Theatre in Robinson Center.
Krodinger, 21, is a principal dancer with the five-member Scott Morrow Dance Theatre, which is in residence at the University.
Morrow, assistant professor of dance, choreographed "Masculin/Feminin," a modern dance that Krodinger has performed for about a year with Willie Lenoir, Lawrence special student.
Krodinger said Morrow and his dance were the greatest contributing factors to her winning the award.
"The dance demanded a technical and artistic maturity that was beyond my range." Krodinger said.
"Scott taught me a craft, a process, which enabled me to grow as a performer, and in turn made it possible for me to give a depth of expression to my dancing that I had not felt before."
Morrow said Krodinger had trained for long hours with an enthusiasm and devotion that put
her ahead as a dancer at the University.
"She applied herself," he said, adding that she had a natural talent that he was helping her shape.
Krodinger started dancing when she was 13. She said that she had always enjoyed athletics, especially track and volleyball but that she wanted a form of exercise that used creativity as well as physical prowess. Dance provided her with that exercise.
Krodinger plans to continue dancing with Morrow next year and after she graduates in the spring of 1988. She said that dancing in his company had been her most exciting dance experience and that she looked forward to dancing in it full time.
For 14 years I dreamed of dancing in Mihikh Baryshnikov's arms.
For 14 years I mutilated my body for him. After years of plies, I developed such abnormal hip rotation that I walked like a duck. I stretched my leg muscles until they were as flexible as rubber bands, and I missed out on those great hardies like "the Shag," because the Sugar Palm Fairy had to have a bun.
P. G.
Patricia Feeny Arts editor
I began dancing when I was 4 and living in Houston. I was decked out in pink tights and a black leopard I wore. I walked down the street, but, boy, I thought I looked cool.
I remember my first public performance. It was the dance school's
spring recital and I played a little white duck. I wore tape shoes that had pennies in the hollowed-out soles so she would walk me. I walked or shook my feathered tail.
I explored every dance form. I danced jazz and tap for many years. I took up gymnastics when I was 9; I had the Olga Korbut Syndrome. That was about the same time that I started breaking lamps around my mother's living room with a baton.
I went on to play a bumblebee, a mouse, a frog, a jar of mustard and a moon beam. My career had been launched.
When I turned 12, I became a serious ballet dancer. I got my first pair of toe shoes and first bra all in the same month. I am certain that I did the shoes than the bra. I did the manufacturer's dubbed "the little stretch."
But ballet was my first love.
But I didn't care. Long hair, a
My family moved to Albuquerque, N.M., and I began taking classes every day. During the summer, I attended workshops at the North Carolina School for the Arts in Winston-Salem, N.C. and Ballet West in Aspen, Colo. I became a member of the Albuquerque Junior Ballet Company and began performing regularly.
small chest and blistered feet were all part of the romantic ballerina package. (Can you see Dolly Parton or toe shoes and a little pink tutu?)
I danced in "The Nutcracker," "Pippin," "Music Man," "Orpheus in the Underworld," "Giselle," and "Carousel." It was a step up from my portrayal of a mustard jar.
I continued taking classes and attending workshops. I knew I was going to need a coach who received great thrills from pounding my $21 toe shoes with a hammer to
make them wearable: running home from school to wash a pair of tights and wearing them wet because there wasn't enough time for them to dry; and sacrificing pizzas, icecream and anything chocolate. I was convinced that I was the only seventh grader in the United States who drank Tab.
At about this time, I started to launch another career. I began competing in debate and forensics. Someone else would juggle my tutus with my orations.
For a while everything ran smoothly. I continued performing with the junior company and began working on their ballet Ballet Company during the summer.
By the time I was a sophomore in high school, I was debating on a national circuit, carrying a full course load and taking theater classes. I was fortunate to learn from life. The first thing that went was the junior company. The next thing was
me
The human body can only take so much. After a while baseball players are forced to put down their bats, and gymnasts start to fall from their beams. Ballerinas with big dreams have to step away from the barre and let someone else twirl in the spotlight.
At 14, my right knee began to disintegrate slowly. I developed some type of cartilage infection. In the next four years, the knee was drained four times. I reached a desperate state and tried anything to relieve the pain so that I could continue dancing.
My mother, a born-again health enthusiast, decided that a solid diet
Lathering myself with Ben Gay brought only temporary relief and made me smell like somebody's grandmother. I tried ice packs, acupuncture and whirlpool baths. Nothing seemed to help.
of wheat germ on peanut butter sandwiches and 47 vitamins a day would shoot the infection out of my body.
Eventually, I danced only a few nights a week. I put all my energy into debating. At 18, I gave my last performance.
Some of the memories are painful.
I will always wonder what could have been, but I'm handling my loss. Sure,
remarks about thunder shingles do not help, and I can't say that my breasts have had any drastic growth spurts during the last four years, but that's okay. I'm a journalist now.
The toe shoes that I wore in that last performance hang on a nail in my bedroom. They are stained with champagne and tears, and the toes are filled with rose petals from a bouquet of roses from my greatest fan, my mom. She once shook hands with Mihkail Baryshnikov.
8
Thursday, April 16, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Washington marchers get support from local bands
By JENNIFER FORKER
Staff writer
Opponents of U.S. aid to the contrasts in Nicaragua plan to charter a bus, drive to Washington, D.C., and participate in an April 25 march for peace and justice in Central America and South Africa. But first they need to raise money to finance their trip.
Three local bands, Common Ground, Altered Media and Manna, have volunteered their time and talent for the concert.
To raise the 'money', the Lawrence April 25 Committee is sponsoring a benefit concert of jazz and anti-spartheid poetry.
The bands will perform at 8 p.m.
Tuesday at The Jazzhaus, 926 $ \frac{1}{2} $
Massachusetts St.
Also that evening, A.A. Aiya, a poet from Nigeria, will read three poems from a book he published in the year titled, "Adam Was An Ane."
Chris Barkeshli, coordinator of the benefit and member of the committee, said the concert was designed to raise money to send people to the march in Washington and to increase people's awareness about the reasons for the march.
"We want to let people know we're banding together to march," she said.
Barkeshi said the benefit would provide entertainment for a political cause. She said the bands had been supportive of the committee.
"They've been really supportive and were glad to play for this cause," she said. "We just want to get people together. It's basically a celebration for peace and justice."
Keith Abrams, base player for Manna, said band members agreed to play at the benefit of the band in their aid and U.S. aid to the contras.
"I like to see activism take a positive control," he said. "Young people need to express concerns."
The concert is important, he said, because students don't have much influence in the Kansas state because it is important to show solidarity.
"I'm really encouraged to see people say, 'Until no one is suffering, we are. ' , " Abrams said.
The five members of Manna, who formed the band six months ago, will play one hour of original reggae songs. Abrams a said a lot of the band's music reflected its support for freedom struggles.
Many of the songs condemn aparthide. O.J. Dwyer, guitarist and singer for Manna, wrote Black Wall, and dedicated the song to Katie Abraam in South Africa, Abrams said. The band will play "Black Wall."
"We especially love to play it to remind people what's going on," he said.
Abrams described Manna's music as having a world beat because it was influenced by jazz, rock, African and Carribean styles. Dwyer, the principal songwriter for Manna, is from Jamaica.
Abrams said he was amazed by the soothing mellowness of South African music. He said he had never heard music would be bitter and violent.
“It’s the most joyful and beautiful music I've ever heard,” he said. “The message seems to be ‘You can't kill our spirit.’ It doesn't try to be ugly. It tries to be beautiful.”
Other members of Manna are Tim Ebeling, drummer; Frank Sheeran, keyboard player; and David Greene guitarist.
The five members of Altered Media, who have been together for two years and play music from jazz, will perform original music.
Sebastian Alfie, guitarist for the band, said the band's music didn't have a political slant.
"We don't emphasize that in the band," he said. "At this point, we don't politicize the music."
But, Alife said, the band members were interested in musical rhythms from different countries, and included African drumming.
George Abrams plays the guitar, bass and harmonica for the band Common Ground. George and Keith Abrams are brothers.
George Abrams said Common Ground agreed to play at the benefit because all five members were activists.
George Abrams said that apartheid was shameful and that people needed to end it.
"This is our contribution, in the music," he said. "We portray how we feel in our music. I hope everybody else can feel it, too."
said
"We agreed with the cause," he
He said Common Ground would play more than an hour of music. Most of the songs will protest apartheid.
"Our music fits into the same theme," he said. "It's definitely anti-apartheid. The name says that."
Other members of Common Ground, which has been together for four years, are Max Martinez, drums and lead vocals; Kenny Yahn, guitar and bass; Chuck Burger, keyboards, trumpet and percussions; and Calvin Hall, percussions and lead vocals.
The benefit will continue until about 2 a.m., Barkeshli said. In addition to the music and poetry reading, a raffle will be held for a $50 gift certificate from Natural Way, 820 Massachusetts St. Committee members also will discuss the April 25 march details.
Barkeshi said small groups unavoided the United States planned to attend the April 25 march. The objective is to demonstrate in a nonviolent and united way the participants' opposition to U.S. support of the contras in Nicaragua, and of opposition to U.S. government and corporate dealings in South Africa.
Barkeshl said it would cost about $80 a person to attend the march. Profits from the benefit will alleviate some of the costs for those who wanted to go.
"It's not cheap to send people to D.C.," she said.
Barkeshi said she thought that the U.S. government was not informing people about its foreign policy, and she would make people more aware.
She said people needed to be made aware of the injustices in Nicaragua and South Africa in order to oppose the U.S. government's policy dealings in those countries.
"I feel that most people don't want war in Central America and don't want to support apartheid in Southern Africa." she said.
"Raising Arizona" is a hilarious comedy that travels at breakneck speed. Two years' worth of action is completed before the opening credits, and the film is just then reaching its stride.
'Raising Arizona' inspires laughter
John Benner Columnist
Columnist
In the movie, Nicholas Cage plays H.I. "Hi" McDonough, a robber who uses an unloaded gun to stick up convenience stores. He meets and charms police officer Edwina or "Ed" (Holly Hunter) when she books him after each of his arrests.
Between prison sentences, Hi laments, "I tried to straighten up and fly right, but it ain't easy with that damn Reagan in the White House." Throughout the film, an earnest H recites such phrases gleaned from counselors and from textbooks.
While in prison for the last time, Hi thinks about his separation from Ed and the impossibility of starting a
"I felt the true sorrow of incarceration for the first time." he said.
family
After his release, he and Ed marry but they find out they are unable to have children. They then decide to steal a newborn quintuple from unpaired-furniture magnate Nathan Arizona (Trevy Wilson).
Hi climbs a ladder into the babies' bedroom (they sleep in an unpainted crib) to pick out a son. During a scene in which Hi mixes up the quintuplets, we are treated to an outrageous "baby's eye view" of the proceedings.
Hi finally decides on one and, armed with Dr. Speck's baby book ("the instruction manual")," carries the boy back to a waiting E. "I think I got the best one, honey! Nathan Jr., I think."
During several merry chase scenes, the baby is kidnapped by several culprits and is referred to as "Nathan Jr," "'Ed Jr." just plain "Junior" and "Gale Jr."
The baby is adducted, in turn, by Hi and Ed, two ex-convicts, Hi's boss, and by a bounty hunter who Hi
The ex-convicts, Hi's former prison buddies who claim they're criminals because they were not breast-fed, take the baby with the intention of collecting a reward from Nathan Arizona. Instead, they fall in love with the boy during a bank robbery and decide to keep him.
named "the lone biker of the ape' calypse."
"Raising Arizona" was directed and produced by brothers Joel Coen, 32, and Elhan Coen, 29. The offbeat director, David Decker, as the tragicomedy "Blood Simple."
In "Arizona," the Coens again have mated tragedy and comedy, with equally successful results.
In "Raising Arizona," they have managed to throw out nearly all of the dead wood and have kept a quickly paced comedy that can bring tears to your eyes.
The Coens actually teamed up on the producing and directing chores of both films and together wrote the story for "Arizona." They said they tried out their jokes on one another, and if they didn't laugh, they tossed them out.
Band revitalizes classic sounds in 'Through the Looking Glass'
By GREG HUNERYAGER
Special to the Kansan
Siousxie and the Banshees have produced an impressive body of intelligent, imaginative music during their decade-plus existence, but the band still attracts only a select audience.
Although they have become more commercial in recent years, mainstream radio stations consider them to be too weird, and many people prefer more upbeat music to the Banshees' harsh view of life.
The fact that upbeat music sells to the public is proven by the recent successes of such artists as Peter Gabriel and the Cure. The early music of these artists was superior, but they didn't hit the big time until their music became more carefree and positive.
"Through the Looking Glass" is an entertaining, fun album, but not because it features deity-like playing or ground-breaking music. It's great
because it's a fantastic selection of overlooked gems.
Because upbeat music sells, Siouxie and the Banshees' infectious collection of cover tunes should open to everyone. You can surprise both fans and non-fans.
And any record that has sources like Sparks, Kraftwerk, Billie Holiday, John Cale and Roxy Music, and even a song from "The Jungle Book" is automatically noteworthy. But it's not just that the selection of songs is superb, the music is good too.
The Banshees use just the right ratio of faithfulness to alteration. They add and update where they deem necessary, and the songs retain their inherent mood while still coming off as modern.
The first song is Sparks" "This Town Ain't Big Enough For the Both of Us." with Siouxis simulating Russell Mael's vocal tone. It's a hilarious upbeat tune that one wouldn't expect this band to cover, which may be why it leads the record. Then they throw another curve ball by immediately jumping
The big exception is Bob Dylan's "This Wheel's On Fire," which is radically transformed into a pseudospechelied powerhouse with neoclassical flourishes. I can't think of anyone who needed to be updated more.
to the opposite extreme with Kraft-
werk's haunting "Hall of Mirrors."
It's like going from the Marx Brothers to Joseph Conrad. And that perhaps reveals part of the Banshees' philosophy — the band (and life) has an up side, but they aren't going to ignore the dark side of things just to be popular.
So while this album has its bright, cheerful moments, it also includes romantic melancholia with Billie Holiday's "Strange Fruit", Roxy Music's "Sea Breezes", and John Cale's macabre masterpiece, "Gun."
The band could have chosen better songs from the Doors, Television and Iggy Pop, but they did a good job with what they chose, and the other material is so strong that the record still works.
"Through the Looking Glass" is an engaging record that displays the variety of moods and tastes of Siouxsie and the Banshees. Fans realized long ago that there was more to this band than gloom and doom. Maybe this record will make Siouxsie and the Banshees' talent more obvious to the unconverted.
KU STUDENTS 1987 KANSAS RELAYS BUTTONS HAVE ARRIVED!!
If you purchased an All-Sports Ticket you may stop by the ticket office in Allen Field House and pick up your Relays button
If you didn't purchase an All-Sports Ticket,you can still get a button for only $2.00 until April 17.
This years Highlights include: Al Oerter, 4 time Olympic gold medalist
- Over 250 high school, college and university teams from over 20 states compete for Kansas Relays championships.
- Over 250 high school, college and university teams
- Over 1,000 runners to compete in Kansas Relays marathon and 10,000 meter town and campus road race.
Stop By:
Stop By:
Athletic Ticket Office
Allen Field House
Lawrence Kansas, 66045
more info call 864-3141
NAME THE
Hot Shot
1 2 3
4 5 6
7 8 9
10 11 12
13 15 16
14 19
17 18 20
21
LEGENDS OF ROCK & ROLL AND WIN!
Clue Set #1
Here's what you Should Do.
This sketch represents the left half of the poster with outlines of the faces. Each face outline is numbered. Match each outline to the poster, using the clues listed below to determine the names of the first 21 Rock Artists featured.
Here's What You Should Do:
Here is the first set of clues to match with The Hot Shot Legends of Rock & Roli Poster inserted into this newspaper last week. (If you missed the poster, a limited supply is available at the newspaper office.)
In next week's newspaper, you will be given the remaining 17 face outlines numbered, as well as the second set of clues to complete the puzzle.
Hot Shot
Clues
(Set #1)
1. HIS PARENTS WERE OZZIE AND HARRIET
2. HIS BAND GAVE OFF GOOD VIBRATIONS
1. 1/4 OF A GROUP, 1/6 OF A TON
2. KING AND MEHTH WERE HIS MATES
3. BERRY GORDY WROTE "LONELY
4. FERGUS FORMULA
**TEARHOPS FOR HUMM**
HIS PAL WAS JOHNY ROTTEN
HIS BIGGEST HIT WAS BE-BOP-A-LULA
HE RECORDED 'HERE, MY DEAR' TO
MEET ALIMONY PAYMENTS.
FIRST LEAD SINGER OF THE DRIFTERS
HE WROTE "I SHOT THE SHERIF"
FORM DJM FO WHO MADE IT BIG
HE SANG "SWEET HOME ALABAMA"
BUT WAS BORN FLORIDA
13. NO RELATION TO WILLIAM F
14. YOU SEND ME! WAS THE FIRST
15. JUST A DROP OF WATER
HE WENT FROM THE BYRD TO
THE FLYING BURRITO BROTHERS
16. SHE PLAYED SECOND
FIDDLE TO DIANA ROSS
17. HE OFFERED NO CURE FOR
THE "SUMMERTIME BLUES"
18. HE WROTE HIS HIT "SPLISH
SPLASH" IN 12 MINUTES
19. DJ WHO CLAIMED TO HAVE
COINED THE PHRASE
ROCK & ROLL
20. HE MADE HIS MARK SITTING ON
THE DOCUMENT.
21. HIS WAS THE "CRICKETS"
22.
Hot Shot® Schnapps, 42 Proof, Produced by
The Hot Shot Distillery. Owensboro, KY ©1987
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 16, 1987
9
Kansas legislators battle over budget issues
By CHRISTOPHER HINES Staff writer
Staff writer
TOPEKA - State Sen. Gus Bogina, R-Lenexa, eased back in his chair, took a puff from his pipe and drawled, "There's our offer, now you make us one."
State Rep. Bill Bunten, R-Topke, poked down at the proposal, then pushed it away.
"Maybe you need some more time to see the light," he said.
That exchange came yesterday as six state legislators — members of a
Bogina replied, "We've already seen the light, you're wrong."
joint conference committee gathered in a high-ceilinged room on the first floor of the Kansas Statehouse to work out House and Senate differences on several budget bills.
The committee, however, failed to bring back for discussion the University of Kansas' 1987 fee release, the fiscal year 1988 operating budget and a proposal to slash the state's travel budget. Those issues were brought up Tuesday, but not decided.
The committee expects to address the issues again today, along with classified employee salary increases and budgets for primary and second-
Bogina, leader of the Senate delegation to the committee, said the House was stalling on the state's education budget until differences on other state agency budgets were resolved.
darv education.
"That's their strategy," Bogina said. "What they want I'm not sure."
The committee already has resolved some differences on financing for state prisons, welfare and the state highway patrol.
highway part of. The major stumbling block to an overall spending compromise between the House and Senate is the
amount of money that should be left as a balance in the state's general fund, said State Rep. Rochelle Chronister, R-Neodesha, a member of the committee.
"If we could resolve this issue a lot of problems would be out of the way," she said. "Education takes the place of course it's going to be affected."
Bunten said he wanted to leave a balance of about $155 million in the state's general fund, but Bogina said he considered $143 million a more reasonable figure. The final balance decided could affect faculty raises,
KU's fee release and the fiscal 1988 operating budget, Bogina said.
Both Bunten and Bogina said that neither side had seriously addressed state university budgets or fee releases. They said they hoped to resolve their differences today.
The House had recommended releasing about $600,000 in KU fees and a 1.5 percent faculty salary increase for the last half of fiscal year 1988. But the Senate had raised the 1987 fee release to about $900,000 and faculty to 2.5 percent for the entire fiscal year 1988.
THERE'S A FUJI TO FIT...
Like Mari Gorski, Olympic gold medalist, you want to have and be the best. And the best is Fuji. Fuji frames are the finest window frames and masked with components that make them perform best. And color-coordinated styling means your Fuji looks great, too.
KU's administration keeps files that violate guidelines, prof says
By BENJAMIN HALL
So start on the cycling road to best. stop in today. Let us find the Fail to fit you!
Your Need for 'Best'!
Staff writer
KU's administration is keeping files that violate University of Kansas guidelines, an associate professor said Monday.
But Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said, "That's absolutely not true. We do not keep confidential files of faculty."
The University keeps a personnel file on each faculty member, said Brower Burchill, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs.
Clark has a copy of a letter from Vickie Thomas, University general counsel, to Brinkman. Clark said he got the copy from his regular personnel file in the office of academic affairs.
Clark said the inquiry Thomas referred to in the letter was Clark's request to see another letter written by an engineering faculty member.
The letter is marked "Confidential" and is dated Sept. 26. It says in part, "Attached is Brower's file on Hector Clark. If there is another file, let me know." Also attached is a draft for you to consider using in response to his recent inquiry."
Burchill solicited the letter from the other faculty member and then told Clark about the letter, Clark said. Burchill would not reveal the author or the contents of the letter, Clark said.
"Burchill solicited statements from faculty members concerning
their view of my behavior." Clark said. "I don't know what motivated him to ask for the letter. But I think it's an extraordinary act."
Burchill said Monday, "I don't remember ever doing that."
On Nov. 26, Clark wrote a letter to Burchill asking to see the "file on Hector Clark."
Burchill's reply, dated Dec. 4, said that he didn't have a confidential file on Clark "so whatever Vickie Thomas was referring to in her Sept. 26, 1986 memo to Del Brinkman was misnamed."
"Our office does not ever comment on personnel matters." she said.
Thomas said Monday that the administration used a policy of confidentiality on personnel matters and that she couldn't comment on Clark's
"What I do have is an administrative file about the department of mechanical engineering, but it contains information to and from several parties, so in no way could it be construed as being a file on any individual," Burchill's letter said.
Fuji.
Clark said he thought the administration was keeping files that violated Article VII of the Faculty Senate rules and regulations.
The article says, "Files and dossiers on individual faculty members are in general to be treated as confidential, with access limited to the individual concerned . . ."
Burchill said he didn't know of any personnel files that violated the Faculty Senate rules and regulations.
But Clark said, "What we have here is the University general
counsel hawking confidential files around the administration."
Under the Faculty Senate rules, faculty members may be denied access to certain confidential files on them. But the administration must at least notify a faculty member when he or she is the subject of a confidential file.
Clark said he never was notified.
"It appears to me that they ought to abide by the regulations as written." Clark said. "In this case, they have arrogantly ignored them. And my protestations were arrogantly brushed aside."
Clark said he brought a grievance against Thomas through Chancellor Gene A. Budig's office and grievances against Burchill and Brinkman through the University judicial board.
The grievances were dismissed, he said.
Jan Sheldon, chairman of the judicial board, said she could not comment on grievances filed with the judicial board.
"Of course the implication is that if they have a file on me, they have a file on somebody else," he said.
Clark said, "I think the fewer secrets we have, the better. There is something called collegiality in the University. But the administration doesn't seem to feel collegiality on a mutual basis.
fields
DOWNTOWN
Cause you like being fit!
CABINET
SALE
Military Surplus
Canteen plus cover $2
Used Field Jacket $10
Used Field Jacket Liners $1
Khaki and Fatique Shirts $2
Camo Six Pocket Pants $10
P-Coats $10
Shelter Halves $2
Wool Pants $5
Pistol Belts $4
Cotton Mechanics Coveralls $8
(mainly medium and small)
Cooks and Dress Whites $2
SPECIALI USED
G.I. M-1949
SLEEPING BAGS $15
Nato Stovets $5
Mosquito Netting —cotton $5, Nylon $10
Ammo Pouches $2
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April 18,
10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
SUNFLOWER
804 Massachusetts • Lawrence, Kansas 66044 • 913-843-5000
Selected Ammo
Cans $2
Wooden
Ammo Boxes $2
Shoulder Straps $1
Shoulder Pads
2 for 50$
Trioxide Fuel 25¢
Sunburn Creme 10¢
GENUINE G.I. OD.
BARRACKS BAGS 50°
Khaki and Fatigue Pants $2
Airplane Seats $25 to $40
Helmets $4, Helmet Liners $2
Wool Coats $10
Leather Brief Cases $2
U.S.
BUTT PACK
MOSQUITO NETTING —cotton $5, Nylon $10
Ammo Pouches $2
SALE Military Surplus
RAISING ARIZONA
Mat. Sun., Sun. 3:10
DAILY 5:10, 7:40, 9:30
HOOSIERS
Mon. Feb. 4-6] Mon. Sat. Jan. 10-18]
DAILY 7:15, 9:25
842-0600 DELIVERED
BEST BUILDING SERVICES
WALT DISNEY'S CLASSIC
THE ARISTOCOPIES
Mint 10:30 - 12:00
Mon-Fri 7-9:30
Ana Maxine Lee Dialey & Elysabeth Dale
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WANT
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Met. Sat., Sun, DAILY
* 2:15
DAILY
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Met. Sat, Sun: 2:30
DAILY
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Commonwealth
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THE SECRET OF MY
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MICHAEL J.
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DAY 7.10 9:30
Varsity
Blind Date
KIM BRUNER
BUSING ASSISTANTS
MAT. SUN. 7-15
DAY 7.30 9:40
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TAT. SUN. 7-25
DAILY
4:40, 7:10
Gene Hackman
HOOSIERS
THREE ROAD
Blind Date
KIM M. BRUCE
BASINGER WILLIAMS
Mar. Feat. 5-13, 7-15
Mon. Sat. Jan. 4-8, 7-15
DAINT 7:30, 9:40
Interest
POLICE
ACADEMY 4
Mat. Sat., Sun. 3:00
DAILY
5:00, 7:35, 9:25
Cooks and Dress Whites $2
SPECIALI USED
G.I. M-1949
SLEEPING BAGS $15
Nato Stoves $5
Mosquito Netting —cotton $5, Nylon $10
Ammo Pouches $2
ALLEY SALE
April 18,
10 a.m.-4 p.m.
SUNFLOWER
804 Massachusetts • Lawrence, Kansas 66044 • 913-843-5000
Southern Hills Mall
749-4341
G
842-511
- Costumed Bunny
- Deliveries
- Singing Telegrams
- Baskets
"We Deliver Smiles"
- Easter Egg Balloons
BALLOONS 'N' MORE
- Helium Tank Rentals
603 Vermont 749-0148
4 4 4 4 4
NEW
Don't miss a chance living with all your friends next year!
HURRY!
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
1301 W 24th
(one block East of Gammons)
842-5111
The apartment complex built with the STUDENT in mind!
FIVE BONES
Pre-leasing Now Accepted! 10 Month Leases Available!
- one bedroom apt. ($345)
- two bedroom apt.
Featuring:
with two full bathrooms ($370)
- drapes are furnished
- fully equipped kitchen with
Amenities
- 3 outside hot tubs
- large indoor/outdoor pool
- weight room
- bedroom facility
MICROWAVE, DISHWASHER and ICEMAKER
- laundry facilities
- satellite extra
- simple parking
14 kt. Chain Repair
842-5111
Kizer
Cummings
EMEWERS
890 Mass. 740-4333
800 Mass. 749-4333
RICK'S
BIKE
SHOP
1033 Vermont
Phone: (913)841-6642
University-Community Service Scholarship Award
As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20, 1970 in the saving of furniture, art objects, and invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present the Kansas Union with a gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarship/awards from the interest on the gift.
Qualifications
- Service to the University and/or the Lawrence community
- Regularly enrolled students at the University of Kansas at the time of application (spring term) and at the time of receipt of the award (fall term).
- Scholarship, financial need and references will be of minimal consideration in application reviews.
Applications
- Applications available at SUA office, Kansas Union, 864-3477.
- Applications must be received by 5:00 p.m., Monday, April 20, 1987 in the SUA office, Kansas Union. Interviews to be held 5:30 p.m., Wednesday, April 22, 1987.
LEVI'S
JEANS ON SALE! Today Thru Sunday Only.
That's Right! Your favorite Levi's jeans are on sale today thru Sunday only. Don't miss these great values on America's favorite jeans. Stock up now and save at Lawrence's most complete Jean Store!
Sale Price
Special Sale Price
Levi's Shrink To Fit "501's" $1899 38-40 Length - add $2, Reg. $21.99
Levi's Strait Leg "505's" $1699 27-46 Waist, Reg. $21.99
Levi's Boot Cut "517's" $1699 28-42 Waist, Reg. $21.99
Prewashed Levi's "501's or "505's" $2199
Prewashed Dark Blue Denim, Reg $30.00
Prewashed Levi's
in Fashion Colors
Choose 501's or 505's, Reg. $30.00 Black, Grey, Bleached, Ect...
$2499
Prewashed "501's"
Shrink to Fit Levi's, Reg. 30.00 (slightly Irregular, flawed, and Imperfect)
$1599
KING Jeans
740 Mass.
10
Thursday, April 16, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Police blame inaction on 911 mix-up
The Associated Press
MANHATTAN, Kan. — Because of a mix-up in the 911 dispatch procedure, police did not respond to a report of a young man passed out in his car last weekend, a police official said yesterday.
Stephen Lobmeyer, 18, a Kansas State University freshman from Lakewood, Colo., was found dead in
the car about 10 hours later, an apparent suicide victim, Les Bieler, assistant Riley County Police Department director, said yesterday.
A garden hose was found running from the exhaust of Lobmeyer's car into his car. A computer floppy disk marked "Suicide" was found with the body, but police have not released
the contents of the computer disk. An autopsy is under way.
Bieler said a call about 12:05 a.m. Saturday from Natalie Darfler, a campus reporter an intoxicated man sitting in a car near her Manhattan apartment.
"The nature of the call did not indicate an emergency; just a young man being knocked down."
running car. That is not an unusual event on a Saturday night in Manhattan," Bieler said.
"Several errors were made in the procedures for handling it. The ultimate outcome is that no officer was dispatched."
He said the call came during a shift change.
Pilot should have had warning, official says
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — An on-board warning system should have alerted the pilot of a Boeing 707 cargo plane that his approach to Kansas City International Airport was too low, a company official said yesterday.
The plane crashed and exploded in a field near the airport Monday night, killing three crew members. No one on the ground was injured.
The pilot should have heard a recorded voice saying, "Pull up, pull up" as well as a loud whooping sound emitted by the warning system, said Ray Pepperling, chief pilot and director of operations for Croix Holdings Inc., the San Antonio, Texas, company that owned the cargo jet.
"A ground-proximity warning device was on board as required by the Federal Aviation Administration." Pepperling said. "The pilot would have heard a 'whoop, whoop' and a voice telling him to pull up. That should have been sufficient to tell him something was wrong."
Investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board won't know if the on-board device was working until they play the tape
from the aircraft's cockpit recorder, said FAA spokesman Bob Raynesford.
The plane also received two low-altitude warnings from air traffic controllers shortly before the crash, which occurred just before 10 p.m. Investigators said they didn't know why the pilot didn't respond to the warnings.
Witnessed said the jet appeared to be flying on a normal flight pattern with no apparent structural defects before it slammed into a wooded park near Weatherby Lake.
The Boeing 707 was leased to Buffalo Airways of Waco, Texas. The airline, in turn, leased the plane to Burlington Air Express, of Fort Wayne, Ind.
Killed in the crash were Capt. Clarence Brenner, 52, of Henderson, Nev., the pilot; David Lee Zupancik, 40, of Flower Mound, Texas, the copilot; Nicholas P. Pennell, 22, of Axtell, Texas, the flight engineer; and John E. Lemery, 36, of Wichita, a passenger who worked for Mid-Continent Transport Inc., a Burlington agency in Wichita.
--then, we look at WOOD.
Two pieces of wood made the cruel, crude CROSS OF GOOD THUNDER.
We focus on the cross Friday NOON at Dandorf Chanel.
Coupon Bocky's Coupon
Two Banana Splits $1.99!
842-2930 2120 W. 9th Offer good through Sunday, April 19.
FERRIS BUELLER'S DAYOFF SPECIAL ADVENTURE LAND WIDE
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LEAD UP TO NOTHING?
First, we look at FEET.
First, we look at FEEL.
On MAUNDY THURSDAY we include Foot Washing
Ceremony with recollection of First Eucharist.
join us Thursday at 9 p.m.
Then, we look at WOOD.
Finally, we hear of women finding NOTHING. The empty tomb was reported by women to the absent disciples. Celebrate the awesome news of EASTER at 10:30 a.m.
Sunday Worship: 10:30 a.m.
女
1204 Oread
Lutheran Campus Ministry
1204 Oread 843-4948
SURF LAWRENCE
CALL NOW! 1-451-2747
- Rentals available one day
Ride the "Big Kahuna" the Midwest's one & only.
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Quincy's K.C. Comets Vista Hotel's
Bert Haycocks Rusty Pelican Chill Out'
WHY ARE PROCTOR AND GAMBLE, IBM, AND XEROX INTERESTED IN STUDENTS WHO HAVE WORKED WITH US FOR THE SUMMER? Students selected for our summer sales and management training program will gain excellent resume experience and above average earnings.
For an interview call 749-7377
Video Player
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$9.95
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1447 W. 23rd
Open 9 a.m.-10 p.m. Daily
MEMO TO THE PARENTS OF K.U. STUDENTS
Thank You
With costs of education continuing to rise, have you explored the tax advantages of purchasing a home or condominium for your student to occupy during their K.U. years?
We also still have many fine homes, apartments and duplexes for rent so we see us for all your rental needs.
Our broker would be most happy to visit with you about those possibilities.
Kaw Valley Management Inc.
KVM
Andy Galyardt 841-6080
901 Kentucky Suite 205
Can't Get Enough!
Sub&Stuff
Sandwich Shop
Sub&Stuff
Sandwich Shop
1618 W 23rd
Collegium Pro Clarificio
Lacoste al
Milano
CANTERBURY HOUSE
Maundy Thursday Eucharist
Maundy Thursday Lunch
12 Noon, Danforth Chapel,
April 16
The Great Vigil of Easter & Baptism
Private confessions by appointment 843-8202
Good Friday Morning Prayer
7:30 a.m., St. Anselm's Chapel
1116 Louisiana
1116 Louisiana
For Easter Sunday Services, please call Trinity Episcopal Church 843-6166.
Holy Saturday, April 18, 8 p.m.
St. Anselm's Chapel, 1116 Louisiana
THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH AT KU
MITRE
Rugged Outdoor
SIERRA LITE
You'll notice even more Sierra Lite's on the trail this year. For 'B7 it rugged lightweight features durable 1000 denier nylon and suede up-to-date leather, removable memory inside, steel shank, suede toe-over patch, removable tongueHi-Tec's high carbon rubber outside gives this boot an excellent backpacker Magazine recognized this excellent performer with their durable Boottest award "ledd". Well-known for its comfort and durability.
SUNFLOWER
804 Massachusetts • Lawrence, Kansas 66044 • 013-543-5000
Screemin' Lee and the ROCKTONES
AT THE JAZZHOUSE
Friday & Saturday, April 17 & 18
Lambda Chi Alpha Greek Masters Golf Tournament Alvamar Country Club
Final Team Results:
2nd Place-AKΛ 322
1st Place- ФΔ∏ #1-318
3rd Place- ΦΔΠ #2- 328
Best Individual Score:John Sinovic, $ \phi\Delta\theta $ -70
Closest to the Pin-Chris Knodle, IKA
Thanks to the following teams who competed:
| | | | |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| AK$\Lambda$ | $\Delta T \Delta$ | $\Phi \Delta \Theta$ | $\Sigma AE$ |
| AT$\Omega$ | $\Delta T$ | $\Phi K \Psi$ | $\Sigma X$ |
| BO$\Pi$ | K$\Sigma$ | $\Phi K \Theta$ | $\Sigma N$ |
| ΔX | $\Delta XA$ | ΠKA | TKE |
--for the 1988 Editor and
JAYHAWKER
APPLICATIONS
for the 1988 Editor and Business Manager positions for the Jayhawker Year Book are now available at:
Activities and Organizations Offices
and
S. U.A Offices
DEADLINE:
5:00 p.m. Friday, April 17
For more information CALL:
864-3728
between 1 and 5 Mon.-Fri.
"CHECK" OUT
THESE COUPONS!!
---
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CHECKERS
PIZZA
2214 Yale Road·841-8010
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 16, 1987
11
Now there's more than one way to get through college.
Wordsworth's Prelude vs. Honda's Prelude:
Worlds in Collision.
As Thomas More said shortly before his untimely demise, "There is no hurt on earth that is beyond heavenly help."
How does this simple poignant, powerful thought relate to the inherent tension evident in the contrast between Wordsworth's immortal The Prelude and that more recent (and better recognized) offering from one of Japan's pre-eminent artists, The Honda Motor Corporation?
First, let's consider the facts.
Poem vs Car Student Preferences
Honda's Prelude Wordsworth's Prelude
Wordsworth's Prelude vs. Honda's Prelude: Worlds in Collision.
As Thomas More said shortly before his untimely demise, "There is no hurt on earth that is beyond heavenly help."
How does this simple, poignant, powerful thought relate to the inherent tension evident in the contrast between Wordsworth's immortal *The Prelude* and that more recent (and better recognized) offering from one of Japan's pre-eminent artists, The Honda Motor Corporation?
First, let's consider the facts.
Poem vs Cer Student Preferences
Honda's Prelude Wordsworth's Prelude
File Edit Draw Move Measure Animation
alpha helix-1
Macintosh SE
If you want to get ahead in college it helps if you choose a brilliant roommate. Like a Macintosh personal computer. And now there are two models from which you can choose.
First, there's the Macintosh Plus-now widely accepted by students at colleges and universities all across the country.
It comes with one 800K disk drive and a full megabyte of memory (which is expandable to four).
For those of you who need even more power, there's the Macintosh SE.
It comes with all of the above. As
well as a built-in 20-megabyte hard disk, for storing up to 10,000 pages. Or if you prefer,you can add a second built-in 800K floppy drive.
The SE also gives you a choice of two new keyboards, one with function keys for special applications.
And it has an internal expansion slot so you can add new power without performing major surgery. Like a card that lets you share information over a campus-wide network. Or another that lets you run MS-DOS programs.
With either Macintosh, you'll be
KU Bookstore Burge Union Computer Store 864-5697
So no matter which model you decide on-you'll be able to work much faster,better and smarter.
Like idea processors that outline your thoughts.Word processors for writing, editing and checking your spelling.And communications programs that give you 24-hour access to valuable information.
APPLE
No two ways about it.
able to take advantage of the latest most advanced software.
The power to be your best.
© 1987 Apple Computer Inc. Apple and the apple logo are registered trademarks of Apple Computer Inc. Macintosh is a trademark of Apple Computer inc. MS-DOS is a registered trademark of Microsoft Corp.
12
Thursday, April 16, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Official results released
The Student Senate Elections Committee released official election results Tuesday. None of the races has been recounted; recount results will be released April 22.
Tom Moore, elections committee co-chairman, said a problem with 58 unaccounted-for votes in the presidential and vice presidential race was caused by voters filing blank ballots, which the computer registered as valid ballots. Write-in ballots were not considered, he said.
Results are listed according to candidates' schools and coalitions. Winners are boldfaced.
President and vice president Jaskran Kawkon and Stephanie Quincy 1,452 Jeff Mullins and Brian Kramer First Class 1,022 Phyllis Hoff and Gienn Shirtless Synchrotron 617 3.155 valid balls, 12 invalid balls, 5 write-
■ Architecture — two seats available
Patrick Duff — Synchrony 69
Cheryl Heinrichs — Bottom Line 47
Diane Porhouse — Synchrony 42
Jane Peterson — Synchrony 33
Michael R. Killeen — First Class 195 valid bailers, 1 invalid bailer, 4 write-ins
■ Business — two seat available
Tom Shewham — Bottom Line
106
Tom Shewham — Bottom Line
Brent Mitchell — First Class
79
Del Metry Metrum — First Class
64
Del Metry Metrum
| Off-campus — five seats available |
| :--- |
| Mark McMahon — Bottom Line | 522 |
| Chris Kirkby — Bottom Line | 506 |
| Kathryn Anderson — Bottom Line | 383 |
| Frank Partany — First Class | 491 |
| Kevin Conway — First Class | 471 |
| Kevin Ross — Bottom Line | 462 |
| Kevin Possland — Bottom Line | 462 |
Jeanny Glance – First Class 461
Sarah McCollley – First Class 455
Kent Smith – First Class 449
Allen Levine – Synchronity 300
Mike Levine – Synchronity 308
Bohner Yevich – Synchronity 341
Chuck Munson – Synchrony 328
Jennifer Homburger – Synchronity 308
1.390 valid ballots, 20 invalid ballots, 11 write
■ Education - two seats available
Kim Couter - Bottom Line ... 46
Jennifer Asher - First Class ... 45
Jenifer Asher - Second Class ... 42
10 valid balls. 1 write-in . . . . .
**Engineering — four seats available**
Lori Nobert — Bottom Line 147
Jeff Bedell—Bottom Line 131
Renee McGhee — First Class 129
William Zanelli — Bottom Line 116
David Carr — First Class 112
Michael J Bell — First Class 102
T. H. Mason — First Class 102
77th Banking, 1 impallet, 5 write-in.
Social welfare - two seats available
*Social welfare – two seats available*
*Stacey Wash – Bottom Line* 34
*Tim Greenwell – Bottom Line* 33
37 valid ballots, 2 write-ins
Journalism - two seats available
**Journalism** - two best articles
Journalism Line - Best Article Line 60
Line - Best Article Line 122
Bottom Line - Best Article Line 39
Scott Long - First Class 33
Stacie Kennon - First Class 29
Debbie Hoekmeen - Synchronicity 24
Synchronicity 23
125 valid ballets, 125 in-its
Non-traditional — one seat available
Helen Goldblatt — Bottom Line ... 99
Ruth Lichtheuer — Synchrony ... 83
Bethany Koehler — Synchrony ... 83
824 valid ballets, 1 invalid balllet, 3 write-ins
Fine Arts - two seats available
■ Fine Arts - two seats available
Andrea Johnson - Bottom Line 57
Gregory Schoenberg - Bottom Line 46
Kerry Sheahan - First Class 44
Peter D. Becket - Bottom Line 42
Henri Schlegel - Synchrony 35
Tom E. Holland - Synchrony 34
Jimmy Lewis - 1 write-in
**Residence at large — one seat available**
Amy Baker - First Class ... 341
Ross Nigro - Bottom Line ... 325
Jennifer Mullen - Upper Line ... 325
84 valid balls, 4 invalid balls, 1 write-in
Brian Moore — Bottom Line ... 327
Lie Parker — Bottom Line ... 323
Cohy Hall — Bottom Line ... 305
Franklin Carter — Bottom Line ... 384
Amy Randles — Bottom Line ... 381
John Cassel — Bottom Line ... 280
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Cheryl Garrett — First Class ... 230
Laura Coggin — First Class ... 219
Debbie Davenport — Synchronicity ... 206
Peter Owen — First Class ... 196
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Sterrett Schanzue — First Class ... 193
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James Bradley — Bottom Line, 19
the college) — 16 seats available
Kevin Pritchard — First Class . . . . .
**Pharmacy** — two seats available
David Korber — Bottom Line
Michael Ricki — Bottom Line
14 valid ballots, 2 write-ins
Student must apologize for trespassing
By a Kansan reporter
A KU student who was charged Jan. 27 with trespassing at the Delta Gamma sorority house will be required to write a letter of apology to the sorority.
The student, Michael D. Haines,
Manhattan senior and a member of
Delta Upsilon fraternity, 1025 Emery Road, also must perform 40 hours of community service work, pay $138 in court and diversion costs and not break any laws, excluding traffic ordinances, for one year.
Criminal trespassing charges are class B felonies, punishable by up to
six months in the county jail, up to a $1,000 fine or both.
Police arrested Haines at 4 a.m. Jan. 27 after Delta Gamma sorority members reported prowlers on the fire escape of the building, 1015 Emery Road.
The University of Kansas
Commission on the Status of Women
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April 16,1987 8:00 p.m.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday. April 16, 1987
Sports
13
Royals' 2-1 victory sparked by Seitzer
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kevin Seitler, whose hot rookie start has been overshadowed by Bo Jackson, drove in two runs last night in support of Bret Saberhagen's six-hitter as the Kansas City Royals defeated the Detroit Tigers 2-1.
KC
R
Angel Salazar led off the Kansas City innning with his second double off Walt Terrell, 1-1, and went to third on an infield out. Setzer then lined an opposite field double into right to score Salazar and give the Royals a two-game sweep of the Tigers.
"Seitzer did it again." Royals manager Billy Gardner said. "He sure has been swinging the bat good. He should that to do with the bat in any situation."
Saberhagen, the 1985 CY Young Award winner who slumped to 7-12 last year, raised his record to 2.0. Saberhagen struck out two and did
not issue a walk. Bud Black pitched the ninth inning for his first save.
The Tigers rode a four-game winning streak into Kansas City, but lost to the Ravens.
"You lose about 20 one-run games a year," Tigers manager Sparky Anderson said. "We've got 17 to go. I thought Saberhagen threw good."
KU dominates opening Relays event
Tom Brookens, the Tigers' ninth-position hitter, tagged Sabermagen for a triple with one out in the sixth inning. Lou Whitaker followed with a double for a 1-0 Tigers lead. Whitaker took third on an infield out by Pat Nankin, but Sabermagen retired Matt Nokes on a grounder to end the inning.
The Royals broke through in the bottom of the sixth for a run against Terrell. Salazar led with a double into the left-field corner and took third when Willie Wilson blooped a single in front of center field Chet Mackey's rookie first baseman, brought Salazar home with a groundout.
Dwight Evans singled leading off the Detroit seethat but was erased when Seltzer snared a sharp line down on the bag and played on the bag for an easy double play.
Jackson, the Royals' rookie left-fielder, drove in seven runs with two home runs on Tuesday night. He entered the game batting .500 but was 0-for-3 against Terrell.
KU athletes grabbed first, third and fourth places in the heptathlon, and the Jim Bauch Decathlon began as the the 62nd Annual Kansas Relays got off to a soggy start yesterday.
Bv ROB KNAPP
Staff writer
Kansas senior Rosie Wadman, last year's Big Eight Conference heptathlon champion, won the high jump and the shot put and finished third in the 100-meter hurdles, helping her take with 2,937 points after four events.
Meanwhile, Wichita State's Peder Bengtsson tied for first in the 100 meters and placed second in the long jump and the shot put. He leads the decathlon at the halfway mark with 3.570 points.
Rainy weather forced competitors indoors for the day's earlier events. The heptathlon hurdles and high jump, and the decathlon 100-meter dash, long jump and high jump all place at Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
Afternoon events resumed at Memorial Stadium
Wadman finished the first day of competition with 2,937 points, 50 points ahead of Lizz Barringer of Southeast Missouri State. Barringer, the defending Relays champion, finishes second in the events and tied Wadman and Kansas' Jaci Metzger for first place in the high jump.
Metzger finished the day in third place with 2,865 points. Teammate
Kim Hutoefer was behind her in fourth with 2,802 points.
The top seed in the event, Susan Carter of Texas-Arlington, began the day by winning the 100-meter hurdles in 14.92 seconds. She fell to third place overall after finishing sixth in the high jump and dropped all the way to sixth when she finished 12th in the field of 13 in the shot put.
Carter won the 200 meters and ended the day in fifth place.
Other Kansas entries include Andrea Schwartz, sixth place with 2,664 points, and Cindy Panowicz, ninth place with 2,542 points.
Kansas' Julie Hall dropped out of the competition during the high jump because of an injury. She was in 13th place at the time.
The heptathlon will end tomorrow with the long jump at 11:30 a.m., the javelin throw at 1:20 p.m. and the 800-meter run at 3:10.
Bengtsson, who last year took third place in the Relays decathlon, tied for sixth place in the high jump for his lowest finish on the first day.
Jim Strafuss was the highest Kansas finisher for the first day. Strafuss, in eight place overall with his team, had his best finish of the day in the high jump, where he tied for fourth with a jump of 6 feet, $14\frac{1}{4}$ inches.
The decathlon will wind up tomorrow with the 110-meter hurdles at 10 a.m., the discus throw at 10:50, the pole vault at 12:45 p.m., the javelin throw at 3:15 and the 1500 meter run at 5:05.
POLYMNASIA
John Schwepek of Southeast Missouri State makes his first attempt at 6-foot-31/2 inches in the high jump event of the men's decathlon. Schwepek finished second in the event and second overall yesterday in the first day of the 62nd Annual Kansas Relays.
Connolly receives Big 8 honors
By ROB KNAPP
Staff writer
Sheila Connolly walked into the Kansas softball office in the fall of 1982 and asked for a chance to play. She earned a spot on the team and has spent four seasons earning a place in the Javahawk record book.
Sheila Connollv
Connolly. named yesterday as the Big Eight Conference player of the week, leads the Jayhawk in today's double-header with 14th-ranked Creighton.
Connolly hit 478 last week, going
11-for-23 in Kansas' six games. She
had a double and two triples and stole
five bases without being caught.
Shaila Connolly
Softball
Connolly also moved from center field to shortstop in the doubleheader against Missouri and played there again in Sunday's doubleheader with Southwest Missouri State. She made seven putouts and 14 assists in her four starts at shortstop and committed only one error.
Connolly, who played shortstop in high school, was moved to the infield by Kansas coach Bob Stanclift in an effort to strengthen the team's defense.
"She handled the adjustment pretty well," Stanclift said. "She got her hands on a couple of plays and did real well."
"I can't wait to play them," Kansas first baseman and center fielder Laura Cramer said earlier in the game. "We were better than we did this weekend."
But as good as Connolly's fielding may be, it is her batting that has made her a standout this season. After playing 34 games, a little more than half-way through the season, Connolly has 48 hits in 115 trips to the plate and a .471 batting average.
If she could keep up that pace, she would top Jill Larson's KU record of 400, set in 1979. Connolly said she hoped the team's remaining schedule would help her.
Connolly is also moving up on a number of Kansas career records. She has stolen 16 bases this year and needs only one more to break the old Kansas career mark of 39.
"Most of our games left are with conference teams, and we have Creighton again." Connolly said. "There will be a lot of pitchers I've already seen this season."
The next run she scores will give her sole possession of second place on the Kansas career run list, and she is only two triples short of the Jayhawk career record.
Connolly and the Jayhawks are 0-3 against Creighton this season including a doubleheader loss at Jayhawk Field last Saturday. Kansas made nine errors in those two games.
Little-league letdown at nine didn't stop one of KU's best
By DAVID BOYCE
Staff writer
At age nine, KU's first baseman,
John Byrn, was cut from his little
league baseball team in Lawrence
Now, Byrn is Kansas' second leading hitter overall and leads the team in RH with 34
"He never gave up," said Pam Byrn, John's mother.
She said her son was relaxed and didn't become upset because of disappointments.
"I progressed a little at a time, but it wasn't until I was 18 that I realized that I could hit," Byrn said.
Byrn said that he first thought seriously of playing major league baseball during high school.
"I don't think about it day-to-day," he said, "but I'm not going to lie. I sometimes do think about that." That's a ballplayer's dream. "That's every ballplayer's dream."
Byn took his first step toward playing in the major leagues when he played junior college baseball in the community College in El Dorado.
"I wasn't physically or mentally ready to play major college baseball." Byrn said. "I went to Butler to play and needed to play."
He said that he started hitting well during his sophomore year at Butler.
"I did not have the size," Byrnn said, explaining why he didn't start hitting well until his sophomore year.
Byrn said, "I try not to think about hitting home runs Most of mine come off mistakes."
His mother, who has worked as a secretary for 15 years in different sports offices in Allen Field House, and his father, who is significantly stronger since leaving Law.
"The fences were not as deep at Butler as they are here," she said. "His home runs now are truer."
After Byrn left Butler, he immediately became starting first baseman for the Jayhawks. In his first year, he batted a team-leading .395 with six home runs and 31 RBIs.
Byrn said that the pitching was the biggest difference between playing at Butler and Kansas.
He said, "In junior college, every team had one good pitcher. But here, every team has four good pitchers.
"I have to stay mentally ready every game now, instead of coasting a few games."
KU
John Byrn
This season Byrn has batted .352 and has hit seven home runs.
Byrn said he thought that speed was the only skill he lacked that could hurt his chances at being drafted.
"I am not the fastest person in the world," he said, "but I have a capable stick, a good arm and baseball smart.
Byrn said that he would quickly take advantage of an opportunity to play professionally.
"Three out of four isn't bad."
"That's my dream," he said. All I want is a chance."
However, Byrn said he was not worried about playing in the minor leagues, even though he has heard that most minor league players are of small salaries and spend a lot of their time on buses travelling to away games.
Byrn said he knew that if he was drafted, he first would have to spend time playing minor league baseball.
"My father is a very big supporter and helps me a lot when he can," Byrn said. "He lives in
Memphis and he said he would give me financial support if I get drafted."
Byrn said he received support from his entire family. In addition to his parents, he has a brother, Mike, who plays at Butler County, and a brother, Bill, who plays at Lawrence High School.
"Mike calls me and we talk about hitting, and Bill and I work
I am not the fastest person in the world, but I have a capable stick, a good arm and baseball smart. Three out of four isn't bad.'
— John Byrn KU firstbaseman
together helping each other on fielding," he said. "We are a big family unit.
"My mother sacrifices a lot of her time watching all three of us play."
When John's mother is not able to attend KU's games because of her work in the Sports Information Office, she routinely calls the press box to ask how her son and the team are doing.
Lately, the reply has been that John has had a hit, but that the team was losing
The Jay Hawks are now free overall and 1-11 in the Big Eight Conference.
"We are to the point that we are overthinking," he said last week. "We need to relax."
2
Gareth Waltrip/KANSAR
John Byrn, KU first baseman, makes a hit for the Jayhawks. Byrn has helped lead the KU baseball team often sively this season with a .332 batting average, a team-leading 34 RBI and seven home runs.
Diving catch saves no-hitter for Brewers
The Associated Press
BALTIMORE — Juan Nieves threw the first no-hitter in Milwaukee Brewers history last night when the Brewers beat Baltimore 7-0. Center fielder Robin Yount made a diving catch in right center to end the game.
American League
Nieves, a 22-year-old right-hander, struck out seven and walked five in intermittent drizzle. The Orioles were no-hit for the first time since Nolan Ryan, then with California, pitched one against them on June 1, 1975.
Yount ran about 15 yards and then dived to snare Eddie Murray's drive and preserve the no-hitter. The Breesmen mobbed Nieves at the mound.
Nieves, 2-0, who was 11-12 as a rookie last season, needed three other fine defensive plays behind him to ensure the pitching gem. Left fielder Jim Pacorek made a diving play against the baseman Paul Molitor made outstanding plays in the fourth and fifth innings.
Twins 5. Oakland 2
OAKLAND, Calif. — Mike Smithson of the Minnesota Twins pitched a no-hitter for six innings, then needed relief help from George Frazier and Jeff Reardon in a 5-2 victory over the
Oakland Athletics vesterdav
Angels 4. Mariners 0
SEATTLE — Kirk McCaskill pitched a four-hitter and Brian Downing and Dick Schofield hit solo home runs yesterday as the California Angels shut out the Seattle Mariners 4-0.
McCaskill, 2-0, scattered four singles for his first shutout and complete game of the season. He walked 16-7 and scored 29 batters, two over the minimum.
Yankees 4. Indians 3
Boston 5. Texas 4
NEW YORK - Wade Winfield lined a two-run single to cap a three-run ninth-minute New York Yankees Cleveland and 3 last hits for the Indians' sixth straight loss.
BOSTON -- Dwight Evans's sixth-inning slam and the overpowering relief pitching of Wes Gardner scored for Texas against victory over the Texas Rangers yesterday and extended the Rangers' losing streak to six.
White Sox 5. Blue Jays 0
TORONTO — Jose DeLeon struck out nine in 7-2 innings, while Tim Huelt drew in four runs as the Chicago White Sox snapped a fourgame losing streak with 5-4 victory last night over the Toronto Blue Jays.
Braves clip Reds 4-3 with three-run homer
The Associated Press
ATLANTA — Andres Thomas hit a three-run home run and powered the Atlanta Braves to a 4-3 victory over the Cincinnati Reds last night.
National League
Thomas connected in the third inning off Reds starter Tom Browning, 1-1, after a walk to Glenn Hubbard and a single by Dion James.
Giants 1. Padres 0
SAN DIEGO — Kelly Downs pitched a three-hitter and Candy Maldonado provided the only run with a seventh-inning homer as the San Francisco Giants beat the San Diego Padres 1-0 last night.
The loss dropped the Padres' record to 1-8, the worst start in the 19-year history of the franchise. Counting spring training games, the Padres have won only once since March 27 and have lost 16 of 17 since then.
Astros 4. Dodgers 0
LOS ANGELES — Mike Scott threw a one-hit shotout and Billy Hatcher homered, doubled and singled and continued his torrid 1987 start as the Houston Astros downed Los Angeles Dodgers 4-0 last night.
Mets 4. Phillies 1
Scott, the 1986 National League Cy Young Award winner, allowed just a third-inning single to Mariano Duncan as he ran his record to 2.0. He retired the last 15 batters. Houston's split-finger fastball specialist struck out 10 and gave up just one walk.
PHILADELPHIA — Gary Carter and Darryl Strawberry hit consecutive home runs in the seven innings of Philadelphia Phillies 4-1 last night.
Left-hander Sid Fernandez, 2-0,
worked six innings, giving up two
hive, walking five and striking out
five. After a relief spell by rookie
Austin Hunt, he came on and
earned his second save by getting
two outs in the ninth.
Pirates 3. Cubs 1
CHICAGO — Jim Morrison singled home the go-ahead run in the top of the 10th inning yesterday, and the Pittsburgh Pirates went on to a 3-1 victory over the Chicago Cubs.
After Chicago's Jody Davis tied the game at 1-1 with a one-out homer in the bottom of the ninth off reliever Don Robinson, the Pirates quickly rallied against reliever Dickie Noles, 0-1.
Andy Van Slyke lefto the 10th with a single, Barry Bonds lined to center, but Johnny Ray singled to right, sending Van Slyke to third. Morrison then singled, scoring Van Slyke with the tie-breaking run.
Frank DiPino relieved Noles and got Sid Grem to fly out, with Ray moving to third. Bobonila walk-in when he relied on whilen reliever Les Lancaster balked.
Pirates starter Rick Reuschel allowed only three hits over the first eight innings before leaving for a pinch-hitter. He walked four and struck out four. Cubs starter Steve Trout allowed eight hits in seven innings.
14
Thursday, April 16, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Sports Briefs
KU distance runner hurt will miss Kansas Relays
KU distance runner Craig Watched had shoulder surgery yesterday afternoon at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. He will not compete in the 62nd Annual Kuala Lumpur began yesterday and will continue through Saturday.
Watkee said yesterday that the injury, a dislocated left shoulder, was an accident that occurred in the wrestling ring.
Watcke said that Ken Wertzberger, Kansas team physician, performed the surgery to repair cartilage and ligaments that had been torn and a muscle that had been pierced.
Watcke, South Bend, Ind., sophomore, said that Wertzberger thought he would be able to compete May 14-16 in the Big Eight Outdoor Championships at the Utah State University immobilized for two weeks and let it heal properly.
Watcke was Kansas' leading distance runner this season. He won a 1,500-meter run at a quadrangular meet last Saturday with California-Berkley, Arizona State and San Jose State in California.
Stadium renamed for Howser
TALLAHASEE, Fla. — Florida lawmakers voted unanimously yesterday to rename the baseball stadium at Florida State University in honor of an alumnus, former Kansas City Royals Manager Dick
Gov. Bob Martinez pledged to sign the bill as soon as he received it.
Howser, 50, is battling a malignant brain tumor diagnosed shortly after he managed the American League team in the All-Star Game last year. He stepped down as manager of the Royals in February.
Howser's sister, Joyce Howser Kelly, and Florida State President Bernard Sliger watched from the House and Senate galleries as lawmakers approved the hill to rename the stadium.
"It's going to mean a tremendous amount to people
living in this area," said Rep. Al Lawson, D-Tallahassee, one of the bill's house sponsors. "He loves the university so much."
Florida State Athletic Director C.W. "Hootie" Ingram said Howser had helped raise the Seminoles baseball program from its infancy and always has remained loyal to Florida State.
Howser became Florida State's first All-America baseball star in 1957. He was named Florida amateur athlete of the year in 1958.
NAACP plans hiring campaign
NEW YORK — The NAACP announced yesterday a national campaign to pressure professional sports franchises to hire more blacks in management, and promised "massive demonstrations" against any that
Hooks said local branches of his organization would seek meetings with their nearest teams, starting with baseball and then extending their efforts to football and basketball franchises and to college sports.
"We have millions of black young people who need to see blacks in these front offices. . . Most newspapers devote more space to sports than to business," said Benjamin Hooks, NAACP executive director.
They will seek first information about the teams' minority hiring, and then will try to work with each team to develop affirmative action programs. In addition to field managers and executives, the NAACP will look at hiring of vendors, ushers, receptionists and all other employees.
Hooks said if the teams refuse to cooperate — a possibility that Hooks was remote, because "I expect they are embarrassed" by the lack of blacks they employ — protests will follow."
Hooks made his remarks at a news conference a little more than a week after Al Campanis, a vice president of the Los Angeles Dodgers, set off a furor by telling a national television audience that blacks "may not have some of the necessities" to become managers or general managers.
From staff and wire reports
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KANSAN STAFF POSITIONS
Application forms are available in rooms 119 (Kansan Business Office) and 200 (Journalism Office) Stauffer-Flint Hall. News staff applications are due in room 200 by 5 p.m. Wednesday, April 15. Business staff applications are due in room 200 by 5 p.m. Before you ask any questions, please stop by the Kansan Business Office, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
The University Daily Kansan is now accepting applications for the 1987 Fall semester business and news staffs. These are paid positions but do not require newspaper experience.
The Kansan is anEqual Opportunity / Affirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry.
University Community Service Scholarship Award application deadline is 5 p.m. Monday, April 20 at the SUA office, 864-3477, fourth floor of the Kansas Union.
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Sohu Cebra) 841-3176
4 Bedroom house near K U. Available mid-May or June J. Barnhardwood floors; lindows of W.D.
Apartments for summer and fall at University Terrace Apartments. 1600 W. 9th. 1 Bedroom for summer. June and July only $190 unfurnished. Bedroom for summer. June and July only $490 unfurnished. furnished $300, plus all utilities. 1 Bedroom for fall, 10 month leave. August 1 June. furnished $290, plus all utilities. Bedroom for fall. August 1 June. $110 furnished $290 unfurnished, plus all utilities. Central air on bus line, large rooms, gas heat. Come see at us. 800 W. 56th. or 810 W. 429. If no answer call 943-1433.
Gay & Lesbian Services of Kansas General meeting Plan for Summer and Fall Semester this Thursday, April 16, 7:30 p.m. International Convention Center; Tuesday, April 18, we will meet Thursday, April 23
A Bedroom home, furnished, available date are July.
Family preferred, call for information.
Apartment for Suitcase. Furnished. Utilities paid, $260/month. 14th and 17th Street. 749-535. Perfect
ARE YOU ATTENDING SUMMER SCHOOL? **
Students attending at 210 disc
Berkshire Flats, 822116
SAVE TIME
Find your apartment or rental home in the Kansas City area.
- FREE SERVICE
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VIDEO PREVIEWS
Call or stop by.
6600 College Bldd.
Overland Park, Ks.
GREAT PLACES
(913) 345-8777
Aspen West now leasing for Summer. Energy effi-
cent, 1 and 2 bedrooms. 3 Blocks west of Iowa on
15th. Private gatios/decks, ceiling fans, no
pets $269-$349, 749-1288. Open house Saturday.
BEAUTIFUL Townhouse for summer sublease
BEAUTIFUL Townhouse for summer sub lease
and dishwasher 2 bedrooms with patio
and balcony
Beauty, eh? 7 How Bedroom Apartment, Five minutes to Fraser. Low Utilities. Lease for Summer with Fall option. Leave message. 842-1023
Clean studio with air conditioning located close to campus. Water and electricity paid. Available at: 612-549-3811 or 641-8345 between 6:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m.
Completely furnished 2 bcp apt. low utilities.
Close to campus. Rent neg. Call
290-803-1660
Convenient summer sublease. We are renting all or part of our three bedroom apartment. Microwave, private washer and dryer Cheap Kitchen Appliances, 10th & 11th & '2h' Call anytime, 842-2853
WEST HILLS APARTMENTS 1012 EMERY RD. 841-3800
Now taking reservations for summer & fall
Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apartments furnished & unfurnished
Great location
near campus
OPEN
DISPLAY APARTMENTS OPEN
Monday-Wednesday-Thursday
1:00 4:00
No appointment needed Stop by office located in middle of complex by pool
Excellent location: 2 bedroom apartments in four-plex, carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, and low utilities. Available June 1. Summer Rates $499. Attendance at 118 Tennessee and 141 Ohio. Call 842-4242
Female nonsmoker wanted for 87-88 school year. 28 bath 2 bath room. Right off 23rd street. Please email resume to amanda.mcginnis@answeringmachine.com on answering machine $195.00 Gas, Wr, Tr pa.
Female Bedroom needed from May 20-August 20. Furnished Tanglewood Apartment. Larger bedroom. Great bargain for $175.11 a month. Call
Female roommate wanted, June 1 August. 1 Own
room with balcony in 2 bdm. apt. Pool. $125/
1+ us/Utilities. Sunrise Place. Call 842-0969 after
1 p.m.
For Rent: Bedroom in Private home, males preferred 843-2044
Fine location on bedroom basement studio aparment, CA, equipped kitchen. Low utilities. Available June 1, $175 at 1801 Mississippi. Call 842-4242.
Furnished, spacious one-bedroom apartment available from 5/11/17 through 8/16/17 for $900 plus electricity. Nice area, walking distance to campus, Hillcrest, and downtown. Call (817) 457-0732 or visit www.hillcrest.edu.
Get it while it's hot! 1 Bedroom Apt Summer Sublease. It's close to campus and downtown. Call
IF YOU LIKE SPACE & QUIET WE HAVE IT AND YOU CAN STILL WALK TO CAMPUS
Spacious 2 bedroom
Laundry facilities
Waterbed fine
Swimming pool
10-12 month leases
VILLAGE SQUARE
9th & Avalon
842-3040
Get Out of the Dormir* Living enjoy with 30 other students in a Cooper's College building. Enjoy the pleasure of living at SUNFLOWER HOUSE Rent $160-$340. Spaces open for Summer and Fall -749-607-ask for more information.
Have a duplex adventure this summer! Need female student to subdue splendid duges, great hooks and ropes.
GREAT SUMMER RATES Special incentives,
our military and ROTC Special!
Pierce American Airlines
Help. Need subarea subarea for beautiful 3 bdr
home. Graduating. Make will deal!
Please: 841.78230
HOT Summer Sublease: nice, new, tur-
bish 12TH and Louisiana Available mid-May 6400
to 7950
I'll pay you $120 to subsitute Westhill furnished i bdg. June 7, June 9. And July with a Opt-A C
Houses, Bedroom Apartments, Sleeping Rooms.
Available June 1st; 2-bedroom rooms 1.2 and 3-bedroom apartments; and, sleeping rooms.
Near campus. No pets. Call 842-8971.
Large 1-Dbm. Furnished. 126 Tenn. $225 plus about $10 electricity. Other utilities paid. 749-5859.
964-9000 or 841-5645
Large three bedroom apartment, close to campa-
nion and downstream for summer sublease. Available
May 15. Free rent through May $33.00 month.
Call 845-7633 or 841-1327.
LIKE CATY For summer, beautiful apartment in older house. Spacious, wood floors, fireplace, water/ dryer, $1200 plus gas & electricity for summer set. saturn air. Aime 99.3587
Most Budget for summer. Available mid-May.
since 9th apartment in house. Large Kitchen,
Rath, and Living room. Partially furnished
$231/month plus utilities. 749-838
One bedroom house 1800 block of Marine Street
to class prefer couple available, at
843-969-2555.
Need to Sublime? 1 bedroom, close to campus
Need to Sublime? 2 bedrooms, close to campus
Need to Sublime? Apple Lane Place studio apartment for the summer. Available May 1 or asap
Need to Sublume? Carpenters' plot paint cell
George Idfern 965-487-3000. Apple
Fully furnished, dishwasher, etc. Regnible Tanglewood, 109 & Arkansas
One male graduate student for attractive, quiet,
responsible department. Utilizes paid $290 monthly.
1633 Northwest Blvd.
accepted
Reserve your apartment now! Just 2 sheet blocks from university, 1.2, and 4 bedroom apartments Furnished with some utilities paid and off street parking. No pets. 841-5500.
in town
- FF refrig. Disposal
- Lowest utility bills
- Quiet location
- Short term leases
For more info. call between 9-6, Mon.-Fri., 843-4754
---
- Gas heat, C-A, D-W
Reserve you room now! For summer and/or fall Furnished with most utilities paid. Shared cooking and bath facilities. Just 2 short blocks from the park, off street parking. No pets. 841-5500
Room for rent in nice, clean. O.W. l. apartment.
Room has wood floor, private 1/2 bath, entrance
door, carpeted walkway. Free parking.
Share Rent, utilities, and dues. Nice house,
close to campus, washdriver, private room,
toilet, laundry. 750 sq. ft.
Spacious: Peppeertte 2 R.R. 2 bath.
PooleChinese Tennis Bus 18 Seatle usefor
7 people.
SPHING GRADS to Welchina dupes for 3 BHE.
CLEANER with HEAT PUMP, METALLIC COAT,
located locally enclosed condition. $75, Available
at your door.
SUMMER SCHOOL 7. NO CAR? 2 bdm available.
SUMMER SCHOOL 8. NO CAR? 1 bdm available.
item goes up,
avail, may 4, avail 3, may 10
Mastercraft Offers . . .
Completely Furnished
14th & Mass. • 841-1212
bdrm apartments—all close to Campus!
- SUNDANCE
HANOVER PLACE
- SUNDANCE
7th & Florida • 841-5255
- TANGLEWOOD
- 10th & Arkansas • 749-2415
- CAMPUS PLACE
1145 Louisiana • 841-1429
Make the right choice
Live in a
Mastercraft Apartment!
842-4455
SUMMER SUBLEASE extra clean, furnished,
wooded area, angledwood Apart-
ment. Call 642-907-8319 for in-
quiries.
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Need two non-smoking females to sublease Trailridge townhouse. Call now! 749-3717
SUMMER SUMMER SULELEASE: 3 bait apis; 2 full baths,
close to campus; $25 plus dill perfume; Tangwooled,
new construction.
SUMMER SULEASEL 3 Bedroom, 2 bathroom apartroom. Clean, pool, laundry facilities Call
SUMMER SUBLEASE Malls Apts May-Aug 1 One Bedroom 824-4517
SUMMER SUBLEASE: Spacious two bedroom.
Malls Alps, HALF OFF first month's rent.
13.5967
AMENITIES
Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the amenities of Naismith Hall. Applications for fall semester are now being accepted while space remains.
NAISMITHHALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
913-843-8559
SUMMER SUBLEASE Homemate needed
SUMMER SUBLEASE Homemate needed
Cheap Check Call Critic 842-880-1036. Leave
mail at cheapsubs@nytimes.com
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Very nice, new 1
BHD/Studio apt. Furnished. Must be non-smoker,
off-street parking NEGOTIABLE. Available
May 14, 84-4606, 11th & Ohio.
University Daily Kansan / Thursday. April 16, 1987
15
SUNRISE PLACE SUMMER APT SUBLEASE 2
facilities.
$800 populate! call 791-4711.
$600 populate! call 791-4711.
Sublease for summer: a large one bedroom in two
bedrooms, mall Apt. Mali's Olde English Village,
842-417.
Sublease for summer, studio at Hanover Place.
Call 749-5440
Sub-Lease for summer. Sunrise Terrace 3.
Bedrooms. Call for info. 841-0487.
**Sublease for summer:** Furnished 2 Bedroom, halfway B/A; C close to campus, near open bars in the building.
Sublease luxury 2BQ gtl, 2 bath, FP, Wet Berat,
sublease luxury 2BQ gtl, 2 bath, FP, Wet Berat,
purchase on balcony on rent call, vocational call.
Purchase on balcony on rent call. Vocational call.
EDDINGHAM PLACE
44th & Collingham men to Gorton
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- 10 or 12 month
- Swimming pool
* Free Showtime
- Exercise Weightroom
Swimming pool
contract
- On-Site Management
Open Daily 3:00-5:00
Saturday 9:00-12:00
841-5444
Professionally managed by Kany Valley Management, Inc.
---
Sublease for Summer Furnished one HR with Lloyd use. Furnished $33 plus electricity. Furnished 749-288.
Sublease: 4 bedroom, spacious, excellent location (next to Yelko Sub). Call 841-3987.
Sub-lease: May 18. One bedroom with loft, fully furnished, watered pad. 841-513-9
Low utilities. Spacious. $275.00. Call 841-5797.
Summer Sublease. Near campus, great for summer school student. Low rent plus possible reductions.
Call 841-5741 at 5:49 p.m.
Summer sublease very nice three room ranske house. Near camus. $420 month. 843-305.
Summer Sublease. One bedroom luxury apartment has washer/dryer, microwave, access to jucczi. Option to renew lease. $350.00, 824.568.
Summer Sublease very nice three Bdrhk style.
يُجد إحدى التعديلات في الكائن
southridge
Southridge Plaza Apts.
LEASING
for fall
1 & 2 bedroom apartments
Summer Sublease: Furnished 1 bdrm apartment.
Call 841-1384.
Summer Sublease 2 bdrm townhouse, 2 baths,
min. bar room, dishwasher, available May 14
Summer Sublease: three or four person furnished apartment adjacent to campus. Available May 18.
Summer Sublease. Furnished. 3 bdm rp. 2 full baths, bathroom to campus, low utilities. Mid-May $190 per month.
Summer Sublime. Need one or two females for 3 bedroom apartment, completely furnished, $165 as month, 1/3 utilities, close to campus. Call 749-2732. Summer Sublime will save you for Fall: $2 bacon, $3 water, $2 gas.
Summer Sublease: 3 bedroom, close to campus,
rent very negotiable. Call 843-1701.
Summer Sublease: nice 2 hr, fully furnished
with a kitchen & utilities. Close to campa-
lgewood. 941-7598
Summer Sublease Studio Apt. 1 all utilities paid,
8th and 10th, B235 8225 749 358 68
Location
Located among 70 acres of rolling hills and trees, you'll enjoy the convenience of being close to campus and area shopping.
Lifestyle
Meadowbrook offers a selection of spacious and comfortable studios, 1, 2, or 3 bedroom apartments, and townhouses to fit your lifestyle
RESERVE YOUR
UNIT NOW...
FOR SUMMER OR FALL!
meadowbrook
Summer Sublue-Nice, roomy, 3 B, A C, a carpet, paint, nice location. $490. Low utilities. Last 1/2 of May free. 749-2533 if necessary) or call 841-2322 if furnished. Close to campus. 841-2322.
Summer subunit : 1 bdm apartment next to campus. *10th & Arkansas*) Available May 15, Low Cost.
15th & Crestline 842-4200
Summer sublease to females: 3 bdm furnished
with room for up to two children.
Summer sublease: 3 bdm Bedroom Apt. 2, 1 bath,
completely furnished, available starting May or June
and closed from April 15th to June 15th.
Close to campus. Need 2 people. 934-842-942
tions. Close to campus. Need 2 people 834-9492
Sunrise Place Townhouse avail for summer
sublease. 2 bdr. 1/1. 1/2 baths, finished basement.
$250/month. Free parking. Negotiate on rent. More info, call 842-9691
BEST VALUE!
Large size 1, 2, 3 bedroom apts, on bus route. All have gas heat, appliances, carpet and drapes. Extra room for children to choose from. If you want the most room for your dollar, then come see us a 2166 W. 26th or call 843-6446.
Gatehouse
FOR SALE
14 x 6 Mobile Home, 2 bedroom, remodeled, nicedeer,
carpeted, fenced yard, Partial owner financing
investment.
1981 Honda CB 750 Custom. Excellent condi tion, mileage, with calls. Excursion 842-7731, Johns Hopkins
1982 Macaulay Sec 400. New, with only one owner,
1000 miles excellent condition with 10 Vetter
toxin kit.
mfrlmkt. maxx tah 564-383
N Honda Nightia 2006 W 7900C, 450 miles, Still
2010 N Honda CRV 2006 W 8900C, 540 miles
2 RICKENBACKERS 1, collector's 12 string 1
3 Serious Buyers only. John, 8415768 or
8426120
50%/70% Coach Airline Ticket. Credit Cards only.
Ask for the Midnight Express. 788-315-31
ALL NIGHT SALE April 17th 10am 18h. 813-932-
music stereo, motorcycle, musical equipment,
sports equipment
Bell Tourstar helmet. Red, 7/1, $40. 794-0167 after
7:30 p.m.
Biancio Sport, 1986 to 19 speed. Blue. Alloy Wheels.
Great Condition. Must Sell. Blu. 843-6431.
*underpilot Dikell Sisokw. Certified Guaranteed 5.
*Underpilot Dikell Sisokw. Certified Guaranteed 17. $15
464796 4769 12 p a m. 6 p m. 9 p m.
464796 4769 12 p a m. 6 p m. 9 p m.
CPA EXAM Study Material. Best CPA Review course with Cassette tapes. Serious inquiries on phone.
Cusinart Food Processor #75 JC Penney microwave micrase 75, Smith Corona electric typewriter 100, T199 Computer, games, joystick 800, 843-275 eves.
For Sale. Honda Express Motorcycle, Excellent
Condition. See at 1791 Indiana or call 843-419-1290.
For sale: 10 speed. Used occasionally, occasionally purposes only. Good condition, $85 Call
Fuji 3-iq bicycle with Fenders and folding
handlebars in love like in perfect condition:
asked $130. Call 844-725-9818
PC/XT Compatible, 64kB, monochrome graphics, monochrome 64k, 1200 Band modem, 3 button mouse, turbo, 2 drives, 5 month warranty, $850, 942-1349 after p. 8pm.
IBM PCX71 compatible, monochrome
driver 4850; USB 2.0 adapter
board / motherboard w/ 512K + 1 Foppy drive
drives (DVD-ROM); RAM 8 MB
MAX'S COMICS Comic Books, Playbys, Penthouse, etc. 811 New Hampshire.
*** MOTHIBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
Monday-Friday 10:5-30 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday 10:2-p.m.
Music Man Sting Ray Bass w/ Hard Shell Case.
$550. Brendan Dreaton 84-5237
Musician 412-GS Speaker cabinet. Sounds great.
Steve, RD-2419
Must Sell 198 BMW K10MT Warranty t10/88 New Pirelli Phantoms, Tail Shield. Heated Gems, Reynolds Rack with trunk Cornbat sonic Mounts with $295.00 - Make offer 542 314. Leave message
Must sell Infiniti infinity $130. Sournure receiver receive Marze rotary total $250
receiver receive Marze rotary total $250
receiver receive Marze rotary total $250
NAD 315 integrated 850rs $23, Carver M-500 plus amplifier, 260 Watts p. channel 2, 300 Watts p. channel 4
NOTES now available for variety of classes
Enhance learning and gain more
knowledge. We are here to Help
Original movie posters just like you see in the theatre. Each poster at 27" x 41", 106% autobook quality, and $25-$35. Maquineau, Tin Mow, Angel Heart Top Gun, Morrigan, Ace Ventura, Black Widow, Merge, Outrage Fortune
Three For the Road, Project X The Aristocats,
Lethal Wheel, Hoosiers. Send $12.99 for each
pender and $17.59帖票 any size order.
Pender 12, 14.93 Maple, Witchahill, Kansas 67211 or
67214, Maple, Witchahill, Kansas 67211.
Rickleman baskass black bass 401 Excellent Con-
tent Professional Quality 2019.01.08 B.O 843 986
Ad HS Phone Name Cis Sort Start Stop cl
Racing Bike Tunturi 23 lbs. $ 25^{th} $ with lock Cycle
1974 WK Beetle with new tires. Great college car,
durable desk. 740-567 or 811-481. Also nice客车.
dusk workshop. 740-567.
1974 Volvo 142. 142 Good condition, Very dependable.
120.00 ml. Available from: Avail. 10:00, $1.00
Call: (855) 361-6200
Sailbate for Sale - 2015 Olympic Class Flying Dug
Saline with 1000.00 or best offer Call evening,
900.00 or best offer Call evening,
Apacheas suckerwater low capacity 942-792-7
TUXEDOS! After Six formal wear TUXEDOS!
Suit in white, with jacket and set with pants, vest, or cumberbun, tie-own expensive to own to rent! Come to Everything Ice but Ice 16c Vermont. Get yours early for that and you will have your size bit more hurry! Everything But Ice
179 Chevette 4 speed. Standard. New batters and alternator. Some dentrs. Need clutch. $800. Phone
077 Volkswagen Rabbit. Restored, beautiful
taxi cab with 120V power, three airbags,
(teetyes), long life highway car fuel for
gasoline only.
AUTOSALES
1974 VW Superbear. Run Good Yellow,
Sunny 5000 miles. Must sell, $300. Call
Shaw.
Moving to California -must sell 1979 Mazda GLC Hatchback, 5 speed, a/c, good mpg, reliable, great body & interior $1,200. B42-8133 evenings.
must Sell Chevrolet, 4 cylinders, Automatic Must Sell Chrysler, 4 new radial air, Air conditioning, recently paid $1,000 ($190). Birch 81-5533
LOST—FOUND
Tiny amount of fuel $79.0goal, T98-3250
% Gater A: A/C, 6/1 C) excellent condition
% Gater B: A/C, 6/1 C) 841-6188
For Sale WV Super Beetle Convertible 1977
White with white top 842.6259
$Chevy Impala Very Reliable, good looking car.
Tiny amount of rust. Five negro. Nippon 843-2800
Chevy
LOST 2 gold rings, one with band of diamonds.
LOST 3 silver rings, contact person ZAC843-7374. Reward contact person ZAC843-7374.
LOST on /1/11/87. Men's Seiko watch, reward. Calve at 842-4700.
HELP WANTED
Lost: Large gold诺文 Dame de sion class ring
Call Jan at 864-2108
Lost: female black calico cat wearing pink collar.
Last March 27 at 14th and 0hh. Please call
(865) 348-9000.
Lost: Presence Design Sunglasses in front of 137
Strong. Can Identify, no questions asked 885-315
***
Artist Needed for Next Semester. Graphic Design
Interpretation. Please Call 842 3383 and ask for Jon Hafez
Are you good with children? Would you like to be
paid to live with a California family and help with
children? HELP PARENTS 770 Menlo Ave 219
Milpita Park, CA 9453 (415) 423-2816
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teacher, archery, sports gymnastics, ricketty, archery, golf, sports campers, camping, crafts, dramas, OR riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary $70 or more. Please refer to Seager, 1965, Mpls. NJ, 312-444-2922.
AIRLINES CRUSELINES HIRING! Summer
Career! Good Pay. Travel. Call For Guide.
Cassette. Newservicer!(916) 944-4444 Ext. 153
Are you good with children?
DAY TELEPHONE Sales needed in our office.
Call 855-423-9121 or contact Calls 855-
423-9121 or ask for Dennis, 497-3921.
Cocktail Waitresses Needed Part-time week
w/ 4th
(beyond McDonald's) 7-10 a.m. w/ m.
(beyond McDonald's) 7-10 a.m. w/ m.
EVENINGS OR SATURDAY Telephone Sales in our Office. No experience necessary. Good Paying Job.
perience with the Developmentally Disabled. Com-
pared to the usual $39.00 per hour plus $72.24 per hour if the clients need assistance during their night. To apply, send resume of appl-
ication and resume of employment to SAFe Po. Suite 206, Glashe, KS 600E; MoeH EO-11.
preparing for Spring and Summer work. If accepted, you will earn 8.10 start. Some evening classes are offered, and flexibility is allowed during final exams. If you qualify, corporate scholarships are awarded, internships are possible, and you may earn 2.50 or 3.50 full-time work is available. Call (913) 345-9675
FREE ROOM AND BOARD. Johnson County's Mental Retention Center seeks a Relief Team member to assist the unit for Developmentally Disabled Persons in OVERLAND PARK, KANSAS. Will provide assistance in and available. This team will work with schedule from 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. five days each.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16,640-$39,250/jr. New
Hiring Call 851-687-6000 R-789; for current
employees.
Join our "Nanny Network" of over 500 placed by our family. We are dedicated to building an exchange in merit for top salary, benefits, room and travel packages.
Goddfather's Pizza now hiring delivery drivers.
must be 18 years of age and have a good driving record. Dependable car also required. Position at 71 W. 22rd. Apply in person at 71 W. 22rd.
Kansas Sports Bar & Grill taking applications to, sharp, energetic hardtenders and cocktail waitresses. Evening shifts. Experience prefer. 8-9th Street, 8-9th Eldridge, Hotel 7th, & Massachusetts.
and board, airfare. All families prescreened for your satisfaction. Many families for you choose from: Contact Helping Hands, Inc at 203-834-7424 or feature on NPCR's Today Show & Hour Magazine.
NANNY POSITIONS AVAILABLE Good salary
Dallas, Texas. Call 9-519 (m).
2147
2307
Naismith Hall is taking applications for a full time cook position. Schedule is Tuesday-Saturday, early shift. If interested step by step through the application and fill out an application EO/F/M/HAA
NEEED a change of pace & environment? Spend a year or summer in the New York City area caring for children. Volunteer as a dividual to become a loving, well paid member of a professional family. Call or write Midwest Nanny, Inc. (914) 478-4565. 8 Jordan Road, HUNTINGTON, N.J. 10706 for more information.
Campus interviews for summer employment at a resident camp in Shawnee, Kansas.
Male and female counselors
Waterfront assistant
Nature, archery, riflery, and
rampelling specialists
Counselor-in-training director Arts and crafts director
Call the placement office to set up interviews on Wednesday, April 22. from 1:00 to 4:00 p.m.
PEOPLE NEEDED IMMEDIATELY for
delivery. Must have own transportation. Good
transportation.
SUMMER CAMP JOBBS in the Northeast. For free list send self adress stamped (39) envelope to Midwest Camp Consultants, 1785 Red Coat, Maryland HG, MO 63043
Part-time food service positions available now. If
you are interested in application at Nimbah Hall
dept. desk 201, please contact us.
Have a Boston Adventure
SEARCH EXTENDED *School of Education* seeks DORMITORY SUPERVISOR (1) coordinate dorm staff and live in dorm. Degree and Master's degree required. DORMITORY ASSISTANTS (4) live in dorm and supervise high school students. Degree preferred. DEADLINE: April 20, 1987. 5:00 p.m. Complete application. Attend Balley Hall. Send letter of application, current resume and names of references to: M. Nettie C. Hart, Director, Upward Bound, 848 Hally Bay, Berkeley, Lawrence, KS 69435 (914) 86535 (914) 86540 EAO AA
- Live-in child care for professional Boston
- Must love childrer
- Good Pay
and Benefits
We make excellent matches
American Au Pair
(617) 244-5154
P.O. Box 97
New Town Branch
New Town Branch Boston Mass 02251
- 1 year commitment
- round-trip air fare
- no face
Summer Job. Opportunities available with the U.S. Marine Corps—No obligation to be a Marine. Earn between $60,000 and $85,000 in housing! Call 914-831-1821 (collect).
- no fees
XMCA Camp Gravys in beautiful Lake of the Ozarks now hiring summer staff. Desire for excellence, but no experience necessary. Call (816) 254-9626-Keith Miller
Wanted Nanny/Mother's Helper, female, in affluent Northern New Jersey town, close to NYC
provide care for the flooded with children, energetic,
and have driver skills. Good pay
Summer or permanent. (911) 803-9031
SUMMER JORS A new fifties dance club is opening in Lenox. We hire cocktail waitresses and bartenders. WTl train Apply. In 9:34 M.-S. at Ridgway Rd. Lenox. Located Four Colonias Plaza.
Summer Job-College age female as companion for seven year old girl. Owen transportation needed. Hours: 5 a.m.-4:50 p.m. M.F. References required. Weekdays: 6 m.p.m. weekdays or on weekends. 814-8448
ZZZZZZ TIRED OF MAKING LESS THAN SWEETSTOUT Company is looking for students who are, seriously looking for a good summer job, hard working with net to $50,000 this summer. Please send resume to: info@swetstout.com
PERSONAL
Gees, roses, June 15, Red, White, Black
Backyard, Christmas 86, bride, Naval; March 15, mph, New Years, relaxing, flowers, shake, in-
front of the fire, white favorite peak
2:2:3-3:4-3:4.3 Shmoo
MISCELLANEOUS
--guaranteed lowest
Summer softball team's division D team seeks
players for batting and play ball in Overland
Park. Stuart, 843-7047
GREEN EGGS 31 months after "Wave Babes," I still love you more than I can tell. Just thought I show you that I remembered the day, Love, KO BIRTHDAY Candance. Love your Cat, Cara
Kevin "Hunter" M., 6th Floor JRJ. Don't Mess with girls! Love girls! Live, The Exotic Beauties
Mary Lym You're just too good to be true. Can't take my eyes off of you.
BUS. PERSONAL
Be creative in gift gifting. Fulfillant with a beautiful Beauto Portrait for all occasions. Call us at 212-455-0970. www.beautoportraits.com
Susan from Oatle - Your musician misses you.
Call again. Lust always, D.
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
Call or drop by Headquarters.
We're here because we care.
841-2345 1419 Mass.
Furniture Barn, 1811 W. 6th Street. Just arrived-Inclined section with corner table 900. Mat-tened table 500 each. Dineties starting at $8.00 a drawer tool $4.00 used to垫桌. Vibrating recline $2.50.
THE COMIC CORNER
NE Corner of 3rd & illy. 844-1294
Bloom Co. & Farside T-Shirts
Fantasy Games.
HEADACHE, BACKACH, ARM PAIN, LEG PAIN Student and most insurance accepted. For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark Johnson 843-3979
Spring/Summer Sale Only
Lots of items for Half Price or Less
LOOK & FEEL GREAT Fastest and Most Convenient Tan
- 8 Super Tanning Beds
- Also Facial Tanners
- Also Facial Treatments
- Hot Tubs
STUDENT DISCOUNTS
WALK-INS WELCOME
**GLEYLABSANH1** For writes for KM/MO info. PER
**GLEYLABSANH2** For reads for KM/MO info.
**94016-0218** Mailed discreetly/confidentially
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
25th & IOWA • 841-6232
EUROPEAN SUNTANNING
NOT HIGH & HEALTH CLUB
Leaving Town?
飞机起飞
Maupintour offers
arrangements?
Why go off campus
Maupintour
complete travel planning.
Need music for your wedding? Call Jean, 843-3704. Gives piano and voice lessons over summer.
842-4013 Tuesdays-Saturday to 6; eights by April May. 842-4014 Cutts and cuts, $9 per session. April May. 842-4015 Cutts and cuts, $9 per session.
Weekly Beer Specials
On campus location.
in the Kansas Union
and 831 Mass.
GREENS
PARTY SUPPLY
808 W. 23rd
749-0700
Most reasonable rates in town for all your photo needs, especially graduation, resumes, and portraits.
April 15-21
Busch 12 pk. $4.26
Coors Light 12 pk. $5.37
Coors Extra Gold 12pk. $5.37
Lowenbrau 6 pk. $3.10
Old Style 12 pk. $4.12
Weidemann 12 pk. $3.49
Nare and Used Records Buy, Sell, or Trade Quantrill's 811 New Hampshire.
AUTO-TINTING: Best scratch resistant solar
autohire. Lifetime warranty. PROTI of T
introduction.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving U.S. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7748
Bike Repair Tune-Up Very reasonable rates.
*Graduates and undergraduates, money for fee*
*Societies, sources (913), 764-0299 or 1-800-1221 Exit*
*Source.*
Gransport Bicycle
7th & Arkansas 843-3328
骑自行车的人
K1 PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ekachrome
processing within 24 hours. Complete B W services.
PASSPORT $6.00 Art & Design Building,
Room 284, 84-4707
*MATH TUORIST* by 1976, M.A., $4/hour; *coeurs*
above 19%, I8 / 843.9032.
HARPER
1101 Mass
Suite 201 749-0117
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. AE
processes 842-7945, K48, 742-814.
MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC
Audio Tracks 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
Maximum Audio Wizardry
Bell Box 749-1753
Stamestress. All indices dresses can be made here in various styles from the latest fashion magazines, I will style them
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Jyn and Abortion Services.
Overland Park...{913} 491-878
- D.W.I.'s & traffic
* Fake I.D.'s & other criminal problems
* Family Law & other legal problems
DONALD G. STROLE
1-1-1 TRIO Word processing. Heapsoil. Consistency.
2-40-Hour Typing. 18th semester in Lawrence.
2-40-Hour Typing. 18th semester in Lawrence.
TUTORING MATH STAT. $8.00/HR CALL.
$STAT
TYPING
cientius. Reliable. Call 842 3111 for service.
24-Hour Time. 13th semester in Lawrence.
Resumes, dissertations, papers; Close to campus.
Best quality and fastest service. Clare 841-5006.
Word Processing, proofreading, spell check
NLQ. Printing,Reasonable. 842.1940
A) professional typing. Term papers, Thesis.
B) electronic typesetting. IBM Electronic Typewriter: 842-326
C) printed typesetting.
A-3 Word processing Service. Quality resumes,
resume templates, online resume creation.
storage available: 845-1850 until 9 p.m.
/var/db/mysql> mdb open w/ process:
/var/db/mysql> mdb storage w/ process:
/var/db/mysql> mdb pickup w/ any time
/var/db/mysql> mdb pickup available
Accurate Word Processing. Meadowbrook location. 10 years experience. Call 749-1961 EVENINGS.
Absolutely Fast Typing. Dependable and easy to use. Supports 16-bit system (i.e., 4890-1990 a.p.m. - 5 a.p.m. and 2940-3094 a.p.m.) Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard secretary's call. Secretary叫Mary Nancy Macintyre, 812-1291.
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing.
Donna has been teaching applications,
For professional typing/word processing, can handle a 1400-string special $120, 30-page, double-spaces. pt.
Experienced typist ; tesis, dissertations, term papers 842-310 after 6:15 p.m. M or F/Sat or Sun.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Dependable, professional, experienced.
Dependable, professional, experienced.
TRANSCRIPTION also, standard tape, 848-8877.
DISSERTATIONS. THESES. LAW
DISSECTED. THESES. LAW
will put. KEEP WATCHING THAT AD
Experienced Typeist: Dissertations, theses, term papers, etc. Reasonable Call. Call 824.3230.
Resume Service-written-len 10 copies ONLY
$20.749-2193 after 5 p.m.
GUARANTEED PERFECT done on word
LOCATED near Lawrence Hospital. Call
843-7247
SECRETARY. Typing and word processing.
Affordable, fast, accurate. Spelling corrected,
letter quality. Pickup on campus. Monica 841-8246.
Evenings-weekends.
Quality typing; excellent editing, grammar,
spelling, punctuation skills Fast, reliable.
Pickup, delivery available. 843-0247.
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word pro-
tension letter quality, B4-830-9600, lesse. letter
quality printing, B4-830-9600
ACT NOW, Papers $1.50/pg. Resumes $15.
WRITING LIFELINE #B4. 369-1258
Smart Word Processing include editing and spell
recognition a reasonable rate. 748-291-70
10 a.m. to 7 p.m.
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, edugram, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes. HAVE M.S. Degree. 841-6254
Typing: very reasonable and rates will also assist with spelling punctuation and call. Form 841 2629. 8629
WANTED
Female. Deposit $157.00 Summer only or into fall.
841-1096. Nanae Annti Tunes/Thrush or leave
BAYSISTER TWENTED in my home for 2 young
mater. M-W F afternoons beginning early May
45th
Roommate Wanted! 1 or 2 for summer or for next year. 1 person gets TWO bedroom upstairs. Only 1 person gets ONE room upstairs.
Policy
Roommate to share two bedroom apt $134
172 utilities. On bus route. Call Martin,
Jim.
*LABLE FEMALE GTA WANTS to HOUSEST this summer. Claudia, 749-756 (evenings).
ROOMMATE WANTED-FALL 1987 Need 2 people to share 4 BR house, WD, bus route or walk to campus; quiet neighborhood, near 21st & 22nd AVE, 50/60 month plus 1/4 utilities. 723/723, keep it clean.
Non-smoking, responsible female roommate for
summer and/or fall at seminary. Bath attached,
microwave, washer/dryer. Must be 21 and older.
Utilities: Call 749-3529 or 843-6466 for sandy
People to Join the Fun with SUA's Canoe Trip Down the Kau. 844-3774 For Info
Roommate wanted to share large 2 BR apt.
Available June 1st, 1987 for summer and school year
1978-88 STL location, Laundry facilities,
Kitchen, Rent plus 1/2 deposit and
utilities: 843-3073.
SPANSI TRANSLATOR NOW easy-Now
transferable to town own. Tiny Pay, Call, leave
address: 843-5348
Wanted: Female roommate, nonmoker, for Fall or Summer to share three bedroom apartments.
Wanted: graphic artist to paint menu. Will pay $125.00. Call Chris, 841-1060.
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16
Thursday, April 16, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
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READING IN THE SUN
Details, page 2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Friday
April 17, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 135
(USPS 650-640)
KU alumnus captures 1987 Pulitzer Prize
4 1 4
This photograph is one of 50 published in a Dec. 7, 1986 special *Rural Crisis*." David Peterson, 1974 KU school of journalism section of the Des Moines Register titled "Shattered Dreams: The teacher, yesterday won a Pulitzer prize in feature photography.
By KIERSTLMOEN
A KU graduate yesterday won a 1987 Pulitzer Prize in photojournalism for his portraital of the rural Midwestern crisis.
Gary Mason, KU associate professor of journalism, and Calder Pickett, professor of journalism, said last night that Peterson was the first KU journalism graduate to win a Pulitzer for individual work.
Staff writer
David Peterson, who graduated from the school of journalism in December 1974, won 03.5ature photography award for 50 photographs depicting the farm crisis. The Des Moines Register published his pictures in a December 7 special section titled "Shattered Dreams: The Rural Crisis."
The Pultizers are awarded for outstanding work in journalism and the arts. Since 1917, the Pultizer Board has awarded $1,000 each of its grants to make significant contributions to their fields.
"It feels wonderful," Peterson said last night from a Des Moines bar where he and colleagues were celebrating.
"I was driving into town, and I heard it over the radio. I stopped right away."
Peterson said he had wanted to do a project about the plight of U.S. farm families and communities for a long time. When he won a $10,000 Nikon National Press Photography grant last year, he took a three-month leave earlier to concentrate on the farm photographs.
"It was something I had to do at the time," he said. "I really enjoyed doing it."
Peterson worked on the project from April to October 1986, when the Register saw the pictures and decided to print them.
But the Pulitzer prize did not come completely out of the blue, Peterson said.
"I had a feeling about it because of the nature of the subject," he said. "It was more than a good photo story. It's a good journalist story"
"I was always the guy who took the family photos," he said.
His first job after graduation was with the Topeka Capital-Journal, where he worked from 1975 to 1977, when he was hired by the Register.
Warren Taylor, director of photography at the Register, said last night. "Dave is so versatile he can do anything. He can write his own ticket now."
Mason, who taught Peterson photojournalism, said he saw great potential in Peter-
"I've always known he was the best," Mason said. "He's always been a fantastic photographer. He has feeling toward humanity. He really cares."
"He's also an extremely professional person, which is an ingredient that a lot of our staff have to deal with."
Mason said that he had not expected Peterson to win a Pulitzer but that he always hoped for something like that to happen to good students.
Del Brinkman, who was dean of journalism when Peterson went to KU and is now vice
chancellor for academic affairs, said he was excited and pleased about Peterson's award. Peterson's award is also an award for the school, he said.
"He reflects the kind of talent that's there in most years," Brinkman said. "We've had some outstanding photographers. In any one
helped free an innocent man from prison.
The Los Angeles Times and the New York Times each were awarded two Pulitizers.
year we've had one or two who could make a significant contribution. We've done something well."
The board also announced yesterday that the Philadelphia Inquirer had won three Pulitzer, including two for investigative reports that revealed court corruption and
Kansan reporter Todd Cohen and The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
Budget decision is stalled
By CHRISTOPHER HINES
Staff writer
TOPEKA — At the end of a third day of intense negotiations, a Kansas House and Senate conference committee yesterday put off decisions cc: university faculty salary increases, budgets and fee releases until today.
"We're getting to the big stuff, boss," State Rep. Rochelle Chisteron, R.Needsha, said to State Rep. Jake Hammond, chair of the House side of the committee.
The committee already has worked out differences on a number of state agency budgets, including health and education transportation and the new state lottery.
And yesterday the House dropped an amendment supported by Republican representatives that would have slashed the state's travel budget. The University of Kansas would have lost about $150,000 from its 1988 travel budget under the amendment.
The only issues left to decide are budgets for primary and secondary education, state employee pay requirements and budgets for Board of Regents institutions.
But those issues together represent more than half the state's $3.9 billion in sales.
"Of course we're getting to the big job yet," he explained. "My concern is ending burgers."
A big stumbling block in negotiations has been the question of how much money the state should leave in its budget as an final balance in 1988 and a dispute over how much money the state will take in next year.
"There's nothing left to cut except state employee salaries and education if the House wants a high ending balance in the state budget," said State Sen. Gus Bogina, R-Lenexa, leader of the Senate side of the committee.
Bunten said that according to all the spending bills approved so far, the ending balance still would be $5 million or $10 million short of what he wanted.
"I would prefer to be safe than sorrow and leave a good balance in the budget," Bunten said. "I'm not as fearful as I used to be." Money the state is going to take in."
Bogina called the House's recommended $155 million balance too conservative and unnecessary in light of the state's important obligations, including the need to provide quality education at all levels.
"We're only trying to be fair to everyone." Bogina said. "I unite the people."
See SALARY, p. 6, col. 3
KU to ease pains of tuition payment
By ROGER COREY
Staff writer
Each spring for the next three years, students at the University of Kansas will find it easier to pay enrollment fees.
By 1990, they should, among other things, be able to pay their tuition by credit card.
The reason for the improvements is a three-step plan the University has developed to upgrade its fee system.
Gary Thompson, director of student records and chairman of a special fees committee, said yesterday that the change was an attempt by the administration to streamline the educational process.
The first phase of the plan will begin in spring 1988 and will change the way fees are assessed. Students must receive a form instead of the old punch card.
The fees committee has been working on the three-phase plan since February 1985, he said. The committee also will be a week for the past nine months.
"It is an incredible amount of work because it involves so many offices."
“This plan doesn't just affect the student records office.” Thompson said, “it also affects academic hairs, housing, student affairs and other offices.
"The assessment program we use now was written in 1955," Thompson said. "The new system will be much faster."
He said the new form would allow students to get refunds from dropped
classes within days instead of weeks.
"But it also means they will be billed more quickly for added classes," he said.
The second phase will begin in spring 1989 and will integrate financial aid with the fee system. Students who receive financial aid no longer will have to stand in long lines to pick up their checks and carry them to the new system, all financial aid will be transferred electronically.
"It cuts out a whole step in the enrollment process," Thompson
In phase three, students will be billed by mail and will be able to pay tuition by mail. They also will have the option of paying their fees in installments. Students who choose the installation plan will make pay- for fall semesters, and Jan. 1 and March 1 for spring semesters.
Thompson said the University would have to ask the Board of Regents for approval of the mail delivery and the installment payment option.
The third phase will begin in spring 1990.
"This is the big one for the students," Thompson said.
"The third phase is the most important," he said. "The first two phases are just laying the ground-work to build the system."
Keith Ratzloff, associate comptroller, said the tuition-by-mail plan would allow the University to identify
See TUITION, p. 6, col. 3
INSIDE
Brotherly love
Mark Craig, Kansas City, Kan. senior, will be running in this weekend's Kansas Relays marathon to raise money for the United Cerebral Palsy of Greater Kansas City in honor of his brother, who has the disease. See story page 16.
1987
I
Inductees
Four women were inducted into the KU Women's Hall of Fame as part of the Women's Recognition Program sponsored by the KU Commission on the Status of Women. See story page 3.
Ryun plans to relax in race
By DIANE FILIPOWSKI
Ryun said yesterday that he was glad to compete in the Relays again. But this year, he said, he would not race differently than he had in the past.
"I'm going to relax and enjoy the
Ryun is scheduled to compete tomorrow at 4:18 p.m. in the masters 800-meter run in Memorial Stadium. The race will mark the first time since 1972 that the former Kansas All-American, Olympian and world record-holder has competed on an outdoor track.
Staff writer
At 39 up on 40, running has taken on new meaning for Jim Ryun.
Timmons said that Ryun, who occasionally practices with the KU men's team, was a different runner in 1970s when he stopped competing.
Ryun is dedicating his race to Pat Timmons, of wife of KU track coach Bob Timmons. Ryun said she was having surgery tomorrow and for the first time would miss watching him compete in Memorial Stadium.
He is like an eager freshman in
See Relays preview p. 8 and 9.
race." Ryan said. "I don't expect to win or set a world record."
See RYUN, p. 8, col. 1
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Jim Ryun
Ukrainian artwork displayed on eggs
By PAUL SCHRAG
Staff writer
People all over the world paint eggs at Easter, but few have equaled the Ukrainians' ability to create art on an eggshell.
More than a dozen Easter eggs, painted with intricate designs in the Ukrainian style, are on display until Monday. The third-floor lobby of Watson Library.
The eggs are from the collection of Michael Palij, who retired in 1984 after 20 years as Slavic librarian at the University of Kansas. Palij is a native of the Ukraine, a Soviet republic that borders Poland, Czech Republic, Hungary and Romania. He came to the United States after World War II.
"I want the students and professors to see the beauty of these eggs at the holiday." Palii said.
Artists draw intricate designs on the eggs with a fine-pointed stylus dipped in melted wax, Palji said.
Pallai's pigs, which he has collected in the last 30 years, were painted in the United States by artists who reproduced the Ukrainian style faithfully. Some have floral designs, some with geometric patterns and black are the dominant colors.
"They never go far from tradition." Palij said of the Ukrainian artist who paints eggs now. "But each new generation strives for greater perfection and beauty."
Ukrainians gave painted eggs as gifts. In the United States, children
Lawrence's annual Easter egg hunt, sponsored by the parks and recreation department and KLWAN AM 1320 radio, will be at 2:30 p.m. Sunday at South Park. The event is free and open to children ages 3 to 8. Prizes will be awarded, and games will be played. If it rains, the event will be at the Community Center, 115 W. 11th St.
Eggs have symbolized spring's rebirth of nature since ancient times, Palij said. Christians adopted the egg as a symbol because of the relationship between Easter and renewed life.
In the Ukraine, archaeologists have discovered painted, egg-shaped wooden objects from ancient cultures, Paliyi said. When the Christian era in the Ukraine began about 1,000 years ago, Ukrainians preserved the symbolism of the egg and applied it to the celebration of Easter.
The display of Palij's collection also includes Ukrainian wooden wine glasses, embroidered tablecloths, a ceramic plate, vases and greeting cards.
2
Friday, April 17, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Across the Country
Shultz to consult with Reagan on Soviet nuclear arms proposal
PEASE AIR FORCE BASE, N.H. — Predicting a prompt decision by the NATO allies, Secretary of State George P. Shultz flew home yesterday and planned to brief President Reagan on a Soviet proposal to unilaterally remove an atomic bomb of nuclear missiles from Europe.
Shultz left foreign ministers from nine NATO countries behind in Brussels to ponder whether the proposal should be accepted.
It would mean the elimination of about 50 shorter-range Soviet nuclear missiles in East Germany
and Czechoslovakia and could also involve the dismantling of about 85 other Scaleboard and Spider missiles in the Soviet Union.
Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev offered to include those weapons, which have a range of 350 to 600 miles, in a treaty to scrap medium-and Soviet missiles except for 100 warheads on each side.
Shultz stopped at this base in early afternoon before continuing on to California to brief Reagan, who is vacationing at his mountaintop ranch near Santa Barbara.
Request for foreign bank records denied
WASHINGTON — A federal judge yesterday refused to order retired Air Force Maj. Gen. Richard V. Secord to release records of foreign bank accounts that Senate investigators think are tied to the Iran-contra arms deal.
U. S. District Judge Aubrey E. Robinson Jr. denied a request by the Senate panel investigating the Iran-contra affair that he order Second to sign a directive releasing records of foreign bank accounts in Switzerland, Panama and the Cayman Islands.
Lawyers for the Senate commit
tee told Robinson on Monday that investigators thought the accounts were used in the sale of U.S. arms to Iran and diversion of profits to the contrast.
Secord and Albert Hamik, an U.S.-Iranian businessman who was his partner, have been linked by the presidentially appointed Tower Commission to foreign bank accounts that were used to facilitate the arms sales.
Robinson ruled that forcing Secord to sign the document would violate his constitutional protection against self-incrimination.
U.S. to slap stiff tariffs on Japan's imports
NEW YORK — The United States is expected to slap steep tariffs on a grab bag of Japanese imports today as part of what international business executives call the most serious threat to the economic powers since Japan's postwar reconstruction.
Nevertheless, the executives said prospects remained remote for the sanctions escalating into a trade war, partly because Japanese officials know their country could not afford one.
President Reagan is expected to
announce the tariffs today in retaliation for alleged Japanese violation of a 1986 agreement to open its home market to U.S. made computer chips and to avoid dumping unfairly low costs in other countries.
But trade experts say that chips are only one factor in the tariffs. U.S. officials are exasperated with Japan's persistent trade surplus, relatively closed market and failure to stimulate its economy to absorb more of the world's exports.
In the State
havden appoints director of state lottery
TOPEKA — Larry Montgomery, who twice has tried unsuccessfully to win statewide elective office, yesterday was named by Gov. Mike Hayden to be executive director of the Kansas Lottery.
His salary as lottery director will be $62,000 a year.
Montgomery, no 99, who admitted to having no experience in lottery operations, will begin work on a part time basis next week.
He said he hoped to move swiftly enough to have the first lottery
tickets sold by September or October.
Montgomery, who lives on an acreage southwest of Topeka near Dover, was the lieutenant governor running mate in 1978 of former governor Robert F. Bennett. They lost to Democrats John Carlin and Paul Duan.
Montgomery also was the GOP nominee for state treasurer last year, losing to Democratic incumbent Joan Finney in November.
Vote on speed limit bill expected soon
TOPEKA — Gov. Mike Hayden said yesterday that he thought the Legislature would reach agreement on increasing the legal speed limit on rural stretches of interstate highways to 65 mph when it returns for its wrap-up session on April 29.
However, the governor said he opposed allowing those caught
going faster than 65 mph a 5 mph "grace" lenency before the speeding violation would go on their driving record.
Hayden told his weekly news conference that he would prefer that the Legislature not address any other issues in the 65 mph bill when lawmakers come back to finish the work of the 1987 session.
From Kansan wires.
From the KANSAN Weather Service
LAWRENCE FORECAST
Weather
It will be sunny and warm today with a high near 76 degrees. The winds will be out of the south at 5-10 mph. Tonight will be clear with a low of 52.
appropriate for the weekend. The temperature tomorrow and Sunday will reach 80 degrees and the lows will be in the 50s.
DES MOINES
77 / 52
OMAHA
77 / 51
LINCOLN
80 / 50
CONCORDIA
83 / 52
TOPEKA
79 / 52
KANSAS CITY
78 / 55
COLUMBIA
77 / 52
ST. LOUIS
75 / 53
SALINA
81 / 53
WICHITA
84 / 53
CHANJUTE
80 / 53
SPRINGFIELD
78 / 53
TULSA
86 / 57
DON'T YOU BE GUILTY OF MISSING A
GREAT DEAL!
AMOUNT INITIAL
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SAT. ONLY
APRIL 18, 1987
IGA
DISCOUNT
IN RUSTY'S WE TRUST
IGA DISCOUNT
I
sidewalk sale!
KU
wmccu
- Kansas Basketball Sweatshirt 11.95 (Reg. 16.95)
T-shirt 6.95 (Reg. 9.50)
- Clearance sweatshirts 10.00 each or 2/18.00
- Official KU Football Jerseys- Half Price
- "Punching" Jayhawk Puppets 6.95 (Reg. 9.95)
- Cliff Notes- 50¢ off
- Assorted Youth Clothing up to 75% off
- Assorted Glassware up to 75% off
- Many more specials
- Far Side Posters 3/2.00 or 1.50 each
BOOKS- Paperbacks 69¢ Hardbound 1.99 All you can carry 24.99 while supplies of 10,000 last!
Now through April 17th, weather permitting.
---
Jayhawk
layhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd.
Bookstore
"At the top of Naismith Hill""
Mon.-Fri. 8-5 Sat. 9-5
843-3826
TW
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Commonwealth
THE SECRET OF MY
SUCCESS MICHAEL J.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 17, 1987
3
Local Briefs
Lawrence police arrested a KU student on April 9 an warrant for four counts of felony forgery, the county jail log indicates.
The student, Sandra Kay Dicker,
19. Topeka freshman, spent a half hour in the county jail before she was released on her own recognizance. She must appear in Douglas County District Court at 1:30 p.m. on April 24, or forfeit $3,000, district judge Michael J. Malone said.
Felony charge levied against KU freshman
Campus and Area
Forgery is a class E felony, punishable by five years in prison and a $5,000 fine.
Jeanne Longaker, KU police spokesman, said the charges were connected to the November theft of a KU student's purse from a car parked on Poplar Lane.
The charges, filed April 17, allege that on Nov. 20 Dicker forged four checks. The checks belonged to Jana Gregory, Arkansas City freshman, and were drawn on the Arkansas City, the charrere state.
Longaker said the checks were forged at four different IGA stores in Lawrence.
Man charged with threats to Flory
A Lawrence man was charged Tuesday in Douglas County District Court with making terroristic attacks, Jim Flory, the district attorney.
The man, Joseph Mervin Farmer, was charged in connection with a phone call made to a Lawrence police dispatcher at about 11 p.m. Saturday, said Jerry Wells, assistant district attorney
The person who made the call threatened to kill Flory, Wells said.
Farmer was in the county jail yesterday. James W. Paddock, district judge, set Farmer's bond at $25,000 and scheduled a preliminary hearing at 1:30 p.m. on Monday.
Wells said he didn't think Flory and Farmer had any contact before Saturday.
No Easter holiday for KU this year
Don't take off today for a long, three-day Easter weekend because there's school on Monday.
Unlike previous years, the Board of Regents, which sets the academic calendar for the University of Kansas and other Regents schools, did not schedule an Easter vacation for students this year.
University employees also will report to work Monday.
Easter, a Christian holiday, is Sunday.
Smoot released after four months
A Lawrence man convicted of possessing cocaine has been released from a federal prison after pleading guilty to one-year sentence, officials said.
Bradley J. Smoot, 37, a former assistant Kansas attorney general and former chairman of the Douglas County Central Republican Committee, was released yesterdays by Calif., a prison official said.
Smoot was indicted last fall for possessing one gram of cocaine. He was sentenced to one year in prison, with eight months of the sentence suspended. He also was placed on probation for two years and ordered to participate in a drug program.
From staff and wire report$.
SenEx approves guidelines for graduates
By BENJAMIN HALL
Staff writer
Students who plan to graduate this summer may be allowed to take a required course at another institution if the course or a substitute is not offered here.
The University Senate Executive Committee yesterday approved a set of guidelines submitted by the University Senate academic policies and procedures committee, which considers petitions from students on academic matters.
Under the new guidelines, the committee could waive certain requirements, such as the 2.5 grade point average requirement needed to gra
A letter with the guidelines said that the University was offering fewer courses this summer because of financial cutbacks.
duate in some schools, for seniors who plan to graduate this summer
But the guidelines are designed to be temporary, the letter said.
In other action, SenEx tabled a proposal that would have shortened the period during which students could act, and not receiving a "W" on their transcripts.
Under the proposal, students who withdrew from courses after the second week of classes would receive a "W" on their transcripts.
The proposal also would shorten
the add period from four weeks to two weeks.
Under University Senate rules, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences or any of the professional schools can adopt a shorter add period as long as that policy is announced in the Timetable.
SenEx chairman Mel Dubnick said he had moved to a week-end period.
Sandra Zindars-Swartz, assistant professor of religious studies, said the University's resources had been strained by students who added and dropped classes excessively.
"They can sign up for lots of courses that they never intend to
take, and they don't have to drop for five weeks," she said. "The feeling of the committee was that the 'W' was necessary to get that student out of the course in two weeks."
But SenEx student member Gordon Woods, who moved to table the motion, said, "I think we're penalizing students unfairly. A lot of students don't realize until four or five weeks into the semester that they're in over their heads."
SenEx member Evelyn Swartz, professor of curriculum and instruction, said, "Some students, because of poor advising, get in a terrible spot. I think this is symptomatic of the larger problem of how we do
enrollment at KU."
A new SenEx, elected yesterday by new University Council members, will consider the proposal again sometime later.
New SenEx members are Ron Francisco, associate professor of political science; Bob Jerry, professor of law; James Seaver, professor of history; and Gary Shapiro, professor of philosophy.
Sharon Bass, associate professor of journalism, and Swartz were re-elected to SenEx, and Swartz was elected chairman.
Student SenEx member Amy Ran dles was elected vice-chair.
Carmen G. Browning
Lenoir Ekdahl has been director of food services for student housing at the University of Kansas since 1955. She was inducted last night into the KU Women's Hall of Fame.
Commission honors 4 women
Staff writer
By LAURA BOSTROM
Rampant rumors on the KU campus in the early 1970s caused then-graduate student Rae Sedgwick to ask for a rumor control office. Emily Taylor, dean of women, said "use my office" and the KU information center began.
Sedgwick was one of four women inducted last night into the KU Women's Hall of Fame, a part of the Women's Recognition Program sponsored by the KU Commission on the Status of Women. About 100 attendees the program Alderson auditorium of the Kansas Union.
Lenoir Ekdahl, director of food
services for student housing; Kathleen McCluskey-Fawcett, associate professor of psychology and chairman of the department of psychology; and Joanne M. Collins, assistant vice president of United Missouri Bank, also were honored.
Fifteen years ago, more than 20 women, calling themselves the February Sisters, locked themselves in a KU building and demanded rights and services for women. Sedgwick was one of those women.
Sedgwick has received advanced degrees in nursing, psychology and a juris doctorate from the KU law school. She now is serving her second four-year term
on the Bonner Springs City Council
But Sedgwick said a children's book, "The White Frame House," was her greatest accomplishment. Her goals now include more writing, particularly a book on women and their daughters.
Several of McCluskey-Fawcett's students attended the program in support of their teacher
"The letters my students wrote meant more than the award." McCluskey-Fawett said. When she was a student 13 years ago, she said, she nominated Frances Horowitz for research graduate studies and public service, to the Hall of Fame.
Food service job not just catering
Work brings KU director fame
By JOSEPH REBELLO Staff writer
When Lenoir Ekdahl arrived at the University of Kansas in 1955, she was given a small desk in the kitchen of Gertrude Sellars Pearson Hall and told to direct food services for the hall and several others that were going to be built.
The prospect didn't thrill her. She promised herself she would always look at him and then look for a job in Topeka, where her husband was working.
It didn't quite work out that way.
Instead, Ekdahl built up the housing office's food services department from an operation that looked after the needs of fewer than 500 students to one that now caters to 4,700 students.
Last night, she finally stepped up to take credit for that accomplishment. At a program organized by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, Ekhdahl became one of four KU staff and faculty members to be inducted into the 1987 KU Women's Hall of Fame.
Ekdahl was cited for professional competence and service to the University.
Earlier this week, Ekdahl reminisced about her early years at the University.
She found her job too exciting to leave when residence halls began to be built in quick succession soon after her arrival.
"Those were exciting times," Ekdahl said. "We'd have one residence hall opened, and before anything else could happen, there'd be another on the drawing board.
"Finally, I never moved. I just liked the job here."
But it was never easy, she said.
When she started in September 1955, she had a difficult time hiring workers at the rate of 75 cents an hour, then the hourly full-time wage, she said. Student workers
were paid 35 cents an hour.
were part $3 cents all hour.
Ekdahl herself made only $3,600
a year.
"We didn't have health insurance or anything. But I was young and eager, and I thought we could make it." she said. "And we did
"When I first got here they had a set menu. There was no selection. You'd have one meat dish, one vegetable dish and one salad. And you had to eat it or go somewhere else."
Ekdahl changed that. Today, hall residents have a choice of at least two main dishes, in addition salads, desserts and pop, she said.
That has not stopped students from grumbling about the food, she said, but complaints about food are something she has become used to.
"You've got 4,000 students together, and they have food habits that they developed long before they began to live in a 14.00ce hall. We try to hit them with something that's middle-of-the-road, something that would satisfy the most number of students. But we're never going to be able to cook like mother does."
Some of Ekdahl's colleagues said she directed the food services department with a combination of toughness and compassion.
"She's done just about everything," said Ken Stoner, director of student housing and one of three people who nominated Ekdahl for the honor. "She's kept the price of meals very low and the quality high. She made my job a lot easier when I came here."
Catherine Cox, an administrative assistant at the housing office who has worked with Ekdahl for 23 years, said. "She's always very cordial and low-key with people who come to the office.
Phone access code abusers might face charges
Special to the Kansan
Bv IAVAN OWENS
Yesterday proved to be a busy day for U.S. Sprint and MCI investigators, as students filed into a room at a Lawrence motel to meet a p.m. deadline for exemption from criminal charges of telephone access code abuse.
The investigators have been at the All Seasons Motel, 2309 Iowa St., for two weeks to allow students who have illegally used phone codes to make restitution.
Brian Bales, U.S. Sprint investigator, said more than 150 KU students had turned themselves in. But the number of abused access codes indicated that there was more abuse
occurring than people had confessed.
"There has been a significant drop in long-distance service in the Lawrence-Topeka area (in
Bales made it clear that people who had not turned themselves in by yesterday could face criminal charges. Cases with the greatest abuse will be investigators' first priority.
"A part of our job is education," Bales said. "Education ends at 5 p.m. today, and enforcement begins."
Jerry Slaughter, MCI representative, said investigators would compile evidence during the weekend and turn the most flagrant abuse cases over to proper authorities. Cases with
abuse of less than $1,000 will be given to the Douglas County District Attorney's office.
Dave Frenicks, Secret Service agent an media liaison in Texas, said that because of a 1984 federal ruling, the Secret Service had been given the authority and responsibility to investigate cases that exceeded $1,000. The Secret Service has been made aware of the Lawrence investigation, he said.
Frericks also said the Secret Service had just completed a recent MCI-related investigation at Texas Tech University in Lubbock. A student was charged with "hacking" and illegal distribution of access codes. If convicted, the student could face up to 10 years in
prison and/or a $10,000 fine.
"We hope the word is spread. You can go to jail for this." Frericks said.
Bales said that Secret Service agent Tom McKernan of Kansas City, Mo., had been notified of the Lawrence investigation and undated on evidence.
"The Secret Service has been notified," Bales said. "We just may have a federal violation."
Bales and Slaughter said they were concerned that so few students had turned themselves in, because they didn't think students understood the seriousness of the crime.
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Friday, April 17, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Take with a grain of salt
They've been talking and discussing and conversing, but what has been said? A better question might be: What has been accomplished?
Opinions
Secretary of State George Shultz visited Moscow last week for yet another round of talks to promote East-West arms negotiations. Proposals were heard from both sides, and the possibility of a future Reagan-Gorbachev summit encouraged.
The two superpowers have, however, been down this negotiation road so many futile times during the Reagan presidency that any promise of agreement should be taken with a grain of salt.
No treaty has been signed.
There has been no nuclear weapons dismantled and there has been no slow-down of any developmental missile systems.
Gorbachev offered to scrap short-range missiles in Eastern Europe, to seek a compromise on the U.S. Star Wars program, and to conclude a treaty on medium range missiles. Shultz has said that negotiations were in order for strategic offensive wepsons, anti-missile defenses and nuclear tests.
Not surprisingly, he deferred comment on a possible summit until detailed "content" was prepared. If the content is as detailed as it was at the last summit in Reykjavik, Iceland, then expectations for success should remain low.
Both governments have been whistling in the wind for a long time. The rhetoric surrounding the current U.S.-Soviet embassy games indicates East-West relations have not changed. An arms agreement is still a distant dream.
Don't let violations pass
James Scaly, the assistant to Chancellor Gene A. Budig, recently said he knew the chancellor's parking passes had been misused during the 11 years that he had been at the University of Kansas.
The University administration should not have waited until the misuse became an issue to clean up the problem. Instead, administrators should have gotten to the bottom of the problem a long time ago.
He also said he was surprised that the misuse had become such an issue.
The issue arose in November when KU parking officials caught a student with a chancellor's pass. The student said she received the pass from Bradley Smoot, a Lawrence attorney and a former attorney for Richard von Ende. Smoot and von Ende were both convicted on drug charges last semester.
Before von Ende resigned from the University, he had supervised the distribution of chancellor's passes.
The University needs the new regulations to stop students and others from taking advantage of the system. Under the new system, Scally will have authority over the passes. Parking services will be able to keep track of passes with a list of the names of holders.
Parking services and the University are tough on students, faculty and staff who park illegally and those who obtained the chancellor's passes should not be exempt from fines and punishment.
University officials should not let students or staff get away with abusing their rules, especially now that the problem is evident.
It's time for the changes.
For whom the bell tolls
Since 1951, the University carillon has rang out a lasting tribute to KU staff and students who served in World War II, lightened spirits with its music and kept the campus running on time. But time and a tight budget slowly are muting the bells.
The carillon, which has been rated one of the best in the United States, has 53 bells, ranging in weight from 10 pounds to seven tons. In addition to Sunday afternoon concerts played by the University's two carillonneurs, Albert Gerken and Mark Holmberg,
both professors of music theory, the bells chime on the quarter hour.
KU's carillon, part of the Memorial Campanile, was erected in memory of the 8,000 KU men and women who served in the U.S. armed forces during World War II. It's $78,000 cost was paid for with contributions from the community.
But with no maintenance budget, many of the bells no longer can be played, and others do not ring because of exposure to the elements. Also, the transmission, which connects the carillon keyboard to the bell clappers, is in disrepair and needs to be replaced.
The carillon is on a list of major repairs that need to be made, but because its value is more aesthetic than physical, and because of recent budget cuts, any aid from the state may come too late.
The thousands of students and staff members of the University of Kansas and citizens of Lawrence owe it to future generations to keep the carillon the ringing tribute it has been in the past.
News staff
News staff
Frank Hansel Editor
Jennifer Benjamin Managing editor
Jul Warren News editor
Brian Kaberline Editorial editor
Sandra Engelland Campus editor
Mark Siebert Sports editor
Diane Gultmeier Photo editor
Bill Skeet Graphics editor
Tom Eblen General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Lisa Weems Business manager
Bonnie Hardy Activist
Denise Stephens Retail sales manager
Kelly Scherer Campus sales manager
Duncan Calhoun Marketing manager
Lori Coppile Classified manager
Mariam Follinski Product manager
David Nixon National sales manager
Jeanne Hines Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be type, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words and should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
Guest shots should be type, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The
Guest shots should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed
The Kansan reserves the right reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Fint Hall.
The University Daily Kansas (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, Kansas St. lighthouse Fint Hall, Lawen, Kan. 60454, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and on Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage paid in US dollars for submissions by mail are $40 per year in Douglas County and $50 per 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-Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045
Mandatory service sacrifices liberties
There is a chilling draft blowing through the halls of the Senate Democratic caucus that causes those concerned with individual liberties to take note. And the effect of this draft would be much worse than merely catching a cold.
Paul Campbell
I am very grateful to you.
Columnist
Some Democratic Party leaders are anxious to rid themselves of their image of being weak on national defense issues in time for the 1988 presidential elections. Their most dangerous proposals are a military force property and a reinstatement of military conscription, the draft.
The country has drifted towards national affirmation under the Reagan presidency, which represents quite a change from the Johnson and Nixon years when burning the U.S. flag was commonplace on the U.S. campus.
One plan for mandatory national service would tap this reserve of patriotism by requiring high school
While the state has responsibilities in these areas, it is not the state's purpose to dictate the direction of the creative energies of the populace. As civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. put it, "Man is not made for the state; the state is made for man."
Criticism of mandatory state service should not be inferred as criticism of some of the truly worthwhile activities the service might undertake, such as building hospitals or participating in conservation projects.
graduates to donate a year or two of their lives to the interests of the state.
proposals for a mandatory service he shows himself not to represent the most basic ideal this country stands for: the liberty of the individual.
It is indeed morally bankrupt not to work in some way for the nation's improvement, whether by serving in the military or volunteering for an organization like Volunteers In Service To America. Feelings of wanting to contribute something to the country are indeed most moral and honorable when they come from the voluntary impulses of the individual.
He is running for president of the United States in 1988, not prime minister of Italy in 1922.
Unfortunately, Gary Hart, the liberal dreamboat from the 1984 elections who recently announced his 1988 bid, does not appear to agree with this assessment. While he states that he loves his country, by making
While Hart graciously would offer military service as an option in his national service scheme, some of his Democrat colleagues who remained behind to guard the fort have other ideas.
Senators Sam Nunn, D-Ga, and Ernest Hollings, D-Fla., have proposed legislation to bring back the country's largest farm subsidy of the country's conventional forces.
While the government's primary responsibility is for national defense, a draft would not increase our strength.
With demographics indicating the pool of military-aged men and women dwindling, draft proponents say the draft is needed to maintain troop strengths. This is all despite the fact that service enlistment goals are falling in the past few years with young men and women who are better educated and better motivated than those in the earlier draft years.
Another argument put forth is that the draft somehow would reduce the operating cost of the military, potentially juicy bait to a budget-conscious Congress. A draft, however, would increase and shift military costs instead of reducing them. More money would be needed to pay, house the old debt, and replace the Democrats want to "find something for them to do," like randomly invade small countries like Burkina Faso.
HE'S PAYING
HE'LL TAKE IT
YOU ATE IT
HE'LL PAY IT
IT'S ON HIM
NO, HE'LL PAY
IT'S HIS CHECK
NO
NO, HE'LL TAKE IT
NO, HE'LL PAY
YOU ATE IT!
HE'LL PAY IT
IT'S ON HIM!
HE'LL PICK IT UP
IT'S HIS CHECK!
NO IT'S...
BILL
TAX
HIKE
DEFICIT SPENDING
The Affani Herald
Distributed by King Features Syndicate
Make no mistake, the United States needs a military force second to none. There are totalitarian forces that greedily seek to take our place of world leadership. In the past 14 years, the All Volunteer Force has provided such a force.
During wartime, a soldier committed to getting the job done because he voluntarily undertook the country's war effort. He had simply waiting out his conscription.
Baseball language easy to fake
At this time of year, I always think of Schultz. What a lucky guy,
Schultz and I worked together for many years. We visited each other's homes, occasionally had lunch, stopped for a beer after work, talked shop, swapped war stories and were pretty good friends.
Mike Royko Columnist
M. L. C. H.
It came out while we were having a drink after work and a ball game was
But it was only after knowing him for a decade that I discovered that Schultz had this remarkable secret.
I said something like, "That tall skinny guy's got a swing, reminds me of Teddy Williams."
Schultz said, "Uh-huh."
I said, "Williams. Best left-handed bitter it ever saw."
Schultz said, "Uh-uh, yeah. He could really hit. The best."
I said, "I wonder how many homers he would have hit if he had been playing in Yankee Stadium instead of Fenway?"
He said, "Uh, the size of a porch?" Then suddenly I knew and it was too.
I said, "Schultz, you don't have the faintest idea what I'm talking about, do you."
Schultz said, "Well, hard to say, hard to say."
I looked at Schultz for several seconds and said, "Do you know what I want about?"
I said, "It would have been a lot more."
I said, "What do you mean — possibly. With the short porch?"
in talking about:
"Did you the size of a porch?"
more.
Schultz said. "Possibly."
While few political watchers predict any sort of this legislation to pass, its appearance on the political scene is enough to cause great concern. If the United States lacks the moral authority to maintain its defense and protect its interests, no amount of coercion can regain it.
And he confessed. He told me that, no, he didn't know what I meant by a short porch," which is baseball shirts. "What does that is unusually close to home plate.
He only vaguely was aware that there had been a player named Ted Williams. He didn't know that Fenway Park, in Boston, was where Williams had played. He knew virtually nothing about baseball.
His confession went on. He ha-
never been to a baseball game. He
had never watched a game on TV or
read a story about a game. A box
score was just a meaningless jumble
of numbers. The entire language of
baseball was a foreign babble. To
him, a switch-hitter was someone
you wouldn't want your daughter to
date.
"I know the pitcher throws the ball and the batter tries to hit it. Beyond that, nothing happens."
I was amazed and said, "But I've been with you in groups when we've talked about baseball, and you know what we were talking about."
He smiled and said, "I faked it. It really not hard. Until you got me on the short porch, I never been on, or try me. Make baseball talk."
"Well, pitching is something you always have to think about."
"Well, you never know. If every thing falls together, what the heck."
"What do you think of the trade they just made?"
So I did. I said something like:
"You think the Cubs can go all the way?"
"Did you see the play that kid at short made?"
things about baseball, he could slide through a baseball conversation. "Sometimes," he said, "all it takes is a shrug. And if someone says something about the future, I'd say, 'Well, I guess we'll just have to wait and see,'" he said, "that's just happened, I get by with, 'That's the way it goes.'"
"Some kind of play."
I asked him why he bothered with insult. Why he didn't just admit that he hated her.
Because we have just begun another season. And all over the United States, millions of people are planning another summer of suffering.
He was right. Without knowing a
"What? And have them think I'm not manly, or I'm a communist? No, it's much easier this way."
And why, you might ask, did I tell Schultz that I said saying that Schultz was a luck boy.
Oh, some might be happy today because their team won. But the suffering will come it. It is inevitable. It might be tomorrow or the day after. You can't win ball Somebody strikes out. Moans of misery, grief and remorse.
And before the season is over, the fans in all but one baseball city will suffer. Consider Boston last year. A summer of joy. But in the end, after that final game, Boston's fans rioted, wept, tore at their hair and kicked little cats.
But not Schultz. He's oblivious to it all. When the man cries, "Batter up," Schultz ponders that for a moment. Then he says, "or maybe it's just that we don't know the entire universe, we really don't know what's up or down, do we?"
Sometimes I wish I could be like Schultz.
But even more, I wish I could have seen Ted Williams hit in a park with a short porch.
Mailbox Protest Abrams' visit
Elliott Abrams is currently the Reagan administration's chief publicist for the U.S. proxy war against Nicaragua. He should therefore, be welcomed with protests and demonstrations when he visits KU on Tuesday.
Abrams is a right wing fanatic of the worst sort, keen to sniff out communities behind every bush. Last year, "60 Minutes" reported on the case of a distinguished Colombian journalist who was thrown into jail for a couple of days when she tried to gain entry into the United States to protest defended the incarceration, charging that the woman was a pro-Cuban terrorist but offering no evidence for his ridiculous claim.
Recently, Abrams has been implicated in the Iran-contra scandal. A March 3 article in the Village Voice, based on interviews with government sources, reports that Abrams collaborated with Oliver North to supply arms to the contras at a time when such military assistance was illegal. Abrams then gave misleading testimony about his involvement to the Senate Intelligence Committee, then investigating the contra network.
Responding to Abrams' testimony, the Republican chairman of the committee, David Durenberger, told reporters, "I wouldn't trust Elliott Abrams any further than I could throw Oliver North.
Laird Okie Lawrence resident
Offended by letter
There is a very interesting letter by Mahmoud Abu-Ali in the April 15 issue of the Kansan about racism against Arabs. He complains about a lack of press coverage of Arab participation in campus events. But, because it appears that he is not a journalism major, what does he know about when to put certain articles in the newspaper?
Next, Abu-Ali complains that the Kansan never states the Arab viewpoint when they have a grievance. The reason there has not been much coverage of the Arab marches is because the organizers do not put notices in the paper. They need to give notice to the Kansan when they are going to march so that they can get proper coverage.
The idea that shocked me is when Abu-Ali says "It was too bad about Hitler and the Jews. Over six million Jews were killed by the Nazis. If someone went out and killed six Palestinians there would be none left."
In his letter, Abu-Ali says the Israelis are taking revenge on Palestinians for events that occurred 40 years ago. Why are the Palestinians fighting with Israel? Isn't it because the Israelis took land that belonged to the Palestinians more than 40 years ago? Get your facts straight.
Paul Fambrini
Paul Fambrini Washington, D.C., freshman
BLOOM COUNTY
WHAT'S GOING ON IN THERE,
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 17, 1987
5
Working with judge helps law students
By CAROLINE REDDICK
Staff writer
Law students who have not committed themselves to a specific field might find judicial clerkships helpful in deciding where and what to practice, a KU professor said yesterday.
Speaking at the School of Law's noon forum, William Westerbeke, professor of law, told students that judicial clerkships could provide insights into specific areas of law.
"You can learn a great deal about options that you never encountered in law."
Clerkships also provide annual salaries of about $22,000 to $23,000. You must
"If you're doing it to make money, you're doing it for the wrong reason. You can make more money working for a firm," Westerbeke said. "The best reason is that it's a great education and a very good experience. And you get two years out of your life. So you practice 44 years instead of 45."
Westerbeke said judicial clerks could work in the federal courts, where a clerk usually works for one judge. In central staff positions, such as those offered by state courts, a clerk usually works for a group of judges. Clerks also work in specialty
courts or agencies such as the Labor Department, with judges handling specific types of cases.
Jim Hosnett, Topeka law student, attended the forum but said he was not seriously considering a clerkship. He said that because he was an older graduate, he probably would go directly into practice.
"I if were a 22-year-old, I'd probably be more interested." he said.
Westerbeke said a clerk's duties could vary depending on the judge and type of clerkship.
"A clerk basically gives research and writing assistance to the judge," Westberke said. "He may ask you to check out the arguments of each side. You may get involved in editing drafts or writing drafts that the judge edits. He may want you to play devil's advocate."
He said clerks who worked with a good judge might increase their income.
"The judge's reputation is a very important factor as far as a resume item," he said. The judges are really it, but making sure their clerks get a good job.
"Most people say later, 'I wouldn't trade that year for anything I've done, almost.'"
As the weather warms, people will take to hiking and biking trails. While enjoying the exercise, they will need to consider what high energy, portable foods to carry on an afternoon outing or a week-long excursion.
Healthy food needed on hike
By JENNIFER FORKER
Staff writer
What are good foods for fuel?
Ann Kohl, Watkins Hospital dietitian, said people's nutrition needs didn't change when hiking. Hikers and other sport fanatics still needed to eat well-balanced meals from the four food groups — dairy products, meat, fruit and vegetables, and breads and grains.
"You want a balanced diet. Hiking doesn't change the needs for nutrition."
She suggested eating peanut butter for protein. It's easy to carry, won't ruin in hot weather and can be spread on toast or with milk to fill the bread and grain requirement.
Chuck Magerl, an employee at the Community Mercantile Group, a natural foods grocery at 700 Maine St., said that long distance bicyclists most often took along peanut butter on long trails.
"Peanut butter comes in a whole variety of candy," he said.
Cheese, yogurt and hard-boiled eggs also are excellent sources of protein, but they can spoil on long trips.
Yogurt and other milk products need to be kept at 35 to 40 degrees, he said, and there are difficult foods to cart on a long hiking or biking trip.
But Magerl said that cheeses would hold up well for afternoon outings.
"Most cheeses are designed to be served at room temperature and not right out of the refrigerator," he said.
Magerl didn't think it was essential to cover all four food groups while on an afternoon outing.
"Mostly in the afternoon you need something to keep you alive so that you can enjoy your day."
Magerl said that a mixture of raisins, sunflower seeds and almonds was convenient and required little preparation. He also suggested carrying dried fruits. Dried apricots and pears are good choices because they are sweet. he said.
Fruits and vegetables are easy to fix and are portable, Kohl said. Apples, oranges, bananas, celery and carrots are examples of simple-to-tote fruits and vegetables.
Granola and dried cereals can be carried in dry, plastic containers or plastic baggies, and are simple energy boosts.
And Kohl suggested carrying water and fruit juices on a hike.
But exercisers should avoid can- bars as a quick source of energy.
Kohl said. Other foods, such as fruits and vegetables, supply the same energy nutritionally.
"For the most part, you're just eating sugar," she said.
Magerl said candy bars provided quick but non-lasting energy. And candy bars can actually exercise more tired.
"Once the sugar is gone, it leaves your body in a lower energy phase," he said.
Candy bars that contain fruit sugar instead of refined sugar slowly provide energy and are more nutritional.
Another problem is how to transport foods.
Kohl suggested carrying foods in airtight, well-insulated and light-weight containers. She said that styrofoam containers worked well because they could keep foods hot or cold.
George Latham, owner of Gran Sport, Seventh and Arkansas streets, said that freeze-dried or soft-packaged prepared foods were optimal food sources for longer treks. Freeze-dried packages are quick to fix. The packages, which take from three to five minutes to prepare in hot water, come in a wide variety of foods. Beef strogonoff, pork, corn and green beans are a few options.
On the Record
A KU student's black leather motorcycle jacket, valued at $150, was taken sometime between April 9 and Saturday from the student's residence in the 1300 block of Kentucky Street, Lawrence police said.
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Truman scholarship to help with third degree, law school
Staff writer
By TODD COHEN
A KU student has been awarded a Truman scholarship, one of 105 offered nationally to college sophomores interested in government service.
Frank Partnoy, Overland Park sophomore, will receive up to $7,000 annually for two years of undergraduated study and two years of graduate work.
"It's so unreal," Partnoy said yesterday. "I've always been interested in public service."
CUP AND USE RUSTY'S COURONS
"This is a major award. It's national recognition," said Randa Dubnick, assistant director of the College Honors program.
Partnoy, who is majoring in economics and math, said he had planned to graduate next year, after three years. But because the scholarship will pay for two more years, he now will stay and seek a third degree, possibly in political science.
Truman scholarships are awarded to students by the Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation in honor of the United States' 32nd president.
Partnoy said he also planned to attend last week, which the scholar's team will prepare for.
Nominees for the Truman award are required to have a minimum 3.0 grade point average, rank in the upper one-fourth of their class, be full-time students and be U.S. citizens. They also must submit several essays.
"First, I want to establish some kind of technical reputation, probably in economics . . . and work in the Treasury Department," he said.
Second, Partnoy said he wanted to run for public office, something that he already has had success at. Last week, Partnoy was elected to an off-campus seat on the Student Senate. Partnoy ran with the First Class coalition.
After graduating, Partnoy said he had two main goals.
Students are nominated by their universities. KU nominated three students, including Partny, who was one of five Kansas semifinalists. Overall, Kansas colleges nominated 25 students.
The other KU nominees were Richard Morrison, Hutchinson sophomore, and Daniel Schneider, Manhattan sophomore.
"We're very proud of all our nominees." Dubnick said.
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Friday, April 17, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE FAR SIDE
©1987 Universal Press Syndicate 4-17
"Yes! Yes! That's it! ... Just a little higher."
Bunten reaffirmed his commitment to keeping the state in a sound state.
Continued from p. 1
Salary
don't think he's being realistic."
"If the revenues are higher than expected," Bunten said, "we can come back next year and do some exceptional things."
Both sides said they wanted to study each other's proposals overnight before discussing the education and state employee budgets.
The spending bills concerning education and state employee salaries probably will be negotiated together with the business process of give and box. Boxina said.
"That's dangerous at times," he said. "You've got to make sure you know that you're giving and getting all those bills are thrown together."
Tuition
Continued from p. 1
earlier which classes were open or closed.
It also would allow students to knit at pre-enrollment the amount of fees.
"We're looking positively toward the plan's implementation," Ratzloff said. "In the long term it will benefit the students and the university."
Regents want to raise financing to near level of peer institutions
The Associated Press
Among objectives of the proposal, which Stanley Koplik, Regents executive officer, called "Margin Of Excellence," was a plan to bring the Regents schools up to 95 percent of their faculty and peer institutions by fiscal year. The peer universities picked by the Regents staff were not identified.
The Regents current budget strategy takes more of an incremental approach, according to Koplik.
EMPORIA — The Kansas Board of Regents approved yesterday the concept of a large change in budget strategy proposed by staff members for universities under the Regents system.
The total projected cost of the three-year plan is $115.8 million. Financing would come from state general funds, $38.3 million; student
Faculty salaries would be increased to 100 percent of the peer university average by fiscal 1991, according to the proposal. In the fourth quarter of 1988 under consideration, faculty salaries are 92 percent of peer universities.
Regents universities currently are funded 86.6 percent of the peer average under the proposed fiscal 1988 budget.
fees, $20 million; and revenue from the University of Kansas Medical Center, $12 million.
"This plan may be ambitious," Koplik said, adding that the new strategy was based on the philosophy
Koplik said 95 percent was chosen as a goal because it was a more realistic figure. The plan seeks $30.1 million from the Legislature in fiscal 1989, $27.7 million in fiscal 1990 and $26 million in fiscal 1991.
Although several Regents members disagreed with some budget figures presented during the meeting at Emporia State University, the proposal approved the basic concept. The proposal covers the fiscal years 1989-91.
Kopilik said the proposal would be further discussed by the Regents during other meetings this spring and summer. The presidents of Regents institutions have endorsed the proposal, Emporia State President Robert Glennen said.
The fiscal 1988 budget under consideration seeks $46 million from the Legislature but is expected to be reduced considerably. Some Regents members said financing to be sought from the state for the proposal was not realistic.
that higher education is critical to economic development in the state
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"Aerodynamics Research," an air collocation coopllum, is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. today at 3140 Wescoe Hall.
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The Lindley Hall observatory is scheduled to have an open house at 8 p.m. today, if the sky is clear.
FINE ARTS: assist in the planning and coordinating of cultural programs; i.e., art fairs, performing arts, and literary readings.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA NEEDS YOU!
OUTDOOR RECREATION: plan outings, workshops, lectures plus overseeing the camping equipment rental service
FORUMS: help plan and promote in lecture oriented activities.
Student Union Activities is planning an exciting '87-'88 year full of concerts, speakers, trips, all kinds of recreation and much more. You can be a part of SUA by sharing your time, talents, and ideas in these areas as a committee person.
FILMS: help plan, promote and coordinate the film program.
PUBLIC RELATIONS: excellent hands-on experience in promoting SUA programs and the Kansas and Burge Unions as a whole.
INDOOR RECREATION: help run games and tournaments.
scheduled for 7 p.m. today in Brew-
ster Auditorium at Strong Hall.
■ Scott Cairns, poet from the University of Utah, will read at a department of English reading at 8 p.m.
SPECIAL EVENTS: the concert producing entity is looking for help in the following areas: public relations, usher/security, communications/marketing, stage manager, graphic design, and administration.
TRAVEL: help plan, organize and promote university sponsored trips. Sign up deadline: Friday, April 17th, 5 p.m. in the SUA Office For more information, SUA 864-3477.
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SENIOR COOKOUT!
Here's your chance (it may be your only chance) to order a FREE burger cooked by KU's deans — exclusively for the senior class.
The Adams Alumni Center's north terrace and parking lot will be cleared so that seniors can party with FREE burgers, FREE beverages, good tunes and good times all served with gusto!
You'll also want to tour inside of the Adams Alumni Center, check out the records system that will follow you the rest of your natural life and consider the many benefits of alumni membership at a discount for seniors.
You must present your senior class ID card to prove that indeed, rank doth have its privileges. (If it rains, we'll move indoors.)
Wednesday, April 22, 5:30 to 8 p.m. Adams Alumni Center •1266 Oread Avenue
Cosponsored for the Class of 1987 by the KU Alumni Association and the Student Alumni Association
University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 17, 1987
7
JACKIE KENNEDY
Amy Rhoads/KANSAN
Fun in the sun
Wendy Lenz, Overland Park junior, sings along with Jimmy Yankovitz, Kansas City, Kan., senior. Yankovitz was playing his guitar yesterday afternoon on Wescoe Beach.
There is hope for diabetes patients, Specialists in the field gathered recently at the University of Kansas Medical Center to discuss two new advancements in the treatment of diabetes.
By JENNIFER WYRICK
Specialists discovering new methods for treating diabetes
Staff writer
But both treatments still are in the experimental stage and have not been tested.
Diabetes is characterized by either a lack of insulin or by the lack of insulin effectiveness, said Paul Hoefer, endocrinologist at Watkins Hospital.
Insulin is vital to the body because it deposits sugar into muscles and the liver and protects muscles and deposits fats into fat cells.
The first experimental treatment is islet cell transportation, said Wayne V. Moore, physician and pediatrician at the Med Center. A substance called alloxan, which is produced in animals, damages the insulin-producing islet cells of the pancreas.
The symptoms of diabetes are increased appetite, thirst, frequency of urination, frequent urination at night, infections and sores that don't heal.
Diabetes is thought to cause blindness, kidney failure and foot and vascular problems. In pregnant the birth defects are premature births and birth defects.
Moore said research was being done to determine whether it was possible to transport animals islets from the skin of a pig to stop overabundant insulin production.
The second advancement is the realization of the importance of early detection of long-term chronic complications of the disease, Moore said. He said that researchers were developing highly sensitive instruments to detect those complications early
The diabetes center at the Med Center treats about 750 patients.
There are two types of diabetes, Reith said. The first type is "juvenile onset" or type-one diabetes. A type-one diabetic is insulin deficient and requires insulin injections to live.
Teri Buchman, Salina sophomore,
is a type-one diabetic.
Type-one diabetics have relatively normal body weight, although some are thin and constantly lose weight. These individuals require the disease from a viral infection.
Because of her insulin dependency, Buchman requires two insulin shots a day to break down food. She takes the first shot 45 minutes before breakfast and the second 45 minutes before the second shot acts more slowly so that it will protect her at night, when her blood sugar naturally rises.
Buchman said that, initially, she had difficulty giving herself shots but that she now gave herself the shot in some or some other fatty part of her body.
Diabetics sometimes suffer from insulin attacks because they have too much insulin in their systems and too little food to counteract it.
Buchman said she didn't suffer from many insulin attacks because she regulated her system well. If she does have an attack, she said, she drinks orange juice to balance her system.
Although many diabetics have problems with convulsions, Buch-
man has had only one, which occurred after a strenuous spirit squad audition.
Buchman now has a blood testing machine that determines her blood-sugar level from a small sample. The device, however, doesn't cause it's small and portable, she said.
Buchman said she was supposed to consume 2,800 calories a day, divided among three meals and three snacks. He also followed a diet of certain low-sugar foods.
Reith said about four million Americans suffered from the "adult-onset," or type-two diabetes, which often develops in people in their 40s or 50s. The victims also are usually overweight.
Type-two victims have enough insulin, but it's defective. The type-two diabetic usually manages by taking insulin, and sometimes must take pills and insulin.
Unlike type-one, this strain of diab etes is usually inherited
Reith said Watkins treated 100 diabetic students on campus.
Diabetic students can take advantage of special services at Watkins, Reith said. The registered dietitian helps diabetics manage their diets, and a psychologist teaches them stress management. Diabetics also can receive special counseling about exercise and contraception.
Reith said he also encouraged his patients to attend American Diabetes Association meetings the second month at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
Hazardous waste removal concerns KU safety officer
Staff writer
By TIM HAMILTON
On the wall of his office next to the shelves of thick books on chemicals and government regulations, Steve Cater plans to hang an embroidered picture that says, "Waste is a terrible thing to mind."
Since November, Cater has been KU's environmental health and safety officer, overseeing hazardous waste management on campus.
For two and a half years before Cater came to the University of Kansas, John Landgrebe, professor of chemistry and chairman of KU's institutional biohazard committee, had volunteered to coordinate the disposal of KU's hazardous waste.
But the 1986 federal Hazardous and Solid Waste Amendments to the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 provided strict guidelines and regulations for the removal and disposal of hazardous materials and waste.
Benjamin Friesen, professor of biochemistry and head of KU's radiation safety service, said the new legislation had required changes in KU's waste management policy.
"That indicated that things had to be done," Friessen said. "Before, you did not have to guarantee accountability for what you had done, and now it was informal before, and now it will be more structured and organized."
Landgrebe said Cater had made a successful start.
"He makes a lot of response calls to people in research labs who call him with questions," said Landgrebe of Cater, who has set up a regular schedule of waste pickups.
"He's done a lot in the short time he's been here," Landgrebe said. "It'll take years to get all the labs to do exactly what they're supposed to."
And Cater said he was pleased with his first few months' progress.
"I have a good start on organizing the office and getting the removal
and disposal of waste on a regular basis." Cater said.
Cater, a chemical engineering graduate from Kansas State University, previously was an environmental engineer and inspector for two and a half years at the Kansas Department of Health and Environment
Now, Cater complies with federal regulations instead of enforcing
"New regulations come along, and I spend a lot of time on trying to figure out how the University will
have to comply." Cater said. "The earlier we can figure out what we have to do, the better we can estimate what it's going to cost."
Cater said his office handled only hazardous wastes, materials thrown out that are generated in academic research labs, paintshops and print-shops.
KU' s hazardous waste is stored in a trailer on West Campus until it reaches a federal maximum level and must be disposed of.
THE 1987 KANSAS RELAYS
SPONSOR
The success of the Kansas Relays depends a great deal upon the support of our sponsors. It is with great appreciation that we acknowledge the following for their contributions to the 1987 Kansas Relavs.
SPONSORS
FRIENDS OF THE RELAYS
All Season Hotel
Jack P. Anderson
Jack B. Brown
Brittany Eddy
Calvin, Eddy, and Kappeler, Inc.
James and Sally Campbell
Mike and Main Chapman
Michael and Dennis Douglas County Abstract & Title Co.
Sherman Describes
Dracula Michellion Econlogie
First National Bank of Lawrence
Both and Pat Fromene
Jim Farris
Hustable Associates and
Iancie Associates, Inc.
Kaw Valley Management Inc/
Andy and Tom Garland
Tom Garland
Kentucky Fried Chicken, Inc.
Wichita
Paul Rowlond
Lawrence Clinical Laboratory
Dr. Richard M. McDowell
McGraw Real Estate,
McCail Shore
McCall's Museum
J.C. Nichols Co.
Rachel Cowen
Richmond Council
Dick and Georgiana
Dick and George Orchard
James Clinton
Pearl Goff
Date and Rite Pennywhale
Ratey Enterprise
Karen Robertson
Emory F. Scott
Lloyd W. J. Scott
Ben H. Sims
University Floral
Charles Flush
Clarence Smith
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PATRONS OF THE RELAYS
VENT SPONSORS:
Pleassey Airway Prescription Corp.
Orthopedic Surgery Assoc., P.A.
Silicon Valley Medical Center
Servicing Center
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George S. Timmons
University of Colorado
PATRONS OF THE RELAYS
W.A. Darbar and Son, Inc.
Garry Warner and Co.,
Greg Kallgo
Lawrence Travel Lodge Motel
W. East Grant Saloon
W. Great Sandy Resort
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Breakfast Optimized Club
Game Frenzel Construction Co. inc.
Mrs. and Mrs. Roxon A. Edwards
FMC Corporation
Travel Club
Maupinport Travel Service
BANQUET SPONSOR
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Doug Knop Larry Winn
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Mr. W. Bill "Bill" Warren
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Friday, April 17, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
The 62nd Annual
Ryun returning to Memorial Stadium track
Continued from p. 1
college," said Timmons, who coached Ryun in college. "He never moans and groans about a practice."
In 1972. Ryun ran his last mile in Memorial Stadium in front of a crowd of 32,000, the biggest in the Relays' 62-year history.
Ryun has been named the Relays' outstanding performer four times, three while running for the Jayhawks. During his career, he has held three outdoor world records in the 880-yard run, 1,500-meter run and the mile, and an indoor world record in the mile.
But he never won an Olympic gold medal as many expected him to. He was a silver medalist in the 1968 Olympics in Mexico City. In 1972 in Yunnan, China, Ryan fell in the preliminaries of the 1,500 and did not make the finals.
He speaks to asthmatics all over the country about his experiences as a runner and his problems with asthma.
Today, Ryun said, he runs competitively in only six or seven road races a year and trains only when his schedule allows.
Ryun, who lives in Lawrence, represents Glaxo, a pharmaceutical company based in Research Triangle. N.C.
"In a sense, it's a higher calling to serve the Lord by sharing my personal experiences," Ryun said. "I have taken on more of a service attitude instead of an attitude of serving myself."
Timmons also coached Ryun at Wichita East High School, where Ryun became the first high schooler to break the 4-minute mile barrier.
Timmons said Ryun's success since high school was difficult because of the press attention he received and the resulting pressures.
"There was too much speculation about how he would perform when all
KANSAS
28
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PACIFIC
LOAST
he wanted to do was run. "Timmons obligated to the public but to himself."
Timmons said that outside influences sometimes could destroy the spontaneous enthusiasm athletes have, like it did for Ryun.
"He used to run the home run every time he was up to bat," Timmons said. "No one can hit home runs, or run sub 4-minute miles forever, but people thought he could and that was unfair.
"He was never a machine. He's always been flesh and blood."
Timmons said the press never realized that Ryun's racing, like any other athlete's, depended on psychological factors, weather and training.
But Ryun's decision to compete at the masters level, racing on a track and in shorter races might force him to deal with the press and the same pressures he faced as a world record-holder.
Some press members already have speculated that he could be the first master runner to break the 4-minute mile.
But Ryun said he thought that now he could deal with the pressure because his perspective had changed since he was 25.
Ryun said that after his layoff he avoided shorter races on the track and tried to excel in road races, but the race was not much stronger strengths were the shorter distances.
"That all happened before I was a Christian," Kyun said. "I used to focus on winning a gold medal or an Olympic title because I thought my life didn't measure up to anything if I didn't."
Timmons said that he had encouraged Ryun to compete again in shorter distances, such as the mile, but that he never pressured him.
"I've accepted that I have a God-given talent," Ryun said, "and I am going to go out and enjoy it."
Courtesy of University Archives
Jim Ryun, second from left, jostes for position in the mile run in the 1971 Relays masters 800-meter in Memorial Stadium. The race will mark the Kansas Relays. Ryun is scheduled to compete at 4:18 p.m. tomorrow in the first time since 1972 that Ryun has competed on an outdoor track.
Kansas Relays finally take shape after yearlong planning process
Staff writer
By DIANE FILIPOWSKI Staff writer
This is the second year that Fereshetian has been in charge of the behind-the-scenes preparation for the Relays.
After a year of preparation, the 62nd Annual Kansas Relays have finally taken shape for AI Fereshevsky and his three student chairmen
"When I came to KU, I hoped to get some experience in meet administration." Fereshetian said, "I never expected anything like this."
The planning of the RELays is a yearlong process that began with an extensive evaluation when last year's meet was over and ended this week with final preparations and 16-hour workdays.
As Relays manager, Fereshetian is ultimately responsible for the Relays' 2,600 participants and the 1,800 volunteers at Get Fereshetnai said he enjoyed it.
"I like this time of year," said Feresheetian, who came to Kansas as a graduate assistant coach in 1985. "No matter how tired I get, I can always keep going because it's exciting to see the meet fall together."
Back in September, Fereshetian began organizing committees that would to run the Relays.
From the community, about 25 volunteers compose the Greater Relays Committee. From the KU student body come three chairmen, who eventually choose a committee of 30 students.
"It's a big commitment for these students to help organize the Relays when they probably didn't
know much about track when they started," Fereshetai said. "The tri-chairmen have spent all of their time working in office helping organize the meet."
The tri-chairmen are responsible for three areas: officials, sponsorship and the meet headquarters. Another student is named the manager of the 10,000-meter road race and the marathon.
This year's tri-chairman are Ron Brancon, Hutchinson senior; Ross Cargo, Allenspark, Colo. Shane Kaplan, Shane, Kansas City, Mo, Senior.
Fereshetai said that when the Relays were over tomorrow, about 600 people would have helped with the meet. He said from 100 to 150 people needed to run the meeting during the week and about 250 tomorrow.
A few more than half are adults. "We have a big group of adults that come back every year to help," Fereshetian said, "Some of us have been helping for 40 years. It really helps the meet run smoothly."
Cargo, the tri-chairman in charge of the headquarters, said that for two weeks he had been up until 2 a.m. and had not attended many classes while making final preparations.
When the Relays are over, Cargo said he probably would help with the preparation for the Big Eight Conference outdoor championships May 14-16 at Memorial Stadium.
While Fereshetian sees the opening ceremonies, watches records being broken and awards
"I just like track." he said.
presented, he also sees the dollars and cents side.
Last year, running the meet cost between $65,000 and $75,000. About $30,000 comes from sponsorship and another $34,000 from the KU Athletics team, Fereshetai said. The remainder is covered by the Williams Fund.
Fereshetian said all contributions were accepted and were usually divided into specific categories by amount.
For example, a person or business can sponsor a high school event for $300 and a collegiate event for $500.
About $10,000 of the $27,000 in sponsorship money is used to bring in top athletes and teams; it is not enough to cover all expenses.
Brancom, the tri-chairmen in charge of promotion, said the Relays had 142 sponsors this year.
"We want to attract good athletes to the meet." Fereshetian said, "but we have to work within the masses of our financial situation."
More than half of the money for team sponsorship goes to Big Eight Conference teams. Kansas does not cover a the full cost for other teams to compete, but offers tickets on tickets on Braniff. money for travel and some money for meals and lodging while in Lawrence.
"We started doing this in the early 1980's because participation had dropped off," Fereshetian. "The benefits are starting to show because the competition is getting better."
Results and Scoring
Susan Jordan, Topeka junior, an assistant scorekeeper at the Kansas Relays, finds some time to catch some rays instead of results. Jordan was taking a break yesterday afternoon in Memorial Stadium during the women's heptathlon competition.
Chad DeShazo/KANBAN
From Anschutz to Outland, Relays are full of memories
By DIANE FILIPOWSKI
Staff writer
John Outland, who is known as the father of the Kansas Relays, saw a dream come true in 1923. The native Kansan forsaw an event in Kansas that would be similar to the Pennsylvania Relays.
After Memorial Stadium was built in honor of the 120 Kansas students who lost their lives in World War I, such an event became a possibility. Outland, an All-America football player for Kansas i 1895, convinced Forrest C. "Phog" Allen, KU Athletic Director in 1923, and Karl Schlademann, KU track coach, to hold the first Relays in 1923.
There is a long history that accompanies the 62nd Annual Kansas Relays, which began Wednesday and will run through Saturday. Here is an account, which began with K for the Kansas Relays, of some of the many stories that have been passed on since 1923.
In fact, it rained on the first day of the Relys in 1923. Since then, there have been reports of thunderstorms, hail, duststorms and even snowstorms. There were reports of hard winters in 1948, 1950, 1951, 1952, 1953, 1954, 1957, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1970, 1974. In 1973 tornado warnings interrupted the meeting.
A — ANSCHUTZ — The first events Wednesday that opened the 62nd Annual Kansas Relays were held in Anschutz Sports Pavilion because of rain, which is nothing new at the Kansas Relays.
Allen, KU's athletic director in 1923, took out insurance for the Relays to guard against low attendance and profit losses caused by Kansas weather. This ended in 1925 because insurance agents did not find the deal lucrative.
N — NINETEEN FIFTY — It was 1950 when the Jayhawks first sported their fluorescent pink shorts and baby-blue jerseys at the Relays because, Bill Easton, men's coach from 1948-1965, and team members decided a month earlier to change the team's colors.
The decision was made after the 1950 Big Seven Conference Indoor Championships when Jack Greenwood was not given credit for a third-place finish in the 60-yard high hurdles until another runner verified his finish.
TheJayhawks wanted uniforms that would separate them from other competitors and would never allow a teammate to go back to the Jayhawk to disappear in a race again.
S — SOVIETS — In a press conference in March 1983, Bob Swan, the founder of Athletes for Peace, and Mark Scott, executive director of the group, announced that they wanted to bring Soviet athletes to Lawrence. Swan wanted the athletes to compete in the 58th edition of the Relays in a
*pursuasive role in helping lead America and Russia away from the global crisis*
The Relays that year was considered the most publicized and successful of the recent Relays history. Only after the Soviets declined twice did Swan and Scott receive a confirmation from the Soviet Embassy that 13 world-class Soviet athletes would compete, among them two women worldrecord holders and a world-ranked vaulter.
This year, Kansas spent almost $10,000 of its $27,000 from sponsorship to bring top athletes into Lawrence to compete in the Relays. These athletes and teams, including Big Eight players, will compete on the summer and an offered some money for travel, lodging or food to attend the meet.
A — ARTIFICIAL TRACK — The use of a new tartan, all-weather track highlighted the 45th Relays in 1970. Jim Hershberger, a former Kansas track athlete and a Wichita oilman, owns 20,000 for the installation of the track.
Hershberger Track was a gift from heaven in 1970 when rain plagued the Relays. The Lawrence Daily Journal-World reported after the Relays that Elon Torrence of The Associated Press said Hershberger should be awarded the outstanding athlete award "... And not because of his thirdplace finish in the masters mile, but because of his gift of the track that made an impossible meet possible."
S — SPONSONSORSHIP — By 1980, the Relays began to lose popularity, and meet officials decided it was time to use sponsorship to attract nationally ranked teams and athletes to Lawrence. Allen, athletic director in 1923, knew that top athletes attracted large crowds
R — RECORDS The Kansas Relays scored crowds of 20,000 yearly during the 1950s and 1960s because of the high quality of athletes at the meet. It was simple. The potential broke made for an exciting Relays.
The Relays' longest held record is Harrison Dillard's 1948 world record in the 120-yard high hurdles with a time of 13.6 seconds. It wasn't until 1973 that Gregg Vandaveau broke the record with a time of 13.5.
At the Relays in 1925, the first world record was broken when Kansas' 440-yard relay team recorded a firstplace time of 42 seconds.
These events include: the Carl V. Rice high jump, Rice was Kansas' first national champion; Bill Nieder shot put and the Jim Bausch decathlon, Nieder and Bausch were Olympic gold medalists; Bill Easton four-
E — EVENTS — Ten events at the Rams are named after past competitors or people who have made an outstanding contribution to the meet.
mile relay, Easton was the Kansas men's coach from 1945-65; high school boys' Jim Ryun one-mile run, the Glenn Cunningham invitational 1.500-meter and the Wes Santee 1.500-meter run, Ryun, Cunningham and Santee were world record holders while they competed at Kansas; the Larry Winn 3.000-meter steeplechase, Winn was a congressman and a supporter of the Relays; the Ed Elbel distance-medley relay, Elibel was the Relays manager for almost 40 years; the Julius Marks 440-yard relay, Marks was the original maker of the meet's award watches; and the Cliff Cushman 400-meter hurdles, Cushman was an Olympian and an inspirational member of the Kansas track team in the early 1960's.
L — LONG DISTANCE RACES —
the first events tomorrow morning,
the marathon and 10,000-meter road
increased in 1970 and 1980,
respectively.
Gene Burnette, of Lawrence, organized the first marathon, which became a popular event in the Midwest because no other marathons were run in the area at that time of year.
The marathon and the 10K were designed to allow mass participation in the Relays. Because the qualifying times for the meet are difficult, many people are not able to compete, and the marathon and 10K were a way to get non-qualifiers and amateur athletes involved.
But more importantly, it was designed to allow community involvement. Five hundred participants tomorrow morning in these races.
A — AWARDS — Since the first Relays, meet officials have insured that the meet's winners do not go home empty-handed. Sol Marks' jewelry store in Lawrence made the watches awarded at the first Relays in 1923. The eight, seven-jewel, white gold, Eglin watches each had a different design and were displayed in the store's window.
Today, Marks Jewelers, 817 Massachusetts, still supplies the Relays watches that are awarded to the winners of the collegiate events. Richard Yeakel, co-owner of Marks Jewelers, said he was responsible for supplying the 70 men's and 55 women's Rodana watches thatinnen the incipient "Kansas Relays" and a picture of the Jay hawk.
Y — YOUR KANSAS RELAYS — The Relays saw its best crowd participation, 32,000 in 1972, the last time Jim Ryun participated in the Relays. This was an exceptional turnout considering that campus violence in the late 60s and early 70s chipped the 1971 attendance to 3,500.
In 1973, attendance fell to 15,300
See HISTORY, p. 16, col. 1
University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 17, 1987
9
Kansas Relays
Mills found acceptance in world of sports
Bv ROB KNAPP
Staff writer
MOHUNAR OF ATHENS
The film projected on the wall shows Billy Mills, 26. less than two years out of KU and wearing a U.S. uniform, nearing the end the 10,000-meter run at the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo. He trails two runners.
Billy Mills, 1964 Olympic champion in the 10.000-meter run, is pictured during his days at Kansas. The Kansas Belays' 10.000-meter run, named in his honor, begins at 8:27 a.m. today at Memorial Stadium.
Suddenly, with less than 100 yards to go, Mills speeds up. He is passing world record-holder Ron Clarke of Australia and Mohamed Gammoud of Tunisia. Announcer Jim McKay has only enough time to yell, "Here comes Mills! Here comes Mills!" as Mills bursts past his competition and crosses the finish line in 28 minutes, 24.4 seconds, an Olympic record.
Billy Mills, 49, and wearing a subdued plaid suit, sits at the head table with hands folded, watching the film clip for the thousandth, maybe the millionth time. As the audience at the Kansas Press, Mills of Kano claps enthusiastically, Mills rises to give his speech.
He is no longer distance-runner thin. He has remained in good shape, though, but by running shorter distances. His only connection with the 10,000 meters now is that the race at the Kansas Relays, which begins at 8:27 a.m. today at Memorial Stadium, bears his name.
Mills does not approach the rostrum as an underdog. He is in his element. He takes the microphone from its stand on the podium and moves to a platform beside the head table.
There, the audience can see him move to the rhythm of his words, bending his knees slightly to emphasize a point. His hand, free from the burden of notes, clinches into a fist, then relaxes. He waves his arm upward. This is a broad landscape of his native South Dakota was again before him.
He speaks of dealing with change and making commitment, but everything sooner or later relates back to track
"I enjoy being on the platform and telling stories," Mills said later. "Having people hear the highs and lows of your own emotions causes them to start dealing with their own feelings."
Mills, who lives with his wife and three daughters in Fair Oaks, Calif., makes the trip to the speaker's platform about 60 times a year. He receives about 500 requests a year, all handled through a company called the Harris Agency, operated by his wife, Pat.
The speaking engagements are only a portion of Billy Mills Enterprises, the umbrella company under which all of Mills' ventures fall. He is a successful insurance agent. He also has a program called Running Strong, which raises money for Indian youth programs.
Mills, a half-blood Sioux, is quick with a smile, but he takes on a serious cast when he talks about the struggle for Indian rights.
that have two sets of rights," he said.
"As an American, I have rights, plus I have the rights retained for me by my ancestors in treaties with this country. It's the second set of rights that have been ignored."
Life at Haskell
"Indians are the only Americans
Mills was one of 15 children. His parents were divorced early in his life. His father, whom he called the "Little Man," was the last person to live. died when Mills was 12 years old.
"He died before I realized he was human," Mills said. "I couldn't see his weaknesses, I only knew him as my father."
But Mills still had a family in his brothers and sisters.
Indians saw me as a half-blood, and the white world saw me as an Indian. I found a third culture, and that culture was sport.'
Billy Mills former KU track star
"My brothers and sisters were my support system," Mills said. "They gave me my social direction."
"They helped me deal with living in society and the free enterprise system. They helped me in dealing with being a minority in society."
Mills went to Haskell Indian School in 1954. Haskell, at that time, was a high school, taking in Indian youths from all over the country. It was first time Mills lived away from the reservation.
"We were high school freshmen through seniors, in the charge of the school, far away from our homes. I loved it."
Mills ran competitively at Haskell under Coach Tony Coffin. Coffin, a KU graduate, was impressed with Mills and told his friend, Kansas track coach Bill Easton, to come out and take a look.
Easton attended Haskell football games, where Mills ran in races held at halftime, and knew immediately that Mills was a special talent.
"You had the sense about something special when you'd first see him run," Easton said. "You could see it was there."
After four happy years at Haskell,
Mills enrolled at the University of
Kansas in the fall of 1958.
"It was my first exposure to white society." Mills said. "When I left Haskell it was breaking away from the culture I had always known."
Tough times at KU
Billy Mills left his mark on Kansas athletics, more in cross country than in track. He was named a cross
country All-American in 1958 and 1959 and was the Big Eight Conference cross country champion in 1960. He was a member of Kansas' and 1960 NCAA championship track teams.
Off the track, Mills was trying to find a place for himself in a university community that was only beginning to adjust to the presence of minorities.
"KU almost broke me," Mills said.
"Life at KU was tough in many,"
"most places."
He said he encountered resistance when he considered joining a fraternity. Some fraternities did not allow minorities at the time. In all cases, the cultural barriers between Mills and his adopted society were proving to be formidable.
Mills, who had been a half-breed to those of the Indian world, was now looked on as an Indian by white society.
"While the others' hero might be the chairman of the board of some large company, my hero was Crazy Horse," Mills said. "They would look at me and say, 'Who's Crazy Horse?'"
Easton remembered Mills as being very shy in his early days at KU.
"But you've got to remember, Billy had had no affiliations with white people up to that time as a rule." Easton said.
And although Mills gradually grew more comfortable at Kansas, he cannot forget the incidents of discrimination that marked the times.
He recalled a trip to the barber shop with some teammates, including the late Charlie Tidwell. Mills invited Tidwell, who was black, into the barber shop, but Tidwell insisted on going elsewhere to get his assist when he was inside the shop did Mills warn that it did not serve blacks.
Mills the Olympian
Mills began training in earnest for the 1964 Olympics while he was at Ku
"I did what I did not to win, but to get a better perspective of who I am," Mills said.
"Indians saw me as a half-blood, and the white world saw me as an Indian. I found a third culture, and that culture was sport."
He began to consider the Olympics when he was still a sophomore at Haskell. But at KU, he said he often fallen apart by the end of the cross country season and didn't perform as well in track events.
He discovered that he had food allergies and made a change in his diet. In the day when the standard meal for an athlete was a steak and a baked potato, Mills replaced much of the meat in his diet with a protein supplement and began eating more fruit.
Mills kept a training notebook, and two years before the Olympics, he made an entry that said, "Gold medal—10,000 meters."
A year later. one year before
Tokyo, Mills wrote in his notebook,
"Qualify for two events—10,000 and
5,000 or marathon."
At the Olympic trials in 1964, Mills qualified for the 10,000-meter run and the marathon. It was his second race over 10,000 meters and his first marathon.
In Tokyo, the press ignored Mills and concentrated on the favorites in Japan.
"I thought I was going to win," Mills said. "I didn't say, 'Billy, you're going to win,' but I was confident."
In 1965, Mills set his only world record, a 27 minute, 11.1 second-place finish in the six-mile run.
two years of not competing, he rushed into training for the 1968 Olympics in Mexico City and finished fourth in the 10,000 meters at the Olympic trials. A third place finish would have earned him a spot on the U.S. team.
Mills gave up the international track circuit later that year. After
Mills still regrets his decision to leave track when he was only 27.
"If I had kept running," Mills said, "I would have gone down in history as being one of the great distance runners.
"I feel like I am, but I'm not."
Mills' running days are over now. He reinforced his right knee this past winter while skiing, and doctors had to remove cartilage from his knee
He has taken up golf as a substitute, but after years of training, the
habit is tough to shake
"Knowing I can't run hard again, that's hard to take." Mills said.
As neither a full-blood member of the white or the Indian world, Milla said winning the Olympic gold medal for soccer made it easier to coexist peacefully in his life.
"I am learning to walk in two
wheels with one spirit," he is fond of
himself.
But his own identity, the one he fought and trained so long to discover, may still be a bit of a mystery to him.
"Society really still doesn't know me," Mills said. "Not that they show. But very few people still believe that they're all that's ever really wanted to be."
Coca-Cola
Peder Bengtsson, Wichita State, watches his competitors high jump during the men's decathlon. Bengtsson tied for sixth place in the event Wednesday in Anschutz Sports Pavilion with a jump of 6 feet.
Former KU field event stars to be honored
Daryl Chang/KANSAN
By DIANE FILIPOWSKI
Staff writer
five former Kansas track stars
paid their dues at McCook Field on
Monday.
Those five athletes, who threw the discus, shot put and javelin, will be honored tonight when they officially be dug into the KU Sports Hall of Fame.
The throwing field just outside of Memorial Stadium, where they spent much of their careers practicing, will be renamed McCook-Impaley Field
in their honor
The three who will attend the banquet, Oerter, Nieder and Alley, will receive replicas of their pictures, for the KU Hall of Fame in Allen Field House.
Al Oerter, Bill Nieder, Bill Alley,
the late Terry Becher and Sam
Colson are the five inductees, who
will be honored at a banquet at 7 p.m.
at the Holiday Inn Holdioe, 200
McDonald Drive.
Arl Orefesetian, Kansas Relief
manager, said since McCollore Field,
Kansas State.
throwing events since 1923, was rebuilt two years ago, this year's Relays was the perfect opportunity to rename the field.
"There isn't another team in the country that has had five Olympic competitors in throwing events," Fereshetian said. "We thought it was a good way to honor and remember them."
In honor of these Olympians, the discus ring will be named Al Oerter Discus Ring and the shot put ring will
See FIELD EVENTS, p. 16, col. 1
Women's role in KU Relays has increased over 24 years
Rv DAVID ROYCF
Staff writer
Wednesday marked the opening of the 62nd Annual Kansas Relays, but for women athletes, this will be only their 24th year of participation.
Not until 1963 did women participate in the Relays. And even then, only 15 participated in two of the 440-yard dash and a 440-yard relay.
Even though the women participated in these two events, official times and places were not recorded until 1969.
By 1969, the official Relays record book had a time for the 800-yard run. An unattached runner named Barbara Lawson won with a time of 2:20.7.
The first time the Relays' record book acknowledged the women's 100-yard dash was 1973, and the women's 100-meter race was women's 100-vard intramural race.
At this time, the Kansas women's track program was just starting. Newly appointed women's basketball coach Marian Washington started the program when she came to Kansas in 1972 to get her master's degree in health and physical education.
Before Washington came to KU, she practiced with AI Oerter in New York on discuss throwing, an activity she did along with coaching basketball.
"When I came here I was looking for someone to throw discus and Bill Easton was here," Washington said.
Easton then was the men's discus coach.
Washington said she noticed there was not a women's track program and so she requested permission to start one.
"I worked with Bob Timmons very hard to bring the two programs together," Washington said.
Each year events have been gradually added for women'
Carla Coffey women's track coach
Washington stayed with the program until 1974 when she gave it up to concentrate on coaching basketball.
the next year, 1975, the Relays added seven events for women. Timmons coached both the men's and women's team that year.
Coffey, who has coached women's track longer than any
Each year events have been gradually added for women." Carla Coffey, women's track coach, said.
By 1977, Kansas, coached by Tom Lionvale, fielded a KU team of 19 members and competed against 24 other teams.
In 1973, only three colleges had women's teams at the RELAws, and 18 women participated. But in 1975, eight colleges competed, and Kansas alone had 10 women entered in events.
"Women's tradition is growing. Tradition began with Oerter and Rvun." she said.
previous coach at Kansas, is in her seventh year.
In 1975, Sheila Sullentrop won the high jump at 4-feet-10. Last year, Kansas State's Rita Graves scored a career-high with a leap of 6-4. A Relais record.
For Kansas women, only one person owns a Relay record. Halcyon McNight holds the Relays record in the long jump with a leap of 30.4 feet.
This year's RELays include a woman Olympic gold medalist, Nawal El Moutawakel, from Jordan. The 400-meter intermediate hurdles
"We haven't had any Olympians from Kansas," Coffey said, "but we have had 12 or so All-Americans, which is pretty good starting ground for a young program."
The number of women competing from 1963 to 1974 averaged 15 athletes per year. This year, the women will compete in 19 events.
And Kansas' program also has progressed since 1972.
"We didn't have much of anything," Washington said. "There was no recruiting, and most of our equipment we received was from the health and physical education department.
"Anytime you can be involved with a program and you can see improvement and growth, the feeling is good. I think Carla's longevity here has really helped the program."
10
Friday, April 17, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Arabs' rights neglected, activist says
By JENNIFER FORKER
Staff writer
A human rights activist spoke last night at the Burge Union about the lack of human rights in the Arab world.
Ali Alayamee, vice president of the Association of Human Rights in the Arab World, said that human rights had been neglected in Arab nations and that no other people was more abused. He said he wasn't insulting Arabs, only the forms of government that ruled them.
"Arabs have no say in anything," he told the 40 people in the audience. "You should have the choice to live your life the way you want to live it. The Arab world treats people like
little children. They choose for you what to do."
Alyamee said Egypt was the only exception because it allowed its citizens to travel abroad.
"The president is not thinking for them," he said.
Alyamee, who holds a doctorate in international politics, said that in comparison, Iraq would not remain a single country and needed its citizens of basic human rights.
"They cannot even pray freely. The government has to check them as they pray." Alyamee said.
"These governments in the Arab world put themselves on the level of God," said Alyamey, who came to the United States 21 years ago from
Alyamea said that Arab students in the S. should expose their governments to them.
Saudi Arabia and is now a citizen.
"This is your chance to speak up," he said. "Every Arab government respects Western civilization's opinions more than those of the people in the Arab world. If you expose the Arab countries, they will hear you, clear and loud."
He said he was the only Saudi who publicly spoke against the Arab nation.
He said that disapproval stemmed from people's inability to admit failures and weaknesses. Instead, they blame others.
"It is our failure not to be able to
recognize our weaknesses." he said.
passes," he said. Haitam Shami, president of the KU Arab Students' organization, which sponsored the sprint along with the KU International Club, said people in the Arab world had long been oppressed.
"Their main concern is to survive and to earn a living." Sami, a帕萨,a Pat萨。
He said that if students returned to their countries and spoke against the persecution be persecuted or jailed. Their families' safety also would be in jeopardy.
"The subject is fairly new," he said. "None of us are aware of what's going on." he said.
Grand jury indicts 3 for telephone fraud
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Three men accused of bulking about 800 investors out of nearly $7 million in what authorities called a discount long-distance telephone service scheme have been indicted on fraud charges.
Named in a 28-count indictment issued Wednesday by a federal grand jury were Larry M. Cheney, founder, sole owner and president of Telecom Management International Inc.: Kenneth Briggs, the firm's vice President of operations; and Joseph Barkurt II, vice president for finance.
Cheney, 37, and Burkart, 46, are from Grain Valley. Briggs, 59, is from Independence. If convicted on all counts, the defendants each would face maximum sentences of 140 years in prison and fines of $154,000.
TMI was set up to sell interests in limited partnerships in cities in Missouri, Kansas, Iowa, Illinois and Oklahoma, said Robert Schneider, assistant U.S. attorney.
The limited partnerships were named for the city in which they were set up. St. Joseph Telecom Ltd., for instance, and were to provide discount long-distance telephone service to individual subscribers.
From late 1983 to June 1985, TMI formed 30 limited partnerships in cities in the five states. The defendants sold up to 35 interests in each of the limited partnerships for $7,000 to $8,000 each, Schneider said. About $7 million from about 800 investors was raised, he said.
Investors were told that they would have a return of their investment plus 10 percent within six months, and as time went on, they were told that five of the initial partnerships had a net profit from telephone revenue in the first quarter of 1984.
In fact, the indictment said, it was part of the scheme to use money from the sale of new partnership interests "to create a facade that the limited partnership's discount telephone business operations were successful."
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2nd Place- AK $\Lambda$ $ \mp $ 322
3rd Place- $ \Phi\Delta\Theta $ #2- 328
--newest night club
842-1212
PIZZA SHUTTLE
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1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Center
EVERYDAY TWO FERS
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Mon - Thurs. - 11a.m-2.a.m
Fri. & Sat. - 11a.m-3.a.m
Sunday - 11a.m-14.a.m
HOURS
842-5111
We Deliver During Lunch
NATURAL WAY Natural Fiber Clothing 820 Mass. 841-0100 SURF LAWRENCE
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Safari Shorts ... $19^{99}
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Spring colors in junior sizes. Reg. $28.
litwin's
830 Mass. • 843-6155
Lawrence's THE
BOTTLENECK
The Germans produce 91,000,000 Hecto Liters of Beer each year! (Good thing they don't drink all of it...)
New Hampshire
This Weekend Special:
a premium drinking establishment'
All German Beers...$1.50
Look for our daily shot specials NO COVER / DJ & DANCING
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members and guests welcome!
It's the brand new . . .
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403.253
Absolutely. A special purchase from ROSS qualifies us to lower the price on all ROSS bicycles. Here's an example—the 1987 Mt. Hood. Which Features:
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Was $474.95
Now $429.95
UPTOWN BICYCLES
1337 Mass.
749-0636
University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 17, 1987
11
Cancer research slow. report shows
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Progress in the country's fight against cancer has been much more limited than suggested by federal statistics, said a congressional report released yesterday.
The General Accounting Office studied a dozen forms of cancer and found dramatic improvements in survival rates in only two relatively rare cancers, acute leukemia and non-Hodkins lymphoma.
"For the majority of cancers we examined, the actual improvements have been small or have been overestimated by the published rates." GAO said.
"For lung, rectum and breast cancer (the most prevalent malignancies), gains in survival have been only modest," GAO said. "The result is that the dramatic improvements in
leukemia and NHL are muted by the overwhelming prevalence of the other cancers. From this perspective, it is difficult to find that there has been much progress."
The agency recommended that the Department of Health and Human Services include in future reviews of cancer statistics a description of factors "likely to cloud the interpretation of survival rates."
According to the agency, the federal department concurred with the recommendation and several other findings, although the department considered the tone of the report "unduly negative."
The federal National Cancer Institute, meanwhile, distributed a news release quoting its director, Vincent T. DeVita Jr., as saying that the report relied too much on interviews with cancer experts, and that "use of
such an opinion-based analysis makes the report limited in its accuracy and usefulness."
In addition, the NCI news release quoted Edward Sondik, chief statistician at the institute, as saying that overall survival rates were not the only measure of progress, and that other positive signs included a declining death rate among cancer patients under 55.
Sondik also said that treatment advances of a decade ago were only now beginning to show in cancer statistics because "it takes time for changes in treatment to be reflected."
The General Accounting Office report was requested by Rep. Ted Weiss, D.N.Y., chairman of the House Government Operations Subcommittee on Intergovernmental Relations and Human Resources. He
asked GAO, the non-partisan investigative arm of Congress, to determine whether reported improvements in cancer patient survival rates reflect true progress.
GAO said that advances in the detection and treatment of cancer from 1950 to 1982 had extended patient survival for all but one of the 12 cancers it studied. Earlier detection, chemotherapy and better surglimination radiation procedures accounted for the improvement, GAO said.
According to Weiss, NCI officials in recent years have repeatedly said that almost half the cancers in the United States have been cured or are curable on the basis that nearly half of all cancer patients are alive five years after they are diagnosed.
KCPL rate reduction request to be heard
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Kansas City Power &
Light Co.'s plan to reduce the rates it
charges customers for power from
the Wolf Creek nuclear plant will be
presented to state utility regulators
May 27-29.
KCPL, which serves about 144,000 customers in eastern Kansas, wants to cut its rates by $10.3 million, or about 5 percent, as part of a rate reduction, equalization and stabilization plan.
The Kansas Corporation Commission approved a similar restructuring plan last month for Kansas Gas and Electric Co. of Wichita, one of KCPL's partners in the $3.5 billion Wolf Creek project.
the reduction would be phased in over two years with a 2 percent reduction next month and a 3 percent reduction in May 1988. The rate cut would mean average residential customers would save about $47 a year.
A key provision of the plan calls for KCPL to drop its appeal of the KCC's bellow Creek rate decision, now proposed by the State Legislature, if the restructuring plan is approved.
The utility is offering to cut rates based on expected savings from the this year's federal tax reform laws.
The reduction would be phased in over two years with a 2 percent reduction next month.
The 5 percent rate cut would follow a 16.2 percent jump in KCPL's rates two years ago when Wolf Creek started operating.
KCPL was granted the $28.2 million rate hike to pay for its 47 percent ownership share in the nuclear power plant.
The complex restructuring proposal also includes changing from a 30-year to a 40-year depreciation schedule on the power plant and changing the company's accounting procedures, related to value of the plant, to increase tax benefits.
Farmer saves mail from creek waters
The Associated Press
CONCORDIA - Add submersion to the list of hazards that won't deter postal officials in north-central Kansas from delivering the mail.
More than a thousand pieces of mail, submerged when a U.S. Postal Service truck and a mail carrier went into the floodwaters of the Buffalo Creek Wednesday, have been recovered, according to Richard Mason, superintendent of postal operations in Concordia. The mail will be delivered today, he said.
Farmer David Walker, 25, dived into the creek and used an ax to shatter the rear window of the truck and drag substitute letter carrier Donald Hutchinson, 64, to safety.
"I thought I was going to die," saidutchinson, a retired grocery who was working in the food industry.
"This may be the last day to file income taxes, but this is the first day of the rest of my life." Hutchinson said.
WANT 842-0600
PIZZA? DELIVERED
Hutchinson had been talking with Walker and another farmer, Greg Thoman, minutes before he took a wrong turn and was swept into the creek. Thoman threw Walker the ax used in the rescue.
Mason said a sheriff's vehicle towed the mail truck and seven bundles of mail out of the creek Wednesday night. Newspapers wrapped around the mail truck up most of the water and protected the rest of the mail, Mason said.
Heavy rain sent floodwaters to their highest levels since 1951 on the Saline and Solomon rivers this week.
"It's not as bad as you might think," Mason said. "We've got it in the basement, drying out."
14 kt. Chain
Repair
Kizer
Cummings
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Two electric fans were used to speed the drying of the mail, which contained only one income tax return. Mason said. The person filing the return was aware of its submersion and filed a duplicate, Mason said.
Video Player
Four Movies
Two Days
Video Player
Four Movies
Two Days
$9.95
(Higher Weekends)
Videoxpress
1447 W. 23rd
Open 9 a.m.-10 p.m. Daily
Royal Peking Restaurant
店飯都京
- Treasure chicken
- Beef and vegetables
Royal Peking Restaurant
店飯都京
SUNDAY SPECIALS
$3.95 per person
Dine In Only
choose from
- Sweet and sour pork
Shelter Halves $2
Wool Pants $5
SPECIAL! USED G.I. M-1949 SLEEPING BAGS $15
Canteen plus cover $2
Used Field Jacket $10
Used Field Jacket Liners $1
Khaki and Fatigue Shirts $2
Dress Ports $10
SALE Military Surplus
All dinners served with egg drop soup, fried won tons, hot tea, and almond cookie.
Cooks and Dress Whites $2
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER 711 W.23rd ST. 841-4599
Canteen plus cover $2
CLOSED MONDAYS
LUNCH 11:30:30 p.m. DINNER 4:30-10:00 p.m.
TUES. SAT. SUN. NOON 9:30 p.m.
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
711 W. 23rd ST. 841-155-6000
Selected Ammo Cans $2
Nato Stoves $5
Cotton Mechanics Coveralls $8 (mainly medium and small)
Camo Six Pocket Pants $10
Khaki and Fatique Pants $2
Airplane Seats $25 to $40
Helmets $4, Helmet Liners $2
Wool Coats $10
COOLER
CLOSED MONDAYS
Mosquito Netting —cotton $5, Nylon $10
Ammo Pouches $2 ALLEY SALE
April 18,
10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
SUNFLOWER
904 Massachusetts • Lawrence, Kansas 66044 • 913-843-5000
Mosquito Netting — cotton $5, Nylon $10
店飯都京
GENUINE G.I. OD.
BARRACKS BAGS 50°
Wooden
Ammo Boxes $2
Shoulder Straps $1
Shoulder Pads
2 for 50¢*
Trioxide Fuel 25¢*
Sunburn Creme 10¢*
Kaypro Computers Announces Manager Mouse.
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COMPUTER
OUTLET
843-PLUG • 804 N.H.
Lawrence, Kansas
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Breakfast or Lunch
(6 to 11) (11 to 2)
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MASTERS INN
(Soon to be a Park Inn International)
2222 West 6th 842-7030
SUNRISE PLACE
Featuring: Luxurious two bedroom townhouse living
9th & Michigan
- Prices start from $385
- Free cablevision
- Energy efficient
- Swimming pool
- Within walking distance to campus
We are open for show
Monday—Saturday 1:00—6:00 p.m.
Please stop by our office or call
841-1287.
16TH ANNUAL
WICHITA
FESTIVAL
SUNDAY, APRIL 26
Noon-11:30 P.M. Century II
JOE SAMPLE QUARTET
1986 Grammy winner vocalist Diane Sa-
John Scotfield Band
1987 W J F All-Stars: Peter Erskine
Bob Minter • Randy Brecker
George Mraz • Elias Elias-Breker
U.S. Air Force Falconettes
Epstein Pete Barbutt! Tickets $5, $10, $1
Phil Woods Quinter
$15
Schuur
$15
1987 Wichita Jazz Festival All-Stars:
Peter Erskine B包 Mozart
Randy Brecker Eliane Elias-Brecker
George Maz $ Steve Story Band
Emcee Pete Barbutti
SATURDAY, APRIL 25
7:30 p.m. Wichita Cotillion
FREDDIE HUBBARD
Tickets: $10. Beer will be served.
Wichita Falls Jazz Festival is a non-profit organization funded in part by the National Enrollment for the Arts, a federal agency, the Kansas Arts Corp.
Columbia
Boston
Tickets available at Central Ticket Agency, 252 W. Douglas Wichita 67201 MasterCard/Visa (361) 263-471. Tickets also available at Second Time Around Poverty Records Starkey Records. Yesterday Music and More McConnell Air Force Base and the Aircraft Employer's Club
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---
12
Friday, April 17, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Groups can have computers installed
By KJERSTI MOEN
Staff writer
Students and faculty now have to come to the Computer Center to use computers. Soon, the computers may be coming to them.
Computing Services is offering 13 Macintosh Plus microcomputers and a laser printer to student, faculty and departmental organizations that might want computers for their members to use.
The computers, printer and software, together worth about $25,000, will be installed free for any groups that apply and qualify.
The Macintosh Plus has software for word processing, graphics and illustration to publish newsletters, brochures and other publications.
Herb Harris, director of academic user services at the center, said the center had no restrictions on applicants, users or types of uses.
"I think the people would have to use their own creative juices in figuring out how to use these things." Harris said. "The clientele would depend upon who submits the proposals. We haven’t ruled out any users."
There are, however, some limitations.
"We're looking for more public kinds of things, and we probably would shy away from secretarial use in the departments, for example," he said. "They're not meant for that."
The computer center will deliver and install the computers and provide seminars and consulting on their use.
is no real deadline, Harris said.
Thirteen other Macintosh Plus computers are already available to students 24 hours a day at the computer center.
The second group of 13 computers and the laser printer will arrive in June as the second shipment in a buy-13-get-13-free contract between the computer center and Apple-Mintosh, Harris said.
Recipients will provide laboratory and table space for the computers, chairs, paper, maintenance on the computers and the printer, a supervisor and a system for distributing
However, Harris said applicants who could not afford all those accessories could work out a deal with the center.
software.
So far, only the Student Senate has applied for the computers. The Senate has asked for two computers for student use.
Brady Stanton, out-going student body president, said he hoped to install the computers in Watson Library's typing room or in the Kansas or Burge unions.
"I think it's fantastic. Especially in the recession where everything is being cut back, here's a department that's actually offering something extra. It's like a breath of fresh air." Stanton said.
Women unaware of AIDS risk, study says
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — The proportion of women getting AIDS from male sexual partners has doubled in five years, indicating that women may underestimate their risk of getting the fatal disease, a new study says.
Meanwhile, the cost of the only drug approved by the Food and Drug Administration for treating AIDS threatens to put the medication out of reach for many patients, the American Medical Association's weekly newspaper says.
Only 12 percent of women diagnosed with acquired immune deficiency syndrome in 1982, the first full year U.S. medical authorities
tracked it, got it from male sex partners, researchers at the federal Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta said.
By late last year, 26 percent of women getting AIDS were contracting it from men, physician Mary E. Guinan and public health specialist Ann Hardy reported in today's Journal of the American Medical Association.
Drug abuse remains the largest single way the viral disease spreads to women, accounting for just over 50 percent of cases, the study said.
More than 80 percent of women contracting AIDS are in their childbearing years, the researchers said.
Many women may be unaware of their risk of catching AIDS from men during sex, and they need to learn about that risk and the possibility of passing the disease to their fetuses, the study and an accompanying editorial said.
Seventy percent of the 1,819 women in the study were black or Hispanic, the researchers said, but an accompanying editorial said news stories dramatizing the AIDS risk typically picture whites.
By focusing on whites, minorities may be receiving "the misimpression that AIDS in heterosexuals is a white disease, just as previous reports conveyed the false impression that AIDS is a gay disease," said the editorial by Constance B. Wofsy of the University of California at San Francisco.
As of Monday, the CDC had counted 2.285 U.S. women with AIDS, representing about 7 percent of adult cases, and 479 children under age 13 with the disease, with 79 percent of the children getting it from their mothers, said spokesman Chuck Fallis.
The AMA's newspaper predicted that the drug azidothymidine, or AZT, may be too expensive for thousands of people with AIDS.
Ringleader teaches group of N.Y. boys the art of shoplifting
NEWARK, N.J. — A shoplifting mastermind organized about 75 New York City boys into a gang of thieves and gave them a manual which targets expensive designer clothing at suburban malls in four states, authorities said yesterday.
New Jersey and New York City police said children from a Brooklyn neighborhood made weekend trips to shoplift up to $800 worth of clothes apiece in exchange for money and drugs from the ringleader.
Since January, 150 ploilifting arrests have been made in Paramus, Wayne and Livingston involving boys from New York City. Authorities think that many are repeat offenders and that about 75 boys may be involved, said Paramus police Chief Joseph Delaune.
In three cases, authorities found boys carrying a four-page typewritten manual that explains how to shoplift. Attached is a list of 27 stores in suburbs in northern New Jersey, in cities like Rockford and Connecticut, Delaney said.
Daleyne said authorities had some very good leads on the leader. Members of the New York City fraud commission went yesterday to aid in the investigation.
The latest arrests came Saturday when 10 boys were nabbed at the Paramus Park mall, where 42 children have been arrested in the past four months. At the Livingston Mall, 50 boys have been arrested, and at Willowbrook Mall in Wayne 50 boys have been arrested, Delaney said.
Many of the thieves carry knapsacks full of old clothes and exchange them for new ones in store fitting rooms, he said.
The manual tells them to take alarm devices off clothes and how to spot store detectives.
"If you see someone pick up a phone on your way out of the store and then hear some bells, those bells are for you," it reads. "Don't run or panic. Just calmly walk out of the store."
If a shoplifter gets caught, the manual advises, they "will be out in several hours. The juvenile justice system will not you will not be held for very long."
The shoplifters return with $500 to
$800 in clothes, Delaney said, and the
ringleader pays them $300 to $500 or
gives them drugs.
The boys have told police that their leader has threatened them with severe beattings if they don't meet quotas on each trip.
INTERESTED IN THE ARTS?
SUA FINE ARTS COMMITTEE
WANTS YOU!
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843-4754
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
One of Lawrence's newer and most energy efficient complexes
SUMMER SUBLEASE SPECIALS
June 1 to July 31, 1987
• 1 Bedroom Apt.. $225 per month
• 2 Bedroom Apt. $275 per month
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LAWRENCE, KS
Kaw Valley Management is pleased to represent the following living areas:
Where Are You Living Next Semester?
Applications are due 5:00 p.m. Monday, April 20th
- Student Executive Committee Chair
- Treasurer
paid for by the Student Activity Fee
- Administrative Assistant
- Executive Secretary
- (in the basement of the Burge Union)
- Associated Students of Kansas Campus Director
- Jayhawk Course Source Director
Student Senate Office
is now accepting applications for the following positions:
THINK BIG
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COPIES
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JAYHAWKER APPLICATIONS
for the 1988 Editor and Business Manager positions for the Jayhawker Yearbook are now available at:
S. U.A Offices
S. U.A Offices and Activities and Organizations Offices
EXTENDED DEADLINE: 5:00 p.m. Monday, April 20
For more information CALL:
864-3728
between 1 and 5 Mon.-Fri.
Sports
University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 17, 1987
13
Athletes to attend career banquet
By LAURA BOSTROM
Staff writer
About 45 KU athletes will meet, dine and visit with local businessmen Monday at Senior Career Night, a new program organized by the Athletic Department and Kansas football alumni.
Student athletes are often so caught up in their sport that they don't make career plans, said Ray Evans Jr. Evans is a stockbroker and former KU football player who helped organize the program.
The night begins with a social hour and dinner at the BMA Towers in Kansas City, Mo. After the dinner, each athlete will have one minute to introduce himself to the more than 30 businessmen attending the program, said Tim Allen, Athletic Department academic coordinator.
The Athletic Department wants to build the Senior Career Night into a successful recruiting tool, Evans said.
The participating athletes will use the program to make contacts for later jobs.
- The program is one of only a few in the country, Allen said, and it shows student athletes that the University is concerned about athletes' success after their college careers end.
Wayne Ziegler, football graduate assistant, said the program would give him a chance to make job contacts.
Ziegler, who graduated in December but would like a position in sales or as a stockbroker, said, "If I am not able to continue playing, I'll have something to fall back on."
Julie Hall, a senior track athlete,
said the program was the best way to
get exposure in the business world.
"If you give a good enough impression, they'll remember you," Hall said.
Evans said he hoped the program would help five to 10 athletes locate jobs.
Many athletes come to college with dreams of a professional career in sports. Allen said.
"This gives them an opportunity to plan for something outside of athletics," he said.
KU's Wadman wins Relays heptathlon
SUNDAY'S
By DAVID BOYCE
Kansas heptathlete Rosie Wadman skids into the sand during the women's long jump. Wadman finished fourth in the event
Staff writer
The KU women's track team claimed its first victory at the Kansas Relays yesterday when Rosie Wadman narrowly defeated Lizz Barringer in the heptathlon.
Wadman entered the last three events in the heptathlon with a 50-point lead over Barringer.
Wadman increased her lead after five of the seven events by finishing fourth in the long jump while Barringer took sixth.
"She had two bad throws, but I am happy with the way she came back," said assistant track coach Cliff Rovello.
After suffering two bad throws in the javelin, Wadman came through on her final attempt and finished first in the event with a toss of 136 feet, 6 inches.
In the final event in Memorial Stadium, the 800-meter run, Wadman needed to finish within 8 seconds of Barringer to win.
Even though Wadman finished in tenth place, her time of 2:32.74 was a personal best and good enough to gain the heptathlon victory. Barringer finished the race at 2:26.14.
The final points standing was Wadman 4,957 and Barringer 4,936.
"I am happy with the way I did in the 800." Wadman said. "I had been tentative in the first half. This race will help me a lot in future meets."
During the two-day event, Wadman's best events were the shot put and high jump on Wednesday and the long jump. He secured first in all three of those events.
"I had two bad throws in the shot," Wadman said of Wednesday's events. "We ran hurdles inside because of the weather, but we came out in the cold to throw and that affected me some."
In the high jump, she tied for first with Barringer and teammate Jaci Metzger with a leap of 5-6. And her shot put toss of $36.2\mathrm{f}$ beat her closest competitor by three inches.
"Today was a good day for me." Rovello said that in spite of Wadman's victory he thought she could have done better.
"I didn't think she had a very good meet, but she did come back and do well in the 800." he said.
Wadman, who did not compete last year in the Relays because of injury to her right Achilles' tendon, said she would have been happy even if she did not win the heptathlon.
"I am happy with the way I ran the 800," she said. "It was a personal
best."
Rovelto said he was pleased with the improvement he saw in Andrea Schwartz, who finished fourth at 4,599, and Kim Huthoefer, who finished sixth at 4,538.
"I was aiming at the top five," Hutheoeffer said.
She missed finishing fifth by only five points.
"My performance was pretty consistent with what I have done all year," she said. "I did have a personal record in the javelin.
"I had no bad performances, and I am happy with what I did.
Both Wadman and Hutbeofer said their next goal was to do well in the Big Eight Championships on May 15-16.
Shocker captures close decathlon in final event
Staff writer
By DAVID BOYCE Staff writer
nois State held a 71-point lead over
Rentonstuff.
Only 21 points separated the top two women in the heptathlon, but the results in the men's decathlon were even closer.
Fourteen points was the winning margin for Wichita State's Peder Bengtsson, who won the Kansas Relays Jim Bauch Decathlon in the last event yesterday in Memorial Stadium.
Entering the last event, the 1,500 meter run, Brian Schweitzer of Izzie
"I knew he was 12 seconds ahead of me." Benttsson said.
Bengtsson finished more 13 seconds ahead of Schweitzer to win the decathlon with 6,986 points to Schweitzer's 6,972.
"I was also worried with John (Schwecker, Southeast Missouri State), who was only four seconds behind me in the last event." Bengt-
Bengtsson finished the race with a
time of 4:42.38 while Schweitzer finished at 4:56.54 and Schweker at 5:00.04
"It felt very good to win," Bengtsson said. "Last year Brian beat me twice.
"I can't be anything but glad," he said.
Jim Strauff finished fourth and was Kansas' top performer with 6,401 points. The other Jayhawk, Toddin, finished fifth with 6,301 points.
finished fourth in the decathlon and
Schweitzer finished third.
The decathlon events took place Wednesday and yesterday and some had to be moved indoors Wednesday because of the weather.
Bengtsson said that the difference this year was his performance in the 1,500-meter run.
"The weather today helps everybody," Bengtsson said. "Yesterday we went inside and I really didn't like it."
In the Relays last year, Bengtsson
der Bengtsson's performance. After Wednesday's events he held an 18-point lead over Schweker.
"I didn't have any personal bests, but I did best in the javelin throw," Bengtsson said.
He finished third in the javelin with a toss of 170 feet, 7 inches. The winning toss was 186-7 by Schweizer.
Going inside, though, did not hin-
Jayhawks drop out of BMA tournament
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The fourteam Business Men's Assurance Classic basketball tournament scheduled in November has been canceled for this year because Kansas dropped out of the field.
Alex Matthews, a BMA official, said that the sponsor was unable to find an appropriate replacement for the Nov. 28-29 tournament at Kemper Arena, which was seen as a tune-up for the San Francisco City. Other teams scheduled to play were San Francisco, Tulsa and Southern Methodist.
"We are just going to have a one-year moratorium on the tournament." Matthews said of the BMA tournament which started three years ago. "... At this late date, we did not have a school that could pick up for KU, especially a local school
with which we would have a chance to draw a large crowd."
Gary Hunter, assistant athletic director, said that the Jayhawks did not have a contract with BMA and had a scheduling problem. He said that Kansas opted to play in the Hawaiian Airlines Maui Classic Nov. 17, when the games did not begin against the regular-season, 28-game limit. It also freezes two games from the BMA that could be played in Lawrence.
"Those dates from the BMA give us two more home dates, and that's critical from a financial standpoint," Hunter said. He said that another reason for going to Hawaii rather than Kansas City was for exposure and experience.
Barfield's RBI single gives Blue Jays win
Other teams in the field at the Hawaiian tournament are Iowa, Illinois, Villanova, Nebraska, Baylor, Stanford and Chaminade.
Key struck out three and walked three and improved his record to 3-0. The left-hander got into serious trouble in the sixth when he loaded the bases on walks, but Don Baylor flied out and ended the threat.
American League
The Associated Press
TORONTO — Jesse Barfield's run-scoring single snapped a sixth-inning tie, and Jimmy Key threw a two-hitter over six innings to give the Toronto Blue Jays a 4-2 victory over the Boston Red Sox last night.
Starter Roger Clemens, who walked out of the Red Sox' training camp in a contract dispute and returned less than a week before the season began, fell to 0-2, striking out nine and walking two.
Tom Henke, the fourth Toronto pitcher, worked the ninth inning for his first save of the year.
Harold Reynolds started the Mariners' rally in the fourth inning with a one-out double off Jose Rijo, 0-1. After a groundout, Mickey Brantley and Phil Bradley both walked and loaded the bases.
SEATTLE — A wild throw by second baseman Tony Phillips on Ken Phelps' infield single allowed the winning run to score as the Seattle Mariners beat the Oakland Athletics 6-5 last night.
Phelps hit a sharp groundball up the middle that Rijo defended towards Phillips, who barehanded the ball and threw toward first. However, Phelps collided with Oakland first baseman Ron Cey and the ball rolled away allowing Brantley to score the game-winning run.
Mariners 6. Athletics 5
Seattle starter Mike Trujillo, 1-0,
pitched seven innings, allowing five
runs on six hits. Edwin Nunez pitched
the final two innings for his second
save.
Kansas Relays schedule
Today
MORNING SESSION
Field Events
8 Girls' dances (prelimits & finals)
8 Boys' shot put (prelimits & finals)
8:45 Boys' triple jump (prelimits & finals)
10 Girls' shot put (prelimits & finals)
10 Boys' javelin (finals)
10:20 Girls' long jump (prelimits & finals)
Track events
8:15 Girl's 2-mile run (finals)
8:15 Boys' 2-mile run (finals)
8:27 Men's Billy Mills 10,000-meter run (finals)
8:27 Girls' 100-meter dash (prelims)
8:27 Women's 100-meter dash (prelims)
9:10 Women's 100-meter dash (prelims)
9:10 Men's 100-meter dash (prelims)
10:30 Women's 400-meter hurdles (prelims)
10:30 Men's 400-meter hurdles (prelims)
11:10 Boys' 300-meter hurdles (finals)
11:10 Girls' 300-meter hurdles (finals)
11:49 relay race (finals)
11:48 Women's sprint-medley relay (finals)
11:54 Women's sprint-medley relay (finals)
AFTERNOON Field events
12 Men's pole vaults finals
12 Men's javelin prelimits & finals
12 Boys high jump finals
12 Boys long jump finals & finals
12 Women's long jump finals
12 Women's high jump finals
12 Girl's triple jump prelimits & finals
12 Boys discus prelimits & finals
12 Men's long jump prelimits & finals
1. Men's Bill Easton 4-mile relay (finish)
2. Women's 880-ydr relay (finals)
1.28 Men's 880-ydr relay (finals)
1.26 Girl's 1-mile run (finals)
1.24 Boys Jim Ryum 1-mile run (finals)
1.24 Women's 1,500-meter run (prelims)
2.20 Men's Wae Santee 15,000 (prelims)
2.28 Girl's 440-yard relay (prelims)
2.28 Boys 440-yard relay (prelims)
3.20 Women's 440-yard relay (prelims)
3.20 Women's 800-ydr relay (prelims)
3.26 Women's 800-ydr runner (prelims)
3.41 Men's 800-meter runner (prelims)
3.56 Girl's 1-mile relay (prelims)
1.21 Boy's 1-mile relay (prelims)
4.26 Women's 1-mile relay (prelims)
4.24 Men's 1-mile relay (prelims)
Track events
Tomorrow
MORNING SESSION Field events
9 30 "Crisa" (preditura & finala)
10 Men's basketball (preditura & finala)
11. 10 Men's basketball (preditura & finala)
Track events
18th annual marathon
Town and campus 10,000-meter road race
Women's mile run (finals)
Girls' 2-mile relay (finals)
Boy's 2-mile relay (finals)
Women's 400-meter dash (prelims)
Men's 400-meter dash (prelims)
Women's 2-mile relay (finals)
Men's 110-meter hurdles (prelims)
Boys' 110-meter hurdles (prelims)
Women's 100-meter hurdles (prelims)
Girls' 100-meter hurdles (prelims)
Men's 100-meter hurdles run (finals)
Women's 200-meter dash (prelims)
Men's 200-meter dash (prelims)
AFTERNOON SESSION Field events
12 Men's Caril V. Rico high jump (finals)
12 Women's long jump (prelimits & finals)
12:15 Men's javelin (prelimits & finals)
13:0 men's invitational high jump (finals)
12:15 Women's invitational high jump (finals)
2:15 Women's invitational high jump (finals)
Track events
1. Girls' 100-meter hurdles (finals)
1:05 Women's 100-meter hurdles (finals)
1:10 Boys' 110-meter hurdles (finals)
1:15 Men's 110-meter hurdles (finals)
1:20 Men's Larry Winn 3,000 steeplechase (finals)
1:32 Girl's 100-meter dash (finals)
1:40 Women's 100-meter dash (finals)
1:40 Women's 100-meter dash (finals)
1:48 Men's Edel distance-medley relay (finals)
2. Men's invitational 400-meter dash (finals)
2:05 Women's 1,500-meter run (finals)
2:12 Men's Wee Sentet run (finals)
2:20 Women's 100-meter dash (finals)
2:24 Boyt's 440-yard relay (finals)
2:29 Women's junior college 440-yard relay (finals)
2:34 Men's junior college 440-yard relay (finals)
2:39 Men's 440-yard relay (finals)
2:44 Men's Julius Marks 440-yard relay (finals)
2:44 Women's invitational 1,500
2:55 Women's 400-meter dash (finals)
3. Men's 400-meter dash (finals)
3:05 Women's 800-meter run (finals)
3:11 Men's 800-meter run (finals)
3:19 Women's 400-meter hurdles (finals)
3:31 Women's 5,000-meter hurdles (finals)
3:51 Women's 200-meter dash (finals)
3:56 Men's 200-meter dash (finals)
4. Men's 5,000-meter run (finals)
4:18 Men's masters 800-meter run (finals)
4:24 Girl's 1-mile relay (finals)
4:24 Boyt's 1-mile relay (finals)
4:36 Women's junior college 1-mile relay (finals)
4:42 Men's junior college 1-mile relay (finals)
4:48 Women's 1-mile relay (finals)
4:54 Men's 1-mile relay (finals)
Rv ROB KNAPP
KU tennis team tops Big 8 poll
Oklahoma State has won the big Eight Conference men's tennis championship four years in a row, but the Kansas Jayhawks have been picked by the conference coaches as the this season's favorite.
Both the men's and women's tennis teams play dual matches with Iowa State at Ames today. They will travel to Lincoln to play Nebraska tomorrow.
Four of six conference coaches predicted the Kansas men's team would finish atop the Big Eight standings. The other two coaches picked the Jayhawks second, giving them 34 total points in the poll.
Kansas has not won a Big Eight men's tennis championship since 1965.
Teams were awarded six points for a first-place vote, five points for a second-place vote and one point less for each descending place. Coaches were not allowed to vote for their own teams.
Only seven teams were included because Kansas State does not field a men's tennis team.
Oklahoma State finished in second place, only one point behind Kansas, and Nebraska was a unanimous pick for third place.
"Obviously it's very close," Kansas men's and women's tennis coach Scott Perelman said. "It’s a nice thing but it doesn't give us any points toward the championship."
The Kansas men took the conference lead with a 9-0 whitewash of Missouri on Tuesday. The Jayhawks have 29 points after four matches.
have played five matches and the Sooners have played four.
Oklahoma State has 22 point after three matches. The Cowboys were scheduled to play Oklahoma on Tuesday, but the match was postponed after the death of longtime Sooner tennis coach Jerry Keen.
Chiefs player fined
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kansas City Chiefs veteran wide receiver Henry H. Marshall was fined $40,000 in federal court yesterday for failing to file federal income tax returns.
Marshall, 32, pleaded guilty to two counts of failing to file tax returns for 1982 and 1983, and was placed on probation for three years and ordered to perform 320 hours of community service by U.S. Magistrate Calvin
Two other counts, for 1981 and 1984, were dismissed after sentencing.
Marshall's attorney, Philip J. Adams Jr. said Marshall had paid the Internal Revenue Service $46,785 in back taxes, interest and penalties. Adams said that all of Marshall's income, $124,277 in 1982 and $139,182 in 1983, came from the Chiefs.
14
Friday, April 17, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Two-run double lifts Expos over the Cards, 4-3
The Associated Press
ST. LOUIS — Tom Foley's two-run double broke a sixth-inning tie and gave the Montreal Expos a 4-3 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals yesterday.
Andres Galarrarga and Tim Wallach hit consecutive doubles off losing pitcher Bob Forsch, 1-1, starting the sixth. Wallach went to third on a balk, and after a walk to Vance Law, Foley scored both runners to give Montreal a 4-2 lead.
Foley, a four-year veteran, played shortstop in place of disabled Hubie Brooks.
Left-hander Neal Heaton, 1-1, was the winning pitcher. He gave up single runs in the first and second before settling down and retiring 17
National League
straight batters. Heaton was relieved with one out in the eighth by Randy St. Claire when giving up an RBI single to Ozzie Smith.
St. Claire shut out the Cardinals the rest of the way picking up his first save.
CHICAGO — Bob Kipper pitched a four-hitter while newcomers Mike Lallaire and Andy Van Slyke combined for six hits and four RBI, leading the Pittsburgh Pirates 6-0 over the Chicago Cubs yesterday.
Pirates 6. Cubs 0
Lavalliere and Van Slyke each went three-for-four with two RBI in the game. Iade included Iade that sent catcher Tony Penn to the St. Louis Cardinals.
Kipper. 1-1, struck out eight and
Starter Ed Lynch, 1-1, took the loss for Chicago.
Padres 3. Dodgers 2
walked one.
SAN DIEGO — Tony Gwynn went five-for-five for the first time in his career and scored the game-winning run on Carmalo Martinez' 10th-inning double, giving the San Diego Padres a 3-2 edge over the Los Angeles Dodgers yesterday.
Gwynn led off the 10th with a single off reliever Matt Young, 0.3. Mar-34 was an exceptionally good game of the game. Gwynn, who had two doubles and three singles, beat the
relay to the plate to give the Padres only second win in 10 games.
Mets 9. Phillies 3
PHILADELPHIA — Darryl Strawberry extended his hitting streak to eight games with a home run and drove in four runs last night as the New York Mets beat the Philadelphia Phillies 9-3.
Right-hander Rick Aguilera earned his first victory of the season, allowing nine hits over eight innings, striking out eight and walking three. Terry Lecayne pitched the ninth inning.
Convenient summer sublease. We are renting all or part of our three bedroom apartment. Microwave, private washer and dryer. Cheap laundry room. 10th & 11th Call owl callm. 842-285-3881
Beauty, eh? Two Bedroom Apartment. Five Bathrooms. Large room with Fall option. Leave message. 842-1090
Completely furnished 2 bdrm apt. Low utilities. Sublease. Close to campus. Send Reg. Call
Excellent location: 2 bedroom apartments in four-plex, Carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, and low utilities. Available June 1. Summer Rate $775
Beds at 104 Tennessean and Triage 141
Call 844-3411
Sports Briefs
Female nonsmoker wanted for $78, 60 school year. 2, brat bath room. Right off 23rd street. Please leave message on answering machine. $195. Female Roommate needed from May 20-August 20. Furnished Tanglewood Apartment. Large bedroom. Great bargain for $175. a month. Call 1-800-743-2222.
Joe Young, a 6-foot-7 forward from Dodge City Community College, has become Kansas' first basketball signee of the spring signing period.
Dodge City juco forward becomes first KU signee
"I hope I do well, that's all I can say," Young said.
"I just want to be able to contribute to the team."
Young said last night that he had signed a letter of intent to play at Kansas on Wednesday.
Young considered signing with St. John's before deciding on Kansas. He averaged about 17 points and eight rebounds this season for Dodge City.
KU softball splits with Creighton
The Kansas softball team split a pair of games with 14th-ranked Creighton yesterday, losing the first game 2-1 and coming back to win the nightcap 3-2.
The split gave the Jayhawks a record of 20-16. The victory in the second game was Kansas' first in five tries against the Blue Jays this spring.
Kansas will be the host for a Big Eight weekend tomorrow and Sunday as Oklahoma, Oklahoma State and Missouri come to Jayhawk Field. Kansas plays Oklahoma and Oklahoma State once each day, with games beginning at 10 a.m. both tomorrow and Saturday.
Women golfers to play in Ohio
The Kansas women's golf team will compete tomorrow and Sunday in the Lady Buckeye Invitational at Columbus, Ohio. It will be the team's last tournament before the Big Eight Conference championships April 27-28.
Coach Kent Weiser said the Jayhawks would face 12 teams, mostly in the Big Ten Conference, including ninth-ranked Indiana.
Weiser said the team was not able to practice earlier this week because of rainy weather, but said they were able to catch up on their homework.
"We are still feeling good about our third-place finish last weekend," Weiser said. "I think it will help us out this weekend."
Kansas competed April 11 and 12 in the University of Missouri Invitational. Susan Pekar won the individual championship.
The Kansas baseball team's game against Washburn was rained out yesterday in Topeka. It was the fourth game called this week because of rain.
The Jayhawks' next games are tomorrow at Quigley Field against No. 1-ranked Oklahoma State, which enters the weekend games with a 36-3 record overall and 4-1 in the Big Eight Conference.
Kansas' overall record is 11-23-1, and 1-11 in the Big Eight.
KU crew to compete in Topeka
The Kansas Crew will compete in the Sunflower State Championship tomorrow at Lake Shawnee in Tooneka
Kansas State, Wichita State, Washburn University and the Topeka Rowing Association also will compete. Kansas will try to defeat Kansas State, which has beaten the Jawhavas twice this season.
Sunday Evening ...
Worship
5:30 p.m.
From staff and wire reports.
1204 Oread (one block north of the Kansas Union)
Sponsored by
ECOUNCIL OF CHURCHINES
The United Methodist Church
The Presbyterian Church (USA)
The United Church of Christ
The Roman Catholic Church
Pier1 imports
A Place To Discover.
738 Massachusetts
Hours
Mon.-Sat. 9:30-5:30
Thurs. 9:30-8:30
Sun. 1-5
NATURAL WAY
Natural Fiber Clothing
820 Mass. 841-0100
en hur
UFS
UNIVERSITY FILM SOCIETY
7:00 April 17, 2:30 &
7:00 April 18.
$2.00
All UFS films are shown in Downs Auditorium in Dyche Hall ********************
Wishing you an Easter filled with Joy . .
Orthodox Christians on Campus
NOW OPEN!
3000 W. 15th St.
843-7456
Joe Suggs, Manager
Apple
GOLF CLUB
Sigma Delta Tau Presents Fraternity Men of KU ..1987-88 school year calendar
come vote for your favorite Calendar Man!
when: April 15-17 where: Wescoe Beach
25 $ ^{c} $ per VOTE
All proceeds go to National Prevention of Child Abuse
ClassifiedAds
ANNOUNCEMENTS
University Community Service Scholarship
Award application deadline is 5 p.m. Monday,
April 20 at the SUA Office, 864-3477, fourth floor of
the Kansas University.
Richard Rhodes, author of The Making of The Fire and the Firebrand, Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont Free; Sponsors, KU Coalition for Justice and Peace; Lawrence Coalition for Justice and Peace.
HILLEL
הלה
Hillel House 940 Mississippi
Sunday, April 19
Passover Brunch
The University Daily Kansan is now accepting applications for the 1987 Fall semester business and news staffs. These are paid positions but do not require newspaper experience.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KANSAN STAFF POSITIONS
LEAIN TO FLY- Get 4-7 hrs KU. Credit.
LEAIN TO FLY- 61 lowest rates around
EzoneFlight 841-FLY-841
WEIGHT LOSS PROGRAM Lose 10.20 lbs in 30
minutes. (Sale Price: $54.99)
D. Must order. Call Gerl. (617) 875-9427
Application forms are available in rooms 119 (Kansan Business Office) and 200 (Journalism Office) Stauffer Flint Hall. News staff applications are due in room 200 by 5 p.m., Wednesday, April 15. Business staff applications are due in room 200 by 5 p.m., Friday, April 17. If you have any questions, please stop by the Kansan Business Office, 119 StauFFER-Flint Hall.
The Kansan is an Equal Opportunity / Affirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry.
IS MASSAGE BETTER THEN PIZZA? Find
try. steam & massage from Lawrence
Massage Therapy and R-E-A-L N Student rates
on call. Call 001-434-7892 the anchovies!
ENTERTAINMENT
Your Requests Lawrence's Best and Most Affordable D. 1 Sound and Light for Any Vacancy
Have the Hottest Party in Town. Rent A Hot Tub. Call Tu-to Go. 841-2691.
LIBERTY HALL
SOLENTG WILD R
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WILD R
7:15 & 9:30
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Sat. Matinees
@ 2:45 & 5:00
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642 Mass. 748-1812
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battery! DJ EXtradiante, Dances, Dances,
Parties, Probs. Booking graduation parties now.
Hot Stops for Maximum Party! 814-703-8615
FOR RENT
HR for rent. Desirable location and price. Amenities. Call 841-8091 (John).
clean studio with air conditioning located close to campus. Water and electricity paid. Available May 1, $250/month. Call 749-2193 or 841-3845 between 6:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m.
1-3 bedroom luxury apartments now leasing for
buyers. Call us at 827-2405; 6:00 AM or 8:42 PM at 842-3813.
- idtm Townhouse for summer-special rate,
680 W. 14th St., tennis, tmts. K-U-Bus-
Call 453-979 between a and b
- story, 3 bedroom older home in good condition,
near downtown and bus stop. $380/month plus
utilities. 12 month lease and $300 deposit require.
Excellent for group of 3 mature students. No pets.
3 Bedroom Apartment Summer Sublease 2
bath, dishwasher, spacious. Close to campus
school.
4-Bdrm, 2 full bath, large kitchen, living room.
Brand new furnished apartment. Sublease summary.
Mastercraft Campus Place, Next to Yelp.
Soil (Charent) 841-376
4 Bedroom house near K U. Available mid-May or June 1. Hardwood floors, lots of windows. W.D.
8 Bedrooms, 3 Bathrooms. Adjacent to campus.
No pets. Call 842-8971.
Terrace Apartments, 1607 W. 9th. 1 Bedroom for summer; June and July only $190 unfurnished,
furnished $205, plus all utilities $190 unfurnished,
furnished $200, plus all utilities $240 unfurnished,
furnished $200, plus all utilities. 1 Bedroom for fall, 10 month lease. August-1 June: 1 furnished
$200 unfurnished, plus all utilities. 1 furnished
$200 unfurnished or fall. August-1 June: 1,$30 furnished
$200 unfurnished, plus all utilities. Central air, on bus route, large rooms, gas heat. Come at Apex at 843-1433, W. 9th or 841-3200. No call power #843-1433.
Apartment for Sublease. Furnished. Utilities paid, $260/month. 14th and 74th. 749-$353. Perfect
Aspen West new leasing for Summer. Energy effi-
cent, 1 and 2 bedrooms. 3 Blocks west of Iowa on
15th. Private patio/decks, ceiling fans, no pets.
$460-$840 month. 749-1288. Open house Saturday.
Fine location on bedroom basement studio aparmentTA, equipped kitchen. Low utilities. Available June 1, $175 at 1801 Mississippi Call 842-4242
BEAUTIFUL Townehouse for summer sublease.
Great for 2, 3, or 4' Terrific kitchen with microwave and dishwasher. 2 bedroom with patio and beautiful yard. Call 841-6925 NOW!
For Rent: Bedroom in Private home, males preferred. 843-2004
Get it while it's hot! 1 Bedroom Apt. Summer
campus and campus downtown. Call
1-841-760-9233.
Furnished, spacious one-bedroom apartment available from 5/11/17 through 8/29/17 for $900 plus electricity. Nive area; walking distance to campgrounds known. Call 843-747-6324 or info. "career information."
GREAT SUMMER RATES SPECIAL incentives,
Saturday, June 13th to July 10th, OTC Special
Pinecrest Apts., 749-202
HARDWOOD FLOORS. A C. c. to campus; furnished, one bedroom apartment available for rent at 200-300 E. 94th St.
HEY LOOK AT THIS THRUS 1 new B 1brm. Apt for summer aulder. Close to campau D. W. A C
Have a duplex adventure this summer! Need space? Locate a suite. Rent location. Call 841-5098
Help. Need summer subdue for beautiful 3 hdr
golf course. Graduating, make will deals!
Please.
I'll pay you $12 to sublease Westill furnished 1
home in New York with favorable A/C option.
Baconty $200,000 - 841-752-6340
HOT Summer Sublease; nice, four bedroom,
fifth and 2nd Louisiana. Available mid May
$600 or early June $900.
Houses, Bedroom Apartments, Sleeping Rooms,
Available June 1st; 3-bedroom rooms 1.2 and
3-bedroom apartments; and, sleeping rooms;
Near campus, No pets. Call 842-8971.
Large I-18drm, Furnished, 1128 Teen, 875 plus
640-300, or 941-848, other utilities 749-789,
864-300, or 941-848
Large three bedroom apartment, close to campus and downstairs for summer sublease. Available May 15. Free rent through May $335.00/month.
Call 845-7631 or 841-3271
Need to Subleave: 2 bedroom, close to campus ap. june to Aug. 350 per month 794-5441
Must Sublease for summer. Available mid May;
2 Bdrm apartment in house. Large Kitchen,
Bath, and Living room. Partially furnished.
$230/month plus utilities. 749-838.
Need to subsitute Apple Place Studio apartment for the summer. Available May 1 or Sep 10, Tuesday through Friday ON CAMPUS APARTMENT for summer. Negotiable rent. low utilities B4-84722.
One Dbrm apt. for, Summer Sublease. Nice Apts.
Bfally furnished, dishwasher, etc. Rent negotiable. Tanglewood, 10th & Arkansas.
943-2391.
one bedroom $223.00 New. Quit 864-940-1400
message for Cindy, or 78-528-1400 (keep
late).
One male graduate student for attractive, quiet, turbulent students. Utilizes 290% tuition Vermont; 841-1200.
Reserve your room now! For summer and/or fall Furnished with most utilities paid. Shared cooking and bath facilities. Just 2 short blocks from the kitchen, off of street parking. No pets. 841-5500.
Reserve your apartment now! Just 2 short blocks from university, 1, 2 and 4 bedroom apartments. Furnished with some utilities paid and off street parking. Nets: 814-5500.
Share Rent, utilities, and duties. Nice house,
room. Available summer and/or fall. 749-513-8060.
Available summer and/or fall. 749-513-8060.
Room for rent in nice, clean. W O L. apartment.
Room has wood floors, private / 2 bath, entrance
and phone ext. Female vegetarian private
room. In the 1968-68 academic year in the Christian living community
"Komenna" at Ecumenical Church Ministries.
For information come to 1042 Oread or call
or rHG GRADS to Weitaa duplex for rent. 3 BR, 1/2 bath, bath appliances, close to park, centrally located, excellent condition. $475. Available June 1. Call 316-682-3679
Spacious Peppertree 2BR, 2 bath.
684 sq. ft. buses Bus Rt. Sublease for
4800 sq.ft.
Studio available for summer in super ap, tech,
great maintenance, recreation facilities and
laundry available. I will assume part of expenses.
Call 842-9967 after 6:30 p.m.
SUMMER SCHOOL SCHOL. 0 NO CAR? 2 bdr available.
PRESENTED by: Neeg regg
threshold ail, eval. May 84,7929 Kelly
SUMMER SUPLEASE extra clean, furnished,
sunroom. A welcoming angloweek Apartments.
Call 749-3073 anytime.
SUMMER SUBLEASE: Need two non-smoking
female to sublease Trailridge townhouse. Call
(212) 650-3978.
SUMMER SUBLEASE: 3 berm alp; 2 full baths,
close to campus $85 plus utilities Tanglewood,
10 and Arkansas. Call 749-194 if interested.
SUMMER SUBLEASE Mails Apts May-Aug 1
One Bedroom B4 84517
MADI 041012 SAFE 34906, Super two bedrooms
SUMMER SULEASE. Spacious two bedroom,
Mala Apts. HALF OFF first month's rent.
Hallway.
SUMMER SUBLASEE Very nice, new
STREET SUBLASEE Very nice, new
street off parking NEGOTIABLE Available
street off parking NEGOTIABLE Available
SUMMER SUBLEASE Sunrise Place
Cameron Call 845-349-2414 or 849-747-0314
Cameron Call 845-349-2414 or 849-747-0314
MASTERCRAFT
Completely furnished
apartments--all near KU!
Consider:
* Custom furnishings
* Energy efficient
* Affordable rates
* Variety of floorplans
* Designed for privacy
* Many great locations
* Professional management
Call of stop by CAMPUS PLACE—1145 Louisiana
HANOVER PLACE—14th & Mass.
841-1212
SUNDANCE—7th & Florida
841-5255
TANGLEWOOD -10th & Arkansas
749-2415
OPEN DAILY 1-5
SUNRISE PLACE SUMMER APT SUBLEASE 2 bedroom, 1 bathroom, Pool. Laundry facilities. $400 negotiable. call 749-7411
Sub-Lease for summer. Sunrise Terrace 3 bedroom, 1 bathroom, pool. $400 negotiable. call 749-7411
Sublease for summer, state at Hanover Place.
Call 749-7441
University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 17, 1987
15
IF YOU LIKE SPACE AND QUIET
WE HAVE IT AND YOU
CAN STILL WALK TO CAMPUS
Spacious 2 bedroom
Laundry facilities
Waterbed fine
Swimming pool
10-12 month leases
VILLAGE SQUARE
9th & Avalon
842-3040
Sublease for summer. Furished 2 bedrooms, full kitchen. Campus, near open harps in summer. Call 814-438-8500.
Sublase luxury 2 BR apt. 2 bath, FW Pat, Wet Bar, Pato, Swimming Pool, Tennis Court at Pepper tree Park, on bus route, rent negotiable, Call 749-485 (after 3 p.m.)
Sublease 4 bedroom, spacious, excellent location (next to Yelow Sub). Call 841-3897
Sub-lease, May 18: One bedroom with loft, fully furnished, watered, paid 841.593
Sublease 2 bdm duplex. Available June 1st. Close to campus. $355. mca. Call 814-2400 eavens
Sublease for Summer Furnished one BR with Left used as second HR, $35 plus electricity
housecare Trilagrid 3 bedroom, 2/12 bath
townhouse. Available mid-May, option to lease
next fall. One large bedroom with own bathroom
bathroom. Sport club facilities. $489 call
719-4384.
Summer Submarine 2 Bdr. Apt. near downtown.
Low utilities. Spacious $72.50. Call 814-7597.
Summer Submarine. near campus, great for summer
possible reductions. Call 814-7341 after 3:00 p.m.
*summer Sublease* One bedroom luxury apartment have/canier/微波器, access to kitchen/bathroom, laundry room.
EDDINGHAM PLACE
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
AT AN AFFORDABLE
* 10 or 12 month contract
* Swimming pool
* Free Showtime satellite T.V.
* Exercise Weightroom
* Laundry room
* Fire place
* Energy efficient
* On-Site Management
Ocean Drive 900
Open Daily 3:00-5:00
Saturday 9:00-12:00
841-5444
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Management, Inc
--previously furnished, starting availability May or June option through July. Low rent plus possible lease income is required. Refunds may be available.
Summer Sublace form nice three ridge style range.
**room suitees:** Need one or two females for 3 bedroom apartment, completely furnished, $16 a month, 1/3 months; close to campus. Call 749-2728. **water services:** For Fall 2 dAC. AC gas, water paid. $225, 749-1831.
Summer Sublease: three or four person furnished
apartment adjacent to campus. Available May 18.
Summer Sublease 2 bdmr townhouse, 2 baths,
muni bus,跑车, dishwasher, available May Mid
100.304.1956
Summer Sublease: 3 bedroom, close to campus;
rent very negotiable. Call 843-1701.
Summer Sublasee nice 2 br. fully furnished
Tangland, WA & utilities Close to campa-
tion, Tanglandwood, 841-7998
Summer Sublime. Furnished. 3 bdram at. 2 full
bedrooms to campus, low utilities. Mid-May
Call 641-596-8160
Summer Sublease-Nice, roomy, BR, A/C, 120 sq ft. Free Shipping. Last 1/2 of May free. 749-253 (late if necessary). Summer Sublease: Furnished Studio, close to campus and downtown. Rentable Call.
Summer Sublease. Studio Apt. All utilities paid,
8th and 10th, $225. Call 749-3581.
Summer Sublease-Harvard Square, 2 bedrooms,
1.5 bathrooms, pool, pool, closet to campus
$89 monthly; 749-343
Summer sublease. 2 bd. furnished. Close to campus. 841-9392
Summer subset: 1 birm apartement next to cam-
munity hall, 15 May 1988. Allow age 15. Low
wage. After 14, allow 182-6988.
Summer sublease to females: 3 bdm furnished apt. 1.12 / blocks from campus. Call 841-7504
Summer sublease. 3 bedroom Ap2. 2 bath. completely furnished available starting May or June
passage through upstairs. Low rent plus reassurance
through upstairs. High rent plus assurance.
Sunrise Place Townhouse avail for summer
rentals in the South Side of Chicago.
sublease 2 bfrs 1/2 baths basement.
Sublease 3 bfrs, Mt. and claid included. Will negotiate on rent if applicable.
Location
Located among 70 acres of rolling hills and trees, you'll enjoy the convenience of being close to campus and area shopping.
Lifestyle
Meadowbrook offers a selection of spacious and comfortable studios, 1,2, or 3 bedroom apartments, and townhouses to fit your lifestyle
RESERVE YOUR
UNIT NOW...
FOR SUMMER OR FALL!
meadowbrook
super large room in house to sublease for summer $100 month, utilities paid. Close to campus. Vasher.dryer. Ask for Trent at 841-6712 of the bill incurred. studio sublease
Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the amenities of Naismith Hall. Applications for fall semester are now being accepted while space remains
AMENITIES
Top of the hill location, studio summer sublease,
to rent to rent; call 841-1790.
NAISMITHHALL™
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
544-743-5590
FOR SALE
14 x 6 Mobile Home, 2 bedroom, remodeled, carpet, fitted yard, Partial owner financing
1981 Honda CB 75 Model. Custom, excellent condition, low mileage, with extract. Call Rick 842-7713, Jim Cline at 800-646-3221.
1882 Yamaha Seat 400 New, with only one owner,
1,400 miles. Excellent collumn with 1Vetter
with camera.
2 RCKENBACKERS 1 Collectors 12 string 1
3 Serious Buyers only, John 8451756 or
8452100.
71 VW Beetle, good body, newly rebuilt engine,
* transportation* 9900; Jason 834-4842.
ALB Wright SALE April 17th through 18th, 1131 Vermont. Graduating seniors selling everything: furniture, stereo, motorcycle, musical equipment, free music and fun.
Biancio Sport. 180 speed. Blue Alloy Wheels.
Great Condition. Must Sell. John. 843-6431.
Brand New Mountain Bike. Black Fuji Bivl XC
Barely reden, Great Bike. Good Price. 842-1824.
Computer Disk Selell: Certified Guaranteed. 5
17.45. White Background. 842-6949. 8:25 a.m., 6:9 p.m.
Cusinart Food Processor $75 JC Penney microwave麦克尺$75 Smith Corona electric typewriter $100 T199 Computer, games.joystick $84, 832-785 eyes.
For Scale Hexa Tres Exponentialo micoctyl E-cellulat
Coal Sae Hexa Tres Exponentialo micoctyl E-cellulat
For sale: 10 speed. Used occasionally, recreational purposes only. Good condition, $53. Call
Fuji 3-4ad bicycle with Fenders and folding baskets. Great Campus hike in perfect condition!
PC/XT Compatible, 64K, monochrome graphics, monochrome monitor, 1200 Rand modem, 3 button mouse, turbo, 2 drives, 5 month warranty, 8500, 842-1349 after 6 p.m.
IBM PC/T compatible, includes monochrome
monitor, keyboard, 3.5" monitor, or
motherboard with 312K i Foppy drive,
or 640K i Dell Drive.
MAX'S COMICS Comic Books. Playbys. Penhouch,
etc. 811 New Hampshire.
*** MOTHBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
Friday 10:5.30 p.m in
10:4.20 p.m. 312 Eau
City
Music Man Sting Ray Bass w/ Hard Shell Case
$590. Brick Conduit at 843-5237
Musician 121-GS Speaker cabinet. Sounds great. Steve. 842-2419
must set 1855 BMW K100RT Warranty till 10/88.
New Pirrelli Phantoms Tail, Shield Heated
Gryps. Reynolds Rack with trunk Cornbat seat.
Motors with $295.00. Make offer.
452-3144. Leave message
Must sell Infiniti转身 $130. Soumure receive BIN, Marzetti turnables $490. Total $250
FREE.
NAD 3155 integrated $225, Carver M-500
3155, Call Mark 7499, channel 2, phone
500, Call Mark 7499, channel 2, phone
Never Used. Fanatic 101 Sailboard 12 x
lift. Northern Salt. N sailboard 000 or less
for. 749-5483
NOTES now available for variety of classes.
Enhance learning and grading.
Provide additional resources here to Help.
Rickenbacher bass black 4001. Excellent Condition.
750.00 O.B Drafting Board. Professional
Songwriter.
Sailboat for Sale: 2017 Olympic Class Flying Dutchman. Good Condition. Light Weight and Fast. Asking 900.00 or best offer. Call evenings, 749-305.
TUXEDOS: After Six formal wear TUXEDOS
are needed. We have a set of dresses with pants, vest, or cumberbant, tie-blossom expensive to own than to rent. Come to Everything
LTD. at 260 W. 34th St. for a special spring floral! TUXEDOS; we have your
fashion needs!
1974 VW Superbeetle. Runs Good, Yellow,
Sunroof, 5000 miles. Must sell. 600; Call Shau.
1973 BMW M3. Runs Good, Yellow. Sunroof,
5000 miles. Must sell. 600; Call Shau.
AUTO SALES
1974 WV Beetle with new tires. Great college car, Must sell 749-501 or 841-121. Also nice motorcycle.
Stereo speakers Omega 50 2-way speakers plus Alphasonic subwoofer 100W capacity. 842-7679
179 Valve 142. Good condition. Very dependable.
120.00 ml. Available from July, 1.000. Call
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterskiing, gymnastics, rifney, archery, terning, tennis, basketball, or Riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance, Salary $100 or more plus RB. Marc Sears, 1765 Male, NFd.
1979 Chevette 4 speed. Standard. New batteries and alternate. Some needs. clutch. $80. Phone
For Sale: VW Super Beetle Convertible 1977
White with white top. B42-8659
Moving to California—must sell 1979 Mazda GLC Hatchback, 5-speed, aerodic, mpg, reliable, fuel-efficient. Call 800-234-6000.
LOST 1. $q$ gift rips, one with band of diamond
LOST 2. $q$ gift rips, one with band of diamond
please contact Suzanne at 843-7674. Reward
please contact Suzanne at 843-7674. Reward
LOST: 1982 Class Ring in Women's Restroom in Lindley Hall. Call 749-141. Please keep trying.
HELP WANTED
Lost: Large gold Notre Dame de sion class ring.
Call Jan at 864-2108.
68 Chevy Impal. Very Reliable, good looking car.
Tiny amount of rust. $700 toge. Tony 943-2580.
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
Strong: Porchite Design. Sunglasses in front. 317
Long: Can identify, no questions asked. 585-3315.
COULD YOU BE A BOSTON NINTHAN? We have
workers. One year commitment, excellent salary,
bounds, benefit trip transport管理, Mrs. Fish.
Rd., Brookline, MA 02167-566-4924
MA 02167-566-4924
Freshmen & Sophomores:
Summer Job Opportunities available
for freshmen. Apply by June 1.
gather to be a Marine! Earn both
$1,300 and $2,100. Mail resume
to HR@UCFSA.BC.Boston.edu (B211)
collect.
LOST on 4/11/87. Men's Seiko watch, reward. Call Steve at 842-4790.
AIRLINES CRUISINELS HIRING! Summer Career! Good Pay. Travel. Call for Guide, Cassette, Newsletter! (916) 944-4444 Exit 153 Are you good with children? Would you like to be paid to live with a California family and help with a business? Parking Ave. 219, Menlo Park, CA 91803 (412) 933-1234
Artist Needed for Next Semester: Graphics Design
and Illustration. Please call 842 7538 and ask for
Joe Kravitz.
*******
DAY TELEPHONE Sales needed in our office.
Call between 8:35 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Ask for Denis, 79-3951.
*
nursesestresses Needed Part-time weekends
Apply in person. Just A Playhouse, 896 W. 24th
(behind McDonald's) 7:10 p.m. Wed-Sat.
FREE ROOM AND BOARD. Johnson County's
RESTRICTED ASSISTANT to work within a
RESTRICTED ASSISTANT to work within a
OVERLAND PARK, KANSAS. Will provide assistance in emergency situations when no full time staff is available. This is a sleepout at the campus for five days. Requires high school diploma and exp.
EVENINGS OR SATURDAY Telephone Sales in
Cleveland, OH. Call 614-259-7382.
Call between 8:55 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Ask for K82-7982.
pension is room and board seven days a week plus $7.25 per hour if the clients need assistance during the night. To apply, send resume or apply online to the Admissions Department, Santa Pae Suite 298, Oatmeal, KS 63018. EOE M-F 8:30-10:00.
preparing for Spring and Summer work. If accepted, you will earn 8.10 hours. Some evening work is also required, and some flexibility is allowed during final examinations, quality, corporate scholarships are awarded, internships are possible, and you may earn 9.25 hours of full-time work is available. Call (013) 345-897-6111.
GVERMENEN JOB'S. $1,940-$2,535/yr. Now
$0,557-807. 857-807 for current
customer
Godfather's Pizza now hiring delivery drivers. Must be 18 years of age and have a good driving record. Dependable car also required. Position requires one hour per plane commission. Apply in person at 237 5th Avenue, Attn: Mary J. Hall, 401-672-2222.
star & Grill taking applications for sharp, energetic bartenders and cocktail waitresses. Evening shifts. Experience prefer 9:30, 9:35, Eldridge Hotel, 7th & Massachusetts.
Join our "Nainy Network" of over 500 placed by us in CT, NY, NJ, and Boston. One year commitment in exchange for top salary, benefits, room, board, meals, training, and your satisfaction. Many families for you to choose. From Contact Helping Hands, Inc at 203-848-1742, or www.nainynetwork.com. NBC Today Show & Hour Magazine.
NATIVE SPEAKERS of Greek, Italian, Korean,
Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, and Vietnamese
with understanding of English Call Steve,
749-4755, evenings.
NANNY POSITIONS AVAILABLE: Good salary.
Nanny Families Dallas, Texas. Call 9:39 m. (214) 870-6550.
Naisim Hall is taking applications for a full time cook position. Schedule is Tuesday-Saturday, early shift. If interested step in Naisim's Lobby and fill out an application.
Need
money for school?
flexible work hours?
excellent wages?
cash bonuses?
incentives?
Relaxed atmosphere?
penning-Weekend hours?
o Experience required?
Wanted Nanny/Mother's Helper, female, in affluent Northern New Jersey town, close to NCY Must be pleasant, good with children, energetic. Must have a diploma from an equiv. good pay Summer or permanent. (201) 803-7955. good pay
We've got it all!
Call today.
841-1200
E. O.E.M/F/H
Syracuse-based New York City area caring for a year or summer of children in the New York City area caring for children. We're looking for responsible individuals to become a loving, well paid member of our family. (516) 478-4456, Nanny, Inc., (914) 478-4456, 8 Jordan Road, Hastings on Hudson, N.Y. *N.Y. 10706* for more
ENTERTEL
Part-time food service positions available now. If interested, EOE application at Nasslath Hall MEMORIAL OFFICE (MAG) 460-827-9355.
CALIFORNIA DREAMIN?
SUBSIDIARY OF ENTERTAINMENT PUBLICATIONS INC
Part time advertising sales representative needed in Lawrence for small weekly newspaper clientele.
SUMMER JOBS A new fifteen dance club is opening in Lenox. New hire cocktail waitresses and bartenders WIL train. Apply in Appleton, 9 M.S. at J. I. T. Hoots, 7800 Quaver Rd. Lenox. Labeled
NANNIES · Needed on west coast. Established midwest firm with excellent reputation arranges your placement. We screen families in their homes. Licenced, No Fee, Minimum stay 1 year. Call or Write:
MISCELLANEOUS
SEARCH EXTENDED: School of Education seeks DORMITORY SUPERVISOR (1) coordinate dorm staff and live in dorm. Degree and experience with secondary students required. Req. Master's degree or supervise high school students. Degree preferred. DEADLINE: April 20, 1987. 5:00 p.m. Complete application. Attend BAiley Hall. Send letter of application, current resume and names of references to: Mrs. Nettie C. Hart, Director, Upward Bound, 484 Bally Hall, Lawrence, Kansas, 6983 (912) 8405 EOA AA
Summer Jol-College Girl: an occupation for seven year old girl. Own transportation needed. Hours 7:15 a.m.-5:48 p.m. M-F. References required. 6 p.m. weekday or on holidays. 814-8441.
SUNWELLER
TRAVEL
SERVICE
704 MASS.
843 4090
ARCHER DAWSON AGENCY
OMAHA, NEBRASKA 68104
(402) 554-1103
PEOPLE NEEDED IMMEDIATELY for light delivery. Must have own transportation.
ZZZZZZ TIRED OF MAKING LESS THAN
SWITZERLAND. The company is looking for students who are: seriously looking for a good summer job, hard working, willing to set $3000 per thissummer salary.
XMCA Camp Gravoy in beautiful Lake of the Oarsks now hiring summer staff. Desire for excellence, but no experience necessary. Call (816) 254-9627-Keith Miller
CHICAGO-BRUSSELS
$469 Round trip
Departure from the 11
Space is limited!
Call today for details.
SPECIAL YOUTH FARE
(Age 12-25)
Summer softball men's division D team seeks players to play hard and play ball in Overland Park.
PERSONAL
dog food anymore! Thanks for bein' the best big dog!
Love & Kisses, Susan & Ann.
Chris C. : WHERE can I find you?-Ial 120.
Happy 23rd Grubby
Keven "Hunter" M., m 6th Floor JRJ D. Mess with girls Lewis' girls; Laws the Exotic Beauties. Mary Lynn You're just too good to be true. Can't take my eyes off you of.
see me we've save and to return an that you have given. I forgive me. I forgive you. George
Frank- Happy 19th Birthday! I love you "this"
rush!
Dearest MONSTER;
with many more to come. I hope you stay.
Where's the time gone?
Remember the airport, the Toyota, Sean's dinner, the tunnel (I still have to get one for my room!)) the walk in the park and HILANDER?
Just a few good times —
All my love KANSAS
NEEDED Two Fabulous looking babies with obeys, a sense of humor to go to the Connections, and personalities that make personalities to get dates, though nobody understands why, particularly us. Call Jay at 800-275-4191.
Puppy, I can't believe us! But I believe in you.
Don't worry about me. Never say goodbye. Love,
your kitten
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
MICHELE S.!!!
LOVE.
Tempiin Pres. Chet. you're strange. You you babies bake (including Kate who likes it) or eat it.
MICH, DEB, LENNY,
NANCY, AUD, AND JULES
BUS. PERSONAL
Be creative in gift gifting. Fulfil your fantasies with beautiful Beautiful Fortress for all occasions. Call us 1-800-749-3235.
Furniture Barn, 1811 W. 6th Street. Just arrived
incision-sectioned with corner table $6.00. Mattres
sets $4.00 each. Dini setting at $4.00 at $4.00.
$7.00 used sofa $4.00. Vibrating recliner $2.50.
NE Corner of 23rd & Iowa, 841-4294
Bloom Co. & Farside T-Shirts
Fantasy Games
THE COMIC CORNER
HEADACHE, BACKACHE, ARM PAIN, LEG PAINT Student and most insurance accepted. For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark Johnson 843-9379.
1000 s of Miniatures & Modules
Spring-Cleaning Sale Now
Lots of items for Half Price or Less
GLEXIENTBAN Wakes for KS/MO/info. PER-
GER 94012871 Mailed discreetly (confidential)
94012871 Mailed discreetly (confidential)
Most reasonable rates in town for all your photo sessions. Call Photo Plus and portfolio interviews. Call Photo Plus.
GREENS PARTY SUPPLY
808 W.23rd
Weekly Beer Specials
Need music for your wedding? Call Jean, 843-3704.
Gives piano and voice lessons over summer.
Busch 12 pk. $4.26
Coors Light 12pk. $5.37
Coors Extra Gold 12pk. $5.37
Lowenbrau 6 pk. $3.10
Old Style 12pk. $4.12
Weidemann 12pk. $3.49
Don't Forget!
Sell books back.
See Advisor
April 15-21
Maupintour
Plane
Tickets
Home
Rare and Used Records. Buy, Sell, or Trade
Quantrill's 811 New Hampshire.
Check TODAY for the best prices and the lowest fares.
KU Union/831 Mass.
749-0700
SERVICES OFFERED
N4 Konnection, 300 Elm, North Lawrence,
492-843. Tuesday-Saturday to 9 o'6. evenings by appointment. Hair styles done your way. Through April and May; 8 cuts and sets, $3 perms.
AUTO-TINTING: Best scratch resistant solar film available. Lifetime warranty. PROTINT of
CRISIMON SUN PHOTO is looking for young
adults in need of a clean, professional
focal, 15% off direct cost. No set fees Call
(304) 879-2600.
*Graduate and undergraduates, money for college is available. Contact College Scholarship Sources, (913) 764-0299 or 1-800-USA-1221 Ext. 7079.*
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided 841-7749
Bike Repair
John sings messages! $20. 841-1874 or 841-1290
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ektachrome processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W service for all of our 360° Art 4 Design Building. Room 208. 844-1476
Gransport Bicycle
7th & Arkansas 843-3328
Cycling
MUSIC!!!!!!! MUSIC!!!!!!! MUSIC!!! MUSIC!
Modern Music Party. Maximum Audio Wizardry.
Modern Music Party. Maximum Audio Wizardry.
MATH TUFOR since 1976, M.A., $/hr (cours
when 1969 $/hr / 1843-9027)
PRIVATE OFFICE Obj-Gyn and Arbor Services
Overland Park...913(49) 4678
Seamstress. All ladies' dresses can be made here in town. You choose your favorite designs or styles from the latest fashion magazines, I will make them for you. Call Sue, 814-349
- D.W.I.'s & Traffic
- Fake I.D.'s & other criminal offences
- Family Law & other legal problem
DONALD G. STROLE
Attorney at Law
16 East 13th St. 842-1133
1-1-1 TRIO Word processing. Responsible. Consistent. Reliable. Call 842-3119 for service.
24-Hour Typing. 13th semester in Lawrence University, resumes, dissertations, papers. Close to campus.
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-2316.
TYPING
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate
datasheet type, word processing,
dictionary.
A1. professional typing. Term papers, Theses.
B2. Professional typing. Reasonable IBM
Electronic Typewriter 84-1246
A-2 Word processing Service. Quality resumes, papers, disasters, Reasonable rates. File submission.
Absolutely Fast Typing and Dependable and easy to use. 24-hour availability. 849-750-3641 or 849-750-3640 a.m. p.m. and s.p. at 749-750-364 after p.m. Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard Medical school secretary. Call Mrs. Nancy Mintz.
Accurate Word Processing Meadowbrook location
experience Call 749-1961 EVENINGS
GOOD IMPRESSIONS Typing/Word Process-
tion Repairs spelled correctly 841-429
Resumes spelling corrected. 841-429
Experienced Typeist: Dissertations; theses, term papers; etc. Reasonable Call. Cases 842-3203.
Experienced typist - theses, dissertations, term
842 3210 at 16:58 p.m. | M or F/Sal or SUN
www.uni-berlin.de
Dependable, professional, experienced.
Dependable, professional, experienced.
TRANSCRIPT also: standard tape. 943-8877
DISSERTATIONS. THESES. LAW
PAPERS. Mommy typing is in Australia but
you can type on a computer.
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, maps, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter
quality printing, spelled correct. 842-2742.
GUARANTEED PENFECT typing done on word call. Located near Lawrence Hospital. Call response
**Service Service-laserwritten 10-copies ONLY**
$29.95-2193 15 p.m.
Quality typing; excellent editing, grammar.
Quality proofreading; proofreading; return.
Pickup, delivery available 845-0247
Telephone: (612) 398-1447
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional work processing; manuscripts, resumes, letters, thesis
KU SECRETARY. Typing and word processing,
fastest, affordable, fast. Spelling corrected,
letter quality. Pickup on campus. Monica 841-8246.
Evenings-weekends.
ACT. NOW, Papers $1.50/pp. Resumes $15.
18WEIGHT I LIFEFE 346-369
Smart Word Processing includes editing and spelling.
Includes reasonable rates. Foster, 749-2740
10 a.m., 7 p.m.
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition,
drafting, proofreading, dissertations, papers, letters, applications.
Use a variety of editing and proofreading tools.
. *ping*, very reasonable rates, will also assist with spelling punctuation and form. B41 862-3629 Word Processing, proofreading, spell checking, NLQ printing. Reasonable. B42 1940.
WANTED
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
BABYSTATWATER wanted in my home for 2 young
women W-F-watches beginning early May
841-436-105
Non-smoking, responsible female roommate for summer and/or fall semester. Own room with 1/2 bath attached, microwave, washer/dryer. Must be vaccinated against UTILS. Call 780-3590 or 824-6466 for Sandy
Needed: Summer roommate for a very nicely full
room, with 1400+ beds, 5 pools, and
1800+ beds/1/2 sleeper. 740 sq ft.
Roommate Wanted: 1 for 2 summer or for next year; per person get TWO bedrooms upfront. Only apply if you are looking for a job.
Need Roommate to share two bedrooms ap$134
Bed 12 utilities on bus route. Call Martin.
Martin's roommate.
People to Join the Fun with SUA's Canoe Trip. Down the Kau. 864-3475 For Info
RELIABLE female GTA wants to HOUSESIT this summer. Claudia, 754-756 (evening)
ROOMMATE WANTED-FALL 1887 Need 2 people to share a 4 BATH, W/D, bus route or walk to Nairn, WA. Travel 21st & Nairn, pets allowed, $143.50 month plus 14 usages. 79-753, keepying
commute must to share large 2 BR apt.
Available June 1st, 1987 for summer and school year 97-88. 6th Street location, Laudry facilities, 8th Avenue Rent plus 1/2 deposit and payment.
SPANISH TRANSLATOR WANTED NOW-Easy
money. Work on own time. Top Pay, Call,
Leave Job.
Wanted: Female roommate, nonsmoker, for Fall
roomshare to share three bedroom apartm
842-265-999
Wanted: graphic artist to paint menu. Will pay
$125.00. Call Chris 841-1060.
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---
16
Friday, April 17, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Student to run to raise funds KU senior to run marathon for older brother
By JERRI NIEBAUM
Staff writer
A KU student will run the marathon at the Kansas Relays this weekend because his brother can't. His 28-year-old brother has had
His 28-year-old brother has had cerebral palsy since birth.
"I played a lot of sports with him when we were little," said Mark Craig, Kansas City, Kan., senior, of his older brother, Owen. "He'll never be able to run a road race."
'Anybody in decent health could run that far if they trained properly.'
Mark Craig, Kansas City, Kan., senior, stretches out against a railing east of Wescoe Hall. Craig, whose brother has cerebral palsy, will be raising money for United Cerebral Palsy of Greater Kansas City by running in the marathon tomorrow at the Kansas Relays.
Mark Craig Kansas City, Kan.
BEST OF ALL 1985
Cerebral palsy is a movement or posture disorder caused by damage to the brain before, during or shortly after birth.
"Help beat Cerebral Palsy in the long run" is printed on the back of the shirt Mark will wear while running. He has collected more than $2,000 in donations and per-mile-pledges. He runs for Greater Kansas City.
"There are a lot of Craigs on there," Mark said as he showed a list of pledges that he had received.
Mark, 22, has been training for the race since July. It will be his first marathon. When he started training, he started raising money. He and his brother performed "The Announcement Shuffle," a rap song they wrote, at a family reunion and collected about 8800.
"I really wanted my family to get behind me." Mark said.
Owen, a Kansas City, Kan., resident, said he was proud and honored that his brother was running to help fight cerebral palsy.
"I wish I could take some part in the race." he said.
Owen said he would be with his brother when the race started at 7 a.m. in Memorial Stadium, and he said he then would follow his brother in a car.
"I really look up to him." Mark said.
Although limited use of his right arm and right leg prohibits him from running, Owen has a competitive spirit that he releases in sports he can play. Mark said the two shot players played pool, and Owen usually won.
Owen said his competitiveness had helped him deal with having cerebral palsy. He has a degree from Avilia College in Kansas City, Mo., and is a bookkeeper for an investment company.
Mark said that by getting involved in fund raising, his brother has learned about motor learning programs and sports programs available through United Cerebral Palsy in Kansas City.
"Owen's finding out that stuff is available, and he may even get involved," Mark said.
Owen will have plenty of company as he watches his younger brother run this weekend. Mark said relatives from across the United States would come to cheer him on. Another brother, Dan Craig, 27, also of Kansas City, Kan., is a runner, too.
"Dan may run the last five or six miles with me to make sure I don't die." Mark said.
Although Mark hasn't run a marathon before, he has run a half marathon and 5- and 10-kilometer
"Anybody in decent health could run that far if they trained properly." Mark said. "I'm not a natural athlete."
Mark started running about a year and a half ago after he injured his knee playing soccer.
"I wanted to try anything before surgery, so I started running," he said.
His knee is healed, and now Mark says he is addicted to running.
be named Bli Nieder Shot Put Ring.
the javelin runway will be named the Colson-Alley-Beucher Javelin Runway.
Field events
Continued from p. 9
Oerter, 50, is retired but lives and trains in Fort Myers, Fla., during the winter. He will compete in the Al Oerter discus event scheduled for tomorrow at 10:15 a.m.
The symbol of this year's Relays, which appears on posters, T-shirts and buttons, is a discus threer representing Oerter. Oerter is a four-time Olympian and won back-to-back gold medals in the 1956-68 Olympics in Melbourne, Rome, Tokyo and Mexico City.
Nieder competed with Oerter at
Oerter said he had been training year-round because he wanted to make the 1988 Olympic team and have a shot at a fifth gold.
In a recent interview, Oerter said he was competing at the Relays because he wanted to cobble a goal and win. The second gold tournament to his fourth gold tournament; to win a fifth.
two Olympic games, but in the shot put. At Melbourne in 1956, Nieder brought home a silver medal, and won the gold in Rome in 1960.
"I hate taking a day off, because I don't feel good," he said.
Nieder broke the world record twice in the shot put in 1903. Oerter broke the world record in the discus four occasions between 1962 and 1964.
Alley and Beucher also competed at the Rome Olympics in 1960 in the javelin. Alley was the 1959 and 1960 NCAA champion and Beucher finished third in 1960.
Oerter was the NCAA discus champion in 1957 and 1958. Nieder was the Big-Eight Conference shot winner in 1964, but the NCAA championship in 1965.
Colson, who will not attend tonight's ceremony, was the next Jayhawk to excel in the javelin. He finished fifth at the 1976 Olympic games in Montreal, was the NCAA javelin champion in 1973 and the Big Eight Champion from 1971-73.
Mark has cut back his running and has eaten many carbohydrates this
History
and gradually has declined since. Through the Relays' 62-year history, attendance and profits have been dependent on the weather. In 1972, the Relays made about $19,000 on a sunny day, and lost about $11,000 the next year because of rain.
S — SUMMARY — Since the first 100 athletes that competed in the first
Continued from p. 8
Relays in 1923, KU has hosted thousands of the world's best athletes. For 62 years at Memorial Stadium, the people of Kansas have watched world, U.S. and Relays records be broken. Those who watch the meet just below the campanile under sunny skies are the ones who keep this tradition alive.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details, page 2
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Monday
April 20, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 136
(USPS 650-640)
Faculty union issue may reach fall vote; pros, cons debated
By BENJAMIN HALL
Staff writer
Last month's "Human Relations Week" produced a phrase that was misinterpreted by some KU faculty members.
Organizers of the event put the words "Together we're better" on buttons that were distributed on campus. Mel Dubnick, chairman of the organization, executive Committee, brought a bag of buttons to a SenEx meeting.
Dubnick was chuckling as he dropped the bag on a table. He said, "Everyone's asking, 'Are these the union buttons?' "
Faculty union, that is.
This semester, amid talk of dwiving University financing and growing faculty discontent, the issue of how to retain faculty union came to the forefront.
Union organizers have pushed the issue far enough that KU's faculty will probably vote in the fall on whether to form a union. Their vote will depend upon decisions with University administrators and the Board of Regents.
Although the issue was brought to a head just this semester, the opportunity to form a faculty union at KU has existed since 1979, when the state's Public Employee Relations Board determined who would be included in a KU faculty bargaining unit.
The board, a five-member panel appointed by the governor, determined that the bargaining unit would include all professors, associate professors, assistant professors, acting assistant professors, instructors and lecturers who work at least half time.
The unit would also include librarians, scientists, specialists and curators who work at least half time, and full-time assistant instructors to teach at least one regularly scheduled course during the academic year.
But the unit would not include people who also carry the title of
Editor's note: This is the first story in a five-part series on the possible formation of a faculty union at the University of Kansas. Today's story focuses on the process of forming a faculty union and a summary of the debate this semester for and against the proposed union.
- Tomorrow: Union organizers of the two prominent groups dying to represent KU faculty explain their approaches
- Wednesday: How a faculty union could affect students
- Thursday: The effects a faculty union has had at Pittsburg State University.
Friday: The all-faculty forum on collective bargaining.
Faculty union issue
chancellor, dean, director, department head or department chairman. The School of Law faculty, which oversees all cases in court, also would be excluded.
In the past, the union issue never came to a vote.
But this semester, the Kansas National Education Association took a significant step toward forming a union by collecting the signatures of 30 percent of KU's 1,020 faculty members.
Tom Madden, a KNEA representative who carne to KU more than a year ago to organize a faculty union, said Friday that his group would present its signatures to the employee relations board that day.
Another group, the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors, may be very close to the required number of signatures. Bob Hohn, professor of educational psychology and research and president of the group, said last week that
See UNION, p. 8, col. 1
AUSTRIAN ISLANDS
Brandy Crouch, 6, Topeka, holds on to a lamp post in the flooded parking lot at Clinton Lake's Bloomington Park. The shoreline usually is about 70 yards where Crouch was standing yesterday afternoon.
Chris Modrow/KANSAN
Beaches at Clinton swamped by waters
Bv IOHN BUZBEE
Staff writer
BLOOMINGTON — Cars vied with water for parking space yesterday and boats yielded to the wind as area residents swarmed to sunny, swollen Clinton Lake.
Topeka residents Mary Emerson and Jenny Snyder walked along the beach at Bloomington Park, but rainwater had pushed the lake past the beach into the parking lot. The beach was completely under water, and the water temperature was in the 50s.
"Once you get used to it," Emerson said, "it's not so bad."
Richard Sanders, fishery biologist for the Kansas Fish and Game Commission, said Clinton Lake was eight or nine feet above normal because of heavy March rains.
The beach at Bloomington Park may remain underwater for a while. Sanders said.
"With as much water as there is in the other reservoirs," he said, "I don't know when Clinton will be able to release some of its water."
Clinton is the last of the area lakes scheduled to release excess water into the Kansas River system, he said.
Jackie Zouch, Omaha, Neb,
junior, sat on a partially
submerged table in a flooded picnic
area Zoucha said she and her
father had heard that the area
was flooded before leaving
Lawrence.
"We came here because there is supposed to be a beach," she said. "We didn't think it would be quite this bad."
It might get worse. A cold front moving into the area could cause thundershowers late this afternoon and tonight, according to the
See CLINTON, p. 8, col. 3
Fee release process
KU expected $30 million tuition income for fiscal year 1987
10 YEAR MASTER $3.5 MILLION in income for fiscal year 1987.
2. KU brought in $33.2 million-an unexpected excess of $3.2 million because of increased enrollment.
This is a hand holding a small object.
CARDS
3 Board of Regents requested $1.2 million of the $3.2 million in excess fees be returned to KU
1.
A Gov. Mike Hayden recommended 75% ($53,500) of the Regents requested money be returned to KU.
Paint Brush
5 The state House wrote a bill designed to return 50% ($635,000) of the Regents request $1.2
推荐
6 The state Senate elected the bill and supported its recommendation.
Hand pulling a piece of paper.
A joint committee was formed to work out the differences between the Senate and House. The committee voted 75% ( $953,000) to return it to KU.
recommendation and Hayden should sign the bill releasing $953,000 to KU.
8 The full House and Senate are expected to approve the committee's
Dave Eames and Bill Skeet / KANSAN
Legislators negotiate KU's budget package
BY CHRISTOPHER HINES
Staff writer
TOPEKA — The University of Kansas saw its budget raised and slashed in recent months as state lawmakers squabbled over spending, but in the end, the University made most of the money it wanted.
State House and Senate negotiators reached final compromises on Friday concerning KU's 1987 fee release, 1988 operating budget and fee release, and faculty and classified employee salary increases for fiscal year 1988.
However, some KU professors and Chancellor Gene A. Budg said they were disappointed with the small number of qualified employee and faculty salaries.
"It's apparent that our Legislature did an outstanding job." Budig said. "But it's essential that our faculty and staff do better next year if the Regents are going to keep good faculty and that loss is not in best interest of the people on the Board of Regents or the people of Kansas."
After four days of intense negotiations in a joint appropriations conference committee, House and Senate leaders worked out their differences and made these budget recommendations:
■ The immediate release of $653,000 of about $3.2 million in additional student fees KU collected this year because of increased enrollment. Of the students at 75 percent of the Board of Regents $1.2 million recommendation.
The restoration of Gov. Mike Hayden's 3.8 percent budget cut from fiscal year 1947, or 1988, adding $2 billion in 1988 operating budget starting July 1.
A special fee release of $635,612 for fiscal year 1988 based on estimates that present enrollment levels will increase. The release would be available July 1
A $110,000 credit from the state's general fund because of the University's energy conservation efforts.
A 3 percent increase in Other expenses, or general, payable expenses.
Changes in the present corridor
system of state university financing additional $1.7 million for KLU in 1899
The committee's recommendations are expected to be given final approval by the full House and should be released on April 29 from their recess.
A faculty salary increase of 3 percent beginning January 1, or an annual increase of 1.5 percent. A classified employee salary increase of 2 percent beginning January 1, or an annual increase of 1 percent.
The Senate had approved unanimously a 2.5 percent faculty salary increase for the entire fiscal year 1988. The House had recommended a 1.5 percent increase for the second half of the fiscal year.
The final 3 percent, half-year salary increase compromise was made with a 1 percent contribution to the faculty retirement fund and a Senate stipulation that more of the extra benefits be returned to the universities.
The leader of the house side, State Rep. Bunten, R-Topeka, said he was pleased with the compromise because it would leave a safe ending balance of about $150 million in the state's general fund.
"We met on even ground between the two sides," said State Sen. Gus Bogina, R-Lenexa, leader of the Senate side of the conference. "I can't find anything wrong with the proposal, given each side's position."
"The state will be in a sound fiscal condition next year, thanks to the good work done on both sides of the Legislature this past week." he said.
"It's not going to do much to keep good faculty here or attract new students," he said, "needed," said Thomas Armstrong, professor of physics and astronomy.
One KU professor said the statewide faculty salary increase, which would cost the state about $4 million, was more symbolic than beneficial.
"They should have the money to improve programs and buy equip-ment."
Budig said the changes in the corridor system would allow KU to better plan and coordinate its budget efforts, instead of the present annual process.
Funeral today for student killed Friday in car crash
Bv PAUL BELDEN
Yesterday, Easter Sunday, the crowd gathered for Mass at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center said a small prayer wishing the soul of Patrick B. Dooley godspeed to heaven.
Staff writer
Mr. Dooley, 20, Atchison sophomore, died about 8:30 p.m. Friday when his car hit a bridge abutment on Jefferson County Road 1045, commonly known as Wellman Road, and flipped over, landing upside down. He was driving north, about a mile and a half from the unincorporated town of Midland, when he struck the abutment.
Mr. Dooley was partially ejected
from his car, a 1977 Oldmobile fourdoor Cutlass, which then caught fire, the highway spokesman said.
A funeral Mass for Mr. Dooley will be at 10 a.m. today at St. Louis Catholic Church in Good Intent, an orestrated town northwest of Acklison.
Mr. Dooley loved music, and was an accomplished piano player, said Father Blame Schultz, music direc-tor at Benedictine College in Aitchison.
Schultz was a judge at a music contest that Mr. Dooley competed in as an Effingham High School senior.
Schulz said he remembered that Mr. Dooley was the overall winner of the tournament.
"He was certainly talented." Schultz said. "What a wonderful young man he was, in the brief time that I knew him."
Schultz said he would play the organ at Mr. Dooley's funeral.
His survivors include his parents, Thomas and Wilma Dooley, Atchison; three brothers, Dan Dooley, Atchison; Mike Dooley, Kansas City, Mo. and Tom Dooley, London, England; two sisters, Theresa Kiefer, Bristol, England; Mike Dooley, Atchison; and his maternal grandfather, William Sauer, Effingham.
Mr. Dooley will be buried after the Mass in the church cemetery.
Praise and criticism follow KU senator through four terms
ed trumpet in the high school band.
Staff writer
By LISA A. MALONEY
He has been called the Darth Vader of the Student Senate by some and has been compared to Socrates by others.
Michael Foubert, 31, has been alternately praised and criticized as the one man who has caused more chaos and controversy in his four terms as a graduate senator than every other senator combined.
"He's not a bad guy, but a lot of times he does take the 'opposite side of the Force,' " said Brady Stanton, out-going student body president. "Whether or not there is another side to an issue, Michael Foubert will always take it."
Sue Glatter, law senator, said, "I think the Senate is a better place for bipartisan relationships. I am a Mineo Flower."
overlook the substance of problems."
"It's good that the Senate has somebody who remembers what happened two years ago, but I think it would be better if we had rules and regulations that he tends to."
He also Rules and Regulates
put the Senate in a strangle hold.
Mark McMahon, off-campus senator, said, "As much as he aggravates me, if we didn't have somebody like him, we'd have to invent one."
"The majority of the time he does the school a great service because he's such an active senator. But God! I want to want to smack him!" Glatter said.
See FOUBERT, p. 8, col. 1
Since the fall of 1982. Foubert has established himself as a powerful presence in the Senate by supporting a variety of programs and issues.
But Jane Hutchinson, Nunemaker senator, said, "Michael acts as the conscience of Student Senate. He makes people look at the hard decisions, not just the popular ones."
He brings a huge, black box of a briefcase with him to most Senate meetings. Two feet high and 2 feet wide, it is filled with papers and
INSIDE
INSIDE
Record meet
Sixteen records were broken over the weekend at the 62nd Annual Kansas Relays, including the U.S. pole vault record, which Joe Dial broke. See complete Relays coverage pages 10 and 11.
Take a hike
People can learn about nature by going on hikes sponsored by the Lawrence Park and Recreation Center on the third Sunday of each month. See story page 5.
2
Monday, April 20, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Around the World
Armed rebel soldiers surrender Argentine president announces
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — President Raul Alfonsin announced yesterday that he had obtained the surrender of dozens of armed rebel soldiers after meeting with their leader at the military base where they had been held up for three days.
The mutineers and their leader,
cashiered Lt. Col. Aldo Rico, were taken into custody from the infantry school at suburban Campo de la Vieja since Thursday. Defense Minister Horacio Jaramaena said.
Alfonsin, following his dramatic decision to meet personally with the rebels, said the mutineers would be detained and processed according to law.
The mutineers, who had been holding about 2,000 loyal government troops at bay at Campo de
Mayo, were demanding amnesty for officers accused of human rights violations under previous military governments. The infantry school is one of about a dozen different training facilities at the sprawling army base.
It was not immediately known how many rebels were involved. Sen. Adolfo Gass on Saturday placed their number at 57, but the rebels claimed they totaled about 150. They had two tanks near the main school at the infantry training compound and positioned machine guns along approaches to the building.
The rebels were taken to the military institute's command unit within the huge Campo de Mayo and placed under the charge of Gen. Augusto Vidal, the defense minister said.
Guerrillas slain after infiltrating Israel
MENARA, Israel — Palestinian guerrillas on a hostage-taking mission sneaked into northern Israel and killed two soldiers yesterday in the dustbowl in seven years, army officials said.
The firefight occurred in an apple orchard and followed a week of violence in northern Israel. The army said the strife was linked to a meeting scheduled for today in Jerusalem, where he will map out a new political and military strategy against Israel.
Shiite Muslim fighters in the most violent clash since Israel withdrew the bulk of its troops from Lebanon in June 1985.
In the occupied Gaza Strip, about 5,000 Palestinians demonstrated at Islamic University yesterday. Nine students were hospitably allowed Israel soldiers beat them with clubs, Palestinian sources said.
The army identified the infiltrators as members of Yasser Arafat's mainstream Fatah wing of the Palestine Liberation Organization, which has stepped up military activity recently in an apparent effort to regain the support of hardliners.
Two killed, 27 hurt at Tokyo rock concert
TOKYO — Two people were killed and 27 others were injured, one seriously, last night at a rock concert when fans rushed forward in an attempt to climb onto the stage, a Metropolitan Fire Board official said.
The official, who spoke on condi
of anonymity, said people in front were knocked down as people farther back tried to rush onto the cliffs to pictures of a Japanese rock band.
He said the 3,000-seat outdoor music hall in central Tokyo was filled to capacity for the concert.
Across the Country
Flood waters begin receding in Richmond
RICHMOND, Va. — The James River slowly began receding yesterday after inundating $1/2$ square miles of the city at almost 16 feet above flood stage, and merchants were allowed back into a low-lying area of restored downtown businesses.
William W. Costin, chief of emergency communications for
Officials credited a network of huge pumps with helping prevent water damage beyond the commercial area.
the department of Public Safety, said damage couldn't be estimated until after the water fully receded.
The James River surged over its banks in many areas of the state after a three-day storm brought 3.36 inches of rain to Richmond and more than 4 inches to parts of western Virginia. One boy drowned, and one woman was missing elsewhere in the state. Many rural roads had been blocked by water.
Boy found in river may be missing epileptic
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Police attempted Saturday to identify the body of a boy found in a river in south Kansas City, Mo.
Authorities had not identified the boy yesterday, but they said he could be the 10-year-old epileptic and diabetic who had been missing since he ran away from school March 20.
An autopsy was to be performed today and dental records would be
checked to make a positive identification.
The body was found about 4 p.m. Saturday by a man hiking along the river. The fully clothed body was in about 18 inches of water.
Timothy Limbach has been missing since he ran away from Mansfield Center for Children, where he is the lowest of which the body was found.
From Kansan wires.
Weather
From the KANSAN Weather Service
LAWRENCE FORECAST
Today, mostly sunny with gusty winds near 30 mph and a high of 85 degrees. Tonight, partly cloudy and windy with a 30 percent chance for thundershowers and a low near 54 degrees. Tomorrow, partly cloudy and
cooler with a high in the up EXTENDED FORECAST:
Wednesday sunny 69°
Thursday partly cloudy 72°
Friday chance for showers 76°
Thursday partly cloudy 72°
Friday chance for showers 76°
DES MOINES
81 / 45
OMAHA
76 / 43
LINCOLN
77 / 45
CONCORDIA
77 / 46
TOWEKA
81 / 50
KANSAS CITY
86 / 53
COLUMBIA
87 / 58
ST. LOUIS
87 / 56
SALINA
80 / 50
WICHITA
84 / 57
CHANUTE
86 / 59
SPRINGFIELD
87 / 60
TULSA
90 / 64
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Campus and Area
University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 20, 1987
3
Local Briefs
Lawrence men bind and beat burglary suspect
Four Lawrence men, upon finding an burglar suspect inside one of the men's apartment early Saturday morning, tied him up and beat him, a Lawrence police spokesman said.
The incident occurred about 2 a.m. Saturday in an apartment in Dover Square, he said.
no arrests have been made yet,
the spokesman said, and police will leave it to the Douglas County
officer to explain what, if any, charges will be filed.
Police took the burglary suspect to the Lawrence Memorial Hospital emergency room, where his nose was found to be broken. He also complained of a sore right eye and forearm, the spokesman said.
2 Lawrence men commit suicide
Two Lawrence men committed suicide last week.
The spokesman said that an anonymous caller called the police dispatcher Thursday that he was going to kill himself in the garage of a house in the 2200 block of Barker Avenue.
When police arrived, they found Strickler in the garage with a self-inflicted wound to the head.
Strickler was flown to the Med Center by helicopter, where he died the next day.
The other man, Jimmie Musselman, 65, shot himself Friday in the front yard of his house in the 1500 block of Powers Street just as police arrived, the spokesman said.
A neighbor of Musselman's had reported to police that Musselman was sitting in his front yard with a gun, he said.
Author to lecture about atomic bomb
Richard Rhodes, author of the critically acclaimed 1987 book "The Making of the Atomic Bomb," will lecture at 8 p.m. today in the Mayflower Room of the Plymouth Congregational Church. 925 Vermont St.
Rhodes will talk about the history of the development of the atomic bomb and what he calls the world's need to reconsider the idea of the nation-state as the ultimate political system.
The lecture is sponsored by the KU Coalition for Peace and Justice.
Correction
Because of an editor's error, the first Pulitzer Prize winner for individual work from the KU School of Journalism was reported incorrectly in Friday's Kansan, and Calder Pickett, Clyde M. Reed distinguished professor of journalism, was misquoted. The first such winner from KU was Louis LaCoss. Because of a reporter's error in the same story, the journalism dean in 1974 was reported incorrectly. The dean in 1974 was Edward Bassett.
From staff and wire reports.
Regents approve funding proposal
By ROGER COREY
Staff writer
The Board of Regents approved Thursday a three-year plan to increase financing among state universities, and KU administrators are working to gain Gov. Mike Hayden's support.
The plan's goal is to bring up the Regents schools to 95 percent of the financing of their peer institutions by fiscal year 1991. Each Regents university has a different group of peer institutions.
The University of Kansas' peer institutions are the universities of Colorado, Iowa, North Carolina, Oklahoma and Oregon.
Now the Regents universities' financing is 14 percent less than the peer average. Faculty salaries are 8 percent below the peer average, and the operating budget is 30 percent below.
The plan would adjust university budgets for enrollment changes, additional physical facilities, faculty salaries and improvement of existing programs and services.
The plan also would raise faculty salaries at Regents schools to the level of the peer schools' average.
"Raising the Regents schools up to 95 percent of their peer institutions is a realistic goal," Del Shankel, acting executive vice chancellor, said Friday. "But whether we will be able to convince the governor and Legislature, I don't know."
He said KU officials should use all their persuasive powers to have the plan approved.
"The state's economy is beginning to turn around. I'm hopeful the turnaround will continue and that the education will continue," Shankel said.
He said the plan demonstrated a real commitment by the Regents to enhance the quality of education at Regents schools.
The six state universities and the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina are under the Regents jurisdiction.
In the past, the Regents usually had a clause that they have received, Shankel said.
Keith Nitcher, director of business affairs, said that the Regents had approved the plan but that specific numbers would not be determined until May. The Regents are scheduled to meet again May 13 to 14.
"We will be seeking the support of the governor after the May meeting." Nitcher said.
He said the Regents would use the weeks before the May meeting to update the peer institution comparator for the Regents' financial financing for each Regents school.
"A lot of our success will have to do with how the plan is packaged."
Regents schools probably will get additional financing only by planning for program improvements, he said. The governor's office will discuss at Thursday's meeting.
Under the new system, the Regents would recommend a base budget increase for each of the Regents universities based on peer averages. The universities then would submit a proposal stating how they intended to use the money.
"Everyone has something at stake in this plan," he said.
Under the old system, schools submitted a list of program proposals to the Regents and asked for a specific amount for each proposal.
"I think the success of the plan will be tied to program review," Nitcher said.
STARLINGS W
Amy Rhoads/KANSAN
Boater still missing; officials and family search Kansas River
Debbie Bushey, Overland Park senior, and Tim Sites, Glen Ellyn, Ill., freshman, cool off in the Chi Omega fountain. The two were enjoying the unseasonably warm temperatures Sunday afternoon.
By PAUL BELDEN
A big splash
The search is continuing for a Lawrence man who disappeared in the Kansas River on Friday morning after he and another man went over the Bowersock River in a small boat.
Staff writer
The man, Elmer F. Wolford, 25,
still is missing but not presumed
dead, a Lawrence police spokesman
said.
missing persons are not presumed dead by the Lawrence police until seven years have passed, a spokesman said.
Major Bob Coleman, of the Lawrence Fire Department, said that two firemen in a boat and two men in a canoe were the hunks of the river for Wolford.
Friends and relatives of Wolford, in several other boats, were helping in the search, he said.
The other man in the boat with Wolford, Ricky J. Franks, 29, of Topea, survived the plunge into the lake and brought about about four feet higher than normal.
Franks pulled himself out of the river about a quarter mile downstream from the dam, which is just east of the Massachusetts Street bridge that crosses the Kansas River.
Franks told police that he and
Wolford had borrowed the boat from a Perry man, and, starting in the Delaware River near Perry, had intended to float down to Lawrence. The Delaware River flows into the Kansas River.
He said that sometime during the trip he had fallen asleep, and that Wolford woke him up and warned him just before the went over the
Franks told police that he thought he was underwater about a minute. He said he was struck by what he thought was an explosion and he kicked hard and broke the surface.
Franks was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital on Friday for observation and was released later that day.
The Kansas Crew team was at a North Lawrence boat ramp Friday morning loading boats onto trucks, when police pulled up and asked them to assist in the search, Libby Elliott, assistant crew coach, said.
Public hearing for bypass is tonight
She said that her husband, Cliff, crew coach, put a motorboat in the water and headed up toward the dam.
"They wanted Cliff to go back and forth up to the beddam and he looked at them like, 'Are you crazy?' " she said.
Trafficway's environmental impact statement is expected to draw large crowd
By TODD COHEN
Staff writer
The eighth and final public hearing on the proposed south Lawrence trafficway, called to discuss the controversial roadway's possible environmental effects, is expected to attract a large, angry crowd tonight.
The hearing, which will focus on a draft environmental impact statement that was released last month, will take place at 7 p.m. in the South Junior High School auditorium, 2734 Louisiana St.
Local environmentalists, who have led spirited campaigns against the trafficway in the past year, are expected to renew arguments that the roadway would harm the Baker Wetlands, a wildlife refuge that is home to the endangered Northern Crawfish frog.
The trafficway would pass next to the wetlands, south of 31st Street, between Haskell Avenue and Louisiana Street.
Environmentalists also have said the roadway would pass through two pastures northwest of Lawrence that contain fields of the rare white-winged prairie orchid and a rare
born of mistakes.
At the hearing, the engineering consultants who prepared the draft statement will make a presentation, and Robert Glicksman, KU professor of law, will discuss the history and laws surrounding the environmental impact statement process.
Also, a Kansas Department of Transportation representative will discuss the right-of-way procedures the county must follow to condemn and acquire property in the road's path.
County commissioners, Lawrence city commissioners and representatives of Environmental Protection Agency, the Federal Highway Administration, and the Kansas Fish and Game Commission also will attend and be available for questions.
Chris McKenzie, Douglas County administrator, said Friday that the hearing was a very important step in the process.
Once the final environmental impact statement is filed with and approved by the Environmental Protection Agency this summer, as required by federal law, the county can make final decisions about the
road's route, McKenzie said.
"Instead of general corridors, we're going to start talking about exactly where it will go," he said.
If built, the trafficway would run 14.3 miles around Lawrence's south border from Kansas Highway 10, on the city's east side, to a new interchange on Interstate 70, on the city's west side.
Currently, road plans run from Highway 10 south to Haskell Avenue, 31st and 35th streets before heading north to meet Clinton Parkway at Clinton Lake. From there, it would run north to Interstate 70.
The hearing won't be the public's last chance to comment on the draft statement. Residents have until May 11 to file letters with the government agencies involved with the draft statement. McKenzie said letters from Frank Hueckey county public works director, or the Federal Highway Administration, 444 S.E. Quincy Avenue, Topeka, 66838.
The draft statement is available at the County Courthouse, 11th and Massachusetts streets; Lawrence City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts
streets; and the Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St.
Glickman said environmental impact statements have only been a requirement since 1969, when the Environmental Policy Act was passed.
The act forced the government and developers to consider environmental effects and disclose their findings to the public, he said.
Glickman said that before the 1969 law, "They didn't have to think about the consequences, and they didn't see it in the public of those consequences."
The EPA doesn't have veto powers, however, and can only require that a statement is filed and prepared correctly. Glickman said.
Final decisions will be made by the county commission and by several agencies that must issue permits for the project, including the Kansas Fish and Game, the U.S. Department of Transportation and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
Opponents who are not satisfied by the statement have only three ways to respond. He said, "They can rob the politicians, go to court, or do nothing, he said.
Alumni can get credit cards with Jayhawks
Staff writer
By PEGGY O'BRIEN
KU alumni and friends now can display their pride in the Jayhawks every time they pull out their charge cards.
The First Bank Card Center of Wichita, in cooperation with the alumni associations of several Kansas colleges and universities, is offering Visa and Mastercard credit cards with a picture of the respective school's mascot printed on the card. KU alumi will see the Jayhawk logo on their cards.
More than 2,000 alumni and friends of the University of Kansas have applied for Visa and Mastercard bearing the Jayhawk logo since the alumni center started a mailing about the program at the beginning of the month, according to John Sanders, University of Kansas Alumni Association treasurer.
Cheryl Koenig, marketing projects manager for First Bank Card Center, said that in addition to the benefits the card allowed to members, First Bank Card Center contributed to the school's alumni association when members used its card. A percentage of the sales volume from card purchases goes back to the alumni association.
Sanders said the Alumni Association was mailing information about the offer to alumni and friends. He said that a telemarketing campaign would follow the mailing.
The Alumni Association does not have any projections on the amount of money the program will generate, but it has had a good response from alumni so far, Sanders said. The Alumni Association board of directors hasn't made any recommendations for use of the funds yet, he said.
Koenigs said the group programs, which offer the customized cards, were a potential promotion
for many organizations. She said that she has had positive response from everyone she has talked to about the program.
Koenigs said that students who have not completed an undergraduate degree did not qualify for this offer but that the bank was working on a student program, which should begin later this
The alumni association at Kansas Newman College in Wichita is using the money brought in by the card users to develop a scholarship fund, according to the First Bank Card Center.
The cards carry benefits for the alumni that may include a 25-day grace period in purchases before interest is charged, $400 optional cash advance available to alumni association members and no-cost travel/accident insurance. First Bank Card Center said in a press release.
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4
Monday, April 20, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Promoting safe sex
Maybe in a perfect world, parents would be able to sit down with their children and explain and discuss sex. Parents would try to make their children aware of the possible consequences of sex and of birth control. Most importantly, they would understand that, ultimately, the decisions on sexuality rest with the child.
Because we don't live in a perfect world, the best that can be done is to inform and protect minors in matters of sex. An opinion handed down last week by Kansas Attorney General Bob Stephen said it would be unconstitutional to require minors to have parental consent before receiving contraceptives. But the opinion also said that a county or the state could impose a law requiring the notification of parents of minors seeking birth control devices.
Like it or not, children are having sex at increasingly earlier ages. It is unrealistic to think teen-age pregnancy can be curbed by stopping children from having sex. The most logical answer to the problem is to educate children and to make contraceptives available.
Parents cannot prevent their children from having sex, but they could scare them away from practicing safe sex. Although children should be encouraged to talk to their parents before engaging in sex, many would rather take their chances without a contraceptive than with anger, and possibly abusive, parents.
Allowing minors to get birth control devices without, or even despite their parents' permission is the best way to realistically promote safe sex and protect minors.
If you got 'em, you'll no longer be able to smoke 'em — at least not in retail stores, restaurants and public buildings, except in specially designated areas.
A breath of fresh air
Gov. Mike Hayden made this possible by signing the smoking bill into law last week. Hayden said he did so because the state had an obligation to protect the health of its citizens.
For years, people who have made a choice not to smoke have had to put up with the smoke of others. In restaurants and other public places, this can be a distraction and irritation.
The current state law prohibits smoking in elevators, libraries, museums, theaters, many governmental meeting rooms and waiting rooms of
This law should not bring about protests from smokers because their rights are not being threatened. However, the rights of others are being protected.
doctors' offices. The new law will add to that list.
The law gives owners and operators of public places a lot of latitude in designating smoking areas. It does not specify where or how large the areas may be. It only says that owners should use existing barriers and ventilation systems wherever possible.
This will not wipe out smoking, and it is not intended to. It will, however, make nonsmokers lives more bearable, and that can't help but make life a little more pleasant for everyone.
Cleaning up 'Dirty Harry'
"Go ahead. Make my day." That phrase, which Clint Eastwood uttered just before pumping lead into a dangerous thug in the movie, "Sudden Impact," might no longer be just memorable lines from a famous movie. They might become a way of life for many people in the United States.
A growing number of states are beginning to enact "make my day" laws. The laws give homeowners the right to kill intruders or anyone someone may think is threatening their lives or property.
The results of the survey are not surprising. The high crime rate in the country and the probability of becoming a victim are astounding. People are
Some of these states have blindly enacted the law, but others are studying it carefully. One study by the Media General-Associate Press showed that 68 percent of Americans thought that people did have the right to shoot intruders, whether the intruders were armed or not.
But states allowing homeowners to become vigilantis is not the answer. That would promote only more violence.
frightened, and they should be. And they want to take precautions.
Trying to provide citizens with some sense of security, especially in their own homes, is a noble gesture of state legislatures, but it is illogical. What about abuse of the system? Already some states have documented cases of people who have shot others and claimed they were a "danger" to them when they weren't Or what about children in these homes that accidentally wander into a desk drawer or closet, find mommy and daddy's "security system," start playing with it and end up shooting themselves?
Enacting tougher laws, and giving out stricter sentences may be one solution but turning the country into a bunch of "Dirty Harrys" definitely is not.
News staff
News staff
Frank Hansel Editor
Jennifer Benjamin Managing editor
Juli Warren News editor
Brian Kabertle Editorial editor
Sandra Engelland Campus editor
Marks Siebert Sports editor
Diane Dutmeier Photo editor
Bill Skeet Graphics editor
Tom Eblen General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Lisa Weens Business manager
Bonnie Hardy Advisor
Denise Stephens Retail sales manager
Kelly Scherer Campus sales manager
Duncan Calhoun Marketing manager
Lori Coppel Classified manager
Phillip Liemanski Production manager
David Nixon National sales manager
Jeanne Hines Sales and marketing adviser
Opinions
**Letters** should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words and should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
**Guest shots** should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The
The Kansan reserves the right reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Fint Hall.
writer will be photographed.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawen, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and on Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage paid in US dollars to the student institution by mail are $40 per year in Douglas County and $50 per 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.
Advocates of nuclear power never have liked to talk about the liability and social costs of storing low-level radioactive waste. In the '70s and early '80s when the future of nuclear power was being discussed, there was only muted emphasis on what
Pull out of compact before its too late
Nicholas
Christian Colbert Columnist
the money it owes for membership, and then pursue alternatives, such as forming another more equitable compact with other states or going it alone. If legislators don't put money in their hands, the state risks being sued by the other states in the compact.
was going to be done with the waste. Ronald Reagan exemplified the lack of concern when he said, "Paper, not nuclear waste, is our major problem."
In this unreliable technological age of space shuttle disasters, Chernobylis and collapsing bridges, it may be wishful thinking to entertain the thought of a technologyally safe solution to the low-level radioactive waste problem short of ceasing the operation of nuclear reactors. Meanwhile, as we continue our profligate ways of not adequately researching solar, wind and geothermal energies, extremely dangerous radioactive waste is piling up and is in need of a home.
Many people think that home should be right here in the Land of Ahs. In fact, Kansas may have to
adopt the unwanted and extremely dangerous waste because five years ago, the state entered into a compact with Arkansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma and Louisiana to determine possible storage sites for low-level radioactive waste.
The compact commission hired a geotechnical consulting firm, Dames and Moore, to locate suitable sites for the waste produced by the compact states. Seventy-five percent of the disposal sites chosen in the Dames and Moore report are in Kansas, while 20 percent are in the waste of the states in the compact, mostly because of a Kerr-McGee operation which produces millions of cubic feet of low-level waste each year, has not been chosen at all.
Over in the state legislature, the controversy is whether to drop out of the compact. State Sen. Paul Feleciano JR., D-Wichita, who favors pulling out of the compact, said it was the single most important decision we could make for the next six generations.
I don't claim to know much about geology or the criteria Dames and Moore used to select the dumping sites, but it seems inequitable, even a bit suspicious, that Kansas has so many suitable sites for radioactive waste. On many occasions I've driven through Oklahoma, and in most parts it doesn't seem all that much different from Kansas.
It may be more expensive for Kansas to go it alone. Estimates have said that it would cost approximately $40 million if we stored our own waste. That $40 million probably will come out of taxpayers' pockets, because, although the storage costs would be charged to the producers of the radioactive waste, it would then be passed on to consumers in the form of higher utility rates. We think, however, you consider the risks involved in accepting much more low-level radioactive waste than Kansas produces, it seems wise to search for ways to store our own waste. Moreover, should we trust people from outside the state to store the waste here?
Feleciano's concern is confirmed by the fact that four of six low-level radioactive waste storage sites in the city are in use. They are in intoading ground water sources.
Unfortunately, efforts to pull Kansas out of the compact fail in the Senate. But the Senate did pass a bill that will ban underground storage of low-level radioactive waste without legislative approval. Of course that doesn't mean radioactive waste will never be buried underground, because methods of above ground storage haven't been with us very long, and the legislature could always change its mind.
At this point, Feleciano thinks Kansas should pull out of the compact before the compact commission meets on June 5 to decide on a developer for the waste storage.
He said, "The developer is going to wander around and find a site, and the compact and the state governments that make it up are going to say that all of this is out of their hands and we're going to have nothing to say about it."
If you've ever seen the state legislature in action you'd know what Feleciano is talking about. The longer legislators delay pulling out of the compact, the harder it will be to do so and the more likely we'll be stuck with the flawed process.
if legislators pull out now, Kansas can save face by paying the compact
By taking care of our own low-level waste and using experts from within the state, we can reduce uncertainty and do the job right. If we rely on people from outside Kansas to do the job, we run the high risk of ending up like one of the four sites currently contaminated. Then we can be known, not as the Land of Ahs, but as the land that glows.
Mailbox
City has rich history
I read with amazement your reporter's account of Mound City. The story zeroed in on the economic problems of that historic location without a syllable to its unique character, which is the original Potashotomie reservation old St. Mary's, and the Sacred Heart Shrine Church.
The church was built to commemorate the beautification of Rose Philippine Duchesne, R.S.C.J., who lived among the Potawatomi in 1841 at the age of 72 and whose cause for canonization is still under consideration in Rome.
This beautiful, French-style church has stained glass windows showing her life, which began in Grenoble, France, and ended in St. Charles, Mo., where she is entombed. The Commission on the Status of Women awarded her the first Outstanding Pioneer Award from the 18-angle window etched in glass, showing Mother Duchesne teaching the Potawatomi may be seen in the St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center.
The canonization of Mother Duchesne would bring economic benefits to Mound City. The city now has strong ties, not only with its own past, but with a present full of hope in the relationship with its beautiful Philippine Duchesne, now being recognized in Lawrence.
Beverly Boyd Professor of English
Prank not amusing
Last Wednesday, I didn't even get out of bed on the wrong side before my bad luck started. There was a fire in the living room, 45 a.m. My neighbor was at the door.
"Sorry for waking you, but did you know that there's a moped on your car?" she asked. I had no idea that there was a moped on my car.
After lifting it off the hood of my car, I returned it to its sleeping owner, who was just as surprised as I was. The damage had been assessed at just under $400. And I'm fairly angry. I'd love to strangle the idiot
who's guilty. How would you feel if someone inflicted $400 worth of damage to your property? That's about two-thirds of my tuition.
I have nothing against fun. I have nothing against debaucherous fun. My only gripe is that someone had fun at my expense. And it will cost me dearly. At $5 an hour, it will take me about 80 hours to make enough to fix my car.
It is not just the destruction of property that gives some people great joy. Some of these people enjoy the pain of others. What leeches!
So, should I go out tonight, get as drunk as possible and flick mobets at cars in retaliation? Or should I forgive and forget? How about a bulletproof衬里衣 for the Kansan? Would that serves as my vengeance? Hardly.
One good thing has come out of all this. I will think twice before having too much fun at someone else's expense. If only those fellows had remembered the golden rule. But let's face it, animals don't have very good memories.
Robert Hindman London junior
Lacking intelligence
Paul Greenberg's lead-footed, dull-witted and inaccurate column on the recent Supreme Court ruling in an Affirmative Action case (April 15) restates one more time all the white male supremacist idiocy that makes an intelligent white male ashamed. I do not relish being classified in the same world with those who suppose that any minority holder of a scholarship or a supervisory job "got there" through "reverse discrimination."
In the past, women and minority groups had to demonstrate higher, not equal, qualifications. Let Mr. Greenberg search the editorial files of the Lawrence paper — he need not search very far back — for expressions this attitude, once a majority opinion. Now, we are reduced to a legalistic quibble over a two point differential on an in-house test, whose margin of error is unknown, but probably greater than two points.
Success or failure in living up to such opportunities after they have been granted is, as far as I have been able to observe, about the same among women and minorities as among white males. That statistic and only that statistic, in the end, demonstrates equality. We wouldn't have much evidence to support our constitutional belief in equality had it not been for the operation of Affirmative Action; it has afforded opportunity to succeed or fail to those traditionally denied the chance.
The point upheld by the Court is that when candidates have met the specified requirements for a scholarship job and are substantially equal, the candidate selected should be the one from an underutilized class (translation: the one who, by being unlike those normally encountered in this position, is most likely to bring to it fresh ideas, to serve as a model for the other members of that class, and to demonstrate to those who though their gender and race gave them the inside position that they too have something to prove if they desire preferment.)
Ellen Goodman wrote a masterful column in support of the Court's decision. I wish you'd hunt it up and get her permission to print it.
George Wedge Associate professor English and linguistics
Looking for purpose
This is a letter not only to the editor, but to anyone who can provide an answer. Just what is parking services for?
My experiences with that renegade group of Jeep enthusiasts has been limited to stickers, tickets and potholes. The title they use is a joke. After all, they don't provide any services.
For instance, when parking services was asked to put a yield sign at the Oliver Hail parking lot, they said that they didn't want to be responsible for it. Their suggestion was KUPD.
Also, when asked about replacing the faulty lights for the Lewis-Tempin-Hashinger parking lots, they said that they weren't responsible for them. This time, however, they passed the buck to housing.
Nevertheless, they continue to take our money, and for what? Perhaps a secure parking lot? (No, try KUPD). Perhaps a safe parking lot? (No, try housing). Perhaps more parking? (Well, try East Topeka). Perhaps a pothole free parking lot? (No, don't try at all).
If anyone out there cares about the image put forth by a run-down parking lot maybe they could pressure parking services to do something positive for the University. Or else at least change the name to Parking Control.
Mark L. Gillem
Walnut Creek, Calif., junior
Civil liberties for all?
Strange how quickly Victor Goodpasture pointed to his civil liberties in the dreadful "Stolen Stalwarts" affair.
Maybe now, having felt life's cruelties firsthand, he can pause to consider the rights of others, like blacks on campus. He might be more general, women and religious minorities.
Like another arrogant conservative, Oliver North, goodpasture only notices the Constitution when convenient. If it gets in the way of their blind dogma, as in the Iran-contrade affair, then checks and balances are for your Visa and Mastercard records, not the government.
I hope you and your fellow Reserve Officer Training Corps members see what happens when military men go to war. And then when they return, trv. Vic, not your corporate sponsors.
katz
SIR, ARE YOU STILL "DEPARTING" APRIL 27?
YES-DIDN'T YOU HEAR?
THE LEGGFLATURE'S RECESSION-
AND NO FEE RELEASE!
By the way, people might find your paper slightly less offensive, Adolf, if you took the fascist-looking eagle off the masthead. Sure, it may not be explicitly a Nazi symbol, but a slick public relations dude like you ought to realize the potential for misinterpretation.
NOW THAT'S NOT FAIRBIR! CAN'T NOUMEET THEM HALFWAY?
?SIGHT WELL...
I SUPPOSE ...
BUT THEYWE COMING BACK THE 29TH FOR A
WRAP-UP SESSION-THEYLL
PROBABLY GIVE US THE
FUNDS THEN.
SORRY--MY ULTIMATUM
WAS FOR THE 27TH,
2 DAYS SHORT.
Jon DeVore
Lawrence junior
k. l. thorman
WE'LL MAKE IT UP TO YOU-
HOW BOUT A PARADE?
CRIMSON GIRLS,
THE BAND
IT'S JUST THAT.
I WANT TO SEE WHAT
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 20, 1987
5
A man helping a child walk down a trail. Other children follow behind.
Danny Ray/KANSAN
Ken Lassman helps a group of Brownies across a stream at the Woodridge Camping and Hiking Area at Clinton Reservoir. Lassman led a nature hike for 38 people Saturday morning.
KU grad leads hikers near lake
Staff writer
By JENNIFER FORKER Staff writer
At 9 a.m. Saturday, Ken Lassam led 38 people on a three-mile nature hike at Woodbridge Camping near the west side of Clinton Restoration.
The hikers, including two OtaWA brownie troops with 18 girls, walked on winding paths that led them through dense forests and past the sparkling lake waters.
Lassman leads the hikes, which are sponsored by the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Center, the third Saturday of each month. It was the second hike this spring. Lassman, who graduated from the University of Kansas in 1977 with a degree in anthropology, said the hikes would continue into the summer.
The path was narrow and sometimes muddy. It followed a creek that wound its way toward the lake. The hikers had to cross the creek on a narrow log less than four feet from the water.
Lassman warned the hikers about ticks and told them not to
drink the creek water or eat any of the edible weeds or flowers that he pointed out. He said the water was undrainable unless boiled.
As the hikers trudged through a particularly muddy area, the Brownies yelled out, "Yucky mud, pass it on."
The hikers wound through the forest and emerged at the top of a hill in open sunlight. The path was clear and light on the left and the lake on the right.
The hikers descended the hill and entered the forest. They stopped for a short rest. The lake lapped along the shore, inches from the hikers. The Brownies broke out their plastic baggies of carrots, celery, raisins and trail mix.
Lassman answered questions about the plants and wildlife. He said hiking was worthwhile year round.
"I think anytime of the year is worthwhile because you see something different," Lassman said. "You can see what's in your guide — to know what to look for."
The weary hikers walked up a small incline and past burned fields. Lassman told the group they would rest at the top of the hill. Nearing the top, someone asked, "We're at the top, can we drop?"
While at the hilltop, Lassman explained that the fields were burned to prevent tree growth. The burned grass would grow back, but the trees still stood.
A buzzard flew over, and a hush fell over the group. It circled overhead and then flew off.
"I guess we didn't look good enough to eat." someone said
Pelicans glided over the lake.
Lassman explained that the pelicans were passing through on their way south.
Once back at the camping area, the hikers broke into applause, congratulating each other for finishing the hike.
Gilda Young, Lawrence, said it was her first hike but would like to go on future hikes.
"I don't want to miss any of them." she said.
Campus operations official to retire
By KJERSTI MOEN Staff writer
Staff writer
His friends and colleagues held a
James Canole, campus director of facilities planning, is retiring after $17 \frac{1}{2}$ years at the University of Kansas.
on the cake was written, "fair seas, showing seas," a Navy expression for good luck. Canole and his wife, Alpha, both have backgrounds in the Navy.
100
Canole
Canole's professional background is in architecture. He worked at the state architect's office for $17\frac{1}{2}$ years, the last six as state architect, from 1961 to 1967. He then became a construction consultant for KU and was hired at the office of facilities planning in 1969.
The pictures on the walls of the facilities planning reception room showed the progressing stages of campus development.
Canole has made a significant contribution to that development. He has supervised the planning and construction of Murphy Hall, Burge Union, Allen Field House, Haworth Hall and the additions to the Robinson Center and Malott Hall.
When he worked at the state architect's office, Canole helped build the Eisenhower Museum in Abilene. The museum is dedicated to former President Dwight D. Eisenhower, who grew up in Abilene. Canole was in charge of constructing the library and planning the chapel.
"He has a very practical approach towards planning," said James Modig, construction administrator. "He looks at the realistic solution rather than a theoretic solution."
Keith Lawton, former campus director, then known as vice chancellor of campus development, has spent a year at the university and is also a personal friend.
"Mr. Canelo is a dedicated state servant," Lawton said, adding that Canelo always had looked after tax payments and having money on construction projects.
"He's had exceptional luck in generating cooperation from the Kansas construction industry. KU is often fortunate to have him here."
Canole said he was ready to retire after 37 years of working for the state, but not because the job had been unrewarding.
"It just all adds up to one great experience," Canole said. To him, as to most architects, one of the greatest satisfactions of the job was seeing
Student Senate Lecture Series and the School of Journalism Radio and Television Department
present: Mark Potter ABC news correspondent, Miami
"The Real Miami Vice Scene: America's failure to control the international drug trade."
Today— April 20, 7:00 p.m. Alderson Auditorium Kansas Union
a project develop from the planning stage to the finished structure, he said.
He said working for the state had brought him in contact with many great people, some of whom also became personal friends.
"The real satisfaction is the number of just plain super people I've met," he said.
"It's just the joy you get from
a thought together from just
a thinking situation.
Video Player
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Turbulent air can make airplane flights uncomfortable and frightening for many passengers. The problem is especially common on commuter flights, which use smaller airplanes, but a KU professor is working to improve passengers' comfort.
Uncomfortable flights, which can scare people away to travel, or the industry.
By TIM HAMILTON Staff writer
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David Downing, associate professor of aerospace engineering and director of KU's Flight Research Laboratory, has designed a system to smooth out choppy flights on commercial commuter airplanes.
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Downing said that computer-controlled surfaces on a plane's wings and tail would move to counteract vertical gusts and improve ride quality.
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"The ride-quality system will have a computer in it as part of the control system."
Downing said the system's success depended on how quickly the computer could react to the gusts.
The computer checks for gusts 50 times a second, he said. If any gust is detected, it will adjust the surfaces to offset the turbulence. The surfaces are capable of moving 15 degrees up or down in one-third of a second.
The system will add about $100,000 to the cost of a commuter aircraft, which range from $3 million to $6 million.
Now, the system only needs to be tested. Downing said.
The University has subcontracted with Cessna Aircraft Corporation to test and modify the system this summer on one of its commuter
planes, the six-passenger twinengine Businessliner.
The test plane also will include a computer provided by National Aeronautics and Space Administration Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va., and some avionics from King Radio Corp. in Olathe.
Downing said his project, one of three in the department involving subcontracts with Cessna, was an example of cooperative research with an industry that was not interested only in increasing profits.
DONT YOU BE GUILT OF MISSING A GREAT DEA!
"The they are examples of ways in which the University and Kansas industries can cooperate to the benefit of both." Downing said.
Saeed Farokhi, assistant professor of aerospace, said that Downing's research fostered economic growth and created a beneficial impact on the industry.
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COMMENCEMENT The University of Kansas
For further information, please call 864-3546 or stop by 208 Robinson.
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Candidates and faculty members may order caps, gowns, and/or hoods by mailing in the order form from the graduation mailing, OR by visiting Booth 1 on level four of the Kansas Union between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. on any weekday until Friday, April 24.
6
Monday, April 20, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
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4-20
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Lawrence boy dies in traffic accident
A 16-year-old Lawrence youth died Friday evening after the motorcycle he was riding skidded into a pickup truck on West Sixth Street, Lawrence police said.
The youth, Dary W housworth II, died at Stormont-Vail Regional Medical Center, Topeka, after being flown there by helicopter from Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
By a Kansan reporter
motorcycle, Angie Bees, Lawrence, was released from Lawrence Memorial Hospital yesterday.
A passenger on Housworth's 1983 Suzuki GS 450
Police said Beers told them that Housworth was driving eastbound on West Sixth Street about 6:30 p.m. Friday when he swerved to avoid a car that had been driving on lanes of Sixth Street from Mississippi Street.
He lost control of the motorcycle, and it fell over on its left side and skidded east, crossing into the road.
Neither Stockton nor his passenger were injured. The police report stated that the speed of the motorcycle was unsafe and partly to blame for the accident, as were the word down motion.
At that time, Dennis H. Stockton, 53, Lawrence, was driving a 1844 pickup westbound on Sixth Street. He told police that he braked hard trying to avoid hitting the motorcycle.
Student arrested after chase by police cars
By a Kansan reporter
A KU student spent about half an hour in the Douglas County jail Friday after a chase involving two Lawrence police cars, a police spokesman said.
Neither motorcycle rider wore a helmet, the report stated.
At the intersection of Harvard
The student, Chad Michael Treater,
18, Belle freshman, was booked into the jail at 12:04 a.m. Friday and released 29 minutes later, after being served with a notice to appear in Douglas County Municipal Court at 7:45 a.m. May 5, said Sgt. Don Dalquest, the spokesman.
While responding to the call, a police car was passed at high speed by a 1986 two-door Chevrolet with its headlights off. The Chevy was westbound on Oxford Road and turned north onto Sunset Drive, he said.
Someone reported about 11:30 p.m. Thursday an attempted break-in at the Alpha Phi sorority house, 1602 High Dr. Dlaquest said.
Street and Sunset Drive, the Chevrolet sidwiped a 1983 two-door Honda driven by Mark S. Ellis, Marie Village sophomore, Dalquest说
It then continued north on Sunset Drive to Ninth Street, where the police officers chasing the car reported that it vaulted off the ground and skidded to a stop across from Ninth Street.
Andrea E. Hoag, 16, Lawrence, was driving a car westbound on Ninth Street when the vehicle being chased approached Ninth Street, now with its headlights on, Dalquest said. Hoag drove her car off the road to avoid being struck by the chased car.
Treaster is facing charges of operating a vehicle without headlights, reckless driving, attempting to elude a police officer, leaving the scene of an accident, not having a driver's license on person and not having proof of insurance, the jail log indicated.
No one was injured in the chase.
ALPHA KAPPA LAMBDA
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Would like to thank the following contributors to Jail and Bail:
Marian Washington
Jackie Davis
Jane Sorensen
Pi Beta Phi
Alpha Gamma Delta
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Alpha Omicron Pi
Delta Gamma
Alpha Delta Pi
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By a Kansan reporter
A Lawrence police officer was injured Saturday morning when a car collided with his motorcycle at Ninth and Maine streets.
The officer, Larry K. Kasson, 42, Lawrence, did not require hospitalization. The Douglas County Ambu-
service treated him at the scene.
Kasson, who was off duty at the time, told Lawrence police that he was driving his 1980 Harley-Davidson motorcycle eastbound in the right lane of Ninth Street at 7:25 a.m. Saturday.
A car was traveling eastbound
Lawrence police said that after the accident, the driver of the car, a 38-year-old Lawrence man, told them he was unconscious on phone call, left and did not return.
beside Kasson in the left lane, he said.
The car attempted a right turn on to Maine Street without warning and knocked Kasson's motorcycle on its side, he said.
Police said they had not located the man as of yesterday.
The driver did not own the car. The owner, who knows the driver, told police she hadn't known that the man had taken it, police said.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 20, 1987
7
KU & LAWRENCE CAMPUS AREA ACTIVITIES APRIL 20
Monday
9 a.m. — "Advanced WORDERP-
FECT," a microcomputer workshop at
204 Computer Center. Call 864-4291
for information.
20
9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. — Master Classes with Claude Frank, piano. The classes also are scheduled from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. tomorrow.
5:30 p.m. — KU Kempo and Karate Club meeting at 130 Robinson Center. Club meets Wednesday at same time.
7 p.m. — Lecture by Mark Potter,
ABC-TV news correspondent, in
Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas
@
8 p.m. — "Beyon the War: The Making of the Atomic Bomb," a lecture by Richard Rhodes, author of "The Making of the Atomic Bomb," in the Mayflower Room of Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont
8 p.m. — Faculty recital with Denise Myers, soprano, in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
8 p.m. — Society for Fantasy and Science Fiction meeting in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union
22
Tuesday
21
11:30 a.m. — Informal concert with David Tanenbaum, guitarist, in the west end of the Kansas Union main lobby.
3 p.m. — Baseball. KU vs. Benedictine College at Quigley Field.
6:30 p.m. — Mathematics honors banquet at Alvamar Country Club, 1809 Crossgate Drive.
1 p.m. — "Central America: What Are the Alternatives?" a University Lecture by Elliott Abrams, assistant secretary of state for inter-American affairs, in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Followed by a 30-minute question-and-answer period.
6:30 p.m.—KU Hispanic-American Leadership Organization meeting in the International Room of the Kansas Union
7 p.m. — "Fiber and Fabric as
Architectural Device and Art," an art lecture by Joy Rushfield, World of Crafts Council, at the Spencer Museum of Art auditionum.
7 p.m. — "The Last Picture Show," an SUA film in Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas University $2
all day -- Midwest Symposium on Public Policy at the Adams Alumni Center. Symposium will continue tomorrow.
Wednesday
7 p.m. — Student Senate meeting in the Kansas Room at the Kansas Union.
8 p.m. - Benefit concert, with Common Ground; Altered Media and Manna at the Jazzhaus, $926^{1/2}$ Massachusetts St.
7.30 p.m. - Expressions dance club meeting at 242 Robinson Center.
8. p.m. - Pot Pourier Productions at the Inghe Theatre at Murphy Hall. Also performed at same time through April 26.
10 a.m. — Retirees Club coffee in Adam Lounge at Adams Alumni Center. Music at 11 a.m.
a submarine fleet, at 427 Summerfield Hall.
11:40 a.m. — “What is Semitica?” a University Forum at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
O
4 p.m. — "El Tiempo en Teatro," a lecture by Luis Iglesias, professor of Spanish literature, Universidad de Compostela, Spain, at the Kangas Union.
3:30 p.m. - Naval ROTC international meeting, for those interested in becoming a nuclear trained officer on
6:30 p.m. — Campus Christians Fellowship meeting in the Northeast Conference Room at the Burge Union.
Conference Roddha趴 the Burge Union.
7 p.m. - KU Dr. Who Appreciation Society meeting in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union.
Thursday
23
11:30 a.m. - "Bird Migration in
11:30 a.m. — **Bird Migration in Argentina**, a slide show, at Brown Bag Lunch Merienda at 109 Lippincott Hall.
3:30 a.m. — University and Faculty Senate meetings in Aledson Auditorium at the Kansas Union.
12:30 a.m. — "The Constitution as a Living Document: Branen vs. Meese." a lecture by Arthur Kinoy at 104 Green Hall
5 p.m. — Society for German-Americans symposium begins at the Kansas Union and Adams University will continue through Saturday
7 p.m. — 'Ansel Adams and Dorothea Lange: An Essay on Three Mormon Towns,' a lecture by David
6 p.m. — Latin American Solidarity Rice and Beans Dinner at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
Jacobs at Spencer Museum of Art auditorium.
7 p.m. — "Witness to Parap-
theld "and" Mandela," SUA films in
Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas
Union, $2
7 p.m. — "The American Past," with Golden Shield, KANUUM 0.5
7 p.m. — "The American Past," with Calder Pickett, KANI FM-91. 8 p.m. Concert with David Tamarack, Tamarack Swanwhatch Regional Hall at Murray Hall.
8 p.m. — "The Diary of Anne Frank," a theatre production by Lawrence Community Theatre, 1501 New Hampshire St. The play also will be performed at 8 p.m. tomorrow, Saturday, May 1 and 2. It will be performed at 2:30 p.m. April 26 and May 3.
7 p.m. — “Sweet Smell of Success,” an SUA film in Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas Union. $2.
7:30 p.m. — Slavic Club panel discussion with native Slavic speakers in the Pine Room at the Kansas Union.
8 p.m. — Student recital with Patrick Sweeten, trombone, in Swathout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
9:30 p.m. — The Red Zone at the Jazzhaus, $ 926_{1 / 2} $ Massachusetts St.
24
Friday
noon — Snyder Book Collecting Contest awards luncheon in the English Room at the Kansas Union
3:30 p.m. — "Ferris Bueller's Day Off" an SUA film in woodwreck Auditorium at the Kansas University. Also showing at 7 and 9:30 p.m. Same tomorrow. Afternoon showings $1, evening showings, $2.
**4 p.m. — English department reading. Janette Turner Hospital, Canadian novelist, will read from her works at 4002 Wescoe Hall.**
7 p.m. — "Opera is My Hobby," with James Seaver, KANU FM-91.5.
7 to 9 p.m. — Naviators rally at.
7 to 9 p.m. — Navigators rally
Free Methodist Church, 802 W. 22nd St. Terrace.
8 p.m. — Observatory Open House at Lindsey Hall (if sky is clear). 8 p.m. — KU International Folk Dance Club meeting at St. John's Elementary School gymnasium, 1233 Vermont St.
8 p.m. — Student recital with Troy Curtis, voice, in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphv Hall.
@
midnight — "Cat People," an
SUA film in woodruff Auditorium
in the Kansas Union. Also showing
tomorrow. $2.
Saturday
4
25
Dick Wright, KANU FM-91.5.
9 a.m. — "The Vintage Jazz Show" with Michael Maher, KANU FM-91.5
10 a.m. — "The Jazz Scene" with
Dick Wright, KANU FM-91.5.
1 p.m. - Baseball. KuVs. University of Iowa at Quigley Field.
Sunday
12:30 p.m. b. Babbage KU'z in university of New York, Quigley Field Art department Art department show at the Art and Design Building gallery. Through May 1.
26
1:30 p.m. Seventh annual Museum Day at museums of Natural History and Anthropology, Spencer Museum of Art and Snow Entomologist-
cal Museum. Events for all ages.
2 p.m. — “Dance with a Stranger”
an SUA film in woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union, $2.
3 p.m. — “The KU Concerts” on
3 p.m. — "The KU Concerts" on KANU FM-91.5.
3:30 p.m. — University Chorus and Symphony Orchestra concert at Hoch Auditorium.
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8
Monday, April 20, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Foubert's principles create mixed emotions in Senate
Continued from p.1
documents, which he uses to back up his arguments.
P. J. K. SMITH
Michael Foubert, graduate senator, has been involved in Student Senate for four years. Foubert is known for his participation in controversial issues
"No one will ever say to you that Michael Foubert is not one of the brightest people they have ever met. He's one sharp cookie."
When Foubert speaks from the floor, it is in a soft voice, barely above a whisper, but the other senators will become quiet. His questions to senators about their pet proposals resemble a game of cat and mouse, with Foubert asking seemingly innocuous questions that senators sometimes find difficult to answer without looking foolish.
when ne speaks from the lectern, he pushes aside the microphone, because the feedback interferes with his hearing aid, and begins a forceful, impassioned speech for or against a proposed motion.
The question on the minds of many is why Foubert, who says he does not like "linear thinkers," has devoted his life to studying the twins. He to 22-year-old undergraduates.
Stanton said, "He's an old debater, and I think debaters simply enjoy the sport of arguing."
But Foubert said the age of the senators made no difference to him.
"I see no difference between a
student and a teacher,
duplicate student who doesn't vote, and
an 18-year-old who yells 'faggot' at a group of people," he said.
Epstein said, "Three words that Michael Foubert has never heard and is not interested in hearing are 'efficiency in government.' No matter what policy it is, he believes it deserves a thorough hearing. And if that means that the crew issue takes four Senate meetings, then that's what it takes."
This semester, a large portion of the Senate wanted to approve the finance committee's student organization budget recommendations as one action. But it was Foubert who voted to consider each of the 42 student groups individually.
His stand this semester against granting revenue code status to the Black Student Union has earned him and two other senators an Affirmative Action complaint from BSU. He has opposed granting amounts of more than $37,000 and $25,000 to the Kansas Crew. He also has protested the Kansas University Endowment Association's investments in companies doing business in South Africa.
Besides serving as graduate senator, Foubert is chairman of the Minority Affairs Committee and is a member of the Election Review Board and the Student Senate Executive Committee.
In addition, he is carrying six hours of classes and has a one-night-a-week job at Pizza Hut, 1606 W. 23rd St.
when asked how he managed all these responsibilities, he laughed and said. "Have you seen my schedule book?"
But Foubert said that this was his fourth and last Senate term. He plans to enter the Peace Corps soon.
"I sure will need to be other people who will raise legitimate issues." pt 5a.
"I need to do something with my life, and that something is not Student Senate, that something is not this university. That something is to go somewhere on a small scale and really make a difference."
Part of his desire to help other people comes from his background, where he was raised. When he was born in 1956, prejudice against racially-mixed children was
strong in Korea, a country still suffering from the Korean War.
"I was taken from that, out of thousands and thousands of children who either died or were lost or abandoned," he said. "I don't know whether you can call it a sense of honor or obligation, but I feel that I owe somebody, somewhere, something."
Foubert was adopted as an infant by a farming couple and grew up in the small Montana town of Haver. He won a National Merit Scholarship in high school and went on to attend Gonzaga University, a private Jesuit college in Spokane, Wash. he gra
duated in 1978 with majors in political science and communication studies.
His two years as a law clerk in Haver during high school made him decide to enter the Gonzaga law school.
"I thought the law transcended everything; it was my ideal," he said. "I had this romantic, Western idea that the law meant you go in, you see something wrong, and you say that it's wrong."
But Fouber became disenchanted with the law and left after his first succession.
"The vast majority of lawyers are mediocre people, like any other profession," he said. "Most of them were just concerned about their fees. They weren't really concerned with equity or justice. None of them wanted to become a public defender, which is what I wanted to do."
For the next few years, Foubert worked as a field researcher for a credit bureau, a job he enjoyed because he got to travel. But in 1980, he came to the University of Kansas to pursue a master's degrees in urban planning and public administration.
He didn't become active in Senate until 1982. He had worked for a short time in high school and undergraduate student government groups, but eventually lost interest because he thought they were irrelevant.
"I'm interested in just about everything," he said. "I go to learn what's there and what interests me."
But when he read that Steve
McMurray, the director of KU on Wheels, had been arrested Sept. 15, 1982, for embezzling $257,651, he decided to get involved
"I suddenly realized that more than a quarter of a million dollars was gone, and I had contributed part of that," he said.
He went down to the Senate office and applied to run as an independent graduate senator. The ballot wasn't read, so Poubert was guaranteed a seat.
He is perhaps best known for his knowledge of and devotion to the Senate's rules and regulations, a code of eight articles that sets procedures for everything from the financing of student organizations to the running of elections.
"Senate changes not from term to term but from meeting to meeting," he said. "There's got to be a structure. Sometimes you can't do what you'd like to do on a whim, because the structure says you cann't."
He criticized Epstein for burning the rules and regulations at the end of his term and faulted those senators who found no time to read the rules.
So what does Foubert do when the committee meetings are finished, and the Senate isn't in session?
"I go home and I read the rules and regulations," he said, smiling. "No. I like to go to auctions. It's a great opportunity to pick up some odds and ends, and you see such a cross section of people there: country people, struggling young couples, college students, the affluent."
Faculty unionization pros, cons debated
"I love to people-watch."
Continued from p.1
AAUP would easily surpass 30 percent.
Any group that collects 30 percent of the faculty's signatures can be included on a ballot as a candidate to represent the faculty bargaining unit in negotiations.
The board will validate petitions and then decide when and where to hold an election. The board also will post notices and sample ballots around campus at least seven days before the election.
The election would determine whether KU's faculty wants to form a union, and if so, which group would represent the union. The group that captures a simple majority of the votes would win. If no group receives more votes than the opposition with his best votes is dropped and another election is held.
The ballot would automatically include a "no union" option.
brothers don't. They can fight their own battles."
Jan Roskam, Deane A. Eckers distinguished professor of aerospace engineering, said earlier this semester, "The weak brothers always need that kind of crutch. The strong
Those who favor the latter option have said that a union would promote mediocrity and threaten collegiality between the faculty and the administration. They say unions have no place in academia.
But proponents say an organized faculty could give faculty members leverage with the administration, the Board of Regents and the Kansas Legislature. Some proponents say a faculty would pay faculty salaries and faculty morale.
Clifford Griffin, professor of history and an organizer for KNEA, has said an organized faculty would be "prepared to pegging" with collective bargaining.
KU administrators, meanwhile, carefully sidetheel the issue. James Scaly, assistant to the chancellor, said last week that the administration would continue to maintain a policy of silence on the issue.
If KU's faculty votes to organize, other universities will probably take notice. Organized faculties are relatively rare in the Midwest, and few "flagship" research universities such as KU are organized.
Pittsburgh State University is the only organized campus in Kansas.
Nationwide, faculties are organized at about a sixth of the nation's 3,200 institutions of higher education.
University governance, in an attempt to answer questions about the faculty union issue, will hold a collective bargaining forum on Thursday at a Faculty Senate meeting.
Baha'i faith's road map for peace earns praise
By a Kansan reporter
A commendation by the Kansas House of Representatives on the Baha'i religion's road map for world peace will help educate people unfamiliar with the faith's teachings, a local Baha'i administrator said yes-erday.
"We're hoping people will be encouraged to read this document and think about what we as human beings can do to bring about peace on this planet," Lawrence resident Ed Thornton said.
Thornton said many people think of world peace as disarmament and think human nature would prevent world peace. But the statement says that through education and encouragement, world peace and a world government can be achieved, he said.
Thornton is a member of the Lawrence Baha'i community, which has about 20 members, he said. Other Baha'i groups are active in Kansas and around the world.
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, co-sponsored a resolution commending "The Promise of World Peace" statement by the Universal House of Justice, the governing body of the international Baha'i faith.
Mike Meyer, adviser to the KU Baha'i Club, said that lasting peace required an end to economic, social and religious turmoil. The agreement recognizes that goal, he said.
Thornton said the statement mirrored the teachings of the Baha'i faa.
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But at the lake, visitors were enjoying the hot weather while they could. Lawrence residents John Breston and Mark Gentry robed themselves on the barbecue before they kicked back to catch some sun.
The sun was great, they said, but they could do without the wind.
"Paper plates just don't work in this kind of weather," Breston said. "We got barbecue sauce all over us."
An underwater sidewalk in the park led to a water pailpast the parking lot. The fountain, about 70 yards out into the lake, wasn't being used by the children who splashed around it.
Gentry said, "It's never been this high, and I've lived here all my life. When you can pull up your hood and your衣 and fish, the lake's high."
The carp fishing wasn't bad, Topea resident Stuart Border said. He has been coming to Clinton Lake for a few years.
"It helps when the water's up," he said. "They usually lie so low, you can't get at them."
The water would have been fine for boaters Ken Clark and Rick Langley, if it wasn't for the wind.
"We could tell by looking at the white caps, it's not our day," Langley said.
Clark said, "Anybody that's had to live in Kansas has to learn to live with the wind."
They sat in front of the boat Langley bought Saturday, which never left its trailer. They were playing it safe.
"We couldn't get the boat in the water," Langley said. "It's just too rough."
It wasn't too rough for David Irvin, Lawrence sophomore, and his windsurfing board.
The red danger flag was flying over the dam, so he had most of the lake to himself. Because of the high wind, his board would touch the lake only on the very back, he said.
"Today, I'll be surfing," he said. "I won't be touching the water much."
Kansan staff member Alison Young contributed information to this story.
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 20, 1987
9
Yankees take two from Royals
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — There may have been some doubts about the New York Yankees' pitching but Charles Hudson and Tommy John did their best yesterday to erase those negative ideas.
"I think we're good enough to win with what we have," said John, after he pitched seven scoreless innings in helping the Yankees to a 5-0 and 1-0 doubleheader sweep of the Kansas City Royals.
Pat Clements, 1-0, was the winner in the second game on Dan Pasqua's eight-inning sacrifice fly after Hudson, 3-0, pitched his first shutout and second straight complete game in the opener.
It's the first time the Yankees have shut out the opposition in both ends of a doubleheader since Sept. 25, 1977 against Toronto. It's the first time the Royals have been shut out twice in one day since Sept. 9, 1974, against the Oakland Athletics.
Clements worked a scoreless eighth inning and Dave Righetti, who earned his third save, retired the side in the ninth inning of the nightcap.
Brett could be out four weeks
"The people we have up there now are the 10 best pitchers this ball club
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Kansas City Royals third baseman George Brett pulled a muscle in his right ribcage yesterday and may be out for three to four weeks.
In the first inning of the first game of a doubleheader against the New York Yankees, Brett injured himself while swinging at Charles Hudson's 3-1 pitch and then aggrimated the muscle in the bottom of the inning while playing the field.
He was replaced at the start of the second inning by Juan Beniquez, who also started the nightcap.
After the doubleheader, which the Royals lost 5-0 and 1-0. Kansas
city trainer Mickey Cobb said that Brett had been examined by a doctor and would be examined again in Boston today.
can come up with." John said. "I think, let us have four to five weeks to get it sorted out."
Cobb said Brett would not play in today's game. "He had some definite discomfort and soreness." He was very sick, our fingers that it is not serious."
The doctor told Brett that the injury seemed serious enough to warrant a three to four week recuperation. Cobb said.
John missed two scheduled starts due to an intestinal virus but threw 93 pitches and allowed only four hits over seven innings before departing
Brett walked on the at-bat that resulted in the injury and mishandled an outfield throw for an error in his only innning of play, and the Yankees to score an unearned run off starter Charlie Leibrand.
in favor of Clements
"I've always said," said Yankees Manager Lou Pinella, "we've had the people here to get the job done. We won nine of 12."
Pasqua's sacriice飞 came off Mark Gubicza, 1-2, after Willie Randolph singled with one out in the eighth and moved to third on Don Mattingly's single to right. Dave Winfield then drew a walk and Pasqua drove Willie Wilson to the edge of the center-field warning track with his fly ball that allowed Randolph to score.
"I knew it wasn't going any-where," said Pasqua, "but I knew it would be deep enough to score the run."
Although his team was held scoreless for 18 innings, Royals Manager Billy Gardner said, "I'm not concerned. It's just one of those things. This team is going to score plenty of runs."
In the first game, Hudson struck out seven and walked three in pitching his second straight complete game. Hudson, who pitched a complete game victory over Cleveland in 1985, pitched the first New York pitcher to go the distance in consecutive games since Phil Niekro in September 1985.
Gary Ward singled in two runs in the Yankees' three-run first inning against Royals starter Charlie Leibrand, 2-1, and Winfield singled home runs in the first and the fourth. Randolph added an RBI single.
No.1-ranked Cowboys pound 'Hawks
Bv DAVID BOYCE
Staff writer
Oklahoma State's preseason All-American Robin Ventura stepped to the plate yesterday in his final at-bat without a hit.
Ventura's 31-game hitting streak was in jeopardy.
The count went full. On the next pitch, Ventura lined a single to right field and extended his hitting
33
18
For the fans that remained at Quigley Field, Ventura's hitting streak was the only drama left in the 21-3 beating the Cowboys handed the Jayhawks.
"The hitting streak was on my mind because everybody on the team wanted it to continue." Ventura said. "They were saying, 'You've gotta swing.'"
Ventura said the pitch from KU's Mike Andress was a strike, although Hugh Stanfield thought differently.
Stanfield jokingly asked Ventura after the game,
"Did you go to church today?"
Then laughed and said, "I told home boy (Andress) to walk you."
Stanfield could allow himself to smile some after the defeat. He hit a three-run homer in the bottom of the sixth, extended his hitting streak to 13 games and broke up a shutout.
"It's been a long time since I hit one," he said. After trading a few jokes with Ventura, Stanfield became serious when reflecting on the Jayhawks' losing ways.
"I have been asking myself, 'Is it worth it?' " he said. "As a senior, I want to go out a winner."
That won't happen. The losses to the Cowboys drop Kansas' record to 11-27-1 overall and 1-14 in the Big Eight Conference. Oklahoma State goes to 40-3 and 8-1.
And during Coach Marty Pattin's six years at Kansas, he has only beaten the Cowboys once.
KU coach Marty Pattin motions to call in a new pitcher as pitcher Steve Renco and catcher Joe Pfister watch. Pattin used three pitchers in yesterday's 15-2 loss against Oklahoma State in the first game of a double-header
Chard DeShazo/KANSAN
This four-game series, though, may have been the worst for a Patinco-cached team.
On Saturday, Oklahoma State beat Iowa 13-3 and 12-1 in a doubleheader. And in the first game yesterday, the Cowboys beat Kansas 15-2. The games were games were Oklahoma State, 61, and Kansas, 49.
Both scheduled nine-inning games only went seven because of the 10-run rule after seven innings.
Kansas played poorly throughout the weekend and reached a low point in the final game.
The Jayhawks were playing the No. 1 team in the country, but as Oklahoma State's Adam Smith said after yesterday's game, "Once Kansas fell behind, they seemed to give up.
"They have some good players, but whenever we took the lead, their attitude was not in the game." That attitude was evident in yesterday's second game.
Oklahoma State scored five times in the first inning off starter Bret Morris. Morris then settled down and gave up only two runs in the next two innings.
During the first six innings, the Jayhawks committed five errors.
After the third, the Jayhawks seemed to give up. The Cowboys scored three in the fourth, eight in the sixth and nine in the seventh.
While Kansas was struggling offensively, defensively and on the mound, the Cowboy's Smith was too good.
In the 21-3 victory, Smith had a two-run double, a scoring triple and a grand slam for seven
After going hitless in his first five at-bats, Smith found his stroke and hit two grandslam homeruns in the next three games.
"I had a hard time picking up the ball early in the series, but once I got used to it, I found a good groove," he said.
Smith had 15 RBIs over the weekend series. Kansas will try to snap a five-game losing streak when it ifaces Benedictine at 3 p.m. tomorrow at Quigley Field.
Yesterdav's games
Kansas 200 000 | 0-2 54
Long and A. Smith, Ward, Purdy, Renko (5) Andress (6) and Boesenham, W-Long, L-Purdy (14) 2B-Okalaon St., Smith, Ottz; Kansas, Etes. Born, HRH-Okalaon St., Ventura.
OKLAHOMA St .15, KANSAS 2 (1 game,
Oklahoma St.
042 252 - 0 15 - 1
OKLAHOMA ST. 21. KANSAS 3 (2nd game)
OKLAHOMA St, 21, KANSAS 3 (2nd game)
Oklahoma St.
502 83 0—2
49 16 0—2
Pugh and A. Smith, Morris, Taylor (4), Andreas (6) and Pistler,
Boeesen, W.-Pug, M-Lighth (1-2), 2Bs-Okalahem St., Ostriz 2:
A. Smith, Iland, 3Bs-Okalaheim St., A. Smith, HRS-Okalaheim St.
, Iland, Barragan; Kansas, Stanfield (7).
'Hawks win 1 of 4 in weekend series
Bv ROR KNAPP
Staff writer
The pitchers had the upper hand this week as the Kansas softball team lost three of four games at Javhawk Field.
Kansas opened yesterday by shutting out Oklahoma 2-0 behind Roanna Brazier's three-hit pitching. But the Jayhawks finished the day with a 2-1 loss to Oklahoma State.
Kansas lost 4-2 to Oklahoma and
3-2 to Oklahoma State on Saturday.
The Jayhawks are now 21-19 over
3-3 in the Big Eight Conference.
"The pitchers were very effective in keeping the hitters' bats idle," Kansas first baseman Gayle Lueeda said.
A combination of good pitching and a strong south wind blowing in from left field kept the scores low.
The Jayhawks got a quick run in yesterday's early game when Oklahoma pitcher Blenda Selvey had first-inning control problems. With one out, left-fielder Jill Williams walked and went to second base on a wild pitch by Selvey.
Luedeke said that the wind was a factor, but that good pitching was the key to keeping scores down.
Williams advanced to third base after walks to Kelly Downs and Laura Cramer and scored on a drive by second-baseman Reenie Noble.
The inning ended when Luecke, the next batter, lined to Oklahoma shortstop Tracy Spears. Spears' throw to third base beat Downs
Softball
back to the bag, completing the double play.
Brazier, who improved her record to 11-7, didn't need any more runs. She struck out one, she didn't did not give up an extra base-hit.
The 'Hawks picked up another run in the second when right-fielder Cherie Wickham led off the second inning with a triple and scored on Brazier's single.
The Jayhawks, playing the game against Oklahoma State as the visiting team, entered the top of the seventh trailing 2-0. Kansas loaded the bases with one out for each pass, who grounded out to second base. Laude scored, cutting the Oklahoma State lead to 1-2 with two outs.
Kim Doley chipped the first pitch high in front of the plate, but hesitated before running to first. The ball was ruled fair, and Doley was thrown out, ending the game.
Sherri Mach, the Kansas pitcher, dropped to 4-6 on the season. She held the Cowgirls scoreless until the third.
The Cowgirls scored the winning run in the goddth. Sixfrey doubled to deep left-center field and was replaced by pinch-runner Carol Davis. Davis moved to third on a sacrifice bunt and score on a suicide squeeze bunt laid down by catcher Lisa Harvey.
Cards sweep series with win over Mets
The Associated Press
ST. LOUIS — Willie McGee and rookie Tom Pagnozzi each homered and Greg Mathews allowed seven hits over 6 $2\%$ innings as the St. Louis Cardinals beat the New York Mets 4-2 yesterday to sweep a three-game game.
McGee, recovering slowly from off-season knee surgery, and Pagnozi each homered off Sid Fernandez. 2-1. The hits in the second and third innings helped give Mathews his first win in two decisions with relief help from Rick Horton, who earned his third save.
No New York runner made it past second base against Mathews, who entered the game with a 13.50 earned-run average based on two shaky starts, until Al Pedrique walked with one out in the seventh and made it to third on Mookie Wilson's single.
The Cardinals' sweep was their first over the Mets since June 1985.
Vince Coleman walked and stole second and third base to start a two-hit play.
CHICAGO — Vance Law hit a two-run single, capping a three-run first inning to lead Lary Sorsensen and the Montreal Expos to a 3-1 triumph yesterday over the Chicago Cubs in a game marred by brush-back pitches.
Expos 3, Cubs 1
In the seventh inning, Cubs shortstop Shaun Dillon went after reliever Andy McGaffigan, who had through patches close on 0-2 and 2-2 counts.
Dunston ran to the mound, threw a punch and missed as McGaffigan ducked. The benches cleared, and there was a lot of pushing and showout at the mound but no ejections. Dunston went back to bat and struck out.
In the top of the eighth, Mitch Webster, the first Expos' batter, was hit on a 2-0 pitch from Ed Lynch. Lynch was thrown out of the game by plate umpire Doug Harvey, as was Cubs Manager Gene Michael.
National League
Giants 4. Braves 3
SAN FRANCISCO — Second baseman Glenn Hubbard's error with two out in the ninth inning enabled Chris Brown to score from third base, and the San Francisco Giants a 43 victory Sunday over the Atlanta Braves.
The Giants, 8-0 in one-run games,
improved to 10-3 for their best start
since 1971 when they went 12-2 and
won the National League West.
Dodgers 9. Padres 1
SAN DIEGO — Mike Marshall drove in five runs with two home runs, and Bob Welch allowed five hits in eight innings as the Los Angeles Dodgers beat the San Diego Padres 9-1 yesterday.
Welch, 1-1, struck out four and walked four, losing his shutout bid in the ninth inning.
PITTSBURGH — Sid Bream's seventh-inning solo home run, his first of the season, broke a 2-12 tie and gave Doug Drabek his first National Player award as the Pittsburgh Pirates beat the Philadelphia Phillies 5-2 yesterday.
Pirates 5. Phillies 2
With two out in the seventh, Bream broke a 2-2 tie by hitting a 3-1 pitch from the left-hander Bruce Rufu-01, over the field wall, just inside the foul pole.
Astros 7, Reds 3 (1st)
Reds 6, Astros 2 (2nd)
CINCINNATI — Kal Daniels hit his fifth homer and scored twice, and Power Ted held Houston to five hits over 6 2½ innings yesterday to give the Cincinnati Reds a 6-2 victory and a double-header split with the Astros.
Houston won the first game 7-3 as Bill Doran drove in three runs with a pair of homers and Mike Scott and Larry Andersen stopped the Reds on three hits. One of the hits was a homer by Daniels.
Tudor breaks right leg in freak dugout mishap
ST. LOUIS — The St. Louis Cardinals, while capping an early-season sweep from the New York Mets with a 4-2 victory yesterday, emerged as losers in the process when pitcher John Tudor was injured during the game.
The Associated Press
Tudor, the club's top left-hander, sustained a broken tibia on the outside of his right knee when rookie New York catcher Barry Lyons tumbled in the St. Louis dugout in the third inning. Lyons, who was chasing Jack Clark's foul, landed on the Cardinals' pitcher.
Tudor was taken to Jewish Hospital, where X-rays revealed a fracture that will keep him out of
the lineup for three months
"He (Lyons) had a back of a run, Tommy (Herr) was on the step. He got out of the way." Herzog said. Herzog said he thought pitchers Danny Cox and Todd Worrrell also got tangled up in the spill.
"I was worried about Lyons, and all of a sudden I lose my No. 1 manager." Manager Whitey Herzog said later in the Cardinals' clubhouse.
Kip Ingle, Cardinals public relations director, said Tudor's knee would be in a cast for two months, followed by a month's rehabilitation for the 33-year-old pitcher.
Brewers rally in ninth to win twelfth straight
The Associated Press
MILWAUKEE — Rob Deer tied the game with a home run hit that scored three runs and Dale Sveum won the game when he hit a home run with one man on base. The Milwaukee Brewers beat the Texas Rangers 6-4 yesterday with the five-run rally in the ninth inning, and set an American League record with their 12th straight victory.
The Atlanta Braves, of the National League, won 13 consecutive games the 1982. With its 11th straight victory in a season, the Braves beat 1981 Oakland A's for the Al-Mark.
Mark Clear, 2-0, got the win in relief for Milwaukee. Greg Harris, 0-2, gave up the two final home runs for the loss.
Red Sox 4. Blue Jays 1
TORONTO — Wade Boggs hit a
American League
home run and Al Nipper pitched a seven-inning five-hitter, leading the Boston Red Sox to a 4-1 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays yesterday.
Nipper, 2-0, struck out three and walked none in his first triumph over Toronto since Sept. 18, 1985. Wes Gardner pitched the final 1 \frac{1}{3} innings for his second save.
Indians 3, Orioles 0 (1st)
Indians 8, Orioles 7 (2nd)
Cleveland won the first game, 3-0.
BALTIMORE — Pat Tabler drove in three runs with a pair of singles and a bases-loaded walk, helping the Indians to an 8-7 victory over the Orioles and a doubleheader sweep yesterday.
as Greg Swindell pitched a six-hitter and Joe Carter hit a home run.
In the second game, the Indians overcame a 3-Baltimore lead with a (6-2) victory.
Forty-two-year-old Steve Carlton, who relieved 48-year-old Phil Niekro in the fifth, got his first victory of the season and No. 324 for his career.
Mariners 8, Athletics 1
Twins 6, Angels 5
NAHEIM, Calif. — Gary Gaetti hit a six-inning home run that scored three runs, leading the Minneapolis 5 victory over the California Angels.
With California leading 2-1, Kirby Puckett and Kent Hrbek had the inning with singles off of Don Sutton, 0-3, before Gaetti hit a 2-2 pitch over the center-field fence for his second home run of the season.
SEATTLE — Scott Bankhead pitched a five-hitter and struck out a career-best nine batters, and Mike Kingery hit a two-run single during a four-run Seattle third as the Mariners defeated the Oakland Athletics 8-1 yesterday.
White Sox 7. Tigers 2
DETROIT — Tim Hullet hit a home run and drove in three runs to back the six-hit pitching of Floyd Bannister as the Chicago White Sox defeated the Detroit Tigers 7-2 for the first time in six this season.
Carlton Fisk, Greg Walker and Daryl Boston also hit home runs for the White Sox.
10
Mondav. April 20, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
*Monday Sports Extra*
Sunny skies contribute to success of 62nd year of Relays
By DIANE FILIPOWSKI
Staff writer
About 5:30 p.m. Saturday, the 62nd annual Kansas Relays were over and a sunburst Al Fereshetan, Relays manager, was relieved to see it end.
The 1987 Kansas Relays will be remembered for its weather — mid-80s and sunny skies — and for its lack of serious problems to mar the event.
"I thought the fields fell together well," Fereshetian said. "We really ended up having some good competition."
After the final runner crossed the finish line, one U.S. record had been broken, another had been attempted, NCAA qualifying marks had been topped 21 times and 16 Relay's records had been broken.
The meet included former Jayhawks, world-record holders and KU Olympians Al Oerter and Jim Ryun, who competed in the discus throw and the Masters 800-meter run, respectively.
Oerter, with wifthrew from his event after two throws because of muscle spasms in his back, competed about noon in front of about 1,000 people at McCook-Olympic Field.
"Even though Oster pulled out of the disucc. Fereshetian said, "there was still a gaggle."
John Powell, six-time national champion and two-time Olympic bronze medalist won the event with a toss of 194 feet.
Ryun finished second in the master's 800-meter run in front of about 10,000 at Memorial Stadium. Herald Hadley won the event
The Relays, which has declined in popularity in the last decade, attracted more than 10,000 during the four days of competition, which began Wednesday and ended Saturday.
with a time of 1:58.7.
And the smooth operation won the respect of most visiting teams, coaches and athletes.
About 1,400 high school and 1,200 college athletes from 21 states competed in the
The 1987 Relays also included a U.S. record in the pole vault. Joe Dial's vault of $19-4\frac{1}{4}$ broke his own record of $19-4\frac{1}{4}$ and was reason enough to earn him the meet's outstanding male performer award.
Another U.S. record was attempted in the high jump by southwestern Louisiana's Hollis Conway. Hollis cleared the br at 7-7, a new Relays record, but missed three attempts at 7-9.
Kansas State's All-American Kenny Harrison set a meet record in the long jump and won the triple jump. Both marks put him in the top three of the collegiate rankings this season.
K-State's Pinkie Suggs also captured the spotlight. Suggs surprised the crowd and four-time national champion Regina Cavanaugh of Rice with a 55-4¼ throw, a win and a meet record in the shot put.
San Diego Track Club's Latanya Sheffield, the meet's outstanding female performer, won the 400-meter hurdles and was on the team's meet record-setting mile relay.
Sheffield said the weather was a pleasant surprise, one that she did not expect.
"We had heard that it was windy and usually cold here," Sheffied said after the meet. "We tried to train later in the evenings when the conditions in San Diego were like that."
Sheffield said she thought the weather added to the competitiveness of the meet.
"I think next year being the Olympic year will bring in a lot more higher competition and make the meet more competitive," said said, "because it is a well run meet."
Dial breaks mark after controversy
See RELAYS, p. 11, col. 4
By ROB KNAPP
Staff writei
Dial got his share of emotional highs and lows as well Saturday at the Kansas Relays at Memorial Stadium. Named the Relays most valuable male athlete, he went from celebration to depression to satisfaction in the space of an hour Saturday as he broke the U.S. pole vault record and nearly set a world record.
Pole vaulter Joe Dial experiences a lot of quick ups-and-downs in his sport, most of them when he sails over the crossbar.
Dial, competing unattached,
vaulted 9 feet, $4\frac{3}{4}$ inches, and broke
the U.S. record of 19-4$\frac{1}{4}$ he set in
Norman, Okla., last year. But for
about 30 minutes, the new record was
in doubt and Dial was ready to pack
his poles and go home.
Dial cleared his first attempt at 19 4-4' and seemed to have broken the U.S. record. That was just after 4 p.m.
Then the measuring began.
Relays officials measured the height with a metal measuring bar, which had been used to measure all the previous jumps, and found the crossbar to be at the presupposed height, 19-43".
Then an official brought out a steel measuring tape, which the NCAA rulebook says must be used to verify all record jumps. The official climbed a stepladder to remeasure the height and came down, and another official made the long climb.
In the stepladder teetered from the swirling winds blowing inside the stadium. Dial draped the measuring stick across crossbar and came down satisfied
The steel tape showed Dial's jump lower than the measuring bar had, and Dial was told he only had tied the record. With his new U.S. mark in danger, Dial volunteered to climb the ladder and check the height himself.
"They said it was a hair under, and I looked up there and it looked like mine."
While Relays officials tried to
decide just how high Dial had jumped, Dial began pulling his warm-ups on and saying he was through jumping for the day.
"I thought I'd made the American record and I got all psyched up," Dial said. "Then they try to take it away from me. Psychologically, I'm down the drain."
A track official came over and told Dial that, after another remeasurement, the new record would stand.
Dial had the bar laced at 19.9,
almost an inch higher than the world
record of 19.84; set last year by
Sergie Bubke of the Soviet Union.
The crowd focused on the vault area as Dial prepared for his three attempts. Several of the Kansas pole balls went through the runway, calling encouragement.
He was close to setting the record on his next two attempts, though, brushing the crossbar about halfway across.
At 4:45 p.m., almost 45 minutes after his last jump, Dial made his first attempt at the world record. He knocked the bar off before he could get his feet across.
On the third try the bar bounced and hesitated for a tantalizing moment before the side nearest the stands began to fall.
"It turned out OK," Dial said later. "I think all of that took a little bit off my first jump, but I got back into it on my second and third jumps."
Dial lost his competition at 18.4, which Scott Huffman of Kansas and Todd Cooper of Athletes In Action could not clear. Dial needed three tries to clear 18.8, but vaulted $19_{-3}$ on his first try with plenty of room to spare.
For Dial, Saturday's performance continued the success he has had at the Relays. He set the Relays high school pole vault record of 17-5-4 while competing for Marlow, Okla., High School in 1980.
Dial also won the invitational pole vault while competing for Oklahoma State in 1982.
SAN DIEGO
Alan Hagman/KANSAN
33
KU's Mia Wickliffe breaks from the blocks at the start of the women's 440-yard relay finals. The Jayhawks finished fourth in the event at the Kansas Relays on Saturday.
Alan Haqman/KANSAN
NANGA
71
Joe Dial, former All-American from Oklahoma State, clears the bar at 19 feet, $4\frac{3}{4}$ inches to set a U.S. pole vault record. Dial broke his old mark of 19-4$\frac{1}{4}$ Saturday at the 62nd running of the Kansas Relays.
Break away
Returning stars show age in KU Relays competition
Staff writer
Bv DIANE FILIPOWSKI
Oerter drops out, Ryun 2nd in 800 meters
Former Jayhawks Al Oerter and Jim Ryun, both Olympians and world-record holders at one time, returned to compete at their alma mater but showed that age had taken its toll.
Their returns attracted large crowds Saturday at the 62nd annual Kansas Relays, but neither athlete could reach back to his old talents for a first-place finish.
In fact, Oerter, 50, a four-time Olympic gold medalist and former world-record holder in the disc, withdrew from the competition after two throws.
Complaining of muscle spasms in his back, he apologized to the crowd of about 1,000 at McCook-Olympic Field before he withdrew from the event in the preliminary round. Neither throw was recorded because Oerter scratched on one and threw the other out of bounds.
Oerter said he was disappointed because he wanted to do well for the people who had come to watch him compete.
"I'm scratching." Oerter said to the crowd over a microphone. "I don't want to do something to myself that will take two months to repair."
Oerter said before the Rivals that he was training year-round to make the 1288 Olympics in Seoul, South Korea. He was to win a fifth Olympic gold medal.
John Powell, a six-time national champion and a two-time Olympic bronze medalist, went on to win the event with a throw of 194 feet.
"I'm still thinking of Seoul," Oerter said, "but this would take away from the effort in the long run."
"I'm unhappy about his injury," Powell said Saturday. "It's always nice to see someone 50 throw well."
You could win four gold medals, and you could only say that you tied Al.'
John Powell Olympic bronze medalist
Powell, who won a bronze medal at Los Angeles in 1844, said he also was training for the 1988 Olympics.
"Oerter has spoiled things for us discuss throwers," Powell said. "You could win four gold medals, and you could only say that you tied Al."
Ryun, 39, a former world-record holder in the 800- and 1,500-meter runs and the mile, ran in the Masters in Tokyo. He also competed in front or a crowd of about 7,000.
And the crowd cheered him to the
finish.
Hadley was a 1965 NCAA Indoor 2-mile champion for Kansas.
Ryun finished second with a time of 2.01.7, behind winner Herald Hadley, who finished at 1.58.7.
Ryun said that Hadley ran a great race and that he was pleased with his own performance because he had run to his capabilities.
"When I was running," Ryun said after his race, "I said, 'God, help me to keep my cool.' I told myself before the race that I could go out and run a respectable race, or I could give up. I don't feel like I gave up."
Ryun said he was nervous about three hours before the race and even asked himself at the starting line why he was racing again.
"It's not a big deal." Ryun said. "But when it's your first time to come back to the track, it is a big deal."
Ryun said it had been about 15 years since he had competed on a track. He said he thought that he had a good experience Saturday and might run again.
Bob Timmons, KU men's coach and Ryun's coach at KU, said that Ryun did not have a lot of speed right now but that he thought Ryun ran the best race he could.
"I am his friend, and I am interested in what he does," Timmons said after the race. "I was still right there with him the whole way."
Huffman, Bohanan vault 18 at Relays
Staff writer
Kansas All-American Scott Huffman was about to ready his piles away for good after he finished fifth in the collegiate pole vault competition Friday at the 62nd annual Kansas Relays.
Huffman, who holds the national freshman outdoor record with a vault of 18 feet, $5\frac{1}{2}$ inches, finished Friday with a vault of 16-6, well behind teammate Chris Bohan, who won the event with a vault of 18-1.
Kansas freshman Pat Manson was second with a vault of 17 feet and Cedric Fullard was fourth with a vault of 16-6, but had fewer misses than Huffman.
Huffman did manage a third-place finish at the Big Eight Indoor Championships in February, but only a 13th-place finish at the NCAA Indoor Championships in March.
Huffman's unimpressive vault capped off what had been a disappointing year for the KU junior. His indoor season was interrupted by a right ankle injury in September that eventually was operated on in January.
Huffman summed up his performance Friday when he said, "Nobody remembers that I was good."
"Scott doesn't remember how good he is." Attig said. "Not other people."
Rick Attig, assistant men's coach,
said Friday that Huffman was lacking
confidence and only needed a good jump to change his outlook.
Huffman proved to the crowd and himself Saturday that he was the same vaulter he was his freshman year. Huffman finished second in the invitational vault Saturday with a jump of 18-4, behind Joe Dial's vault of $19-4_{3}$, which was a U.S. record.
Bohanan finished finished fourth at 18$^{\frac{1}{4}}$ and Manson was eighth at 17-6$^{\frac{1}{4}}$. All three qualified for the NCAA Outdoor Championships June 3-6 at Baton Rousse, La.
"I kept asking myself Friday, 'Am I all washed up?' Did that operation take that much out of me?' " Huffman said Saturday.
Huffman said Dial gave him some encouragement before he vaulted on Saturday.
"I told myself that it was ridiculous to be vaulting so low." Huffman said. "And Joe told me the same thing. It helps when a good valuer tells you that you are good."
Huffman's performance was not Kansas' breakthrough in the event.
Bohan vaulted more than 18 feet for the first time in his career on Friday, and then jumped the height again on Saturday, which he said gave him all the confidence in the world.
And Manson, who was last year's top high school pole vaulter in the nation with a jump of $18^{3/4}$, vaulted higher than 17 feet for the first time as a Jayhawk. Manson was out for most of the indoor season because of injuries.
"We decided to dedicate the indoor and the first part of the outdoor season to technique," Attig said. "At sometime in a vaulter's career, they have to do that to get ahead."
Bohanan said the sacrifice he had made, which included poor vaulting at times during the indoor season, was worth it.
"Coach Attig told us not to worry about technique," Bohanana said. "But to just go out there and jump. What's that I did today."
University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 20, 1987
11
*Monday Sports Extra*
Field events reign supreme at this year's Kansas Relays
By DIANE FILIPOWSKI
Staff writer
Joe Dial's U.S. record Saturday in the pole vault was the final field event at this year's Kansas Relays and marked the end of what was one of the most competitive meets for delites across the country this season.
. . . . .
One U.S. record was broken, another was attempted, NCAA qualifying marks were bettered 13 times, the third one was broken during two days of competition.
Hollis Conway, who competed unattached for Southwest Louisiana, set a Relys record and won the high jump with a leap of 7-7. He made three attempts at the U.S. record of 7-9.
"I just tried not to pay attention to it," Hollis said yesterday. "If I thought that it was an American record when I was jumping, I probably would have hit my head on the bar."
Conway, 20, led a competitive field of high jumpers that had six other participants clear 7-2. Kansas 'Sharar' finished eight with a jump of 7.9
Conway, who is from Shreveport, La., and is redshirting this season, told reporters why he decided to attend such a small school.
"It was close to home," the 6½- Conway said. "You can be good anywhere you go. It's just a matter of what you do."
Pinkie Suggs of Kansas State was the highlight of Saturday morning's field events. Her throw of 55-414 was good enough to qualify for the NCAA outdoor championships, to break her own Relays record and to defeat defending four-time outdoor national champion Regina Cavanaugh of Rice.
Cavanaugh finished second with a throw of 54-11, and Kansas' Denise Buchanan finished third at 51-11%, all in front of the NCAA qualifying mark of 53-11%.
Suggs sat Saturday after she had won that she had been thinking about her competition all week because she had thrown 55 feet in practice.
"It was just a matter of doing it in a meet." Suggs said.
Suggs tossed her winning throw in the preliminary, which put Cavaverine down.
I was tense during the finals.
Suggs said "because I knew she
was going to win."
Cavanaugh, who was the Texas Relay's champion, said she had not been throwing her best because she was in the forearm of her throw arm.
"This gave me a chance to work on
the aspect of the event."
Gaymouth sale.
Suggs said now that she had thrown her thought she could throw 57 or 88 feet. "It's a challenge," she said.
"I just have to keep concentrating and not let up now like I did in the final." Suggs said.
- * * * * *
While Suggs was the center of attention at the shot put ring, Kansas State's Kenny Harrison was the main attraction at the iumping pit.
Harrison broke meet records in the long jump with a leap of 26-8-1/2 and in the triple jump with a mark of 57-2. Both rank him in the top three college long jumpers in the country.
Harrison said he was pleased with his performances because he said he had a crack in his hip bone and had sat out a week of practices.
Kansas' David Bond finished fourth in the triple jump with a leap of 51-7.
Nebraska captured wins in the women's triple jump and long jump, but divided the wins between two both of whom qualified for nationals.
All-American Karen Kruger won the long jump with a leap of 21·0¹/₂; and Renaita Robinson, also an All-America winner, has a leap of 43·0. also a meet record.
K-State's All-American Felicia Carpenter also qualified for nationals with a second-place, 42-9 leap in the triple jump. Kansas' Yawson Taylor was third in the triple jump with 40-6 and was fifth in the long jump with 20-0.
Olympic gold medalist wins 400
400 hurdles.
Staff writer
By ROB KNAPP
Nawal El Moutawakel, competing unattached, pulled away from the field and easily won the women's 400-meter dash in a time of 52.97 Saturday at the Kansas Relays at Memorial Stadium.
Though she crossed over and won the 400 meters, Moutawak said she would narrow her training for the 1988 Olympics to her best event, the
Moutawakel won the gold medal in the 400-meter hurdles at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles while representing Morocco, and she set the Relays record in the event in 1984, when she competed as a member of the Iowa State team.
"There are those who can do everything," Moutawakel said. "I'm only human, one-hundred percent natural human."
Moutawakel's two coaches died several months ago in an airplane crash, and she said she had only recently gotten over the tragedy.
"After that, all my life was com-
pletely destroyed." Moutaukawel said.
Harry Reynolds of Ohio State beat Relays record-holder Daven Morris of Wayland Baptist in winning the men's invitational 400-meter dash. Reynolds also finished better than his brother, Jeff.
"Running against him is the best competition," Reynolds said. "When I'm running against him, it's more than competition. It's blood."
Harry overtook Morris in the final 100 meters and finished in 45.57. Morris took second and Jeff Reynolds, running for Kansas State, finished third, less than a second behind his brother.
Harry, who attended Butler County Community College in El Dorado before transferring, also ran as a coach. State team that won the mile relay.
Kregg Einspahr, the 1987 Relays steeplechase champion, came to Lawrence to boost his confidence.
KANDAS RELIPS
Life in the fast lane
High school runners compete in the 110-meter hurdles. The event took place in Memorial Stadium during the third day of the 62nd annual Kansas Relays, which ended Saturday.
"I came up because I wanted to win," Einspahr said. "I took a break last year and I'm just getting back on track again."
"It's good for my confidence," Einspahr said. "Sometimes you can run fast, but if you get beat it doesn't give you any confidence."
Einspahr, who ran unattached, is back in training with hopes of competing in the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul.
8:59.52, more than 5 minutes ahead of second-place finisher Terry Drake.
Einspahr finished in a time of
'Hawks win Big 8 matches
By ROB KNAPP
Staff writer
The Kansas women's tennis team lost only one match during the weekend as both the men's and women's teams cruised to two Big Eight Conference victories.
The women beat Iowa State 8-1 on Friday in Ames and swept Nebraska 9-0 on Saturday in Lincoln. The men beat Kansas 5-4 on Saturday, Friday and Nebraska on Saturday.
"That's the team I thought I had all year," men's and women's tennis coach Scott Perelman said yesterday the women's performance on Saturday.
The victories should give the Jayhawks momentum going into the Big Eight Championships, which run Wednesday and Thursday in Oklahoma City.
A team receives one point for each singles and doubles match it wins in conference play, so the women's squad picked up 1 points toward the conference title. The points earned in the regular season will be added to points earned in the tournament to determine the Big Eight champion.
The Jayhawks have won nine straight doubles matches since switching to a new lineup before the Missouri match April 14.
On the men's side, Perelman bemoaned the loss of six points that could become very important in the tight Big Eight race.
"We just weren't ready to play." Perelman said of the match with Iowa State. "It's been a very mystifying thing to me about this team."
Kansas began the Iowa State match with losses at No. 2 and No. 3 doubles, but came back by taking five of six singles matches. The next day, the Jayhawks only managed three singles victories. The losses included junior Larry Pascal's first Big Eight loss of the season.
Alan Hagman/KANSAN
The men's squad will probably head into the Big Eight Championships Friday and Saturday in Oklahoma City trailing Oklahoma State by several points. Oklahoma must beat Iowa, but Washington Tuesday if Kansas and Oklahoma State are to enter the conference championships in a tie.
Mike Ott has his hands full Saturday as he and his son Alex, 2, give water to runners competing in the 18th annual Kansas Relays Marathon.
U.S. INTERNATIONAL
PEACE RAC
Helping hands
KU crew dominates weekend meet
By a Kansan reporter
The Kansas Crew again rowed away from its competition Saturday at the Sunflower State Championships at Lake Shawnee in Topeka.
Kansas' 120 members competed in a six-field team of Kansas schools. The Jayhawks won five events and beaten in six of the regatta's eight events.
The Kansas women's vice eightman boat, women's open four-man
and eight-man boats and men's novice eight-man boat won Saturday, and remained undefeated this season.
Coach Cliff Elliott said he thought these boats would have the best chance to compete Midwestern for championships on Friday and Saturday in Madison, Wis.
Kansas was unable to defeat Kansas State's open eight-man boat. Kansas' novice boat placed second.
Elliott said the team hoped to compete well in Madison so it could send as many members as possible to the Dad Vail Regatta on May 8-9 in Philadelphia.
"At the half-way point, they were only four seats behind, as compared to a length and a half in open water. Then they fell like wet, we made some improvement."
Relays
Continued from p. 10
John Creer, coach of Wayland Baptist University, Plainview, Texas, said Saturday that he was glad his team competed in the Relays because the competition was important to his team's success.
Wayland Baptist's men's team won this year's NAIA Indoor Championships and the women's team was second.
"Our problem is that we face NAIA schools when we compete." Creer
said. "But at the Relays we are put in the college division and can run against everyone."
Creer also said the warm weather and good competition was just what his team needed at this time of the year to turn in good times and marks.
Frank Zubovich, Ohio State's men's coach, said he thought the meet's variety of competition was a plus for his Buckeye.
'When we put our meet schedule
together, we try to find the best relay meet that will take us away from the area. "Zubovich" - "We like to get in touch with them," must the Big Ten teams all the time."
This is the second year that Zubovish has brought a team to the meet, and he said that he probably would come again next year.
"our kids just respond well to the competition here," Zubovich said.
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Monday, April 20, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
One year after accident, effects of Chernobyl haunt Kremlin and Soviet people
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — One year after history's worst nuclear accident, thousands of Soviets face lifelong fear of cancer, and the Kremlin's new open image remains marred by the disaster it kept secret for three days.
The accident on April 26, 1986, at the Chernobyl nuclear power station has cost at least 31 Soviet lives, done untold damage to public health and caused billions of dollars in economic losses. It also has bolstered the anti-nuclear movement worldwide and has led to better international cooperation on atomic safety.
The human toll from Chernobyl's radiation, which spread around the world from its source in Ukraine, now France, will not be known for decades.
British radiologists said last month that in the next 50 years, the cancer-causing radiation would have a lower impact on cancer deaths in Western Europe.
Exact figures in the Soviet Union and elsewhere may never be known. There has been no similar accident to compare it to.
West Europeans were outraged that the Chernobyl disaster was not reported in time for them to take steps to block contamination of crops and livestock. The Kremlin's initial silence was cited as proof that Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev's program for increased official openness had limits.
Most of those living near Cher-
nobly were asleep at 1:23 a.m.
April 26 when unsanctioned experiments at the plant's No.4 reactor went out of control. Explosion and fire tore open the reactor.
Hundreds of firefighters and plant workers tried to quell the blaze, which reached a height of five stories and threatened to kill No. 3 reactor. The heaviest cassettes were among this group.
Soviet officials estimated the accident cost them more than $3 billion. Radioactive contamination left 600 square miles of farmland useless.
A reminder of the human cost stands today at the Mitinskoye Cemetery just outside Moscow, 450 miles northeast of Chernobyl. Twenty-six of the victims are buried side-by-side in a plot that will bear a Heroes of Chernobyl monument.
More than 200 other plant employees and firefighters were hospitalized with radiation sickness after the accident. The medical team monitoring them has not stated the victims' chances for
recovery
A Ukrainian nuclear engineer who emigrated after the accident said friends who worked in two Kiev hospitals said at least 15,000 Chernobyl victims died in those hospitals during five months. The emigrant's statement, made to a U.S. congressional group, was denounced as a "100 percent lie" by Soviet officials. American experts say they see no evidence to support such claims.
The accident forced the evacuation of 135,000 people from the northern Ukraine and southern Byelorussia, where a danger zone with an 18-mile radius was established.
But the convoy of buses that evacuated the first group was not summoned until 36 hours after the accident, and some medical specialists have speculated that the evacuees already had been exposed to harmful levels of radiation.
An American bone-marrow specialist, Robert Gale, worked with Soviet physicians for weeks trying to save the lives of the most seriously injured. By the end of last summer, most of the 35 people listed in critical condition after the accident had died.
Gale, who will help the Soviets with long-term monitoring of the survivors' health, predicts a slight increase in cancer risk for those who lived near Chernobyl, but he has been reluctant to project a death toll.
U.S. residents celebrate Easter with protests, prayers, parades
The Associated Press
With colorful hats and bunny ears,
solemn protests and joyous hymns,
U.S. residents celebrated Christianity's holiest day on Easter Sunday.
trespassing.
People in newly bought finery packed into churches to give thanks for Christ's return from the dead. Others, harking back to pagan symprias, prepaint and rebirth, hunted for decorated flowers and nibbled on chocolate rabbits.
While a human-sized Easter Bunny handed out bonnets of carrots and alfalfa sprouts to the two elephants at Chicago's Lincoln Park Zoo, four people were arrested at Ellsworth Air Force Base in South Dakota for
New Yorkers by the hundreds promenaded down Fifth Avenue in an annual display of tropical hues and pastels. In Los Angeles, thousands gathered in early morning darkness for celebrity scripture readings at the 67th Easter sunrise service at the Hollywood Bowl.
About 60 people had gathered for sunrise Easter services and to place lilies at the front gate of the base. The four arrested had crossed a white line at the entrance, said lt ST. Marta Linson, a base spokeswoman
"The Easter service) is a time for a mutual gathering of people across the state who are concerned about issues, including war in Central America, the farm crisis and the nuclear arms race." Diane Kobernus, the protest organizer, said last week.
In Kennebunkport, Maine, 200 people organized by Veterans for Peace gathered on the steps of a church for a prayer, then marched to Vice President George Bush's summer home two miles away.
Things were a bit different in Cape Canaveral, Fla. at the 23rd Easter Surfing Festival. The festivities included a bikini contest and stunts involving dynamite blasts.
At the Lincoln Park Zoo, a year-old orangutan named Bat Sats, aided by zookeeper Pat Sass, hid jelly beans and about six dozen hard-boiled eggs for residents of the chimpanzee habitat bat helped dye the eggs last week.
Soloists, choirs and a symphony performed sacred music in the Hollywood Bowel as dawn lighted the sky over the Hollywood Hills. Actress Jones sang, while Robert Stack and Rhonda Fleming gave readings.
The Easter Mass at San Felipe de Neri Church in Albuquerque, N.M., was broadcast live on CBS-TV, while the Divine Liturgy celebrated by Ukrainian Catholics at Philadelphia's Immaculate Conception Cathedral was broadcast to parts of the Soviet bloc via Voice of America.
President Reagan and his wife, Nancy, celebrated Easter at a church near their California ranch.
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Here's your chance (it may be your only chance) to order a FREE burger cooked by KU's deans - exclusively for the senior class.
You'll also want to tour inside of the Adams Alumni Center, check out the records system that will follow you the rest of your natural life and consider the many benefits of alumni membership at a discount for seniors.
The Adams Alumni Center's north terrace and parking lot will be cleared so that seniors can party with FREE burgers, FREE beverages, good tunes and good times — all served with gusto!
You must present your senior class ID card to prove that indeed, rank doth have its privileges. (If it rains, we'll move indoors.)
Wednesday, April 22, 5:30 to 8 p.m. Adams Alumni Center •1266 Oread Avenue
Cosponsored for the Class of 1987 by the KU Alumni Association and the Student Alumni Association
U.S. bridges in need of repair while facing federal budget cuts
Many a bridge is falling down, and thousands are badly in need of repair, just as the federal government is hardening its highway assistance to the states.
The Associated Press
The problem has worsened enough in some states that the legislature or the voters have boosted taxes. There are bridges so bad in Missouri that children get out of school buses and walk across.
"Not only can we not replace those bridges that need replacing but we don't have the funding to patch those bridges that need patching," said John Gallagher of the West Virginia Department of Highways.
Last year, the federal government authorized $2 billion for bridge repairs, but that will drop to $1.63 billion for each of the next five years.
"Every time we get one fixed, another one needs work," said Scott Picard of the Massachusetts Department of Public Works.
According to the Federal Highway Administration, 243,646, or 42.3 percent, of the nation's 575,607 bridges of four feet in length are in need of repair.
The bridge fell down despite a nationwide bridge inspection program enforced after the collapse of West Virginia's Silver Bridge in December 1967, which killed 46 people.
It's a continuous, nagging problem which gained renewed public attention with the collapse of a New York Thruway bridge over flooded Schoenbach six people died in the April 5 disaster, and four others are missing.
It fell down despite a program to rebuild the state's transportation system, backed by a $1.25 billion state bond issue approved in 1983, the same year three people died when the Mianus River bridge in Connecticut collapsed.
In the aftermath of the New York disaster, the state closed six shaky
- Maryland will raise fuel taxes by 5 cents a gallon and impose higher registration fees on July 1.
■ New Mexico is raising its gasoline tax from 11 cents to 14 cents a gallon, its diesel tax from 11 cents to 16 cents an increasing trip taxes by 50 percent.
Other states have swallowed the same medicine;
Montana's fuel taxes go up from 17 cents to 20 cents a gallon on July 1. State officials say they need to raise bridges a year, they are averaging 18.
Missouri has the worst problem in the country. Of the state's roughly 24,000 bridges, about 16,400, or 68.3 percent, are deficient. Some state highways have 100,000 bridges ought to be closed because they can support less than three tons.
- Kentucky raised fuel taxes from 10 cents to 15 cents a gallon last year.
- Virginia last year raised its sales tax from 4 percent to $4 per cent, and earmarked the increase for highways and bridges.
Classified Ads
ANNOUNCEMENTS
University Community Service Scholarship
Appointed by the UGA Athletic Association
April 16th to UGA Office, 304-3477, four floor of
UGA Hall.
WEIGHT LOSS PROGRAM Lose 10-20 lbs in 30 days. Doctor approved. All charges accepted. C.O.D. Mail call. Call Geri: 460-8537
"All sorts of sad things would have happened had it not passed," said Bob Drusch of the state highway department.
Pizza Hut®
DELIVERY
Events of the Week Wednesday, April 22 United Jewish appeal presents Amy Cooper Deputy Political Mobilization Director of AIPAC 11:30----1:30 Parlor A, Level 5 Kansas Union
A few days after the New York disaster, Missouri residents voted to boost their own fuel taxes from 7 cents to 11 cents per gallon, which will add $133 million a year to the highway fund.
MONDAY DOUBLE COUPONS PIZZA HUT DELIVERY 843-2211
HILLEL
לולא
IS MASSAGE BETTER THEN PIZZA? Fina
out try. steam & massage from Lawrence
Massage Therapy and R-E-L-A-K. Student rates,
Gift Certificates too! Call 841-0662 and hold the
Arizona has the best record with 285 of its 5,340 bridges, or just 5 percent, rated obsolete or structurally deficient.
MARCH 9, 2018
Graduate Student
Wine and Cheese
5:00—7:00 p.m.
Hillel House
New York has 17,440 bridges. Last year, the Federal Highway Administration reported that 11,968 were deficient in some way; in need of improvement more traffic than they were designed to accommodate or perhaps too narrow.
bridges. One of those, also over Schoharie Creek, collapsed on April 11.
Friday, April 24
Shabbat Dinner and
Seniors
Dinner—5:30 p.m.
Services—7:45 p.m.
R.S.V.P. by April 23
For more information call Hillel, 749-4242.
LEARN TO FLY-Get 47 hrs. KU credit. Instruction lesson just $15, lowest rates around
Richard Hibbard, author of The Making of the Atomic Bomb, speaking Monday, April 28, 1965 at the University of Chicago Church, 925 Vermont. Free. Sponsors: KU Coalition for Peace and Justice; Lawrence Lawrence
Huge garage sale 'T-shirts & Sweatshirts; first
class in town' for $25.99 a kind's, overdue, misprints, and test shirts at all great prices. Saturday, April 25 9:00-10:40 KS Sportwear 101 Riverfront Road in North
Kansas City, Missouri
ENTERTAINMENT
At Your Request Lawrence's Best and Most Aflfortable D.J. Sound and Lights for Any Occasion
Have the Hottest Party in Town. Rent A Hot Tub
Call Tub to Go, 841-3691.
LIBERTY HALL
'A MOVIE THAT MUST BE
SEEN.' jettrey gym, lead present
PARTISANS
OF VILNA
7.00 & 9.30
BARRACUDA CINEMAS
Metropolis Mobile Sound, Number one with a
ballet DJ, BJ Extraordinaire, Weddings, Dances,
Parties, Proms, Books给 graduation parties now.
Hot Spins for Maximum Party Thirst! 841-7083
FOR RENT
1/2 bedroom, luxury apartments now leasing for summer and next fall. 2/1/2 blocks from campus. Call Jeff at 842-7200 (before 6:00) and at 542-3513 (after 6:30).
2 Bdm Townhouse for summer special rate,
600 sq ft, tennis courts, K I Bus-
营馆 4434920 between 10:00 a.m. and
11:00 p.m.
3 Bedroom Apartment Summer Sublease. 2
Bedroom Apartment, spacious Close to Campus.
Call 641-589-2200.
2 story, 3 bedroom older home in good condition,
near downtown and bus stop $380/month plus
utilities. 12 month lease and $390 deposit required.
Excellent for family use. No pets.
4 Bedroom house near K.U. Available mid May or
June. Hardwood floors, lots of windows. W.D.
740-816-6966
8 Bedrooms, 3 Bathrooms. Adjacent to campus.
No pets. Call 842-8971.
Apartments for summer and fall at University Terrace Apartment, 1607 W. 9th. 1 Bedroom for summer; June and July only $190 unfurnished; furnished $255, plus all utilities. 2 Bedroom for summer; June and July only $190 unfurnished; $250, plus all utilities. 1 Bedroom for fall, 10 month leave, August 1-June 1; furnished Bedroom for fall, August 1-June 1; $110 furnished Bedroom for fall, August 1-June 1; $110 furnished Bedroom for fall, August 1-June 1; $290 furnished, plus all utilities. Central air, on bus route, large rooms, gas heat. See atApartment 4B, 1607 W. 9th or 8432-130. If no
Apartment for Sublease. Furnished, utilities paid,
month 18th and Tennessey 748-535. Perfect for
student.
ARE YOU ATTENDING SUMMER SCHOOL?
BEFORE HURrying at $20 a day,
Berkeley Highs 841-219-1168
Apex West now leasing for Summer. Energy efficiency 1, and 2 bedrooms. 3 Blocks west of onion 18th. Private patio/decks, cain fans, for 150h $464/month. 794-1288. Open house Saturday.
BEAUTIFUL TUFF for summer sublease
beach cabin, microwave and dishwasher 2 bedrooms with patio
patio kitchen, laundry room
Beauty, eh? Two Bedroom Apartment, Five minutes to Fraser. Low Utilities. Lease for Summer with Fall option. Leave message. 842-1020 Brand new Colony Woods Apt. available for sublease mid May through December. $185/mo. New room in bedroom, bathroom. Females Cali Built 641-2671
IF YOU LIKE SPACE & QUIT
WE HAVE IT AND WE CAN
STILL WALK TO CAMPUS
Spacious 2 bedroom
Laundry facilities
Waterbed fine
Swimming pool
10-12 month leases
ILLAGE SQUARE
BR for rent. Desirable location and price. Am-men-tes. Call 841-8019 (John).
Completely furnished 2 bdrm apt. Low utilities.
Sublease. Close to campus. Rent neg. Call
749-6531.
Convenient summer sublease. We are renting all or part of our three bedroom apartment. Microwave, private washer and dryer. Cheap laundry room with 10th month (11&h) Oc Call anytime. 942.8285
Carpeted, studio apartment with bay window at 845 Missouri. Available May 20, 749-6066
Female roommate, close to campus, own bedroom. 157.50 plus 1/2 utilities. Call 749-1827.
Excellent location: 2 bedroom apartments in four-plex. Carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, and low utilities. Available June 1. Summer Rate: $495. Room rate at 104 Ithaca Town and 1341 Ohio Call 842-424-322
Female nonsmoker wanted for 87-88 school year 20.
Br. 2 bath room apt. Right off 23rd street. Please
contact us at 614-252-3950 or answering machine $195.00 Gas, Wt. tran.
Female Roommate needed from May 20-August
20. Furnished Tanglewood Apartment. Large
bedroom for bargain for $174 a month. Call
749-4898
bedroom, 159.20 sq. l/utilities. Call 749-182.
Fine location on bedroom basement house
apartment. CA, equipped kitchen. Low utilities.
Available June 1, $175 at 181st. Mississippi. Call
For Rent, May 15-August 15, 1 bedroom apartment. Kitchen, bathroom, living room. All private. One block from campus. 180/month. 843-2733.
AMENITIES
Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the amenities of Naismith Hall. Applications for fall semester are now being accepted while space remains.
NAISMITHHALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
913-843-8559
Furnished basement apartment for 1/3 units in
exchange for housing, yard and plant care.
Available May 15-August 20. Call 843-9699 after
5:00 p.m.
Get it while it's hot! 1 Bedroom Apt Summer
campus and campus downcast. Call
1 844-523-9200 or 1 844-523-9200
Furnished, spacious one-bedroom apartment available from 5/11/97 through 8/20/97 for $960 plus electricity. Nice area, walking distance to the shopping district downstown. Call (841) 675-7578 or 840-4924 for information.
GREAT SUMMER RATES Special incentives ask about our Military and ROTC Specials Pinecrest Apartments, 749-2022
HARDWOOD FLOORS. A.C., close to campus furnished, one bedroom apartment for summer at a discount price: 749-2485
Have a duplex adventure this summer? Need female student to subacetus spaciosus; great opportunity.
HEY LOOK AT THIS! Brand new 1 Birkm Apt for summer subtlet, Close to campus. D.W / A.C to boot! 841-7616
HOT Summer Sublime; mce. nce. four bedrooms
HOT Summer Sublime; bce. nce. 84-9266
HOT MICrowave with Sublime. 84-9266
HOT MICrowave with Sublime. 84-9266
plus garage $400/month 749-1988
HEATHERWOOD
VALLEY
NOW LEASING
FOR FALL
- Short term leases
- accepted
- Lowest utility bills
- in town
- Gas heat, C-A, D-W
- EE refrig. Disposal
- Quiet location
For more info. call between 9-6. Mon.-Fri..843-4754
Boooooooooo
Houses, Bedroom Apartments, Sleeping Rooms.
Available June 12: 1-bedroom apartments. 1.2
and 3-bedroom apartments, and, sleeping rooms.
Near Campus. No pets. Call 842-8971.
Large three bedroom apartment close to campus
free with air conditioning
May 1-6 Free rent through May $25.00 per month
Free room on Mondays
Meadowbook Summer Sublease 3 bdmr Twhse
only $175 mo. Don't wait! Call 845-1886.
Must Sublease for summer. Available mid May
2ice 2 Bdroom apartment in house, Large Kitchen
Bath, and Living room. Partially furnished
829/month plus utilities: 749-4838.
Need to Sublease: 2 bedroom, close to campus
apt. June to Aug: 350 per month. 749-5441
Need to sublease Apple Lance Place studio apart
from our apartment in August after May; I wafer and cable paid call 841-4272.
ON CAMPUS APARTMENT for summer.
Nogeli rented cell, low utilita call 843-4752.
One Bunrpt, for Summer Sublease. New Apts.
Fully furnished, dishwasher, etc. Rent negotiable.
Tanglewood, 10th & Arkansas
842-2391
one bedroom $22.90 New Quilt 844-694-100 leaves
message for Cindy, or 749-254-000 (late) Keep
Reserve your apartment now! Just 2 short blocks
Parmished with some utilities and off and street
views.
Reserve the room you need! For summer and or fall Pursuit with furnished both meal and shared cooking and bath facilities. Just 2 shirts blocks from University with off street parking. No pets
Room for rent in nice, clean. W O L. apartment
Room has good wood floors, entrance
entrance, vegetarian/plant-based food,
eating area.
University Daily Kansan / Monday. April 20, 1987
13
Rooms available for summer and the 1987-88 academic year in the Christian living community 'Krononna' at Ecumenica, Christian Ministria informate come to 1024 Ordeal or 843-833.
SPRING GRADS to Wuhta deptu驻3, BRL 1/2 bath. bsmit. appliances, close to park, centrally located, excellent condition. $475. Available June 1. Call 316-682-3697.
Share Rent, utilities, and duties; Nice house,
close to campus; waiver/driver; private room.
Phone: (718) 265-1300.
Sparsacu : Peeperteer 2 B.R. 2 bath.
Pool Clubhouse Pennis Bus II Sublease for
$300/month.
Studio available for summer in super apt. comfort, great maintenance, recreation facilities and laundry availability I will assume part of expenses.
Call 842 9576 after 6:30 p.m.
MASTERCRAFT
offers.
apartments--all near KU!
Consider:
• Custom furnishings
• Energy efficient
• Affordable rates
• Variety of floorplans
• Designed for privacy
• Many great locations
Professional management
Call or stop by—
CAMPUS PLACE-1145 Louisann
841-1429
HANOVER PLACE—14th & Mass.
841-1212
TANGLEWOOD - 10th & Arkansas
749-2415
OPEN DAILY 1-5
SUMMER SCHOOL L, NO CAR? L 2dbm available
Room roommates need on campan. Rent nexus
Room roommate needed on campan. Rent nexus
SUMMER SUBLEASE: Need two non-smoking
cases to call Trailertrideworks. Call
'498-747-3230'.
SUMMER SUBLASELE; 3 bdm apt. 2 full baths,
close to campus; $82 plus utilities. Tanglewood,
Nashville; 1428 bdr lbr. iterates.
SUMMER SUBLLEASE Mats Apts May Aug 1
One Bedroom 843 4517
SUMMER SUBLABLE. Spacious two bedroom
SUMMER SUBLABLE. Alfalf ADF off month's rem
843-9067
SUMMER SUBLEASE: Very nice, new 1
BHD/Studio apt. Furnished. Must be non-smoker,
off street parking. NEGOTIABLE. Available
May 14, 841-4696, 13h & Onio.
SUMMER SUBLEASE Sunrise Place
Lakeview pool, cool, pool close
Call 843-759-8419 843-759-8419
WEST HILLS APARTMENTS 1012 EMERY RD. 841-3800
Now taking reservations for summer & fall
Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apartments furnished & unfurnished Great location near campus
Sub-Lesure for summer Sunrise Terrace 3
bedrooms Call for info 841-0487
middle of complex by pool
DISPLAY APARTMENTS OPEN
No appointment needed
Monday-Wednesday-Thursday
1:00-4:00
Sublease for summer, studio at Hanover Place
Call: 248-5490
'text to yello salt. Can be fresher'
'text to yello salt with left, fully
furnished water pad. 841-500
Sublease. Trailridge 3 bedroom, 2/1/2 bath townhouse. Available mid-May, option to lease next fall. One large bedroom with own bathroom. Sports club, sport club facilities. $89 Call us: 749-4344.
Sublease 8 bpm duplex. Available June 1st. Close
weekend. $779.00, Cop. $44.00.
Sublease: 4 bedrooms, excellent location
Sublease: 5 bedrooms, excellent location
Sublease, May 30. One bedroom with loft*
Sublease 3 bedrooms 2 bathrooms Fully furnished. Near campus and fun bars Low utilities
Sublease for summer: furnished two bedroom
a/c A/C / Great location! Call 841-0607
Summer Sublease: Near campus, great for summer school student. Low rent plus possible redemption.
Summer Sublease - one bedroom luxury apartment with waverdry, microwave, access to kitchen, laundry, pool.
Summer Sublease very nice three Rd ranch style house. Near Campus. $420 monthly. 843-305-
Summer Sublease: Furnished 1 bldm apartment.
Call 841-3848
Summer Sublease. Need one or two females for a bedroom apartments, completely furnished, $164 a month. Send resume to: Jobfinder.com
southridge
compatible school living
Southridge Plaza Apts.
LEASING
for fall
1 & 2 bedroom apartments
10 month leases
Sufficient paid
Summer Sublease with option for Fall: 2 bd. AC,
gas water, pay $225 749-1835
*outside house; three or four person furnished
instrument adjacent to campus. Available May 18,
2015.*
summer. Sublease 2 bdm townhouse, 2 baths; transit route, dishwasher, available mid-May 10.
Summer Sublease: 1 bedroom, close to campus,
vent very negotiable. Call 843-7601.
summer Subaseite: nice 2 bir. fully furnished
pinewoods & utilities. Close to campa-
nionland, 841/7998
**Sublease Books:** Studio Apt. All utilities paid,
th and Ohio, $225; B224, 749-3858.
8th and $225, Call 749-308,
Summer Sublease - Nice room, 3B, A.C. new
6th and $225, Call 749-308,
Summer Sublease-Nice, room, 3 BR, A.C. new master suite in the center of campus or 1/2 May (fee: 749-253 if late) necessary.
Summer Sublease. Furnished Studio, close to campus and downtown. Rentable Call.
Summer Sublease Harvard Square, 2 bedrooms, spacious living for 3, all utilities paid, pool, close proximity to the campus.
hammer sublease. 2 bd. furnished. Close to camas.
841-3932
summer sublease 3 bedroom Ap + 4 bath cfm
apartment plus garage 15' x 10' enclosed
growth through July. Low rent possible reef
fence with gutters. Refinished hardwood flooring.
Lowest price on similar units in the
area.
Location
Located among 70 acres of rolling hills and trees, you'll enjoy the convenience of being close to campus and area shopping.
Lifestyle
Meadowbrook offers a selection of spacious and comfortable studios, 1,2, or 3 bedroom apartments, and townhouses to fit your lifestyle
RESERVE YOUR UNIT NOW...
FOR SUMMER OR FALL
FOR SUMMER OR FALL!
meadowbrook
15th & Crestline 842-4200
Super large room in house to sublease for summer $10 month, utilities paid. Close to Campus Washer dryer. Ask for Trent at 841-6712 Top of the hill location, studio sublease, sublease.
FOR SALE
14 x 65 Mobile Home 2 bedroom, remodeled, nice kitchen, large dining room, financing
7,260. 810-743-8663 Keep living.
1981 Honda CB 750 Custom Excellent condition, low mileage, with extract. Call B42747 8113.
1982 Macaulay Seca 400, with only one owner,
1,000 miliard square feet of condominium con-
laced $100 with Vetter Management.
71 VW Beetle, good body, newly rebuilt engine,
reliable transportation. **900** Jason, 834-4842.
Bianchi Sport. **180** 10 speed. Blue. Alloy Wheels.
Great Condition. Must. John, 843-6431.
Brand New Mountain Bike. Black Fuji Blvd 824.
Barely reden, good Price. Good Bike. 824-1824.
Complete set McGregor Tourney Number 1 shafts
irons. $10 negotiable. Call 824-5230
Computer Disk Sell-List: Certified-Guarded-5.0
Computer Disk Sell-List: Disks 17.5, Paul
68476 - MF 6 a 2 m. a. 9,
68476 - MF 6 a 2 m. a. 9,
Cusinart Food Processor #75 J.C Penney microwave microwaves $15. Smith Corona electric typewriter $100 T99 Computer, games.joystick $50. 843-2735 evees
Emdm Astrosat Telescope 15mm RKE eye
piece and bag. $195 $82556 after 6.
JHEFTO BLASTER. New brand new, still in Box, Auto Reverse, Equalizer, and Detachable Speakers. Only $75. Perfect for Summer. Call Brian at 842-926-098.
IBM V70TX compatible includes monochrome
image capture and output, printer, drive,
motherboard, power supply, drive
manufacturer, warranty, included equipment.
Warranty included equipment.
MAX'S COMICS. Comic Books, Playboys, Penhouse, etc. 811 New Hampshire.
NAD 115 integrated amplifier $225, Carver M- 300 plus amplifier. 24 Watts per channel. 2 months old.
DVI/HDMI interface.
Sailboat for Sale: 2016 Olympia Class Flying Dutchman. Good Condition, Light Weight and Fast. Asking 900.00 or best offer. Call emails: 749-3905.
Rickenbacker bass black 4001. Excellent Condition. 375.00 B.O.B. Drafting Board Professional. 200.00 O.0 B.0 842.9656.
Never Been Used, Fanatic 101 Sailboard 12 x
Rear Mounted, North Sail 900 o/est or
749.548m
NOTES now available for variety of classes.
Enhance learning and grades. Call 434-3102
We are Here to Help
PIANG for Upright good condition $499
749-2277 Keepying
1974 Volvo 142. 142 Good condition. Very dependable.
100,000 ml. Available from Valletta 1,000 ml. Call
Stereo speakers Omega 50 2-way speakers plus Alphasonic subwoofer. 100W capacity. 842-7976
AUTO SALES
1974 WV Beetle with new tires. Great college car.
Mantell Call 694-750 or 841-1421. Also nice motor-
car.
Water ski-EP comp x 2. 1980 Good condition
$220.00扣 For Scout Ph. 749.1473
1977 Red Chevette, two door, goosack shape, must
$65, negligible Call Amay at 842-308-6960
ALL SIZES! Jacket with tails or plain, complete coat. Jacket or Turtle neck expensive to own on than to eat! Come to Everything Ice. Bice 16 Vermont Get yours early for that size! Cute! Bice 12 Vermont Have your size but hurry! Everything But Ice
4V VW Superbreeze Rum Good. Yellow.
4V VW Superbreeze $500 miles. Must sell. Call萧
842-7308
LOST on 4/11/97. Men's Seiko watch, reward Calve Steve at 842-4780.
LOST-FOUND
A 1989 Firefight. 355 AM/FM, Capitol
A 1989 Firefighter. 355 AM/FM, Capitol
B 1989 Firefighter. 355 AM/FM, Capitol
68 Chevy Impala Very Relievable, good looking car
Tiny amount of rust. $70 nogy. Tony 843-2380
$199 450 nogy. Tony 843-2380
MIRLINES CRUISELINES HIRING! Summer!
Career! Good Pay. Travel. Call For Guide.
Assistance, Newsservice (916) 944-4444 Ext. 153.
I are you good with children? You need to
live with a California family and help with
your kids. Come to the Orange Ave. 219,
denbapo Park. CA 90425. (415) 322-3812.
Moving to California -must sell 193 Mazda MG2
Hatchback 6 speed, a/c good mgm, reliability
2017.
artist Needed for Next Semester. Graphic Design and Illustrations. Please Call 842-3338 and ask for Ioe Hor
love in love 107
jest. Large good Notre Dame de sion class ring
HELP WANTED
Cocktail Waitresses Needed Part-time weekends. Apply in person. Just A Playhouse. 806 W. 24th (beyond McDonald's) *7:10 m. Wed-Sat*
DAY TELEPHONE Sales needed in our office.
Call between 9-59
ask for Darius, 789-3455.
available in the Housing office, 205 McColum Hall. Application priority date, p. 10; w.p.m. day, April 29, 1987. Interested persons submit batches of applications to Kathryn E. Sterner, references to Steve Keel, Assistant Director of Housing, 205 McCollum Hall. Lawrence, Ka-6045 (910) 8450-4560. An OPPORTUNITY NAME IS NOT RETURNED.
CAMP COUNSELORS Wanted for private "Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterskiing, gymnastics, riffle, archery, tetherball, volleyball, tennis, or riding also kitchen, office, maintenance. Salary $700 or more plus RAB, Mart Eragete, 1765 Maples NF.
LINDLE 1982 Class Ring in Women's Restroom in LINDLE Hall Call 749-141. Please keep tryin
EVENINGS OR SATURDAY Telephone Sales in our office. No experience necessary (good pay) Please call 212-579-2400
Summer Job Opportunities available with the U.S. Marine Corps - No obliquity to be a Marine. Earn money $1300 per month + housing ($191-841-1821 (collect).
★★★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
★★★★★★★★★★★★★
FREE ROOM AND BOARD. Johnson County's Mental Retention Center seeks a Resilient Assistant Administrative Person to assist with the Developmentally Disabled Persons OVERLAND PARK, KANAS. Will provide assistance in emergency situations when no full-time position is available. Will provide assistance with schedule from 1 p.m. to 7 a.m. five days a week. Requires high school diploma and experience with the Developmentsmily Disabled. Compete with a class of students worth $7.22 per hour if the clients need assistance during the night. To apply, send resume or application to Santa Fe Suite, 202, Olathe, KS 60041 E-F-H FULL AND PART TIME HELP! National Firm preparing for Spring and Summer work. If access to facilities and weekend positions are available and some flexibility is allowed during final exams. If you qualify, corporate scholarships are awarded. In lieu of a full-time position, credit/skills or semester. During summer break full-time work is available Call (313) 945-3075
Goddfather's Pizza now hiring delivery drivers. Must be 18 years of age and have a good driving record. Dependable car also required. Position pays 3.50 per hour plum commission. Apply in.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $1,600-$2,320 yr. Now
GOVERNMENT JOBS. Ext R 978-43548 (for
federal list)
Campus interviews for summer employment at a resident camp in Shaunee, Kansas
tapping space...
Call the placement office to set up interviews on Wednesday. April 22, from 1:00 to 4:00 p.m.
Counselor-in-training director
Arts and crafts director
Nature, craftery , rifle...
Nature, archery, riflery, and rannelling specialists
NATIVE SPEAKERS of Greek, Italian, Korean,
Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, and Vietnamese
with understanding of English. Call Steve,
749-4775, evenings.
Need Friendly Office assistant who can work independently, Typing, Filming, Running Errands, Telephoning. Assisting with Downtown Promo Campaigns. Phone Number: 842-3883. Downtown Lawrence Association
NANNY POSITIONS AVAILABLE. Good salary.
Dallas, Texas. Call 93-491 p. (214)
185-207-2668
CALIFORNIA DREAMIN?
KU Student Assistant, General Office work in K.U. Business Office. Start on or about May 15. Full-time available to organise yearly office salary (80% per month) (FTE). Salary increase; July 1, Three-month probationary period. Type 60 wpm accurately Demonstrate typing skills at interview Operate a computer system at job site. Previous KU office experience and interest in continuous employment through summer and next semester.
academic year. Application deadline: April 29.
Correspondence to: Dr. Katherine Lloyd, resume to Lila Walkins, Kansas Geological Survey, 1800 Constant Avenue, Campus West, Springfield, IL 62704. Form (brief resume appreciated) at Heepee Conservation Center, 300 East 50th Street, Academic Year.
SUMMER JOBS A new fitties dance club is opening in Lenox. We hire cocktail dancers and bartenders. WT train. Apply in K9, 9 M.S. at K, Rd. Inker in Kd. Lenox. Located Four Colonias Plains.
NANNIES - Needed on west coast. Established midwest firm with excellent reputation arranges your placement. We screen families in their homes. Licenced, No Fee, Minimum stay 1 year. Call or Write:
ARCHER DAWSON AGENCY
OMAHA, NEBRASKA 68104
(402) 554-1103
Summer Job-College Age as companion for seven year old girl. Own female transportation needed. Hours 7:15 a.m.-5:45 p.m. M.F. References required. Weekdays 6 a.p.m. weekdays or on holidays, 8:44 wk.
The Mathematics Department is now accepting applications for the position of undergraduate teaching assistant. Applicants must have a high school diploma or equivalent; completion of Math 123 or the equivalent; communicate well in the English language, have undergraduate standing and background in mathematics
Part time advertising sales representative needed in Lawrence for small weekly newspaper Make your own hours. Call Traci, 841-5643
**PEOPLE NEED HOME...**
the Mathematics department is now accepting applications for the position of graduate teaching assistant in mathematics. strong mathematical background for a bachelor's degree by August 15. Groundless background. Formal language an oral exam demonstrating English comprehension, a letter in interest and background, and two letters of recommendation to: Charles Immelberg de Malth, 217强 Hall, Williams College.
Have a Boston Adventure
*POLEF NEEDED IMMEIDATLY for
good light. Call Devins, 749-396-9800
travel transportation.
Call Devins, 749-396-9800
- Live-in child care for professional Boston area families
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- 1 year commitment
- no fees
We make excellent
American Au Pair
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P.O. Box 97
New Town Branch
Boston, Mass. 02258
Wanted Nanny/Mother's Helper, female, in af. of Northern New Jersey town, close to NVT 1020. Will accept travel and have driver's licence. Use of car, good pay Summer or permanent. (201) 930-9013
MISCELLANEOUS
THE BENEFIT MACHINE
YMCA Camp. Gravils in beautiful Lake of the Ozarks now hiring summer staff. Desire for excellence, but no experience necessary. Call (816) 254-9622 Keith Miller
MUSEUM SHOP Museum of Natural History FLY A KITE Diamonds, Dragons, Deltas...
The Good Stuff Store
Summer softball men's division D team seeks
players for an opening and play ball in Overland
Park. 834-792-3097
www.ballparks.org
SUNFLOWER
TRAVEL
SERVICE
704 MASS.
842-4000
SPECIAL YOUTH FARE
$469 8000 mile trip
Depart May 29 or June 11
Space is limited!
Call today for details.
PERSONAL
Ann: If I had the hill behind me, it could be. But I have weekends and I am my own boss; Eve has no weekends and I am my own boss; son: Sometimes I just think funny things. Lowwry Warm; AweEz. I捡起来肌呵. Okay Past! Gb, come to California? Too busy help a dogen being enjoyed here. They were abused children; enjoyed being enjoyed here. They were abused children;
Chris & Bryan-Glad you don't eat cavans and
the best big beetle. Love & Kisses, Susan & Ann
Chris C: WHERE can I find you?-Tall 120.
Congratulations Nikk! We are so proud of you.
Delisle-Hargreif 2 B. Day to a very special girl.
Loane, Norma, Worm and Jeff.
Glen K's graduation party-it's almost here. For info call 749-3676.
Happy 21st, LISANSE! I'm looking forward to spending my life with you. I love you. Humglery.
Kevin "Hunter" M., 6th Floor JRP: Don't Mess with LEMONS! Love, The Exotic Beauties
Be creative in gift giving. Fulfill fantasies with beautiful Boudoir Portraits for all occasions. Call Mike or Gracie at Photos Plus, 749-706.
BUS. PERSONAL
ZZZZZZ.TIRED OF MAKING LESS THAN YOU'RE WOUNDER IN THE NUMBER. THEY'RE WHOLE MASS OF YOUR JOB are. so seriously looking for a good junior job, hard working, willing to set $3500 a month this summer.
★★★★★★★★
HEADACHE, BACKACH, ARM PAIN, LEG PAIN! Student and most insurance accepted. For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark Johnson 841-9207
AUTO-TINTING. Best scratch resistant solar
film available. Lifetime warranty. PROTINCT of
solar film.
weed music for your wedding? Call Jean, 843-7304. liven piano and voice lessons over summer. Connecton, 300 Elm Street, North Larchmont by appointment by appointment or by appointment. Hair styles done your way. Through april and May. May cut and sets, $9 perms or trade drummil's 811 New Hamshire.
GLEASYHISMAN! Write for KM/O to per PER
gregory.hisman@hotmail.com
SATISFAZZA! Mailed discreetly/confidential
FINANCIAL PLANNING
D • W.I. & Traffic
F • Fake I.D. & other criminal offenses
F • Family Law & other legal problems
16 East 19th St. 840 1123
SERVICES OFFERED
CRIMISON SUN PHOTO is looking for young women interested in developing a modeling portfolio. 15% over direct cost. No set fee. Call 841-9689
THE COMIC CORNER
NE CORNER of 23rd & Iowa, 841-4294
Bloom Co. & Famile T-Shirts
Fantasy Games
Games Features & Modules
Spring Cleaning Sale Now
Lots of Items for Half Price or Less
Leading financial services company offers complete training for college graduates for the Topeka and Lawrence area. Confidently market mutual funds, retirement plans, life insurance, and more through our personalized financial planning program.
DONALD G. STROLE
SUMMER IN EUROPE $299 Lowest Schedded Fairs to all of Europe from St. Louis. Call (314) 278-0567.
**MISSON SUN PHOTO for looking for young**
**parents in the city** (20% of)
fall 10% over direct cost. No set fees. Call
(314) 872-3596.
Most reasonable rates in town for all your photo needs especially graduation, education, and portfolios.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided 841-7749
Send resume to:
Mr. Jennings
Waddell & Reed, Inc.
1100 SW Wanmaker Rd.
Suite 103
Snake, KS 66604
Bike Repair
John sings messages! $20. 841-1874 or 843-1209.
Tune-Up
Very reasonable rates
Send resume to:
Cycling
Gransport Bicycle
7th & Arkansas 843-3328
KPHI PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES Ecthonomee
RIGGING SYSTEMS Ecthonomee
KASSPORT $0.00 Art & Design Building,
www.kassport.com
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $/hr, (courses
above) 199, $/hr) 843-9032
- House Audio I & II (Audience, P.A. and Legs)
- Mobile Audio I & II (Maximus Audio Wizardry,
Wizardry)
- iPod Audio I & II (iPod Audio Wizardry)
WE'RE YOUR AUTHORIZED
PRIORITY SERVICE
Metcalf South Mall
95th & Metcalf, O.P. Krs.
(913) 341-6688
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Service (011) 351-8778
Streamtessm. All ladies' dresses can be made here in town. You choose your favorite designs or styles from the latest fashion magazines. I will make them for you. Call Sue, 814-3494.
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-236.
TYPING
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing systems.
A1 professional typing. Term papers, Theses.
IBM Electronic Typewriter 842-3246
A-Z Word processing Service. Quality resumes,
e-mails, and reports. Call 843-1850 or 9 p.m.
before business hours. 843-1850 until 9 p.m.
with resumes.
AAA TYPING has low cost wrd processing/document storage starting at $19.1p ($gap 8412942 after 4 p.m. weekdays, any time weekends. Campus nock available.)
1-1-1 TRIO Word processing. Responsible.
Conscientious. Reliable. Call 842-311-91 for service.
24-Hour Typing. 13th semester in Lawrence
University. Send resume to www.jobs.pmpsa.com
'best quality and best service'. B41-500-6
Accurate Word Processing Meadowbrook location. 10 years experience. Call 749-1961 EVENINGS
Dependable, professional, experienced.
Provide full-time service. Service
TRANSCRIPTION also standard dictionaries.
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW
REFERENCES, EXAMPLES.
will return. REFERENCE KEEPING THIS AD
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, letters, dissertations, letters,
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printing, spelling corrected. 842-7244
experienced Typist: Dissertations, theses, term
apers, etc. reasonable Rate. Calls 842-3203
GOOD IMPRESSIONS Typing/Word Processing/Typsetting; Papers, Theses, Typeset Resellin Scaled correction 841-407
Experienced typist - theses, dissertations, term papers. 842.2310 after 6:15 p.m. M-F or Sat/Sun.
-Barb
For professional typing/word processing, call
professional typewriter. 800. Spring special $129/page, double
space, pica.
Quality typing: excellent editing, grammar
Quality printing: excellent quality, reliable
Pickup, delivery available: 843-0247
Resume Service-laserwritten 10 copies ONLY
$20.749-2193 after 5 p.m.
GUARANTEED PERFECT typing done on word processor. Located near Lawrence hospital. Call 843-7547.
KU SECRETARY. Typing and word processing
Affordable, fast, accurate. Spelling corrected,
tert quality. Pickup on campus. Monica 841-8246
Weekends-events.
ACT NOW: Papers $1.50/pg, Resumes $1.58
LIFELINE WIFE 841-3469
Term papers? Transcription Unlimited, 1012
Massachusetts, Suite 202. Please call ahead for all your typing needs. 842-4619 Spelling, grammar
corrected.
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing
software, theses, letter
quality printing, 843-7062
Smart Word Processing includes editing and spell checking. Very reasonable rates. Foster, 749-2740 10 a.m. - 7 p.m.
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes HAVE M.S. Degree. 841-6254
Typing: *very reasonable*, rates will also assist with spelling punctuation and form. Call 842-3629-3289. Why pay for typing when you can have word-protected spaces? Resumes, tesures, legacy. Since 1983: 843-347 1
Word Processing, proofreading, spell checking,
NLQ printing, Reasonable. 842.1940.
WANTED
Roommate Wanted: 1 or 2 for summer or for next
person. 1 person gets TWO bedrooms apartment. Only
you can make them.
Non-smoking, responsible female roommate for 1/2 summer and/or fall semester. Own with room 6 bath attached, microwave, washer/dryer. Must be 18 years old or 21 units. Utilities 749-3529 or 842-9466 for sandy
Need Roommate to share two bedroom apt $134
172 usites. On bus route. Call Martin,
841 706.
Needed: Roommate for a very fully furnished apartment with 1/2 room. 749-9911 or 1/2 day. 749-9911
People to Go the Fun with SUA's Canoe Trip Down the Kaw. 864-3474 For Info
RELIABLE FEMALE GFA TWANT TO HOUSEIT this summer, Claudia, 240-7966 (learnings)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Roammate wanted to share large 2 BR apt. Available June 1st, 1867 for summer and school year 78-88. 9th Street location, Laundry facilities, Pool. Reasonable Rent plus 1/2 deposit and 4% interest.
Policy
SPANISH TRANSLATOR WANTED NOW easy
work. Work on own time. Top Pay. Call, leave
message.
ROOMMATE WANTED-FALL811 Need 2 people
4 share BR house, W/D, bus route or walk to
campus, quiet neighborhood, near 21st &
9th floor. monthly plan plus 1/4
utilities. 749-7333, keep trying.
Summer Roommate: 2 lux bdrm. Sunrise
Place townhouse fully furnished, pool $200 mth
$300/month
Wanted: Female roommate, nonsmoker, for Fall and or Summer to share three bedroom apartments.
wanted: graphic artist to paint menu. Will pay $125.00; Call Chris, 414-1060
Wanted: Two bedroom furnished apartment
submitted Aug. Dw. Dec. Please Call Steve, 841738 or
www.richmondtech.com
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DLOLW KANSAN POLICY
Make checks payable to:
19 Stauffer Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66043
14
Monday, April 20, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Now there's more than one way to get through college.
Wordsworth's Prelude vs. Honda's Prelude:
Worlds in Collision.
As Thomas More said shortly before his untimely demise, "There is no hurt on earth that is beyond heavenly help."
How does this simple, poignant, powerful thought relate to the inherent tension evident in the contrast between Wordsworth's immortal The Prelude and that more recent (and better recognized) offering from one of Japan's pre-eminent artists, The Honda Motor Corporation?
First, let's consider the facts.
Poem vs Car Student Preferences
Honda's Prelude Wordsworth's Prelude
Wordsworth's Prelude vs. Honda's Prelude: Worlds in Collision.
As Thomas More said shortly before his untimely demise, "There is no hurt on earth that is beyond heavenly help."
How does this simple poignant, powerful thought relate to the inherent tension evident in the contrast between Wordsworth's immortal *The Prelude* and that more recent (and better recognized) offering from one of Japan's pre-eminent artists, The Honda Motor Corporation?
First, let's consider the facts:
Poem vs Cer Student Preferences
Honda's Prelude Wordsworth's Prelude
Macintosh Plus
alpha helix-1
File Edit Draw Move Measure Animation
C H O S N P F Cl Br I * s d t o
alpha helix-1
Macintosh SE
If you want to get ahead in college it helps if you choose a brilliant roommate. Like a Macintosh personal computer. And now there are two models from which you can choose.
First, there's the Macintosh Plus-now widely accepted by students at colleges and universities all across the country.
It comes with one 800K disk drive and a full megabyte of memory (which is expandable to four).
For those of you who need even more power, there's the Macintosh SE.
It comes with all of the above. As
well as a built-in 20-megabyte hard disk, for storing up to 10,000 pages. Or if you prefer,you can add a second built-in 800K floppy drive.
The SE also gives you a choice of two new keyboards, one with function keys for special applications.
And it has an internal expansion slot so you can add new power without performing major surgery. Like a card that lets you share information over a campus-wide network. Or another that lets you run MS-DOS programs.
With either Macintosh, you'll be
Like idea processors that outline your thoughts. Word processors for writing, editing and checking your spelling.And communications programs that give you 24-hour access to valuable information.
able to take advantage of the latest most advanced software.
So no matter which model you decide on-you'll be able to work much faster,better and smarter.
No two ways about it.
APPLE
KU Bookstore Burge Union Computer Store 864-5697
The power to be your best.
© 2087 Apple Computer Inc. Apple and the Apple logo are registered trademarks of Apple Computer Inc. Macintosh is a trademark of Apple Computer Inc. MS-DOS is a registered trademark of Microsoft Corp.
Quest for sun
BIRD
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details, page 2
Tuesday
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
April 21, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 137
(USPS 650-640)
Unions compete to gain support of KU's faculty AAUP better suited,prof says Prof says KNEA is best bet
By BENIAMIN HALL
Staff writer
The KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors should represent a faculty union if one is formed on campus because the AAUP has much experience in higher education, the group's president says.
"The AAUP has a long history of supporting individual faculty rights." Robert Hohn, professor of educational psychology and research and president of the group, said last week
"We would do a better job of representing those rights than a union that represents mostly elementary and high school teachers," he said.
Hohn was referring to the Kansas National Education Association, the other group likely to appear on a ballot in the fall when the faculty votes on whether to organize into a union.
KNEA already has collected enough signatures to get on the ballot. Hohn said his group had almost enough signatures.
"We're close to our number." he said.
"We're close to our number," he said. A faculty union might make it easier for faculty to become involved in administrative decisions. Hohn said.
"College faculty are interested in having their voices heard. That can lead to contentment."
Hohn said the AAUP, which was founded in 1910, had served as a union representative at about 30 universities during the past 10 years. Among the schools are Rutgers University, the
University of Connecticut, the University of Cincinnati and Wayne State University in the state of Ohio.
"Traditionally, AAUP has defended individual faculty concerns about promotion, tenure, et cetera," Hohn said. "One of the beliefs of the organization is that faculty should be involved in the decision-making process as much as possible.
"A lot of people felt we weren't getting that involvement."
Hohn said some faculty members thought they weren't being consulted by the administration on decisions that would affect the faculty.
But the present relationship between the administration and the faculty isn't a bad one, and the AAUP doesn't want to become an adversary of the administration, Hohn said.
"We hope it isn't that kind of a relationship." I think it would be more of a psychological bond than a marriage.
Although a faculty union would give faculty members a louder voice in decision making, it probably would not have much effect on salaries. Hohn said.
"I don't think anybody thinks that just because we have collective bargaining there's going to magically be more money available. I don't think it will increase the size of the pie. But it may allow us to distribute the pie differently," he said.
See AAUP, p. 6, col. 3
Faculty union issue
Editor's note: This is the second in a five-part series on the possible formation of a faculty union at the University of Kansas. Today's stories explain the approaches of the two prominent groups vying to represent KI faculty.
Tomorrow: How a faculty union could affect students.
■ Thursday: The effects a faculty union has had at Pittsburg State University.
Friday: The all-faculty forum on collective bargaining.
Faculty union issue
Faculty union issue
Staff writer
By BENJAMIN HALL
KU's affiliate of the Kansas National Education Association should represent a faculty union if one is formed on campus because KNEA is committed to collective bargaining, a union organizer said last week.
Clifford Griffin, a professor of history who is promoting KNEA as the representative of a faculty union, said KNEA had been thinking about forming a KU union since 1982.
"This discontent we have now is nothing new," he said.
Griffin said the University of Kansas needed a faculty union to gain equal stature with the Board of Regents to bargain collectively about matters that concern faculty.
A union would strengthen faculty governance by forcing the administration to consult with the faculty before making decisions, Griffin said.
"But the union movement is not a movement which is antagonistic to either the Board of Regents or the University administration," he said.
Griffin said KNEA sent a group of organizers to KU in 1982 to introduce faculty members to the idea of collective bargaining.
"Some of us expressed very strong interest in forming an affiliate of KNEA, and we did," he said.
KNEA sent organizer Tom Madden to Lawrence in 1986 to help coordinate collective
bargaining efforts. Griffin said union efforts at KU had been more vigorous since Madden's arrival.
Griffin said that although he disliked the term "flagship," which has been used to refer to leading research universities, a faculty would put KU "in the vanguard in that sense."
"With the exception perhaps of the University of Massachusetts in Amherst, there are not too many institutions that compare to KU that are organized," he said.
Griffin said the American Association of University Professors didn't have the lobbying power or the negotiating experience of KNEA.
The AUP is the other group likely to appear on a ballot this fall in a vote to determine whether KU's faculty members want a union, and if so, which group they want to represent them in negotiations.
Griffin, an AAUP member, said he thought the AAUP was not committed to collective bargaining.
"The national AAUP organization is very badly divided on the question of desirability of collective bargaining," he said.
"AAUP has never taken a substantial leadership role in seeking support for faculty," he said. "They are, in my opinion, far too cooperative."
Bottom Line $156 over budget, may lose seats
See KNEA, p. 6, col. 5
Staff writer
MARGARET PENNAMORE
By LISA A. MALONFY
The Student Senate Election Review Board fined the Bottom Line coalition $150 and found them to over budget on their audit night.
The coalition's presidential and vice presidential candidates and all the winning senators on the coalition could lose their seats.
At the Kansan's deadline, the board had not yet voted on whether to revoke all the coalition's Senate seats. The Senate Rules and Regulations says the board has the power to revoke the seats if an audit is filed without listing all campaign expenditures.
But Sue Glatter, chairman of the board, said, "Basically, we can do what we want. It's a 'may' not a 'shall.'"
Stephanie Quincy, left, and Jason Krakow, student body vice president and coalition, Bottom Line, was fined for receiving a printing discount president-elect, attend a meeting of the Election Review Board. Their unavailable to other coalitions.
The First Class coalition prompted the $150 fine by complaining that Bottom Line had received a special discount on the printing of its posters.
Jason Krakow, Bottom Line presidential candidate and student body president-elect, said his coalition had paid about $350 for the three-color posters from Schifman Printing Co. in Kansas City, Mo.
Krakow said two past Senate coalitions, Common Sense and Cheers, had their posters printed at the same step and had received student discounts.
But Brian Kramer. First Class vice-presidential candidate, charged in a letter to the elections committee that the actual price of printing should have been about $200 more. He wrote that he had received estimates from other print shops and that none gave him a discount as large as the one Schifman Printing gave to Bottom Line.
Kramer also said in the letter that Bottom Line had received the discount because Bob Schifman, the owner, was a friend of Krakow and Brady Stanton, outgoing student body president.
Schifman said, "The same discounts are available for grade schools, high schools, colleges, churches or temples."
He said that his company did not solicit business from such groups because it couldn't afford to but that they were willing to take non-profit groups that asked for it.
But Michael Foubert, graduate senator, said. "This was a discount not readily available to the general public. This was a case of someone knowing someone, although I'm not at all certain that this was an intended violation."
The board then added $200, the amount of the discount, to Bottom Line's campaign expenses, which increased over its limit of $112.69 per booklet $156.43.
But he said, "If you don't know whether there's a law and you choose to act without investigation or consultation, you suffer the consequences."
Stephanie Quincy, Bottom Line's vice-presidential candidate and student body vice president-elect, said the nine election complaints filed by
the First Class coalition against Bottom Line represented a takeover attempt by First Class.
Seven of the complaints were thrown out by the committee last week for insufficient proof. The coalition also will have to pay another $15 fine for failing to print "paid for by Bottom Line" on a set of handouts.
The $165 fine must be paid before
the end of the fiscal year, June 30,
said Missy Kleinholz, committee
member.
Jeff Mullins, First Class presidential candidate, denied that the complaints were part of a takeover.
Kramer said the board seemed reluctant to throw out the entire Bottom Line coalition, even though that option existed.
Public debates trafficway's environmental impact
Flanked by huge posts detailing the proposed south Lawrence trafficway, the engineers preparing an environmental impact statement for the project spent two hours last night explaining it.
By TODD COHEN
Then, for the next two hours, citizens spoke back. And in the front row, Douglas County and Lawrence elected officials listened.
Staff writer
Environmentalists complained that the trafficway's proposed route
About 250 people came to South Junior High School, 2734 Louisiana St., to attend the final public hearing on the trafficway, or bypass.
would endanger two rare plant spe-
cies, Baker Wetlands and a wildlife refuge.
But trafficway supporters said the project was necessary to alleviate Lawrence traffic congestion, specifically on 23rd Street. They also said it would promote economic development.
The trafficway would run 14.3 miles around Lawrence's south border, from Kansas Highway 10, on the city's east side, to a new interchange on Interstate 70, on the city's west side.
Environmentalists previously had focused their complaints almost exclusively on the roadway's possible effects on the wetlands, which is home to the endangered Northern Crawfish frog.
But at the hearing, concerns were raised about another area, Elkin's Meadow, a pasture northwest of that that would be bisected by the road.
Environmentalists said the road would destroy large fields of the rare Mead's milkwood and prairie white-finned orchid.
Ken Lassman, Lawrence resident, asked why the trafficway would go through Elkin's Meadow and not a pasture to the west already zoned and platted for residential development.
"It was an economic decision to lessen the impact on that plat." answered Frank Hempen, county public works director, who did not specify what the economic effect would be.
Hempen also said that the route had been put through the pasture before the county was aware of the rare plants and that Lassman's concerns would be considered when a final route was decided upon.
a recent citizen petition that forced a referendum on a proposed downtown mall, Kindersch said trafficway officials sign petitions to force a public vote.
However, Kelly Kindscher,
Lawrence resident, appeared to be in
no mood for compromise. Alluding to
Roger Boyd, wetlands director,
said the trafficway route should be
moved west to miss Elkin's meadow.
"The entire bypass process has been very frustrating for me," he said.
Several other residents and business and industry representatives said the trafficway would protect the environment in the long run.
Ron Renz. Lawrence resident, said the trafficway would limit growth to the north and west side of Lawrence. Development is restricted by zoning laws in the floodplains that ring Lawrence to the south and east.
Court rejects Linnas' bid to stay in U.S.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Karl Linnas, facing a Soviet death sentence on charges of supervising Nazi concentration camp executions, was to be deported to the Soviet Union yester- days. A Justice Department turned down his bids to remain in the United States, government sources said.
Linnas was taken from his New York jail cell by federal agents and government sources, commenting on condition of anonymity, said he was being flown to the Soviet Union, after a stopover in Czechoslovakia.
He was to be deported from the United States hours after the Supreme Court rejected Linnan's bid to delay his deportation while his lawyers hunted for another country to accept him.
Richard Ollison, executive assistant at the Metropolitan Correctional Center, told reporters that Linna left the prison after being released. He was not told where Linnna was taken.
Agents of the Immigration and Naturalization Service "were very secretive about the entire move," he said.
In Washington, Attorney General Edwin Meele III told reporters that a decision on deportation might be announced before the end of the day. "James was shy two votes as the justices refused, 6-3, to extend an order," Ms. Meele said.
The court's action came on the heels of Justice Department efforts to find a country, other than the Soviet Union, to accept Linnas.
Linnaeus was tried in absence in the Linnaeus Union in 1962, and was sentenced to death.
An arrangement had been made to send Linas to Panama. But last week the Panamanian government said the plan was suspended indefinitely after it was disclosed by the World Jewish Congress. Marijulia Lloyd, the Panamanian Embassy's press attach, said yesterday that her government would make a decision in the next few days.
Linnas, 67, has been held at the New York City jail since April 1986.
INSIDE A stroke of luck
The Kansas men's tennis team started preparing for the Big Eight Conference Tennis Championships with an 8-1 victory over Southwest Missouri State yesterday. See story page 11.
Drug war
The United States is losing its war on drugs because the fight is full of empty rhetoric, Mark Potter, an ABC News correspondent, said yesterday during his speech on drugs in the United States. See story page 3.
2
Tuesday, April 21, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Around the World
Argentine president dismisses army chief of staff after revolt
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — After guiding his civilian government through two military mutines, President Raul Alafonisin dismissed the army chief yesterday and put the defense minister temporarily in charge.
The rebellions were the most serious threat to Allonssin's administration since his inauguration in 1907, and he nearly eight years of military rule.
At least 9,000 people vanished during the right-wing military junta's "dirty war" against leftists, and about 250 officers from the junta face charges. The army rebels demanded amnesty for those accused of human rights
abuses and the resignation of the army chief of staff, Gen. Hector Rios Erenu.
The newspaper Diario Popular's headline yesterday said: "The People Triumph!"
Hundreds of thousands of people went into the streets helping Alfonso in through the crisis.
About 400,000 people responded tourgings from radio and television announcers Sunday to gather in the huge Plaza de Mayo and "defend our democracy." They were there when the president flew to the rebel camp and persuaded the 150 rebellious officers to surrender.
Tamil rebels continue civilian massacres
COLOMBO, Sri Lanka - Tamil rebels killed at least 18 Sinhalese yesterday at a jungle hamlet not far from where Tamils slaughtered 12 civilians three days earlier, the government reported.
Many political observers said the two massacres demonstrated that Tamil radicals were unwilling to negotiate, and set the stage for increased fighting between the military and rebels.
on condition of anonymity, said yesterday that guerrillas invaded Vanella, a jungle village in the eastern Trincomalee district, and killed 18 people, including five women and five children.
Sinhalese were segregated from Tamil and Muslim passengers. Most of those killed were Sinhalese, including children and a 70-year-old woman. At least 65 people were reported wounded.
Government sources, speaking
Tariffs won't affect relations, official says
OISE, Japan — New U.S. tariffs on some Japanese products should not affect the overall relationship between the two allies, U.S. trade representative Clayton Yeutter said yesterday.
He said that the imposition of the duties Saturday was not a protection act and that the U.S. trade deficit would not be eliminated by solving individual issues. However, he urged Japan to increase imports and drop quotas on foreign goods "as a matter of principle."
Yeutter said the new tariffs imposed by the Reagan administration represented "a relatively small blip . . . on the screen of economic relationships between the two countries and should not be permitted to cloud the much more important economic and political relationship."
He spoke at a privately organized meeting of Japanese and U.S. government and business leaders at Olso, a seaside city southwest of Tokyo.
Across the Country
First-class stamp may be 25 cents in 1988
WASHINGTON — Postmaster General Preston R. Tisch said yesterday that 25 cents "seems like a logical amount" to charge for a first-class stamp under a rate increase that may take effect in 1988.
Asked if the rate for a first-class stamp would go from 22 cents to a quarter, Tisch replied, "That seems like a logical amount. It wouldn't cost too muchicularly for those of us who don't like to carry pennies around."
"We are thinking of raising our rates in 1988," Tisch said on NBC-TV's "Today" show, adding that "we haven't made the decision yet."
The rate was last increased Feb. 17, 1985, when the 20-cent rate, which had been in effect more than three years, was raised.
Farmers should get more aid, official says
WASHINGTON — An additional $42.5 million in farm loan funds should be made available by the government to enable growers to proceed with spring planting, a House subcommittee chairman said yesterday.
"As the time for spring planting approaches, thousands of farmers across the country are facing the very real possibility that they will not obtain sufficient credit to finance their operations this year," said Rep. Ed Jones, D-Tenn.
Jones, chairman of the House
Agriculture Committee's credit subcommittee, said in a letter to Agriculture Secretary Richard E. Lyng that the $542.5 million could be made available through a transfer of funds authorized under the 1985 farm law.
The law authorizes the secretary to transfer 25 percent of the funds available for loan guarantees to use for direct Farmers Home Administration loans. Such an action would still leave nearly $1 billion available for loan guarantees, Jones said.
From Kansan wires.
Weather
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LAWRENCE FORECAST
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3
Local Briefs
KU, Lawrence experience phone outage
A telephone outage on campus yesterday was caused when Southwestern Bell was installing new cabling. The telephone company official said.
KU Police phones were out for about 45 minutes, a spokesman said. But Dave Nichols, Southwest Bell cell manager, said that the problems began around 4:30 p.m., that most were cleared up by 5 p.m.
Southwestern Bell had received about 150 calls about the outage by 6 p.m. yesterday. But Nichols said he couldn't determine the number of phones affected or the area affected.
The Society of Professional Journalists recently awarded the Kansas a first-place award as the best student newspaper in this region. It also recently won the most prestigious national award given to a college newspaper's business and advertising staff.
KU journalists win 9 regional awards
The Kansan was named the 1987 Trendsetter in the college newspaper industry for its business and advertising staffs, and Grant Shafer was named the sales representative of the year by the College Newspapers Business and Advertising Managers.
KU journalism students won the most awards, with nine, of any school recently in the regional Mark of Excellence Contest sponsored by the Society of Professional Journalists.
KU first-place winners were Dawn Tongish and Bo Kealing, first place, television documentary; Kealing, first, television spot news; Patti Noland, first, best radio spot news; Matt Ehrlich, first, best radio non-deadline news
These winners advance to national competition.
KU commission honors 11 women
Eleven women were honored Thursday night at the Women's Recognition Program sponsored by the Commission on the Status of Women.
The following women were honored: outstanding woman student in athletics, Rosie Wadman, Osceola Niles, Ill., senior; outstanding woman student in community services, Delmetri Bynum, Topeka junior; outstanding nontraditional woman students, Diane Mlodoenzie, Lawrence senior and Joan Wellman, Lawrence sophomore; outstanding woman student in leadership, Martie Aaron, Wichita senior; outstanding woman student in student services, Margaret Ruth Palmer, Independence senior; outstanding international woman student, Yuko Takahashi, Kawasaki, Japan, graduate student; outstanding pioneer woman, Susanna Madora Salter; outstanding woman teacher, Sandra Albrecht, associate professor of sociology; outstanding woman staff members, Susan Wachter, assistant athletic director, and Ola Faucher, assistant director of employment services.
Correction
Because of an editor's error, the date for the Red Zone concert was incorrectly stated in yesterday's Kansas. The Red Zone will play at the Jazhauz, $929. 92\%$ Massachusetts St., at 9:30 p.m. Wednesday.
TOM M. HARDY
L. A. Rauch/KANSAN
From staff and wire reports
Mark Potter, ABC News correspondent, talks about drug trafficking from Central and South America to the United States. Potter spoke last night to about 75 people in Aldershot Audiorium in the Kansas Union.
War on drugs is being lost ABC newsman Potter says
Empty rhetoric and Band-Aid solutions won't do, he says
By PAUL SCHRAG
Staff writer
The United States' war on drugs is full of empty rhetoric and is being lost, an ABC news correspondent said yesterday.
"There are still many people who are trying to minimize the U.S. drug problem or to wish it away with Band-Aid solutions or rhetoric." Mark Potter, the correspondent, told about 75 people last night in Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas Union. His lecture was sponsored by the Student Senate Lecture Series and the School of Journalism radio-television sequence.
"The supply of drugs in this country today is staggering, and it pours in like water." Potter said. Potter has covered the story of the ABC's "World News Tonight" and "Nightline" since 1983. He has traveled in Central and South America, reporting on the drug trade.
Max Utsler, chairman of radio and television, who taught Potter at the University of Missouri in 1974, said he was proud of Potter's
journalistic accomplishments.
"TV reporters sometimes are accused of being just so much flash and trash, but he really gets it wrong, that he affects all of us." Utsler said.
Potter said U.S. citizens were the No. 1 users of illegal drugs in the world.
Seventeen percent of U.S. high school seniors have tried cocaine, and 54 percent have used marijuana, he said. And the price of cocaine has fallen to a point where just about anybody can afford it.
"Unfortunately, drug abuse is not just a Miami vice," he said. "It's not just a New York vice. Those towns are only the conduits for drugs that eventually end up here."
The best way to end drug trafficking would be to end drug demand, Potter said. But the Reagan administration, which last year announced a war on drug by the federal government, the federal drug education budget.
"Covering the illegal drug trade for any period of time, you see so much hypocrisy and false promises that while it is always an intriguing endeavor, it can also be frustrating and quite depressing," he said.
Both fighting the drug dealers and educating the public about the consequences of drug abuse need to increase, Potter said. The drug trade probably never will be eliminated because there's too much money to be made in it, he said.
Drug dealers in nations such as Bolivia and Colombia are so powerful and ruthless that there is little chance to crack down on them, Potter said. In Bolivia, 11 Supreme Court justices who opposed drug trafficking were assassinated in one shootout.
Potter said drug-related violence in Miami peaked during the drug wars of the late '70s and early '80s, when drug dealers committed machine-gun mass murders in broad daylight.
"The purported war against drugs is costing us billions of dollars and has cost the untold lives of dedicated police officers, journalists, judges and governmental allers over the world." he said.
March scheduled as a protest to aid given to contras
By ROGER COREY
Staff writer
A Latin America Solidarity protest march against contra aid has been scheduled today to coincide with a vote in the Senate on Reagan's policy in Central America.
Elliott Abrams, assistant secretary of state for inter-American affairs and discusso (Central America) What Are the Keys to Success p.m. in the Kansas Union ballroom.
Abrams has been an active supporter of the contrasts, who seek to overthrow the Sandinista government in Nicaragua, and is at the center of a reagan administration to win congressional approval for contra aid.
"We'll try to get some of our people inside," said Rhonda Neugebauer, programming assistant at the University of Kansas libraries and sponsor of the rally. "We want people to think critically about what Elliott Abrams is saving."
The protest march will begin at noon at Wescoe beach and will move to the Kansas Union where Abrams is speaking.
Neugebauer, who visited Nicaragua in 1986 on a research seminar sponsored by the department of Latin American studies, said the rally's goal was to educate students about the contra issue.
"Abrams directs and coordinates state department operations in Honduras," Neugebauer said. "He says
communism is the problem in Nicaragua, but it isn't. Poverty and exploitation are the problems."
Charles Stansifer, director of Latin American studies, said Abrams' visit to the University of Kansas was important because he was the highest level spokesman in the government on U.S. policy in Latin America.
"In lie of hearing the President himself speak on the U.S. policy in Central America, you'll hear his principal spokesman," Stansifer
Stansifer said only Reagan and George Shultz, secretary of state, were above Abrams in the formation of Central American policy.
"And neither the President nor Shultz comes to Kansas too often." Stansifer said.
He said Abrams' comments on Central America would be particularly interesting to KU students and would be his focus on Latin American studies.
"This is a hot issue," Stansifer said.
An article in the March 2 Newsweek said Abrams had lost credibility in the Iran-contra affair. And although he maintained that he knew nothing about the Teheran connection, he had been mentioned by the Senate Intelligence Committee in connection with the administration's legally questionable efforts to facilitate private aid for the contras.
Student ends strike by eating Easter egg
By a Kansan reporter
Michael Maher, Roeland Park senior, peeled and ate an Easter egg in Strong Hall yesterday, a day after he ended a 20-day hunger strike for divestment.
Maher began the strike March 30, saying he would not eat until 50 KU alumni had written letters urging the Kansas University Endowment Association to divest from companies that do business in South Africa.
The 50th letter arrived Saturday, Maher said yesterday, and he broke his fast the next day by having an Easter dinner with his family in Roeland Park. Maher lost 20 to 25 pounds during the hunger strike.
Maber found his 53rd letter yesterday on the platform in the Strong Hall rotunda, where he spent several afternoons during the strike.
Mahar said most of the letters were from 1970s KU graduates who lived in
Kansas and Missouri, although he received one each from Indiana Arizona and Colorado.
"So, it's been a real feat of net-
working," Maher said.
"Very few alumni were actually going on here, and we still oot at least."
Mahar said he was urging alumni to attend the Endowment Association.
"I think this will continue to blossom out. I think we'll get some real impact here." he said.
Maher said the letters would be presented to Todd Seymour. Endowment Association president, after a march from Strong Hall to the Endowment Association offices in Youngberg Hall on West Campus.
Maher was not contacted by either the Endowment Association or the University administration during the strike. Seymour would not comment during the strike.
Atomic bomb product of politics, not progress, author says
Staff writer
Bv IOSEPH REBELLO
The building of the atomic bomb was not a product of scientific progress but of a kind of politics that now confounds efforts to rid the world of nuclear weapons, the author of a book on the atomic bomb said last night.
Richard Rhodes, author of the critically acclaimed "The Making of the Atomic Bomb," said some of the world's most terrible diseases had been eradicated because nations were ready to put politics aside and cooperate on finding a cure.
But no such cooperation on ending the arms race seems possible because the issue is so dominated by politics and mutual distrust between superpowers, he said.
St. The lecture was sponsored by the Lawrence Coalition for Peace and Justice.
Rhodes spoke to about 175 people in the Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont
"The arms race wasn't historically necessary," he said. "The arms race was the result of political decisions made at the end of the war."
Until the early 1930s, three of the world's foremost nuclear scientists, Albert Einstein, Ernest Rutherford and Niels Bohr, had little knowledge of their scientists to harness atomic energy. Rhodes said,
But with the discovery of nuclear fission in the early 1940s, that lack of faith was gone. In its place had come the recognition of the importance of nuclear energy put to destructive use. Rhodes said.
Some scientists, such as Bohr, tried to warn Allied leaders of those consequences, but their advice was spurned.
"I cannot see what you're talking about."
Churchill told Bohr. "It's only a bigger bomb."
British Prime Minister Winston Churchill responded at the time to Bohr's warnings with exasperation, Rhodes said.
Yet, even in reconciling himself to the leaders' indifference, Bohr also saw reason for hope in the deployment of nuclear weapons, and much of what he predicted already has taken place. Rhodes said.
For example, Bohr predicted that once two opposing nations had nuclear weapons, neither would attempt to fight a war on the assumption that it would win.
That, Bohr calculated, would lead nations to sacrifice some of their sovereignty to negotiate peace. They would have to allow adversaries to verify their compliance with peace treaties.
That prediction became a reality in 1960 after
A u-2 spat plane flown by U.S. pilot Gary Powers was shot down while on a mission over the Soviet Union. The plane was attempting to hit the Soviet Union's missile capability, Rhodes said.
"Since that day, leaders have understood what it's all about, and now overlying by spy satellites is not only tolerated but encouraged not only because which was exactly Bolz's "notion," he said.
"It's worth considering that change is coming despite the best efforts of those who would stockpile arms," Rhodes said.
That change was the result of more scientific progress about the consequences of nuclear
"The more we all can learn and make public what we learn, the sooner we will get over this terrible point we are at now." Rhodes said
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Tuesday, April 21, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Opinions
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Surviving tough times
Unfortunately, not all people can care for themselves. They need support from their communities and their state and federal governments.
Unfortunately, social issues are not a top priority of the state and federal governments. When our federal government sets the tone of neglecting social issues, state governments should not follow that example and shirk their responsibilities. Instead, state governments should make up for the federal government's lack of compassion.
Welfare programs in Kansas face budget cuts just as other state programs do. Cuts to welfare programs can result in nothing but harm to a significant number of needy people.
The Kansas welfare program may be able to survive budget cuts, but will those who depend on welfare survive?
Budget cuts may force Kansas welfare programs to cut assistance to some groups and transfer existing money within departments. Usually, welfare programs don't have enough money to help all those who need it. And the state and federal governments haven't helped ease the situation.
So, the responsibility falls on the shoulders of individual communities. Communities must continue to develop programs to care for their own. That's the only sure way of knowing that people will survive tough times.
Alley of the dolls
Has the greed for a dollar completely replaced all respect for human beings?
Apparently in Los Angeles it has.
The dolls are dressed in odd socks, old coats and tattered dresses. They wear old straw hats, old shoes or tennis shoes.
The latest money-making scheme to hit the toy market is the Bag Lady doll. The dolls range in height from 16 inches to six feet, and cost from $50 to $400.
Imagine that, $400 for a doll that does nothing but poke fun at poverty and the misfortunes of others.
Unfortunately, the dolls don't come with all the necessary accessories, such as garbage cans for the dolls to dig through or park benches for them to sleep on. Perhaps the manufacturers would have been able to offer such accessories if their research had included more than just seeing how the bag ladies dressed. With anywhere from three million to six million homeless in this country, it wouldn't have
Despite protests, Donald Gourley, the president of the family business that makes the dolls, said he would continue to produce the dolls. About 500 Bag Lady dolls have been sold since they hit the market 10 months ago.
been hard to do.
Gourley said the Bag Lady dolls were a part of the American way of life, just like his company's surgeon or tennis player dolls, and he said he hoped that the public would have more compassion for the real bag ladies when they purchased the dolls.
If the company wants to continue its education of different types of people, it could come up with a greedy toy manufacturer doll. Children could lock this doll in a board room while it thinks of ways to milk the public. It would be dressed in a nice three-piece suit or a skirt and suit jacket and have $20 bills hanging out of the pockets. It would, however, be missing one thing — a heart.
Comments uncalled for
Last week, three new Lawrence city commissioners were sworn into office. The occasion signaled that Lawrence residents had chosen to replace three incumbents with "new blood."
He did spend much time reminding the audience of his commitment to the commission and the city of Lawrence — all of which can greatly be appreciated. But appreciation,
Unfortunately, the occasion was struck by bitterness from departing Commissioner David Longhurst who chose to go out, not with a bang, but a whimper.
His farewell oratory, a mixture of remembrances of commission work and colleagues, was unprofessionally laced with dissatisfaction of voter choices and authoritative personality judgments.
commonly known as a reflection of good judgment, can sour when that judgment is put into question.
Longhurst questioned the voters' judgment to deny him the opportunity to continue as commissioner, saying, "there is no one, absolutely no one, who loves this city more than I." He also questioned the voters' ability to know what's best for the city. Concerning downtown development, he said "I don't envy you the fight and I can't help but feel you deserve the unpleasantness that will result."
If Longhurst loves Lawrence as much as he says he does, he should try to offer constructive comment instead of bitter remarks. After all, the voters he maligned are the same ones who put him in office in the first place.
News staff
News staff
Frank Hansel Editor
Jennifer Benjamin Managing editor
Juli Warren News editor
Brian Kabelline Editorial editor
Sandra Engelland Campus editor
Mark Siebert Sports editor
James Dulmier Photo editor
Bill Skeet Graphics editor
Tom Eblen General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Lisa Weems Business manager
Bonnie Hardy Advisor
Denise Stephens Retail sales manager
Kelly Scherer Campus sales manager
Duncan Calhoun Marketing manager
Lori Coppel Classified manager
Jennifer Mienkasani Production manager
David Nixon National sales manager
Jennie Hines Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words and should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. Guest shots should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The
The Kansan reserves the right reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Staffer-Flint Hall.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, *Kansas 118 Stauffer Fint-Hall Law*, Kanse, 60045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and on Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage paid in Lawrence, Kan. 60044. Subscriptions by mail are $40 per year in Douglas County and by 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.
I JUST DON'T LIKE IT,
GEORGE;
THERE'S SOMETHING
ABOUT THAT SMILE...
TREATY
Shultz
GORBA LISA
UHLG
University Daily Kansan
Church priorities confuse Catholics
Pope John Paul II's recent trip to Chile illustrates the Catholic Church's growing concern for social justice. This concern has positioned the church at the forefront of the
Greg Gideon
Guest Shot
POLICE
battle for human rights and constructive social change. It also has created a puzzling contradiction between Catholic faith and contemporary church practice.
For many Catholics, this contradiction is well exemplified in the recently constructed, multi-million dollar church to the St. Lawrence Catholic Center.
College students are confused by the allocation of resources within the
institution of the church. Fiscal policies that appear to place the current needs of the church ahead of the immediate needs of individuals heighten this confusion. That has led to a difficult reconciliation of ele- ment of Christian faith with, for example, church construction programs,
These programs have caused some Catholics to perceive their church as a physical "entity" more than as an institution of moral leadership.
As an example, I am reminded that the populations of many Third World countries continue to suffer from the preventable disease of leprosy. For pennies a day, vaccinations can preclude individuals from suffering the effects of this debilitating disease. A regard for justice requires that this enduring problem be recognized and effectively addressed. There must be, however, the recognition that something can be done when the
the exterior packaging of the church
necessary resources are targeted to the problem. Social justice requires sustained action if we are to satisfy the basic requirements of both humanity and Christian faith.
The Catholic Church, however, along with a host of other religious institutions, has determined that both God and the community of man are better served through the creation of grand facilities for worship. These facilities consume significant amounts of available resources and stave programs that could alleviate vast amounts of human suffering. This need does not mean that the church needs to be materially divested; but it must remember that a spartan existence was the example set by Christ.
Moreover, it must be questioned whether God, as chief architect of the entire universe, is moved by activities that celebrate wealth in the midst of so much social, physical and spiritual despair. This type of resource allocation by enlightened members of the spiritual community does create confusion.
College students continue to recognize the contradictions that inhere in these efforts. The general public also is suspicious of, and at times hostile toward, this apparent emphasis on
Pope John Paul II recently has criticized the "cafeteria Catholic" for selectively following only attractive aspects of church doctrine. Selectivity, however, is reflected in church policies that extend the hand of justice incomplete. The church cannot assume a "cafeteria" approach to the moral and social dilemmas extant in the world today. This is precisely what occurs when scarce resources are channeled into costly building programs instead of impoverished lives. This contradiction does indeed create confusion.
Barge story illustrates trashy way of thought
Poring over the newspaper the other day, I found a story that seemed to sum up one of the biggest problems in the United States today. The event in question wasn't that important in itself. Its importance comes in the way it illustrates an all too common way of thinking.
Brian
Kaberline
Editorial editor
A barge with a cargo of more than 3,000 tons of garbage was sitting in a Louisiana port with no place to go. The garbage came from Islip, N.Y., on Long Island, because the community's landfill is running out of room.
The barge originally was bound for North Carolina, but they didn't want it. Next stop, Alabama. But the barge would not come indole about 1,500 tons of trash a day.
Next, the barge tried to relieve itself in Louisiana and, surprise, they wouldn't take it either. So some fortunate families in Venice, La, were treated to the tantalizing smell of month-old garbage.
Think about most of the big news stories from the last year, and see how many of them are the result of a similar scene. People come up against an unpleasant situation and, rather than dealing with it, they send the problem down the line for someone else to worry about. The result is
almost always the same: Somebody not involved with the source of the problem gets dumped on.
On a large scale, the United States recently dumped on Canada when President Reagan failed to offer substantive proposals dealing with acid rain during his visit with Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney. Maybe pollution from the United States stops being a problem Reagan should worry about once it leaves our borders.
And what happens when the government of Kansas finds itself a little short of money? The governor proposes a 3.8 percent across-the-board budget cut for all state agencies. That way, the responsibility is barged down to the agency directors and employees at the people who depend on state programs that already are financially pressed.
If that sounds melodramatic, think about how a little more planning by the state and the University might have altered some of the University's recent financial problems.
The urge to pass the muck extends to individuals too. It may manifest itself in a small act like tessuring out of the car window. Or it may be as an accidental knock on a seat, about sickness, poverty, war or injustice, and keeping quiet about it.
Maybe if more of us thought about the consequences of our actions, or inactions, some of these loads of social and political trash could be sent back to their original owners.
Mailbox Leaders duck job
Many thanks to Benjamin Hall for his report on my talk at the University Forum on Wednesday. While Hall did a fine job in most respects, there is one point I like to clarify and stress. I was quoted in the article as saying that "government leaders shouldn't rely on bureaucats to carry out their policies" and instead of implementation of public policies that government leaders should leave to their administrators.
What was scandalous about President Reagan's behavior is that he left the making of public policy to the National Security Council bureaucracy. That is a critical point in my thesis and it is one I'd like to stress.
I don't think the abdication of responsibility for making policy is Reagan's alone. We see the same thing occurring at all levels of U.S. government and in other major institutions, including universities.
That is the lesson of the tran contra affair: don't blame the bureaucracy for making decisions when they are doing nothing more than filling the vacuum of responsibility elected officials are supposed to assume.
Mel Dubnick associate professor of public administration
interstates, the biggest national joke since Prohibition will be history. The 55 mph speed limit was passed in 1974 in order to save fuel. When the price of oil began to fall and the supply of oil increased, different groups used filmys arguments to support 55 mph.
The end of a joke
Supporters of the 55 mph speed limit base their argument on the premise that it saves lives. This argument could not be further from the truth. The fact is that a lot of people needed to take vacations over major holidays, or they now fly to their destination.
These changes have occurred in order to avoid the extra time of driving at 55 mph, the strict enforcement of the speed limit east of the Rocky Mountains and high fines for speeding. With less people driving on the highways, the death rate on the highways will decrease. The lower fatality rate is because there are fewer people on the road, and not because of the 55 mph speed limit.
Many people in the United States are ready for 65 mph. The outrage has come from excessive fines for driving at 65 mph. The highway patrol is not a profit organization, and should spend its time fighting the real criminals. Sixty-five mph will save time, money from fines, and hassle from highway patrol cars. Sammy Hagar said it best, "I can't drive fifty- ffiiiiiivvvve!"
On May 1, 1987, or when the Kansas Legislature raises the speed limit to 65 mph on rural
M. Alan Smith St. Louis junior
BLOOM COUNTY
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5
L. A. Rauch/KANSAN
A light moment
brenda Callabresi, Salina graduate student, and Greg Hickel, Ellinwood graduate student, walk down the stairs in the Kansas Union.
University to honor 4 community leaders
Dinner to toast distinguished service
The University of Kansas and the University of Kansas Alumni Association will award four Distinguished Service Citations to outstanding community and business leaders who have made exceptional contributions to humanity.
By a Kansan reporter
Gen. Chris Divich, Lackland Air Force Base, Texas; Paul Harry Henson, Mission Hills; John H Robinson, Mission Hills; and Charles "Buddy" Rogers, Beverley Hills, Calif., will receive the awards at the all-University supper at 7 p.m. May 16 in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
The program has honored 283 people since 1941.
Divich, who commands the Air Force Training Center at Lackland, Florida.
Henson, chairman of United Telecommunications Inc., graduated from the University of Nebraska. In 1980, Henson helped create a professorship in operations research in the School of Business.
Robinson, a managing partner of Black and Veatch Engineering and Architecture, graduated from the School of Engineering in 1949.
Rogers was a member of the KU class of 1926 when he was recruited by Paramount Studio's School of Acting. Voted the most popular male movie star in a nationwide poll in 1930. Rogers married actress Mary Pickford in 1937. In 1982 he endowed a $100,000 scholarship fund for KU's division of communication and theater.
Dean says days of class convenience over
As fall enrollment continues and classes close, University of Kansas students are learning to deal with the results of a booming student population.
By JOHN BUZBEE Staff writer
Staff writer
James Carothers, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said yesterday that the days when students always could get convenient times for classes were over.
said.
"Students are adjusting to the fact that they have to be flexible," he
Classes are closing because of high demand in some departments, including communication studies, education and psychology, Carothers said.
"We've had scattered reports of students not being able to get classes there."
But seniors who will graduate in
the class of 2017 need to be in
the class, but they need to be ready.
"We're usually able to accommodate graduating students who need a particular course," he said.
The biggest problems may be for students who will enroll in the summer, he said. Even if summer enrollment doesn't increase from last year, Carothers said, enrollment will be higher next fall.
"Things are going to be tight," he said.
Gary Thompson, director of studies in recruitment process and goes smoothly.
"In a sense, it's two different kinds of enrollments." he said.
"It's the behind-the-scenes things that make enrollment go as well as possi
early enrollment for fall. Thompson said that although students may enroll this spring for the summer and fall, that the fall enrollment for spring was two days longer because seniors participated.
The University began its current process of computer enrollment in November 1982. Students used to teach their courses in punch cards that allocated classes.
Today is the 12th day of the 13-day
City commission to discuss mall again
Staff writer
Bv TODD COHEN
For the first time since voters rejected a mall proposal in the April 7 city elections, Lawrence city commissioners tonight will discuss the city's next step in the continuing downtown mall drama.
The commissioners will meet at 7 p.m. City Hall, Sixth and Massa-
tia Streets.
Members of the Urban Renewal Agency have been invited to the meeting to discuss with commissioners whether the URA and its three subcommittees should continue to meet. All URA and committee meetings were suspended after the election.
Although the mall was defeated, the commission is not required to end the mall project or eliminate the mall. Theendum was non-binding, or advisory.
The committees were to issue reports on their work May 1.
The commission created the URA last year to help Jacobs, Visconsi and Jacobs of Cleveland develop the mall. Three subcommittees were created earlier this year to study the mall's design, traffic and parking needs and the effect on neighboring areas.
Also undecided is the status of the
city's developer-of-record contract with JVJ. The contract gives JVJ an exclusive right to develop a downtown mall for the city.
Mike Wildden, assistant city manager, said yesterday that the developer-of record contract was a "performance" contract that was contingent on the specified actions of both the city and JVJ.
It isn't clear what action is necessi-
cate, but the commission chooses
to void the captain's record.
Wildgen said he thought that the city and JVJ were, technically, still under contract. JVJ hasn't contacted the city since the election, and the new city commission hasn't taken any action regarding the mall, Wildgen said.
At tonight's meeting, the commissioners also will consider:
JVJ officials could not be reached for comment.
A site plan for construction of a retail center with six movie theaters in the 2400 block of Iowa Street.
- Installing traffic signals at 14th and Kentucky streets and at 14th and Tennessee streets.
Plans for installation of a loading zone on 11th Street at Memorial Stadium, and a left turn lane at the entrance to the KU physical plant building on Sunflower Road.
4 arrested for vandalism
By a Kansan reporter
Four KU students were arrested by KU police Friday night and ordered to appear in municipal court on charges of criminal damage as a result of vandalism to the Chancellor's fountain.
Lt. Jeanne Longaker, KU police spokesman, said yesterday that she couldn't reveal the students' names. By law, the KU police cannot release the names of any present or former KU students involved in any campus incident, she said.
The charges are classified as Class C misdeemans. The fines for such charges are determined by the judge.
Police reported that the fountain, on Circle Drive behind Watkins and Miller scholarship halls, sustained an estimated $100 in damage.
However, Bob Porter, associate director of plant maintenance for KU facilities and operations, said yesterday that the costs to repair the fountain most likely would increase.
Porter said vandals had begun to disassemble the fountain when they were apprehended. KU maintenance workers reassembled the fountain late Friday night and had the fountain in working order in time for Kansas Relays visitors Saturday, he said.
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Director: Peter Bogdanovich Contemporary cinema classic about life in a small and dreary Texas town. Starring Timothy Bottoms, Jeff Bridges, Cybill Shepherd and Cloris Leachman, who won the Academy Award for her fine performance. (1971)
7:00 p.m.
Director; Alexander Mackendrick Burt Curlan and Tony Curti star in this drama about the rough and tough life of a soldier,Colonel of a cavalry and his dealings with a wile press agent. The cinematography of James Wong Howe is superb (1937)
Director: Sharon Sopher
Tough, a view keen at the current state of apartheid through two shocking films, is an example of how a film that is untestable Witness. The voices of children speak of police terrorism, detention, and fear. The film is a haunting portrait of South Africa's apartheid era and human rights (1986).
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College is a time of change and that often includes your eating and exercise habits. Learn to meet your nutritional needs sensibly and control your appetite. A program on exercise/diet/ age interaction is available upon your request, or call for individual counseling.
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6
Tuesday, April 21, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Jason
© 1987 Universal Press Syndicate
SALE
14 - 24
Early department stores
The executive committee of KU's AAUP chapter surveyed the chapter's 120 members before joining the race to represent the proposed faculty union.
Hohn said 60 percent of the respondents said faculty should be involved in collective bargaining, and 85 percent said they represent the organization if one were formed.
"That prompted us to take a stand," he said.
Hohn said he thought that if an election were held today, KU's faculty would choose the "no representation" option.
When the election is held, the "no
Continued from p. 1
AAUP
Hohn said because higher education faculty unions were more prevalent on the East and West Coasts than in the Midwest, and because Kansas was a major union issue at KU was attracting attention elsewhere in the Midwest.
"But even if 'no representation is chosen, I think the process is useful."
representation" option automatically will be added to the ballot along with the names of any groups that represent such matrices, or 30 percent of the faculty.
“A lot of people are watching with interest what goes on here,” he said.
9th & Michigan
An informal concert, with David Tanenbaum, guitarist, is scheduled at 11:30 a.m. today in the west end of the Kansas Union Jobbey.
SUNRISE PLACE
Featuring: Luxurious two bedroom townhouse living
"Central America; What Are the Alternatives?" a lecture by Elliott Abrams, assistant secretary of state for inter-American affairs, is scheduled at 1 p.m. today in the Kansas Union Ballroom
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Griffin said recently that he spoke to a group of about 1,200 KNEA representatives in Topeka. "I was even enthusiastically received," he said.
"We want to cooperate with the K through 12 people and to increase the rate of participation."
- Swimming pool
- Energy efficient
A faculty union might encourage graduate teachers and assistant instructors to organize as well, Griffin said.
The KU baseball team is scheduled to play Benedictine College at 3 p.m. today at Quigley Field.
"Fiber and Fabric as Architectural Device and Art, an art lecture by Christopher Dodd, is scheduled at 7 tonight in the Spencer Museum of Art auditorium
KNEA has a group of about 35 KU faculty members working to form a KU union. But the National Education Association as a whole consists mostly of kindergarten through 12th grade teachers.
The Student Senate is scheduled to be held in the Kansas Union.
The KU Hispanic-American Leadership Organization is scheduled to meet at 6:30 tonight in the International Room in the Kansas Union.
Griffin said KNEA's affiliation with those teachers would be an advantage.
Many KU faculty members seem to support the idea of organizing, Griffin said.
We are open for show
Monday—Saturday 1:00—6:00 p.m.
Please stop by our office or call
841-1287.
"I think there's 60 to 70 percent support for the union, which is really
"I would assume that there's very
crossover between the two
groups."
KNEA
"I think it's just as valid a procedure for them as it is for us," he said. The more cooperation we can have between our employers and employees, the better off we are.
Continued from p. 1
KNEA has collected the 306 faculty signatures needed to get on the ballot to represent the faculty bargaining unit. An AAUP organizer says that the number is close to the required number, which is 30 percent of the total faculty.
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Meet the No.1 college advertising rep in the country:
ANS
Grant Shaffer
More than 60 universities gathered in Washington D.C. to recognize the best in the business. More than 60 competed for creative advertising, management and sales awards. One student was awarded for sales excellence. Only one. Grant Shaffer.
From Grant's point of view, it was a tremendous honor. For those of us at the Kansan, it was just plain exciting. He's given us three semesters of hard work, enthusiasm and success. He's developed creative sales strategies that have opened up new markets and brought a lot of new advertisers to your newspaper.
Perhaps the best part of Grant winning the award is that besides everything else, he's one of the nicest guys you'd ever want to work with.
Congratulations, Grant. Through your award you've brought us tons of pride and miles of smiles.
And thanks. Through your three semesters of work here at the Kansan we've brought us a bunch of great ads.
You're reading the No.1 college newspaper.
SAN
The University Daily
KANSAN
Buck in joint competition
introduction, national shock in joint car
Cengage sell focus to 150,000
new students before next week
cnbaim
Your newspaper was recognized as No. 1 in the business, too. The University Daily Kansan received the highest award granted by the College Newspaper Business Advertising Managers, a national organization with more than 80 campus newspaper members.
It's called the Trendsetter and it's presented to the newspaper that's setting the pace for the industry.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
1987 Sales Representative of the Year
The University Daily Kansan
1987 Trendsetter
Summer is here and there are a thousand things to do! Are you short on cash? KU Federal Credit Union understands your needs as a student. That is why we've developed the Command Line of Credit loan. Once approved it works like a credit card, and interest rates are lower than credit cards! Come in or call for more information.
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9th & Louisiana
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 21, 1987
7
'Who'll give a dollar '
PENNESSEY COUNTY
MARYLAND
SPECIALTY
COUNTRY MUSEUM
Above: Arbene Simmons, Albert Paslay and George Simmons, all of Lecompton, take a lunch break. Below: Ken Hornberger, auctioneer, points at a bidder during a sale.
Local weekend auctions provide obscure bargains
ECOMPTON - Eddie McClain picked out a wood-framed windshield and a rusted door handle from the strewn-out car parts to be sold at an auction Saturday
McClain, 76, of Topeka, said the parts
were from a 1921 Ford truck, the same kind McClain had driven through the Pottawatomie Indian reservation burial shes he was much younger.
McClain would pick up and sell old bones that he had reserved for the reservation
- 1. 2. 3.
Anderson said the Studebaker Lark VI had been in a shed for nine years but was "pretty well broken in" with 46,000 miles on the odometer.
"I made a lot of money off that truck," he said.
Old car parts were just part of this auction, which included among its 400 items five television sets, four combines, three refrigerators, two old cars and a tennis racket with a bird-size hole in it.
Yates filled the back of his truck with $30 worth of purchases, “wasstubts, some crocks.” As he strapped a table on the cab in his truck, he said, “I almost forgot my tablet.
Bunten said she and her husband attended an auction almost every week. "I guess
Auctioneer Ken Hornberger of Lawrence stood on a wagon talking up boxes of parts.
The sale Saturday of a Loompton farming couple's *state* was billed as a two-genera
Ruby Bunten of Topeka had her lawn-chair parked near a 1960 Studebaker that Jack Anderson had just purchased.
Items were moving slow Saturday. They're going awful, awful cheap. "Bunny."
Bill Yates of Topeka agreed. "There was nobody here that wanted anything."
Hornberger had a mobile amplifier strapped across his chest, a microphone in one hand and a cigarette in the other. His 3-inch "KEN" belt buckle held his blue jeans up over cowboy boots.
chain saws and other merchant-ware, that's why a good shopkeeper told the crowd.
One of Hornberger's assistants held up a chain saw.
Hornberger often packaged non-selling boxes of merchandise with other items. Many items were selling for a dollar or two.
"Don't start it now," the auctioneer said, "just sell them the way you see them. You can fire them up later."
He said he had been an auctioneer for 20 years and learned by "just deciding to do it."
Hornberger said some auctioneers had rhythm, some just talk. He said that he didn't have a particular style but that he did have rhythm.
The auctioneer described a box of old license plates. "Ain't but a couple years missed, maybe just one."
A man from the crowd said, "1929 is missing. That was the year of the crash, he probably couldn't afford to buy a license plate that year."
A
V.
Above: Hornberger auctions miscellaneous hand tools and machine parts from a fully loaded flatbed trailer.
Photos by Darcy Chang
Story by Laura Bostrom
BEN MILLER
Above: Dave Warriner, Perry, in cap, bids on a 1947 flatbed truck, which he lost to Gary Burch, Lawrence resident, middle, for $500. Right: Jack Corcoran, 2, Lawrence resident, finds a resting place while her parents watch a sale.
1970
8
Tuesday, April 21, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
JOHN MARTIN
Alan Hagman/KANSAN
Not a laughing matter
Teresa Good, top, Edmond, Oklahoma, freshman, has a good time Chanute sophomore. On Wednesday, Good will have to do her study for a Navy ROTC inspection with the help of Amy Barnby, service dress white uniform for the ROTC's biannual inspection
Program examines effect of deregulation
Staff writer
By PEGGY O'BRIEN Staff writer
The effects of deregulation on small Midwestern communities will be discussed at an upcoming symposium at the University of Kansas.
The first annual Midwest Symposium on Public Policy, "Community Aspects of Deregulation," is sponsored by the University of Wisconsin and Business Research. The
program will be tomorrow and Thursday at the Adams Alumni Center.
The symposium will bring together university professors and representatives from Midwestern industries. The group will examine the pros and cons of deregulation in electric utilities, transportation, banking and telecommunications. Participants also will discuss solutions to "
problems that deregulation has caused the region's small communities.
Doug Houston, associate professor of business, said some small communities feared that they would be at risk for higher utility bills because of the electric utilities, a fear that Houston did not think was necessarily true.
the symposium entitled "Power to the People: Communities" Impact on Electric Utility Deregulation.
Houston is presenting a paper at
Prem Pangotra, assistant professor of public administration and symposium convener, will finance the symposium with grants from the Farm Foundation in Oak Brook, Ill., the Hansen Foundation in Logan, and a subsidiary from the office of academic affairs.
Installation of KU's new phone system begins in summer
By KJERSTI MOEN
Staff writer
KU's long-awaited new telephone system will begin operating this summer, but at a higher price than first expected.
The University of Kansas telecommunications department began planning a new telephone system in 1982. Installation began in March 1986 and completed by August, said Dewey Alirez, director of the department.
"In essence, we pretty much become one telephone company we're said to be."
The changes include replacing the University's approximated 4,000 rotary phones with push-button phones. New wiring will also be installed, including fiber-optic cables that can transmit data at a high speed transfer video signals. Under a contract with American Telephone & Telegraph Co., the University will lease an automatic switchboard, which connects the caller with the number dialed.
The system is part of a statewide network that includes five state universities and government agencies in Topeka.
About 80 percent of University buildings have been connected to the new wire system, and about one-third of the phones have been replaced. He said the new system would begin operating in late July.
The University decided to operate its own telephone system instead of leasing wires and other equipment from outside telephone companies to save money in the long run, Alaire said. By using its own equipment, KU will pay AUM and Suntai Ernell's yearly charge increases. After about four years, KU will begin to save money on the new system, he said.
In addition to saving money, the University also wanted to increase efficiency, especially in the transmission of data, Allaire said. Computer data can be transmitted over telephone lines through the use of a modem. The new fiber-optic cables will transmit more data faster than the existing coaxial cables, Allaire said.
"The coaxial cable is choking us up several places," he said.
The total cost of the new equipment
was not final, Alauna said, but he estimated the yearly cost over the first eight years to be about $1.7 million. After eight years, the University will have paid more than $13 million for the system.
In 1984, William Hogan, then associate executive vice chancellor, told the Kansan that the telephone system would cost about $8.5 million.
James Bibb, associate University director of business affairs, said it was not yet finalized where the money would come from. The telephone budget for fiscal 1988 has increased by about $400,000 from fiscal 1987, which will not nearly cover the yearly costs of the new system.
"Those were only estimates," Alaire said. He said the cost had gone up because the University had to lease some equipment instead of buying it, which increased long-run costs and resulted in a decrease included in the early figures he said.
Bibb said some additional funds might go into the budget. A joint Kansas Senate and Legislature finance committee will decide this week whether to allocate about $200,000 to KU's telephone budget. The university last month to transfer some money from the University of Kansas Medical Center to the Lawrence campus to cover budget overruns.
"When it all shakes out, it will finally come down to an exact figure," Bibb said.
Allaire said the telecommunications department had not yet figured out how much the new system would affect individual schools and departments. He expected KU's monthly charges to increase by about 18 percent to state support, and by about 10 percent with state support.
Robert Senecal, dean of continuing education, said the school would face an approximate 15 to 20 percent increase in basic monthly telephone charges. Senecal, who also serves on the telecommunications committee, said the increase was not unreasonable.
"The cost would have gone up anyway, even if we had stayed on the old system," he said.
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Undoubtably you have read quite a bit concerning the powerful effect that the dollarlyen devaluation will have on all goods produced in foreign countries. Many manu facturers have already announced drastic price increases to compensate for currency changes and to anticipate punitive tariffs planned in Washington. Last year the rate of exchange was 275 yen per dollar; currently the rate is around 140 yen per dollar. Obviously, prices in dollars must be adjusted to some form of parity with actual manufacturing costs.
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All participants, including faculty doctorate, law, Master's and Bachelor's candidates, wear traditional regalia during the commencement ceremonies.
Candidates and faculty members may order caps, gowns, and/or hoods by mailing in the order form from the graduation mailing, OR by visiting Booth 1 on level four of the Kansas Union between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. on any weekday until Friday, April 24.
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 21, 1987
9
AIDS education essential,prof says
By JENNIFER WYRICK
Staff writer
AIDS and drug abuse education should be part of required health classes in public schools, Phil Hunt-singer, associate professor of health, physical education and recreation, said yesterday.
He said the middle school years should be the target for such education.
Huntsinger, whose specialty is health education, recently attended the national convention of the American Alliance for Health, Physical Education and Recreation in Las Vegas, Nev.
Health educators discussed current issues in health education, and researchers from the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta provided statistics on acquired immune deficiency syndrome.
"The information that was passed along to us about AIDS was the most
current and up-to-date on the subject of health education." Huntsinger said. Several conference sessions were devoted to the AIDS tonic.
The CDC reported to conference members that, as of two weeks ago, there were 33,000 reported AIDS cases in the United States.
"The number is astronomical and also kind of frightening, because the disease has spread to heterosexuals too," Huntsinger said.
In several of the conference sessions that Huntisinger attended, participants discussed the incorporation of AIDS into health courses. such as AIDS, into health courses.
"I think these issues should be dealt with in a health class as a comprehensive health information course," he said.
He said that education about prevention of AIDS and drug abuse would be a good way to combat potential problems.
AIDS should be treated as a communicable disease and not as a sexual issue. Huntsinger said.
He said that AIDS should be discussed in health courses during the discussion of communicable diseases.
The Kansas AIDS Task Force is considering educational programs as a method of slowing the spread of the disease in Kansas. Also, a recently passed state drug program calls for more drug education.
Walker has formed three subcommittees that will deal with the AIDS issue, Mattzi said.
The task force met Wednesday for the first time and has not yet formulated a curriculum for AIDS education. The school's assistant, assistant to Lt. Gov. Jack Walker,
Drug abuse education is being handled differently, Hunsinger said.
Junior high and high schooldens used to learn how drugs were
taken and the what effects of drugs were. Huntsinger said. Researchers found that students who had had such drug education had more of a tendency to use drugs than students who hadn't had drug education.
The programs are now more efficient, Huntsinger said. They teach students about self-concept and self-worth and help students from experimenting with drugs.
Huntingsaidhe thought that the newer method ofeducation took the mystery away from drug use.
The drug abuse issue also is difficult to teach as a moral issue. Hunt said. Students need to know facts about the drug abuse problem. he
Lawrence High School and the Shawnee Mission high schools have health courses, but the courses are offered as electives. Huntsinger said the courses should be required and brought up-to-date.
On the Record
A stereo equalizer and a beer tap pump, valued at $144, and $10 cash, were reported stolen Saturday during a party at a KU student's apartment in the 1200 block of Rhode Island Street, Lawrence police reported.
A KU student's car caught fire Saturday while parked in the lot in front of McCollum Hall. KU police reported. Damage was estimated at $2,500.
A KU student's 18-carat gold ring and 14-carat gold and diamond ring, valued at $1,300, were stolen or lost in Camberwell Hall. KU police reported.
A video-cassette recorder, a microwave and jewelry, valued at $500, were stolen Sunday from a KU student's apartment in the 1300 block of Tennessee Street, Lawrence police reported.
A KU professor's pocket calculator and case, valued at $200, was stolen sometime between Wednesday and Friday from a locked office in Summerfield Hall, KU police reported.
A sound equalizer valued at $175
was stolen Friday from a car parked in a lot behind Stauffer-Flint Hall, KU police reported.
Three partitions on the seventh floor of McCollum Hall were broken out of their frames Friday causing $45 damage. KU police reported.
- Two textbooks, valued at $23, were stolen Wednesday from the Elsworth Hall desk, KU police reported. The textbooks were "Living, Loving and Learning," and "Classical Mythology by Morford."
- Twenty-five blank checks belonging to a KU student were taken sometime between April 3 and April 5 from the student's residence in the block of Stewart Avenue, Lawrence, where one of the checks was returned to the student forged for an unknown amount, police said.
- A double yellow-head Amazon parrot valued at $1,200, an African Congo gray parrot valued at $500 and two parrot cages valued at $90 each were taken between 8 p.m. Friday and 7:45 a.m. Saturday from a garden supply and pet store in the 3200 block of Iowa Street, Lawrence police said.
Retiring KU faculty members to be honored
By a Kansan reporter
Fifteen KU faculty members who have retired or will retire in the 1986-87 fiscal year will be honored at a dinner sponsored by the Kansas University Endowment Association at 6 p.m. May 5 in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Faculty members to be honored
cal survey and professor of geology; Muriel H. Johnson, associate professor of human development and family life; Clifford Ketzel, professor of political science; Anthony J. Smith, professor of mathematics; send, assistant professor of psychology; and Kenneth White, professor of French and Italian.
who retired in 1986 are: Vivian A. Rogers, assistant to the dean and senior specialist for the Division of Continuing Education; L. Martin Jones, University director for business affairs and assistant professor of business; Jed H. Davis, professor of theatre and media arts and University Theatre; William Hamblem director of the Kansas Geologi-
professor of human development and May and Juve are: K. Eileen Allen, family life; Robert N. Sudlow, professor of art; Edward L. Wike, professor of psychology; Gordon Wiseman, professor of physics and astronomy; Wiley Mitchell, professor of business; and William L. Kelly, associate dean of educational services.
Faculty members who will retire in
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Adoption debated in Illinois
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — Unfit parents are more likely to surrender their children for adoption if they can maintain some contact, says a task force report urging Illinois lawmakers to give their rights in some adoption cases.
"This is no crusade . . . and it's not as new as it sounds." Wedgie Schultz, president of Illinois Action for Children and one of a group of experts who helped draw up the recommendation, said yesterday.
Contracts allowing birth parents rights, ranging from awareness of their children's whereabouts to regular visitation, are "already arranged between consenting groups of adoptive parents, birth parents and the children themselves, when they are old enough." Schultz said.
"All we propose is that such (arrangements) be given legal standing," she said. Informal arrangements for visitation, unlike a legal contract, can be terminated if things don't go well, without the birth parents having any recourse in the courts.
But William Pierce, president of the National Committee for Adoption, argued the proposal amounts to "kind of plea-bargaining with abu- and neglectful parents ... by offering the carrot of continued contact."
"The child would be told his parent is not fit to be a parent, but society and the court requires that this unfit child have access to him." Pierce added.
The report containing the proposal for limited "open adoption" was prepared by the Illinois Task Force on Permanency Planning and distributed to state lawmakers beginning yesterday.
The Illinois report is itself part of a three-year, $7.5 million federally financed study administered by the Court. Juvenile and Family Court Judges.
Council spokesman Robert Praksti, director of the project, said while the council supports open-adoption arrangements in some cases, it would not endorse extending legal standing to such contracts.
He said that as far as he knew, Illinois would be the first state to enact such a law if the recommendations were followed.
Studies indicate that parents who lapse into abuse or neglect of their children are more likely to give them up when some contact is guaranteed, said Pamela Elsner, who served on the task force. She is executive director of Illinois Action for Children, the private child-welfare advocacy group of which Schultz is president.
Many abused children now live in foster homes for years, while their parents fight any state attempt to strip them of their parental rights or to arrange permanent adoption, Elsner said.
Schultz argued that being able to offer birth parents varying degrees of contact could help remove children from risk that they may be subject to abuse or neglect.
The task force report also recommended that the state guarantee any abused child access to counseling or other aid.
Soviet paper prints letter faulting labor camps Prisoner's description of conditions may be first published official criticism
The Associated Press
MOSCOW - A paper has published a letter from a former prisoner criticizing Soviet labor camps and information about them be released.
Western diplomats said the letter may be the first published in official mass media criticizing the camps. There is no official information available.
The letter was signed by former convict V. Stavrovsky of Smolenski and said the camps, estimated to hold at least one million prisoners, turned people into hardened criminals.
"It is high time to say what is going on in the corrective labor camps," the weekly Literary Gazette, which published the letter in its current edition, said in an accompanying commentary.
Publication of the letter appears to be part of a review of the criminal justice system. Soviet media have published examples of miscarriages of justice over the past year, and some high-ranking officials have given better protection of citizens against false arrest and imprisonment.
"It's possible something like this
appeared before in legal publications, but that something with a critical tone of the camps should show up in the Literary Gazette is astonishing. a Western diplomat said privately.
Literary Gazette is one of the country's largest newspapers, with a large number of bookstores.
I its commentary said some readers probably would be upset by publication of a convict's letter, but "the rules of glasnost (openness) tolerate no exceptions." The reference was to Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev's program of publicizing some social problems.
Stavrovsky's letter said little about camp conditions, which have been described in detail by former political prisoners freed in a recent review of dissident cases, but he wrote of the inability of a common criminal to reform himself in the camps.
"The development of vicious inclinations in the individual flourishes," he said. "They say this is a formal re-education, but in reality, it is a continuation of the process in which education leads to mistrust, either in himself or others. The so-called political and education work is just wretched.
'A letter like mine can't be sent from the camps. I learned from my own experience. The rules say you must be sent to a punishment cell for 'illegal mailing of letters containing slanderous statements about the
V. Stavrovsky former prisoner
administration.'
"Having served his term, the person is simply incapable of keeping to the norms of life common in society."
He did not say where he was imprisoned or for what offense. Stavrosky said he had several convictions and believed repeat offenders were much more numerous than those serving first terms.
"A letter like mine can't be sent from the camps," he said. "I learned from my own experience. The rules say you must be sent to a punishment camp." He also told letters containing slanderous statements about the administration."
In the accompanying commentary signed by Yuri Shchekochikhin, the paper said, "It is time to make public the statistics of the corrective labor camp results. Is the system effective? Is it turning people who made mistakes once into hardened criminals? There are many questions around this closed topic. It is necessary to investigate them."
No statistics are published in the official press about the number and capacity of prisons and labor camps or how many prisoners they hold. According to Western estimates, there are more than 1,000 prisons and labor camps holding between one million and two million inmates.
The most widely noted example of recent publicity about abuses in the
Reagan consults leaders about arms control
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Reagan, ending a 10-day California vacation, returned to Washington yesterday to consult congressional leaders about what he believed were promising arms-control negotiations with the Soviet Union.
Besides meeting with top Democratic and Republican leaders this week, Reagan is expected to give instructions to his arms negotiators, who will start a new round of U.S.-Soviet talks in Geneva on Thursday.
Reagan said during the weekend that while significant issues still divided the superpowers, "our negotiators will intensify their efforts to clear them away when talks resume
response could be made to the Soviets, because the NATO allies also must be consulted.
A House delegation, led by Speaker Jim Wright of Texas, also talked with Soviet leader Mihail Gorbachev in Moscow last week. Congress returns from its spring recess today.
The president sounded optimistic concerning the Soviet proposals, which include the removal of entire categories of nuclear weapons from Europe, made last week during Secretary of State George Shultz's three-day visit to Moscow.
in Geneva."
"Direct consultations with our allies will continue on further negotiations and plans," Reagan said. "We must look at this issue in a calm, careful and deliberate manner."
justice system was a report in December by the Communist Party daily Pravda told the KGB arrested a Ukrainian journalist on trumped up charges after he wrote articles critical of local officials.
"When I return to Washington, I will meet with the bipartisan congressional leadership to review this issue. Mr. McHale said in his radio address Saturday.
The president made clear that it would be some time before a formal
The president said after meeting with Shultz, "All I heard today is in the direction that I want to go in."
Stories in other publications have told of ineffective defense lawyers, corrupt judges, beatings during interrogations and convictions of innocent people.
The president and his wife, Nance,
wrapped up their Easter break on
Sunday by attending services at a
presbyterian church in Santa Barbara.
One of his recommendations was that defendants be provided with lawyers during pre-trial proceedings. Under current practice, a defendant often does not meet his lawyer until the trial starts.
On Saturday, the president delivered his radio address from the 688 acre ranch, and later in the day, the couple met with dozens of young
cancer patients at a camp in the Santa Ynez Mountains.
On the ranch, the president kept up a rather busy work schedule, mixing riding and clearing brush with routine paperwork.
Alexander Yakovlev, a candidate member of the party's governing Politburo, proposed several reforms of the legal system last fall.
On Friday, Reagan imposed $300 million in duties on selected Japanese electronic goods in retaliation for the use of cyberbombing computer chips in foreign markets
Shultz flew to the ranch late Thursday to brief the president on his meetings in Moscow, and Reagan spoke with reporters afterward to highlight his optimism about chances for an agreement limiting medium-range weapons.
High Court to hear World War II case
He said a 1983 suit, which seeks compensation for property losses suffered by those imprisoned, was filed in the wrong federal court and
The Politburo said in October that a consistent restructuring of the work of the prosecutor's office, the police, courts and other law enforcement agencies was needed.
A federal appeals court ruled that the government must defend itself at trial against the property-loss claims, estimated in the billions of dollars. The Supreme Court's decision is expected by July.
on questions of legal jurisdiction and a on questions of statute, the case represents the court's first opportunity to decide whether a decision condoning the interment.
Fried said the intermend program was tainted by a racial cast, which
Although its decision may center
was filed too late
But Fried also used the administration's strongest language to date in condemning the internment, in which 120,000 U.S. citizens and resident aliens of Japanese ancestry were taken from their homes and put in concentration camps for up to four years.
Benjamin Zelenko, the lawyer representing those who sued the government, argued that the suit was not filed too late beyond a six-year statute of limitations written into a memorandum of agreement because he said, government concealment and fraud hid the government's liability until 1982.
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Solicitor General Charles Fried, the administration's top-ranking courtroom lawyer, argued that "ordinary rules of law" should apply to the lawsuit "no matter how much he would like to apply to the wound."
The Associated Press
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Sports
11
Saberhagen wins 3rd game in a row; KC romps Boston
The Associated Press
BOSTON — Bret Sahbern won his third consecutive game for the first time since 1985 as the Kansas City Royals routed the Boston Red Sox 10-2 yesterday, spoiling Fenway Park's 75th birthday party before an overflow crowd of 35,486.
"Saberhagen looks like the same tough pitcher he was two years ago." Boston Manager John McNamara said of the 1985 CY Young Award winner. "We had chances to get to him early, but then he got tougher. He threw strikes and he was impressive."
Given an early lead on homers by Danny Tartallbull, Larry Owen and Frank White, Saberhagen settled down after giving up Boston's second run and getting out of a loaded-loaded jam in the third inning.
Saberhagen pitched eight innings and allowed seven singles, including three by Wade Boggs and two by Don Baylon. He retired 11 batters in a row before letting Quinn jubbler mop up in the ninth.
"I felt good and I threw some strikes," Saberhagen said. "When your team cuts loose, it makes it so much easier."
In '185, Saberhagen won 20 games and helped lead the Royals to victory in the World Series. Last season, however, he was plagued by injuries and slipped to a 7-12 record.
"I never got things going last year from day one in spring training," the 23-year-old right-hander said. "I'm healthy now and I plan on staving healthy."
Tartabull, Kevin Seitzer, Hal McRae, Bo Jackson and Angel Salazar had two bits apiece as Kansas City ended a three-game losing streak with a 13-hit attack against Bruce Hurst, 2-1, and reliever Steve Crawford.
Tartabull broke the drought by leading off the second with a homer high into the screen in left.
Owen began a three-run third with a leadoff homer, his first in the American League. A single by Seitzer and White's home run high into the screen gave Kansas City a 4-1 lead.
Every batter in Kansas City's starting lineup except Steve Balboni had at least one ht.
The Royals, shut out 5-0 and 1-0 in a double-header at New York Sunday, had their scoreless string extended to 19 innings as Hurst retired the side in order in the first.
The Royals shelled Hurst in the sixth on an RBI double by Jackson, a sacrifice fly by Owen and Seitzer's two-run triple off Crawford.
Boston picked up a run in the first on a single by Boggs, a hit batsman and a single by Baylor. Singles by Boggs, Baylor, and Bill Buckner accounted for another run in the third.
The game marked the 75th anniversary of the opening of Fenway Park. The Red Sox made their debut in Fenway on April 20, 1912, defeating the New York Highlanders 7-6 in 12 innings.
The Associated Press
BOSTON — Kansas City Royals third baseman George Brett was placed on the 15-day list yesterday with an injury to his right rib cage suffered in his first at bat at Yankee Stadium on Sunday.
Brett seemed upset Sunday in New York after the Royals were swept by the Yankees, 5-0 and 1-0, and had only a few terse words for reporters.
"If this thing is serious, I just might retire." Brett said as he headed for the team bus. "Hey, can you may call it quits. I don't need this."
Brett, who was examined yesterday in Boston where the Royals faced the Red Sox, suffered a cartilage separation after fouling off the first pitch in the first game and losing New York Yankees' Charles Hudson.
KC
After suffering the injury, he was replaced by Juan Beniquez.
George Brett
Brett said Sunday he could be out three to four weeks, but Royals Manager Billy Gardner said it could be longer or shorter.
"Maybe it'll be a five-day thing, but it doesn't look good right now," Gardner said.
Tennis team swings by Bears 8-1
Staff writer
Bv ROB KNAPP
The Kansas men's tennis team began a week of preparation for the Big Eight Conference Tennis Championships by beating Southwest Missouri State 8-1 yesterday at the Allen Field House courts.
The duel match was the last competition for the Jayhawks before they begin play in the conference championships, which begin Friday at the Oklahoma City Tennis Center in Oklahoma City, Oka.
TENNIS
The Kansas women's team opens Big Eight championship play tomorrow in Oklahoma City.
The Jayhawks' usual No. 4 and 5 singles players, Chris Walker and Larry Pascal, did not play in the match. Walker sat out with soreness in his shoulders and knees, and Pascal was sick.
In the absence of Walker and Pascal, Kevin Brady moved up to the No. 4 spot, and Jim Secrest and Darin Herman entered the singles lineup.
Brady's loss at No. 4 was the only Kansas setback of the afternoon, but Sven Greeneveld had to go three sets, including a 7-5 victory in the final set, before winning at No. 3 singles.
"Sven was struggling a little." Perelman said.
"At this point, it's just a lack of concentration. It's not the way we're hitting the ball."
The match with Southwest Missouri State had originally been scheduled for March 10 but was postponed because of cold weather. After another attempt at rescheduling he met in person in which the other in which to play
Perelman said it was important that Kansas got a chance to play the match
Amy Rhoads/KANSAN
The committee also selects the region member that moves on to the NCAA tournament, but Perelman said he thought that the region representative would probably be the winner of the Big Eight championship.
He said that the committee would be responsible for picking the four singles players and two doubles teams that will advance to the NCAA championships.
Pereman said senior Mike Wolf and the doubles team of Wolf and freshman Craig Widley were good bots to be selected for NCAA play, along with Olivier Lorin of Oklahoma.
Kansas tennis player Mike Wolf returns a serve from a Southwestern Missouri State player. Wolf won his match in straight sets yesterday as the KU men's team cruised to an 8-1 victory over the Bears.
"I think it's important he got to see some of our players." Pereulain said.
Wichita State of the Missouri Valley Conference, the strongest contender in the region from outside the Big Eight, is 1-3 against Kansas and has also lost to Nebraska.
Pere尔曼 and assistant coach Michael Center will travel with the women's team when it leaves tomorrow morning for Oklahoma City. Assistant coach Randy Rowley will work out with the men's squad until it leaves on Friday.
The teams will practice this week at the Alvamar Racquet and Swim Club. The surface at Alvamar, slower than that of the field house courts, is close to what the teams will be playing on in Oklahoma City, Perelman said.
Japan's Seko wins Boston Marathon
2nd-time winner pulls away from pack at Heartbreak HI
The Associated Press
For the 30-year-old Seko, the winner in 1981, the victory was his eighth in his last nine marathons. But his time of 2 hours, 11 minutes and 50 seconds was disappointing in view of the expected fast race.
BOSTON — Japan's Toshiikho Seko broke away from the pack going up heartbreak Hill and won the Boston Marathon for the second time yesterday in a slowly paced race that was marred by two accidents.
Meanwhile, 1984 Olympic bronze medalist Rosa Mota, running the Boston Marathon for the first time, was the first women's finisher, clocking 2:25:21, the third fastest ever by a woman in this race. She led all the women over who was threatened in posting her seventh victory in 10 marathons.
Seko's so many marathon defeat since 1979, after he finished third in his
first Boston Marathon, came in the 1984 Olympics at Los Angeles, where he finished 14th.
The quality of the field, was considered one of the best, if not the best ever assembled in this 1917 running of the Boston Marathon. The competitors included defending champion Rob de Castella of Australia, ranked No. 2 in the world; Juma Ikangae of Tanzania, ranked No. 1; Steve Jones of Wales, ranked No. 1 in 1985 and the second-fastest marathoner in history; Olympic silver medalist John Treacy of Ireland; and two-time Boston Marathon winner Geoff Smith of England.
When Seko, the world's fourth-ranked marathoner, made his decisive surge at the "killer" point of the race with about six miles to go, he was in command. He won by 47 seconds over Jones, who clocked in at 2:12:37.
Wade was third in 2:12:42, and
Dave Gorton of Eugene, Ore, was
third.
De Castella, who finished sixth,
didn't have a promising start.
Race officials were slow in getting the rope out of the way of the starters as the race was about to begin. De Castella tripped over the rope and tumbled, scrapping his hands and knees. After rolling over and nearly getting trampled by the 6.313 entrants, he got up quickly and resumed running.
Another incident occurred shortly after the start of the wheelchair division, which began 15 minutes before the open competition. Four competitors lined, knocking two of the competitors out of the race with minor abrasions.
In the open race, Ikangaa, Jones and Smith were expected to set a fast pace, but none made any attempt to
After receiving the winner's laurel wreath, Seko said through an interpreter, "I was very anxious to establish a world record, but the headwind bothered me. That's why the race was so slow."
Mota called her first place finish the finest moment of her career.
Mota and Seko each earned $40,000 from the total purse of $347.00 for their first-place finishes. Both also will get a new car, valued at $131,000.
Agnes Pardaens and Ria Van Landeghem, both of Belgium, finished second and third among the women, in 2:29:50 and 2:29:56, respectively.
"I started slow. I felt good, so I ran a little faster and a little faster. After 30 kilometers, I tried to run fast," she said.
Brewers tie major leage record with 13th win over White Sox
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — Paul Molitor doubled in the tying run with two outs in the seventh and scored on a single by Robin Yount, leading the Milwaukee
American League
The Brewers can break the record, set by the Atlanta Braves in 1982, against the White Sox tonight.
Brewers to a 5-4 victory over the Chicago White Sox last night. The tying run set a major league record of 13 straight season-opening victories for the Brewers.
But in the Milwaukee seventh, Bill Schroeder drew a walk and pinchrunner B.J. Surhoff took second as Jig Gantner grounded out. Dale
Ivan Calderon doubled opening the Chicago fifth and came around on infield groundouts by Carlton Fisk and Greg Wagner. A double by Tim Hulett, a walk to Fred Manrique and an error by Nieves on Ozzie Gullen's crim. It was over for Nieves and struck out Ron Karkovice to end the inning.
Brewer starter Juan Nieves, coming off a no-hitter, was knocked out in the fifth when the Sox took a 4-3 lead
Sveum also bounced out before Molitor doubled in Surroff with the tying run. Molitor then scored on Yount's bloop single.
See AMERICAN. n. 13, col. 5
Crim, 2-0. got the victory, while reliever Dan Plescame came on in the ninth to get his fifth save.
NEW YORK — Don Mattingly celebrated his 26th birthday last night with a two-run homer, and Mike Pagliarulo and Claudel Washington also added two-run
Yankees 8. Tigers 2
Three-run pinch homer in 7th caps late rally; Pirates win 9-6
The Associated Press
PITTSBURGH — Mike Diaz's three-run pinch homer capped a four-run Pittsburgh seventh-inning
National League
rally, and Sid Sream honored twice as the Pirates beat New York 9-6 last night, ending their 15-game losing streak against the Mets.
The loss was th fourth in a row for the defending world-champion Mets, who rallied from a 5-2 deficit with four runs in the top of the seventh.
After Gary Carter's three-run
Myers retired the next two batters but walked Mike LaValliere and Rafael Belliard and was replaced by Doug Sisk, 0-1. Diaz, batting for Jones, then homered.
homer off reliever Barry Jones gave the Mets a 6-5 lead, Bream greeted reliever Randy Myers with a solo homer in the bottom of the inning.
Logan Easley, 1-1, worked two scoreless innings and was credited for
Reds 12. Padres 3
SAN DIEGO — Davis Parker homee-
red and Ron Oester went 4-for-4 to
4
lead an 18-hit Cincinnati attack while Guy Hoffman held San Diego to two runs and seven hits in eight innings as the Reds trounced the Padres 12-3 last night.
The victory was the Reds' 10th in 13 games, and the loss was the fourth straight and 12th in 14 games for the Padres.
In the last two games, San Diego pitchers have allowed 21 runs and 34 hits. The Padres have allowed a league-leading 24 homers, 10 in the last five games.
See NATIONAL, p. 13, col. 5
Manning must decide on future as NBA draft deadline nears
More will be decided about the shape of Kansas' 1987-88 men's basketball team in the next few years, but that could happen in fall practice.
Danny Manning must decide by May 8 whether he is going to make himself eligible for the NBA draft. Freshman recruits Antoine Lewis and Mike Masucci, rumored to be ineligible for their freshman year, will have their final chances to elude Proposition 48.
Larry Brown's contract needs to be signed and the coaching staff needs to find a rebounder and get from the junior college ranks.
The question of Manning's future at KU has received almost as much attention and media
Mark Siebert Sports editor
coverage as Brown's rumored travels to every NBA franchise from Los Angeles to New York.
Everybody has an opinion. Brown says Danny will do what's best for Danny. Darnelle Manning, Danny's mom, says he'll stay in school and earn his degree. Ed Wilson, who plays football, he'll stay in school, in part, so he has a shot to play on the 1988 Olympic team.
Only Danny Manning himself doesn't seem to have an answer
about what's in his future. He answers the question about the same each time: "Right now, I just don't know."
He could follow the lead of other collegiate stars, including Kansas State's Norris Coleman this year, and jump to the money, glamour and cruelty of pro basketball. Every college basketball team with a bona fide young star has to battle the lure of the NBA, and the results don't always turn out well for either party involved.
Consider some of those players who left school early to be eligible for last year's NBA draft. Golden State's Chris Washburn has entered a drug treatment center. William Bedford has been granted immunity for his cooperation with
police investigating a drug scandal in Phoenix, Walter Berry, the 1986 Player of the Year, had more injuries than points in Portland before being traded to San Antonio.
The success stories, however,
include the greatest names in the
game today: Michael Jordan,
"Magic" Johnson and Isiah Thomas.
Manning would be in the media spotlight and a hero to fans before he played a single game. That
same spotlight also means additional pressures and illuminates weaknesses that Manning has new skills in small-town Lawrence, Kansas.
If Manning leaves, he will probably be the No. 2 pick in the draft behind Navy's David Robinson. In that position, Manning could name his price. And, depending on which player would become an instant celebrity.
The extra year would allow his body to grow stronger. The pro schedule is grueling and Manning is still skinny by NBA standards.
The arguments on both sides could go on and on. And speculation probably will too until May 8.
He, of course, would improve if he played for the Jayhawks next season. He would also draw a crowd. But it's difficult even for an All-American to improve while constantly having to fight double-teaming. You can't play player and can't just get the ball down low and score.
If he's mature enough to handle the pressures of instant fame, professional ball might be the right decision. But that also means he'll be getting big money and no degree.
The pros tempt college players with fame and fortune. And then when those players are thrust alone onto the playing fields, the media and the fans can ride them until they break.
New York Mets General Manager Frank Cashen said it well after Dwight Gooden had to report to a drug rehabilitation center for cocaine use.
"The sudden fame and fortune he achieved was nice," said Cashen. "But we sort of robbed him of his youth."
12
Tuesday, April 21, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Florida's governor renames FSU's stadium after Howser
The Associated Press
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Florida State University's baseball stadium officially became Dick Howser Stadium as Gov. Bob Martinez signed a legislative bill into law Monday during a ceremony attended by members of the Howser family and present Seminole players.
"Dick Howser is an individual who truly represents the best of what Florida is all about," said Martinez. "This is one of those very, very pleasant achievements in government."
Howser, a former major league baseball player and manager of the New York Yankees and Kansas City Royals, was unable to travel to the ceremony from Kansas City, where he is being treated for a cancerous brain tumor.
"Dick would love to be here," said Howser's mother, Marjorie Howser of West Palm Beach. "I know he is in spirit. I talked to him yesterday and he thought it was true we were all going to be here."
Athletic Director Cecil "Hootie" Ingram, baseball coach Mike Martin and Seminole players Jose Marzan, Ed Fulton and Barry Blackwell attended the signing ceremony in the governor's office.
KC
Howser, 50, a Florida native and former star player and coach for
Dick Howser
Florida State, has undergone surgery three times since last July when it was discovered he suffered from a brain tumor.
Howser attempted a managerial comeback with the Royals this spring, but stepped aside after one day at spring training to devote his energy to batting his illness.
"He's been through a lot, but he hasn't lost his sense of humor," said Mrs. Howser. "He said if bad comes to worse: 'I can always go back and be an ampuge.'"
Florida State officials said a plaque would be erected at the
stadium with Hosser's achievements along with large lettering across the back of the stadium. Hosser's name would also be on the school's proposed new $150,000 scoreboard.
"We'll get the name on right away," promised Dr. Charles Reed, State University System chancellor.
Last month in St. Petersburg,
Martinez presented Hoswer with
the state's first baseball achievement award
As a player, Howser earned American League Rookie of the Year honors from The Sporting News in 1961 when he batted .280 for the Kansas City A's and struck out just 38 times in 611 at bats, the lowest strikeout ratio in the league. He also played on the A.L. All-Star team in 1961.
Howser tied a major league record in 1964 by playing 162 games at shortstop, and he finished his playing career with the Yankees in 1968. He compiled a 248 career batting average.
As a manager, Hower's teams won three division titles and his 1985 Royals won baseball's World Championship, fashioning comebacks from 3-to-1 deficits in the A.L. Championship Series with Toronto and the World Series against the cross-state St. Louis Cardinals.
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A TRIBUTE TO LOCAL SUPPLY-SIDE HYPOCRITES WITH SOFT JOBS
Because a hypocrite is, according to one dictionary, "one who pretends to be what he is not or to have principles or beliefs he does not have," most people eschew hypocrisy. Yet local supply-siders with soft jobs apparently don't object to purposeful hypocrisy. Although this select group has long sung the praises of individual enterprise, unobtrusive government and market economies that mold; these polished dignitaries were willing until recently to appease with millions of public dollars an alien corporation capable of destroying many small businesses so that they (the polished dignitaries) might continue to spend most of their working time listening to music, watching television and chattering about golf.
But the aforementioned is only one expression of the flexibility which is required of all supply-siders.
For instance, supply-siders unabashedly call for a smaller government and balanced budget because they can...uh...ignore the increase in governmental size and power which both accompanied the Reagan Administration's doubling of our national debt during its first term and will continue to accompany its tripling of that debt by the end of its second term.
For instance, supply-siders applaud publicly-funded economic development because they can...uh...ignore the fact that in the free enterprise system economic development is supposed to be the function of enterprising individuals and groups operating in the private sector.
For instance, supply-siders hail our grossly inadequate system of public education because they can...uh...ignore the 700,000 functional illiterates annually receiving high school diplomas, those 750,000 additional students dropping out of school every year and the periodic waves of college freshmen beginning college with remedial courses.
For instance, despite their opposition to abortion, supply-siders still want taxes reduced because they can...uh...ignore the certainty that educating the misled and confused about intrauterine life, the ghastly modes of abortion, and those practices our Constitution's Fifth, Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments clearly prohibit, would be time-consuming hence expensive.
By implying that these and other public problems would dissolve before a stimulated private sector, supply-siders avoid facing the fact that the work which must be done if this country is to remain free is in the public sector. Perhaps local supply-side hypocrites with soft jobs mouth the familiar tite slogans with more passion than their fellows because the end of each workday finds them in possession of...uh...considerably more energy.
William Dann
2702 W. 24th Street Terrace
PAID ADVERTISEMENT
Last-place finish spurs Knicks to fire coach, general manager
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — The New York Knicks dismissed Coach Bob Hill and general manager Scotty Stirling yesterday in the wake of a 24-58 NBA season and a third straight last-place finish.
The announcement was made by Richard Evans, the new president of Madison Square Garden Corporation.
Prominently mentioned as possible replacements for Hill have been Rick Pitino, who coached Providence College into the NCAA Final Four and is a former Knicks assistant coach, and Larry Brown, coach at Kansas who has previously coached in the NBA with the Denver Nuggets and New Jersey Nets.
the assistant coaching job with the Knicks.
Hill is a former assistant men's basketball coach at KU, where he spent eight seasons with the Jayhawks before leaving in 1985 to take
Hill, who had served as an assistant coach with the club, replaced Hubie Brown as head coach Dec. 1 and posted a 20-46 record, including six straight losses at the end of the season after the return of injured star forward Bernard King.
Stirling was hired Jan. 3, 1986, replacing former Knicks' star Dave DeBusschere as the team's front-office boss. The Knicks, however, continued to flounder and Stirling was under fire for a number of his trades.
Since finishing third in 1983-84 and losing in a seven-game playoff to the eventual world champion Boston Celtics, the Knicks have been unable to escape the Atlantic Division cellar for three years. The team's record over those three seasons was 71-173.
Evans, who moved to the Garden
from Radio City Music Hall on Jan. 11 said the decision on the changes had been made last week.
"Obviously, I have been assessing the ship that arrived at the beginning of January."
Evans said he had no particular timetable for filling the positions or whether he would consider one man for both jobs. He said he has already started interviewing candidates.
"I'm not looking for a quick fix"
"I'm said 'I'looking for a winning
team'."
"I wouldn't make the assumption that we will go after marquee names." Evans said.
"I thought Bob Hill, under extremely adverse conditions, did an admirable job. But I think we need to start from the beginning, from scratch. We need a fresh start in terms of coach and management."
The University of Kansas Swarthout Society thanks you for your support of the KU Concert and Chamber Music Series.
SWARTHOUT SOCIETY THANKS YOU
David Tanenbaum, Guitarist
Reader's Digest Affiliate Artist
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David Tanenbaum, Guitarist
David Tanenbaum, Guitarist
DAVID TANENBAUM PUBLIC PERFORMANCE SWARTHOUT RECITAL HALL PHY HALL-KU April 20-24
Mr. Tanenbaum will be presenting "informances"
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Kansas Union
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Lawrence High School
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For further information, call Swarthout Society at 864.3460
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The New York Times
Special thanks to the Lawrence TravelLodge for providing Mr. Tenanbaum's lodging.
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 21, 1987
13
Sports Briefs
Award to be given at KC triathlon in memory of KU student athlete
During the 1987 Baptist Medical Center Triathlon, a special award will be given in honor of former KU student Paul Childs, who was fatally injured during the 1966 triathlon.
This years' race, sponsored by the Triathlon Federation/USA, will be Sunday, August 30, at Raintree Lake in Lee's Summit, Mo.
Childs, a Fairway senior majoring in pre-medicine at the time of the accident, died Sept. 10 of severe spinal injuries sustained during the bike portion of the race.
Lee's Summit police reported that Childs was racing toward the finish line of the bike portion of the race with his head down when he slammed into a truck that had moved into the intersection of Wade Road and Missouri Highway 150.
In remembrance of Childs, the Paul Childs Memorial will be given each year at the triathlon in recognition of outstanding and personal abilities.
An advisory committee will choose the race participant who best displays an outstanding attitude, courage, enthusiasm and faith. The recipient also must have made significant contributions to community athletic events.
To be considered for the award, a participant must have a written recommendation submitted by a Baptist Medical Center triathlete, a race director or the advisory committee.
The winner will receive a plaque, and a permanent plaque will be hung in the foyer of the building. An invitation from at the Bantist Medical Center.
Other changes in this year's race will include the marking of intersections on the bike course and the use of handgrip tances because of Childs accident.
The intersections of the bike course will have highly visible metallic tape, more volunteers, police officers and ham radio operators at intersections to warn them that they are approaching the intersections.
The overall course will be shortened from 8 miles to 6 miles in the swim portion, 6.2 miles to five miles in the run and 19.5 to 17.5 in the bike portion of the race.
Women's golf team finishes 7th at tourney
The Kansas women's golf team finished seventh in a 14-team field Saturday and Sunday at the Lady Buckeye Invitational in Columbus, Ohio.
Duncan Okla., freshman, finished with a 239.
The Jayhawks finished with a 951 one-round total behind ninth-ranked Indiana, who won the tournament with a score of 86. Indiana's Michelle Redman was the individual leader with a 216 total.
Tina Gnewch, Green Bay, Wis. junior, paced the Jayhawks with a thre-round total of 226. Donna Jo Lowen, Hays freshman, followed with 239, and Sherri Atichon,
Susan Pekar, Wausau, Wis,
junior, who won individual honors
April 11-12 at the University of
Missouri Invitational, managed
only a 244 this weekend. Marielle
Scheid, Lawrence senior, rounded
out the field for Kansas with a 248
total.
The next stop for the Jayhawks, who spent yesterday at a golf fund raiser in Wichita, will be at the Big Eight Conference Championships April 27-28 in Oklahoma City.
Chiefs and Cardinals will play in Memphis
MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Memphis will be the host for a National Football League exhibition game in September, leaders of an effort to win an NFL franchise announced yesterday.
Fred Smith, founder and chief executive officer of Federal Express Corp., said the game was not a serious business with various NFL owners.
Sept. 6 at Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium between the Kansas City Chiefs and the St. Louis Cardinals, said Rudi Schiffer, a spokesman for Mid-America Football.
The exhibition game is set for
"I think Memphis has a three out of four chance that we'll get an NFL expansion franchise. I think we have an excellent chance." Smith said at a breakfast gathering hosted by Mid-America Football Inc., a company he formed last year.
The city-owned stadium is being enlarged from just over 50,000 seats to 65,000 seats.
Schifer said profits from the game will go to the Memphis Mile Of Dimes, but the participating teams will draw a percentage of the gate receipts.
Pepper Rodgers, president of Mid-America Football and former KU football coach, said NFL owners may be forming an expansion committee in October and he hopes for a good turnout for the Memphis game.
From staff and wire reports
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Jackson, Ueberroth meet and discuss minority hiring
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Rev. Jesse Jackson met with Baseball Commissioner Peter Uberroth yesterday, then called on the sport's owners to do away with minority hiring policies that they know "are immoral and unjust."
He said he would meet again with Ueberroth and hoped to meet commissioners David Stern of the NBA and Pete Rozelle of the NFL to form an affirmative action committee that would "include all levels of leadership" in sports as well as the community.
Jackson, who is now considering whether to run for president as he did in 1984, threw his Chicago-based OperationPPUSH into the controversy over minority hiring in baseball earlier this month. The action was triggered by the racial remarks of Los Angeles Dodgers vice president Al Campani, who later was forced to resign.
Jackson characterized his session with Ueberroth, which lasted for nearly two hours, as a "planning meeting and not a confrontation."
"We have to work out a plan for change, and that change should begin this year," the civil rights leader said. "We need to set goals and a timetable for affirmative action . . . There are people out there who are qualified for jobs who have never been considered."
Ueberroth, who called on owners in December to hire more minorities, said in a brief statement: "I'm glad he took the time to meet with me. He had some excellent ideas and suggestions, and we will continue to be in touch as baseball develops an action plan."
Campanis said on a national television news program that blacks may lack some of the "necessities" for jobs such as manager and general manager. Campanis had been invited on the show to discuss the significance of Jackie Robinson breaking baseball's color barrier in 1947.
While an estimated 25 percent of all baseball players are black or Hispanic, there are no black managers, general managers or owners.
"Baseball's owners must recognize that Al Campanis was an embarrassment to them all." Jackson said.
Jackson said any coalition for affirmative action should include other civil rights leaders, sports executives, minority athletes and other minorities involved in professional sports.
He said future meetings would determine goals.
"The courts have indicated that such goals should be established according to the Constitution," Jackson said, "and said goals could be "monitored as jobs opened up."
"We know there is attrition and that jobs will be available." Jackson said in a sidewalk news conference in front of the Park Avenue building that serves as baseball's headquarters.
While not ruling out a minority boycott of baseball as a tool in the battle to open doors, he said it was not a "matter of discussion at this point."
"Owners must see the morality and cost effectiveness of affirmative action."
He said that Hispanics and women, is well as blacks, must be included in affirmative action programs.
"So much of the psychology of our nation is caught up in athletics," Jackson said, noting the uplifting effect on the country of such athletic accomplishments as Joe Louis' boxing victory over Max Schmeling in 1938, Jesse Owens' triumphant performances at the 1936 Berlin Olympics and Robinson's entry into the major leagues in 1947.
"Owners must know their present policies are immoral and unjust and that the broad base of American people will not accept them," Jackson said. "But we need not operate on the basis of threats."
Continued from p. 11
shots, powering the New York Yankees 8-2 over the Detroit Tigers.
American
Twins 13. Mariners 5
MINNEAPOLIS — Gary Gaetti and Roy Smallley capped a six-run first inning with consecutive home runs last night, powering the Minnesota Twins to an 13-5 rout of the Seattle Mariners.
Blue Javs 8. Indians 7
CLEVELAND — Kelly Gruber scored one of five Toronto runs in the ninth inning and then drove in the game-winner with a single to center in the 10th last night as the Blue Jays rallied to defeat the Cleveland Indians 8-7.
Toronto scored five times in the top of the ninth on only one hit to take a 7-6 lead. But Cory Snyder lined a one-out home run, his fourth of the season, off Jeff Musselman, 1-0, in the bottom of the inning to send the game into extra innings.
A's 10. Angels 5
The Athletics had taken a 6-5 lead in the eighth on Reggie Jackson's infield roller, which scored Mike Davis from third base to snap a 5-5 tie.
National
ANAHEIM, Calif. — Tony Phillips hit a bases-loaded home run in the top of the ninth inning to power the Oakland Athletics to a 10-5 victory over the California Angels last night.
Continued from p. 11
Phillies 4, Expos 3
MONTREAL — Lance Parrish hit a three-run homer, and Glenn Wilson followed with a solo shot as Philadelphia rallied for four runs with two out in the ninth, beating Montreal 4-3 in the Expos' home opener yesterday.
Montreal right-hander Jay Tibbs, 1-2, was working on a 2-0 shutout when Von Hayes was safe on a one-out throwing error by first baseman Andres Galarraga in the ninth. Mike Schmidt walked, and Mike Easler struck out before Parrish and Wilson
Giants 4. Dodgers 3
followed with their consecutive homers.
Davis, 2-0, gave way to Scott Garrett after walking Steve Sax to start the eighth inning. Davis was primarily out for two starts over two seasons, making only three starts.
SAN FRANCISCO — Mark Davis held Los Angeles to four hits in seven innings and Chris Speier homered as the San Francisco Giants beat the Los Angeles Dodgers 4-3 last night for their ninth victory without a loss in one-run games.
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Tuesday, April 21, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Bell telephone official to help state analyze job retention
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — The state's second largest utility will lend one of its executives to the state for the next 12-18 months to study and analyze problems relating to job retention in Kansas and other economic development issues.
Southwestern Bell Telephone Co., which serves 800,000 telephone customers across the state, will donate to Kansas the services of Brad Parrott, currently the company's district staff manager for external affairs.
"The beauty of this is that we've got somebody from the private sector," Gov. Mike Hayden told a news conference that was called to announce program. "This will give us the inside scoop.
"He'll be able to the heartbeat directly from the private sector. In the past, the private sector has maintained an arms-length relationship with the public sector. Because Brad is part of the private sector, it'll
be easy for him to establish a rapport with other businesses and he'll be a conduit for information."
Parrott, 34, has worked for Bell since joining the company nine years ago in Oklahoma City. A native of Midwest City, Okla., Parrott worked as a sports reporter for four years at the Oklahoma City Times before joining Bell.
He will work out of the Department of Commerce and start his investigation into the job retention topic. Bell executives estimate that the executive loan program will cost $80,000, in addition to the salary paid by and by the company's customers. His duties at Bell will be shifted to other staff during his leave.
"He'll conduct a thorough review of business retention," Hayden said, noting that he wants to stress the aspects of business life in Kansas.
Hayden said, "Brad will do a lot of survey work with existing Kansas industry. We need to find out what
factors influence a company leaving our state, so we can retain more businesses in Kansas. We want to find out what's good about our climate, and what makes businesses stay and expand here."
Despite a number of recent studies centering on Kansas' economy and business climate, Hayden said he expected Parrott to have more success because he was part of the private sector. He said that most of the recent surveys and analyses were done by public groups and organizations.
The governor said he hoped that Parrott would prepare recommendations for changing Kansas' laws and take them to the 1988 Legislature.
Hayden said Bell proposed the program after one of its sister companies in New Jersey had success with a similar executive loan program. He now hopes that other Kansas companies also will expand executive-loan programs.
TOPEKA — The only way to effectively fight the spread of the killer AIDS epidemic is through education, and it's time to require that information on the virus be given to Kansas Gov. Mike Hayden said yesterday.
"It's clear that education is one of the primary defenses against the disease and I hope the Board of Education will accept its responsibility and make a tough decision about it." Hayden told reporters at a news conference. "It's a controversial issue but the state board should not shv away from it."
Gov. Hayden backs education on AIDS
The Associated Press
Hayden was reacting to the failure of the board to address the issue at its monthly meeting last week. The 10-member board delayed at least until
"The state Board of Education has a responsibility to mandate certain curriculum and they should mandate these materials and information be made available so students can attend on a voluntary basis," Hayden said of the need for sex-education classes.
May any action on proposals that it require some form of sex-education courses in the state's 304 school districts by September 1988.
"The board just has to be realistic about the potential magnitude of the AIDS epidemic. People know very little about this very deadly disease and the best defense is education. It's going to take a major educational effort to prevent the situation from become substantially worse."
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"It would create less of a hardship on urban districts. I hope the Senate would agree to the proposal."
---
helped them out. It would allow a transition and let those urban districts down lightly. I think that's only fair.
Also troubling Hayden was the Senate adoption of a floor amendment that phases out an enrollment category by merging the two largest categories over three years. The amendment would redistribute funding from the largest school districts to the medium-sized districts.
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Hayden said he supported the House version of a bill that set spending limits for the state's 304 school districts during the 1987-88 year because it protects urban districts from large drops in state aid.
The urban districts are worried about losing large amounts of state aid to rural districts where declining farmland values qualify those districts for more money. Under the House bill, large financing shifts would be blunted by a two-year district wealth averaging provision.
districts. The provision allows for adjusting the formula used to distribute state money to school districts
TOPEKA — The Senate should retreat from its position on two key issues blocking legislative agreement on a school finance plan, Gov. Mike Hayden yesterday.
"I prefer the two-year average district wealth as proposed by the House," Hayden told reporters. "We had the same problem in the rural districts a few years ago, and we
The House bill contains a provision designed to protect large, urban
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(Higher Weekends)
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1447 W. 23rd
Open 9 a.m.-10 p.m. Daily
HUAWEI
FREE
The Associated Press
KAYPRO PC
Professional Computer
The Future's Built In
made in U.S.A.
HP
★
Regular $1595
$1395
Education Price:
Computerark
Mon.-Thur. 10-7
Fri. & Sat. 10-5
Lawrence's Oldest Independent Computer Store
Owned and Operated by John and Joan Seitz
KAYPRO
THANK YOU KU!
841-0094 Corner of 23rd and Iowa
Thanks for making our Freshman year a success!
To show our appreciation:
FREE OIL FILTER
with purchase of Lube & Oil change
A $4.00 Value
(KU student or faculty I.D. required)
expires 5/18/87
End of Semester Savings!
Electronic Ignition Tune-Up
4 cyl $34.95
6 cyl $44.95
8 cyl $54.95
includes: New resistor plugs, Idle device adjustment, Visual adjustment, Visual inspection
Steel Belted All Season Radials
P155/80R13 $24.95
P165/80R13 $30.95
P175/80R13 $31.95
P185/80R13 $34.95
P185/75R14 $34.95
P195/75R14 $35.95
P205/75R14 $36.95
P205/75R15 $37.95
P215/75R15 $39.95
P225/75R15 $41.95
P235/75R15 $43.95
- parts extra
Alignment*
Firestone
2425 IOWA
841-9700
Front Wheel $29.95
Thrust Angle $39.95
4-Wheel $49.95
We Have Every DISCOUNT AND REDUCED Rate Airline Available!
TRAVEL CENTER
Houmatrip Air
Kansas City-London $712
Kansas City-Bullet $498
Chicago-Frankfurt $509
Kansas City-Brussels $511
Oneway Fare
Aztürk-Zarun $261
EUROPE
Restrictions Apply Call For Details
EUROPE Roundtrip Airfares
$100,000 BONUS
We have purchased for
our clients
$100,000 Flight Insurance
For Every Scheduled Flight.
EURAIL PASSES
Youthpass for those under 26
1 month $310
2 months $400
ABUDLT
15 days
21 days
1 month
2 months
3 months
$280
$350
$480
$620
$760
NOW is the time to take advantage of the Low Airfares!
- Going Home
* Study Abroad
* Charter Trips
* Educational Options
* Honymoney
841-7117
TRAVEL CENTER
Southern Hills Center
1601 West 23rd
M-F 9:5-30 *San* 9:30-2
LOWER PRICE!
146-027
Trickle-Down economics works! Quantity buying gets us a lower price and we're passing it on to you! The 12-speed ROSS
Carrera offers:
* Cro-Moly Alloy Frame
Carrera offers:
- Aluminum Rims Now $179⁹⁵
* Cruise Spirit
- Cro-Moly Alloy Frame
* Quick Release Hubs
- Aluminum Rims
* Cushion Grips
All this value at a lower price!
UPTOWN BICYCLES
1337 Mass. One Day Repairs 749-0636
ClassifiedAds
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Huge garage sale T-shirts & Sweatshirts; first
week of July, $10 off. Guests pay a kind's overtime, mornings, and test shirts at all great prices. Saturday, April 25 9:00-00 at 10:30
Sportwear 101 Riverfront in North Rockville
IS MASSAGE BETTER THEN PIZZA? Find out, try steam & massage from Lawrence Massage Therapy and R-E-L-A-K. Student rates. see too! Call 814-6626 and hold the anchors!
Preparing for Finals Study Workshop
(Time Management, Reviewing, Testing
Strategies) Monday, April 27, 7: 09 p.m. 300 p.m.
Monday, April 28, 6: 44 p.m.
Professional Assistance Center, 121
Bourne 804-494
MUSEUM OF
ANTHROPOLOGY SIDEWALK SALE Wednesday, April 22 9:00-4:00
LEARIN TO FLY GET 4-7 hrs K U credit. In
Economy Fight 841-FY N
Flood rates around
Economy Fight 841-FY N
WEIGHT LOSS PROGRAM Lose 10-20 Ibs in 30 days with appointment. Accepted for medical approval. Call (855) 492-6900.
HILLEL
בשין
Events of the Week Wednesday, April 22 United Jewish appeal
presents
Amy Cooper
Deputy Political
Mobilization Director
of AIPAC
11:30—1:30
Parlor A, Level 5
Kansas Union
Thursday, April 23
Graduate Student discussion with Dr. Sharon Lowenstein
5:00----7:00 p.m.
Hillel House
Friday, April 24
Services
Shabbat Dinner and
Dinner—5:30 p.m.
Services—7:45 p.m.
R.S.V.P., by April 23
For more information call Hillel, 749-4242.
ENTERTAINMENT
Ranch Rock 47' Saturday April 20th. Don't miss it. For information 749-212-841 or 843-3661. At Your Requests Lawrence's Best and Most Afternoon D.J. Sound and Lights for Any Occasion 841-1406
Have the Hottest Party in Town. Rent A Hot Tub.
Call Tub-to-Gaill- 841-2691.
Metropolis Mobile Sound. Number one with a
battery DJ, DJ Extraordinary, Dances, Dances,
Parties, Proms. Bring graduation parties now.
Hot Spots for Maximum Party Thrust! 841-7036
LIBERTY HALL
"A MOVIE THAT MUST BE
SEEN!" Jeffrey Jones, Speak Previews
PARTISANS
OF VILNA
7:00 & 9:30
BASAGNE NIGHT
740-1912
FOR RENT
2 Edm Townhouse for summer special rate, laundry facilities, swimming tenn. K1 B1. (760) 459-3800.
1-2 bedroom luxury apartments now leasing for summer and next fall. 2/1/2 blocks from campus: Call Jeff at 842-7200 (before 6:00) and at 542-3513 (after 6:30).
2 story, 3 bedroom old home in good condition,
near downtown and bus stop. $800/month plus
utilities. 12 month lease and $380 deposit required.
Insurance includes $50. No. Nets, available June 15.
84916 or 84921 or 8492
3 Bedroom Apartment Summer Sublease. 2 baths, dushroom, spacesize Close to campus.
4 Bedroom house near K U. Available mid May or June 1. Hardwood floors, lots windows. W D
Apartments for summer and fall at University Terrace Aptences. 1607 W. 9th 1 Bedroom for summer. June and July only $190 un furnished. Bedroom 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, 89, 90, 91, 92, 93, 94, 95, 96, 97, 98, 99, 100, 101, 102, 103, 104, 105, 106, 107, 108, 109, 110, 111, 112, 113, 114, 115, 116, 117, 118, 119, 120, 121, 122, 123, 124, 125, 126, 127, 128, 129, 130, 131, 132, 133, 134, 135, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140, 141, 142, 143, 144, 145, 146, 147, 148, 149, 150, 151, 152, 153, 154, 155, 156, 157, 158, 159, 160, 161, 162, 163, 164, 165, 166, 167, 168, 169, 170, 171, 172, 173, 174, 175, 176, 177, 178, 179, 180, 181, 182, 183, 184, 185, 186, 187, 188, 189, 190, 191, 192, 193, 194, 195, 196, 197, 198, 199, 200, 201, 202, 203, 204, 205, 206, 207, 208, 209, 210, 211, 212, 213, 214, 215, 216, 217, 218, 219, 220, 221, 222, 223, 224, 225, 226, 227, 228, 229, 230, 231, 232, 233, 234, 235, 236, 237, 238, 239, 240, 241, 242, 243, 244, 245, 246, 247, 248, 249, 250, 251, 252, 253, 254, 255, 256, 257, 258, 259, 260, 261, 262, 263, 264, 265, 266, 267, 268, 269, 270, 271, 272, 273, 274, 275, 276, 277, 278, 279, 280, 281, 282, 283, 284, 285, 286, 287, 288, 289, 290, 291, 292, 293, 294, 295, 296, 297, 298, 299, 300, 301, 302, 303, 304, 305, 306, 307, 308, 309, 310, 311, 312, 313, 314, 315, 316, 317, 318, 319, 320, 321, 322, 323, 324, 325, 326, 327, 328, 329, 330, 331, 332, 333, 334, 335, 336, 337, 338, 339, 340, 341, 342, 343, 344, 345, 346, 347, 348, 349, 350, 351, 352, 353, 354, 355, 356, 357, 358, 359, 360, 361, 362, 363, 364, 365, 366, 367, 368, 369, 370, 371, 372, 373, 374, 375, 376, 377, 378, 379, 380, 381, 382, 383, 384, 385, 386, 387, 388, 389, 390, 391, 392, 393, 394, 395, 396, 397, 398, 399, 400, 401, 402, 403, 404, 405, 406, 407, 408, 409, 410, 411, 412, 413, 414, 415, 416, 417, 418, 419, 420, 421, 422, 423, 424, 425, 426, 427, 428, 429, 430, 431, 432, 433, 434, 435, 436, 437, 438, 439, 440, 441, 442, 443, 444, 445, 446, 447, 448, 449, 450, 451, 452, 453, 454, 455, 456, 457, 458, 459, 460, 461, 462, 463, 464, 465, 466, 467, 468, 469, 470, 471, 472, 473, 474, 475, 476, 477, 478, 479, 480, 481, 482, 483, 484, 485, 486, 487, 488, 489, 490, 491, 492, 493, 494, 495, 496, 497, 498, 499, 500, 501, 502, 503, 504, 505, 506, 507, 508, 509, 510, 511, 512, 513, 514, 515, 516, 517, 518, 519, 520, 521, 522, 523, 524, 525, 526, 527, 528, 529, 530, 531, 532, 533, 534, 535, 536, 537, 538, 539, 540, 541, 542, 543, 544, 545, 546, 547, 548, 549, 550, 551, 552, 553, 554, 555, 556, 557, 558, 559, 560, 561, 562, 563, 564, 565, 566, 567, 568, 569, 570, 571, 572, 573, 574, 575, 576, 577, 578, 579, 580, 581, 582, 583, 584, 585, 586, 587, 588, 589, 590, 591, 592, 593, 594, 595, 596, 597, 598, 599, 600, 601, 602, 603, 604, 605, 606, 607, 608, 609, 610, 611, 612, 613, 614, 615, 616, 617, 618, 619, 620, 621, 622, 623, 624, 625, 626, 627, 628, 629, 630, 631, 632, 633, 634, 635, 636, 637, 638, 639, 640, 641, 642, 643, 644, 645, 646, 647, 648, 649, 650, 651, 652, 653, 654, 655, 656, 657, 658, 659, 660, 661, 662, 663, 664, 665, 666, 667, 668, 669, 670, 671, 672, 673, 674, 675, 676, 677, 678, 679, 680, 681, 682, 683, 684, 685, 686, 687, 688, 689, 690, 691, 692, 693, 694, 695, 696, 697, 698, 699, 700, 701, 702, 703, 704, 705, 706, 707, 708, 709, 710, 711, 712, 713, 714, 715, 716, 717, 718, 719, 720, 721, 722, 723, 724, 725, 726, 727, 728, 729, 730, 731, 732, 733, 734, 735, 736, 737, 738, 739, 740, 741, 742, 743, 744, 745, 746, 747, 748, 749, 750, 751, 752, 753, 754, 755, 756, 757, 758, 759, 760, 761, 762, 763, 764, 765, 766, 767, 768, 769, 770, 771, 772, 773, 774, 775, 776, 777, 778, 779, 780, 781, 782, 783, 784, 785, 786, 787, 788, 789, 790, 791, 792, 793, 794, 795, 796, 797, 798, 799, 800, 801, 802, 803, 804, 805, 806, 807, 808, 809, 810, 811, 812, 813, 814, 815, 816, 817, 818, 819, 820, 821, 822, 823, 824, 825, 826, 827, 828, 829, 830, 831, 832, 833, 834, 835, 836, 837, 838, 839, 840, 841, 842, 843, 844, 845, 846, 847, 848, 849, 850, 851, 852, 853, 854, 855, 856, 857, 858, 859, 860, 861, 862, 863, 864, 865, 866, 867, 868, 869, 870, 871, 872, 873, 874, 875, 876, 877, 878, 879, 880, 881, 882, 883, 884, 885, 886, 887, 888, 889, 890, 891, 892, 893, 894, 895, 896, 897, 898, 899, 900, 901, 902, 903, 904, 905, 906, 907, 908, 909, 910, 911, 912, 913, 914, 915, 916, 917, 918, 919, 920, 921, 922, 923, 924, 925, 926, 927, 928, 929, 930, 931, 932, 933, 934, 935, 936, 937, 938, 939, 940, 941, 942, 943, 944, 945, 946, 947, 948, 949, 950, 951, 952, 953, 954, 955, 956, 957, 958, 959, 960, 961, 962, 963, 964, 965, 966, 967, 968, 969, 970, 971, 972, 973, 974, 975, 976, 977, 978, 979, 980, 981, 982, 983, 984, 985, 986, 987, 988, 989, 990, 991, 992, 993, 994, 995, 996, 997, 998, 999, 1000, 1001, 1002, 1003, 1004, 1005, 1006, 1007, 1008, 1009, 1010, 1011, 1012, 1013, 1014, 1015, 1016, 1017, 1018, 1019, 1020, 1021, 1022, 1023, 1024, 1025, 1026, 1027, 1028, 1029, 1030, 1031, 1032, 1033, 1034, 1035, 1036, 1037, 1038, 1039, 1040, 1041, 1042, 1043, 1044, 1045, 1046, 1047, 1048, 1049, 1050, 1051, 1052, 1053, 1054, 1055, 1056, 1057, 1058, 1059, 1060, 1061, 1062, 1063, 1064, 1065, 1066, 1067, 1068, 1069, 1070, 1071, 1072, 1073, 1074, 1075, 1076, 1077, 1078, 1079, 1080, 1081, 1082, 1083, 1084, 1085, 1086, 1087, 1088, 1089, 1090, 1091, 1092, 1093, 1094, 1095, 1096, 1097, 1098, 1099, 1100, 1101, 1102, 1103, 1104, 1105, 1106, 1107, 1108, 1109, 1110, 1111, 1112, 1113, 1114, 1115, 1116, 1117, 1118, 1119, 1120, 1121, 1122, 1123, 1124, 1125, 1126, 1127, 1128, 1129, 1130, 1131, 1132, 1133, 1134, 1135, 1136, 1137, 1138, 1139, 1140, 1141, 1142, 1143, 1144, 1145, 1146, 1147, 1148, 1149, 1150, 1151, 1152, 1153, 1154, 1155, 1156, 1157, 1158, 1159, 1160, 1161, 1162, 1163, 1164, 1165, 1166, 1167, 1168, 1169, 1170, 1171, 1172, 1173, 1174, 1175, 1176, 1177, 1178, 1179, 1180, 1181, 1182, 1183, 1184, 1185, 1186, 1187, 1188, 1189, 1190, 1191, 1192, 1193, 1194, 1195, 1196, 1197, 1198, 1199, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 1100, 1101, 1102, 1103, 1104, 1105, 1106, 1107, 1108, 1109, 1110, 1111, 1112, 1113, 1114, 1115, 1116, 1117, 1118, 1119, 1120, 1121, 1122, 1123, 1124, 1125, 1126, 1127, 1128, 1129, 1130, 1131, 1132, 1133, 1134, 1135, 1136, 1137, 1138, 1139, 1140, 1141, 1142, 1143, 1144, 1145, 1146, 1147, 1148, 1149, 1150, 1151, 1152, 1153, 1154, 1155, 1156, 1157, 1158, 1159, 1160, 1161, 1162, 1163, 1164, 1165, 1166, 1167, 1168, 1169, 1700, 1701, 1702, 1703, 1704, 1705, 1706, 1707, 1708, 1709, 1710, 1711, 1712, 1713, 1714, 1715, 1716, 1717, 1718, 1719, 1720, 1721, 1722, 1723, 1724, 1725, 1726, 1727, 1728, 1729, 1730, 1731, 1732, 1733, 1734, 1735, 1736, 1737, 1738, 1739, 1740, 1741, 1742, 1743, 1744, 1745, 1746, 1747, 1748, 1749, 1750, 1751, 1752, 1753, 1754, 1755, 1756, 1757, 1758, 1759, 1760, 1761, 1762, 1763, 1764, 1765, 1766, 1767, 1768, 1769, 1770, 1771, 1772, 1773, 1774, 1775, 1776, 1777, 1778, 1779, 1780, 1781, 1782, 1783, 1784, 1785, 1786, 1787, 1788, 1789, 1790, 1791, 1792, 1793, 1794, 1795, 1796, 1797, 1798, 1799, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 2100, 2101, 2102, 2103, 2104, 2105, 2106, 2107, 2108, 2109, 2110, 2111, 2112, 2113, 2114, 2115, 2116, 2117, 2118, 2119, 2120, 2121, 2122, 2123, 2124, 2125, 2126, 2127, 2128, 2129, 2130, 2131, 2132, 2133, 2134, 2135, 2136, 2137, 2138, 2139, 2140, 2141, 2142, 2143, 2144, 2145, 2146, 2147, 2148, 2149, 2150, 2151, 2152, 2153, 2154, 2155, 2156, 2157, 2158, 2159, 2160, 2161, 2162, 2163, 2164, 2165, 2166, 2167, 2168, 2169, 2170, 2171, 2172, 2173, 2174, 2175, 2176, 2177, 2178, 2179, 2180, 2181, 2182, 2183, 2184, 2185, 2186, 2187, 2188, 2189, 2190, 2191, 2192, 2193, 2194, 2195, 2196, 2197, 2198, 2199, 2200, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 2100, 2101, 2102, 2103, 2104, 2105, 2106, 2107, 2108, 2109, 2110, 2111, 2112, 2113, 2114, 2115, 2116, 2117, 2118, 2119, 2120, 2121, 2122, 2123, 2124, 2125, 2126, 2127, 2128, 2129, 2130, 2131, 2132, 2133, 2134, 2135, 2136, 2137, 2138, 2139, 2140, 2141, 2142, 2143, 2144, 2145, 2146, 2147, 2148, 2149, 2150, 2151, 2152, 2153, 2154, 2155, 2156, 2157, 2158, 2159, 2160, 2161, 2162, 2163, 2164, 2165, 2166, 2167, 2168, 2169, 2700, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 2100, 2101, 2102, 2103, 2104, 2105, 2106, 2107, 2108, 2109, 2110, 2111, 2112, 2113, 2114, 2115, 2116, 2117, 2118, 2119, 2120, 2121, 2122, 2123, 2124, 2125, 2126, 2127, 2128, 2129, 2130, 2131, 2132, 2133, 2134, 2135, 2136, 2137, 2138, 2139, 2140, 2141, 2142, 2143, 2144, 2145, 2146, 2147, 2148, 2149, 2150, 2151, 2152, 2153, 2154, 2155, 2156, 2157, 2158, 2159, 2160, 2161, 2162, 2163, 2164, 2165, 2166, 2167, 2168, 2169, 2700, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 2100, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2100, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2100, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022,
For耻下入座 Water, Gas. Cable paid Across
Neng蒋. Paj or Joe 79-2043.
Negotiable. Paj or Joe 79-2043.
ARE YOU ATTENDING SUMMER SCHOOL?
Visit us online at starting at $20 doe
Berkeley Plains, 842-5110
BEST VALUE!
Large size 1, 2 3 bedroom apts on bus route. All have gas heat, appliances, carpet and draps. Extra baths, balconies and terraces. If you want the most room for your dollar, then come see us a 2166 W. 26th or call 843-6446.
Gatehouse
Apen West now leasing for Summer. Energy effi-
cent, 1 and 2 bedrooms. 3 Blocks west of Iowa on
15th floor; patio/decks, ceiling fans, no pets.
48 month,月 749-1288 (open house Saturday)
11 a.m p
BR for rent. Desirable location and price. Am-
munitions. Call 841-8091 John
Brand new Colony Woods Apt. available for sublease mid-May through December, $185/mm.
Dishwasher, microwave, own bedroom,
bathroom. Females 641-861-2617.
- keen studio with air conditioning located close to
campus. Water and electricity paid Available
May 1, $250/month. Call 749-2913 or 841-8455 between
6:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m.
Completely furnished 2 bfrm apt. low utilities
Subbase. Close to campus. Renq. Neg
CALL
Cozy, carpeted studio apartment with bay window at 94 Missouri. Available May 20. 740-696-8500.
Excellent location: 2 bedroom apartments in four-plex, carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, and low utilities. Available June 1. Summer Rate: $499. Call 104 184-7341 and 104 Ohio 843-4242
Female Roommate needed from May 20 August 20. Furnished Tangleywood Apartment. Large bedroom. Great bargain for $173 a large. Call Hally. 749-4898
Female roommate, close to campus, own bedroom, 157.36 plus square feet in a sunny location; basement studio apartment; CA, equipped kitchen; low utilities. Available June 1, $175 at 100 Madison Cali
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 21, 1987
15
4 Bedroom house, fully furnished. Available June and July. Family preferred. Call for information.
For Rent. May 15 August 15; 1 bedroom apartment. Kitchen, bathroom, living room. All private. One block from campus. 180/month. 843-2233.
8 Bedrooms, 3 Bathrooms. Adjacent to campus.
No pets. Call 842-8971.
Furnished, spacious one-bedroom apartment available from 5/11/17 through 8/26/17 for $900 plus electricity. Nice area walking distance to college campus. Call 843-675 or 864-6024 for information.
Furnished basement apartment for 1/3 units in exchange for housekeeping, yard and plant care. Available May 15-August 20. Call 843-5960 after 5:30 p.m.
Get it while it's hot! 1 Bedroom Apt Summer Suburb, Leave to campus and downtown, Call
GREAT HAMMER RATES Special incentives,
Special Incentives, F. 49-2022
Pinecrest Apartments, F. 49-2022
HARDWOOD FLOORS. A.C. close to campus furnished one bedroom apartment available for rent.
Houses, Bedroom Apartments, Sleeping Rooms.
Available June 1st: 2-bedroom apartments, 1.2
and 3-bedroom apartments, and sleeping rooms.
Near Campus. No pets. Call 842-8871.
10th Summer Sublue; nice, new, four bedroom
apf. 11th and Lenawood Available May.May Free
room at the University of North Carolina.
IEY LOOK AT THIS! Brand new i Bemap. I am
for summer school. Close to campus W/D/A/C
PARKING.
Large three bedroom apartment, close to campus and downtown for summer sublease. Available May 15. Free rent through May. $35 (0) month.
Call 843-7633 or 841-1327
Meadowbook summer Sublease 3rd Mtwn2h only 8715 mo Don't wait! Call 843-1886.
Summer Sublease 2 bern townhouse, 2 baths,
mins bus route, dishwasher, available May 14
Min Sublease for summer. Available mid May.
Must be 18 yrs old and a native of Hath,
Hath, and Living room. Partially furnished.
Adult must be 18 yrs old and have a
carpeted room.
Summer Sublease. Studio Apl. All utilities paid,
8th and Ohio, #223, Call 749-3588.
**Summer Sublease. Nice roomy. BJ A B C. A**
**Room. 1st Floor. Free早餐. 1st L of May free 749 2553 (if necessary)**
**Room. 1st Floor. Free早餐. 1st L of May free 749 2553 (if necessary)**
Need to Subleave: 2 bedroom, close to campus
agt. June to Aug. 350 per month. 744-5441
Need to sublease Apple Lane Place studio apartment for the summer. Available May 1 or asap by the end of March.
IN CAMPUS APARTMENT for summer
Negotiable rent. less utilities. 843 4742
843 4740
(no bedroom) $232.00 New Quilt 844-9490 (late)
message for Cindy, or 749-2584 (late). Keep
phone number.
Reserve your apartment now! Just 2 short blocks from university, 1.2, and 4 bedroom apartments Farmed with some utilities paid and off street parking. No pets. 841-5500
Reserve your room now! For summer and/or fall,
Furnished with most utilities paid. Shared cooking
and bath facilities. Just 2 short blocks from
parking with off street parking. No pets.
841-500
Room for rent in nice, clean, O W L. apartment
Room has wood floors, private / 1/2 bath, entrance
and room ext. Female vegetarian prof. b44-8355
City Townhouse, great location, $215 plus,
garage, lots of room. be dependable, please
call, ask for Jennifer, or leave message. Rent
room at 900 W. 46th St.
Rooms are for summer and the 1987-88 academic year in the Christian living community 'Koonain' at Ecumenical Christian Ministers. For information come to 1204 Oread or call
IF YOU LIKE SPACE & QUIET
WE HAVE IT AND YOU
CAN STILL WALK TO CAMPUS
Spacious 2 bedroom
Laundry facilities
Waterbed fine
Swimming pool
10-12 month leases
VILLAGE SQUARE
9th & Avalon
842-3040
Studio available for summer in super apt. complex, great maintenance, recreation facilities and laundry availability I will assume part of expenses Call 842 9676 after 6:30 p.m.
SUMMER SUPER LEASE: 3 laten up. 2 full baths
close to campus; $25 plus utilities. Tanglewood
parking.
SUMMER SULSEASE Need two non-smoking females to be trainee Trainer townhouse. Call
SUMMER SCHOOL, NO CAR? 2 berm download or roommate needed on campus. Rent meq. rentals. Call 1-800-543-7672.
SUMMER SUBLEASE, Apple Lane Studio. Nice,
quiet, Water, cable free $235/month, Available
mid May. Pay only June. July. Call 841-7802 after
6 p.m.
SUMMER SUBLEASE Sunrise Place
lowrance 2 BR 1/2 a/b bath, AC, pool close to
street.
townhouse 2 HR, 1/2 bath, AC, pool, close
to house Call 843-2649 or 841-9974
SUMMER SUBLEASE 2 Bedroom Apt. New
Close to campas. Call 749 2432
MASTERCRAFT
apartments--all near KU! Consider
- Custom furnishings
- Energy efficient
- Affordable rate
- Affordable rates
- Variety of floorlans
- Variety of floorplans
- Designed for privacy
- Designed for privacy
- Many great locations
- Professional management
Call or stop by—
CAMPUS PLACE—1145 Louisianna
841-1429
HANOVER PLACE—14th & Mass.
841.1212
SUNDANCE—7th & Florida
941 5205
TANGLEWOOD—10th & Arkansas
749-2415
OPEN DAILY 1-5
SUMMER SUMMIT SALEE. Large | Bedroom Apart
Wide | Kitchen | Walk-in Garage.
Negotiable. Grant at Bank 10417. Keep trying.
SUMMER GULLAKE. jigsaw two bedrooms and
two baths. Enjoy the sunny summer Terrace.
Subs Lodge for summer Terrace.
Sublease for summer, studio at Hanover Place
Call 749-5440
*Nubilee* for summer: Furnished 2 bedrooms, bath. A/C. Closet to campus, new open bars in closets.
Sublease: 4 bedroom, spacious, excellent location
(next to Yelso Sub) Call 841-3907
Sublease 2 bdpm dumm. Available 1st June. Close to campus. $252; msg. Mail 841; 444 evenings.
Sub-lease. May 18. One bedroom with left, fully furnished, water paid. 641-593
Location
Located among 70 acres of rolling hills and trees, you'll enjoy the convenience of being close to campus and area shopping.
Lifestyle
Meadowbrook offers a selection of spacious and comfortable studios, 1, 2, or 3 bedroom apartments, and townhouses to fit your lifestyle
RESERVE YOUR
UNIT NOW...
FOR SUMMER OR FALI
15th & Crestline 842-4200
meadowbrook
Sublease. Trailride 3 bedroom, 2/1/2 bath
tenhouse. Availible mid-May, option to lease next fall. One large bedroom with own bathroom. Pool, tennis courts, sports club facilities. $80 Call
Sublease 2 bedrooms 2 bathrooms Fully furnished. Near campus and fun bars. Low utilities.
Sublease for summer: furnished two bedroom
apt. A/C / Great Location! Call 841-9007
Summer Sublease very nice three Rd ranch style
house. Near campus. $420 month. 943-3305
Summer Sublease. Need one or two females for 3 bedroom apartment, completed furnished, furniture #4, Call 789-2732.
Summer Sublease with option for Fall #1. 84AC gas, water $225, 749-1853.
Summer Sublease; three or four person furnished apartment adjacency to campus. Available May 18.
Summer Sublease: 3 bedroom, close to campus,
rent very negotiable. Call 843-170).
AMENITIES
Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the amenities of Naismith Hall. Applications for fall semester are now being accepted while space remains.
NAISMITH HALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
913-843-8559
Summer Submarine Harvard Square. 2 bedrooms,
spacious living for 3, all unified garden, pool, close
to beach.
Summer sublease. 2 bd. furnished. Close to campus. 841.3932
Summer sublease: 3 bedroom Apt. 2, both comfort furnished, available starting May or June option through July. Low rent plus possible reductions. Close to Campus. Need 2 people. #84-8942
Super large room in house to sublease for sum-
mages. Please call Dr. Kirsten at 841-702-6152,
Washer's dryer. Ask for Trent at 841-702-6152.
Top of the hill location, studio summer sublease option to rent year; call 841-1790.
FOR SALE
1981 Honda CB 750 Custom Excellent condition, low mileage, with extract. Call Rug Hail 8427713, J138
Brand New Mountain Lake. Black Fuji Bivd XC,
Barely redden. Great bike. Good Price, Bike 4230.
Complete set McCregor Tourney Number 1 shafts
irons. $100 insoluble. Call 842 5230.
Yamaha Seahc 400. New, with only one owner,
1800 miles. Excellent condition. $1,100 with Vetter
Credit Card.
14 x 6 M Mobile Home, 2 bedroom, remodeled, nice carpet, fence yard. Partial owner financing
Computer Disk Sel Tool - Certified Guaranteed 5.
Computer Disk Sel Tool - Duks 17.1, Pcau
84M76F, M476F 32 a 9 m, Pcau 84M76F, M476F 32 a 9 m
DCA Dalmation puppy, purebred, 12 weeks old.
Must sell. More info. Call John 842-5838.
29 29334. Dark red, low mileage, 5 pd good condition, for only $000 negotiable, call after 4:30 PM.
Accoustic GUITAR together with box in good condition sells under $100! Call 864-6527
Rickeybacker bass black 4001 Excellent
Professional Boarding Professional
Grooming 2001 0 0 1 0 0
2 RICKENHACKERS 1 Collecter's 12 string
new 330, Savings Bayers only. John 84157 or
96954.
NAD15 integrated amplifiers 28C, Carver M-500 plus amplifier 260 Watts per channel, 2 months warranty.
MOTHALLE GOOD USED FURNITURE:
80th St. 9 p.m. to 12 p.m.
313 E. 9th. 749-696
MAX'S COMICS. Comic Books, Playbills, Penhouse, etc. 811 New Hampshire.
Edmund Antsastran Telescope 15mm RKE eye
package and bag. B182 842-0513 after 6
Autumn Broadway New York and
Baltimore Newark. Call Auto
Rewire's Receptionist and Dispatcher.
Speaker #38, Perfect for Summer Call.
Phone: 718-596-2400
Custard Software Processor #72 - JC Penney
Custard Computer System Manager typewriter #T99 - Computer games, joypack
typewriter #T99 - Computer games, joypack
Never Been Used. Fannie Mae 100 Sailboard. 12 x **2**
*8.5 m squared*. North Sea $600.00 best.
ARQ
Ft ORLANDO, FLORIDA $150.00 Round trip
April 23 - May 2 943-6089 after 5 p.m.
Older model Fuji Gran Tourer, 30 inch frame,
Bead and teal slate sleeper, almost New Caller
for you.
NOTES now available for variety of classes.
Bachelor's in Education
Layhawk Study Services. We're here to help.
Do everything in 'em —Run, Climb, Hike, Raft— The Ultimate in Footwear
PIANO for sale. Upright good condition $400
740-272-869, Krein tying
Gransport
Sailbeat for Sale: 202. Olympic Class Flying Dutchman. Good Condition, Light Weight and Fast. Asking. 900.00 or best offer. Call evenings. 749-3905.
Athletic Sandals
AUTO SALES
Stereo speakers Omega 50 2-way speakers plus
Microphone subwoofer,1000W 842.7970
subwoofer 100% capacity 842M/347W
TUXEDO fit. Six formal or plain, all-purpose
ALL SIZES. Includes, vest, or cumberban, low-blee-
expensive to own than to rent! Come to Everything
Bice冰, 6in Vernor. Get yours early for that
have your ice size but hurry! Everything But Ice
1743 Volvo 142. Good condition. Very dependable.
1200 ml容量. Available from July 1, $1,000 Call
Water ski- EP comp x 2. 198 Good condition.
$22.00 and for Scott for Cp. 749-1472
1974 VW Superbeetle, Runs Good Yellow,
Sunroof 5000 miles. Must sell, $00 Call Saun-
d
1977 Red Chevette, two door, goat shape, must agree to vegetable *Call Amy* at 842 290 8800.
1082 Silver Camaro, Great school car. 4 New Tires, Sierra cassette, Pop Up uproof, Great mileage, 4 cyl. Asking $5,000 but negotiable 56,000 miles. Call to me. 749,246 after 5 p.m.
68 Chevy Impala Very Reliable, good looking car
Tiny amount of tint $790 money 848 2580
1365 color options 848 2580
71 VW Beetle, good body, newly rebuilt engine.
reliable transportation. 990; Jason. 834-842
LOST-FOUND
A. 1969 Firebird, 350, AM/FM, Cassette, A.C.
B. Inferior and in excellent condition. 842 505
C. Excellent condition. 842 505
Moving to California - must sell 1979 Mazda GLX R
mounted body & accessories $495, mgb, rebuilt
body & accessories $1,290. Browse at:
http://www.mazda.ca/motors
FOUND. 14 keys of outside Stauffer FIll Hall,
14:40 p.m. 04/17/87. Come by 11 Stauffer FIll
Hall, 12:30 p.m. 04/19/87.
LOST. 1982 Class Ring in Women's Restroom in LINDLE HALL. Call 749-1416. Please keep trying.
LOST on 4/11/87. Men's Seiko watch, reward. Call 749-1416.
Lost: Large gold Notre Dame de seison call. Ring丹 at 844-2108
SAVE at 642/4.00
Lettre : Large Notre Dame de son class ring
HELP WANTED
AIRLINES CRUISINELS HIRING' Summer Career! Good Pay. Travel. Call For Guide, Cassette, Newserisservi (916) 944-4447 U.S.
Are you good with children? Would you like to be paid to live with a Californian family and help with a childcare program? Volunteer at 238 Mine Park, CA 90455 (402) 322-3868.
Artist Needed for Next Semester. Graphic Design and Illustration. Please Call 842-3358 and ask for a sample.
ASSISTANT MANAGER JYHAWK TOWERS
The University of Kansas Hoosier Department is seeking three live-in, one-half time Assistant Manager positions in large residential buildings. Must be enrolled at KU, graduate student preferred. Group work experience is required and residential management experience is required. Applicants must postpone payment starts July 1, 1987 and continues through June 30, 1988. Complete job description
available in the Housing Office, 205 McColm Hall Applicant priority date, p. 10. Wednesday, October 4, 2016. Send resume, name of application, resume, and names of two references to Steve Keel, Assistant Director of Housing, 205 McColm Hall, Lawrence, Ks. (312) 827-4360 AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
CAMP COUNSELORS Wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach swimming canoeing, sailing, waterskiing, water polo, and volleyball. Participate in paddling, camping, crafts, dramas, or Riding. Mountains, drive, maintenance. Salary $70 per week. 321-694-4244. Reqs: L. 60093; 312-369-4244
DAY TELEPHONE Sales needed in our office.
Experience a plus Good Pay. Call between 9-540-232-8761.
Cocktail Waitresses Needed Part-time weekends
Apply in early June. A Playhouse 800 W 44th
McDonald's McDonald's 100 W 69th
Godfather's Pizza now hiring drivers. Must be 18 years of age and have a good driving record. Dependable car also required. Position requires plumbing commission. Apply in person at 71 W. 23rd.
GVERMENNT JOB$ 16,040 $39.250.jr. New
litering Call 853-677-6000 R798 for current
EVENINGS OR SATURDAY Telephone Sales in
Office. No experience necessary. Good Pay
for travel. Please refer to website for details.
*******
**********
FULL AND PART TIME HELP! National Firm preparing for Spring and Summer work. If accepted, you will earn 8.10 starting. Some evening and weekend positions are available and some may require 6.50 training quality, corporate scholarships are awarded, internships are possible, and you may earn 2.34 credits/rq or semester. During summer break you may attend a workshop (911) 343-8678 Mon-fri between 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Freshmen & Sophomores:
Summer Job Opportunities available
for freshmen and sophomores
gitation to be a Marine! Earn between
$1,300 and $2,100; plus meals &
travel.
Massachusetts Street Deli and Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse now hire food service and table experience and a least one yea. experience and a least one yea. service starting pay 3.75 per hour plus profit sharing. table service 2.0 per hour plus tips. Apply to Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse above Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse.
Ku Student Assistant, General Office work in the summer time available to August 17. Three-month time available during academic year $420 per month time available to August 17. Three-month time available during academic year $420 per month Demonstrate typing skills at interview. Operate a computer for applications to applicants with previous KU office experience. Date April 28, 1967, 5:00 p.m. Submit resume to Lila Watkins, Kansas Geological Lawrence, KS 6096, OR Campus West, Lawrence KS 6096, OR Form (brief resume appreciated) at Reception f
NANNY POSITIONS AVAILABLE. Good午食.
Nice Furniture Dallas Texas Call 831-954. (p14)
NATIVE SPEAKERS of Greek, Italian, Korean,
Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, and Vietnamese with good understanding of English. Call Steve.
749-4775, evenings.
Nanny Placement agency looking for nannies.
Great salaries and benefits. Positions available
nationally. Nanny Finders, P.O. Box 403, Chapel
Hill, NC 27141
Need Friendly Office assistant who can work in independently Typing, Filing, Running Errands, Telephoneing. Assisting with Downtown Promo and other office tasks. Call 842-3831. Downtown Lawrence Association Part time advertising sales representative need in Lawrence for small weekly newspaper
SUMMER JOB'S a new fittings dance club is opening in Lencera. You need hiring cocktail waitresses and baristas. Apply in person. 9:34 M, S at J. I. T. Hos. 7920 Quarter Rd. Lencera. Located Four Colonies Plaza
PEOPLE NEEDED INMEDIATELY for
dust delivery. Must have a transportation Good
condition car.
STUDENTS WANTED Part time or full time
No experience necessary. Good pay. Start immediately.
Days, evenings, or Saturdays. Call Dina,
749-3945
Summer Job-College age female as companion for seven year old girl own transportation need. Call after 4:55 p.m. M.F. Reference required. Call after 6 pm weekdays or on weekends. 814-844-84
**STUDENTS WANTED For very light delivery.**
Lawrence Area. Start immediately. Must have
own transportation. Mornings or afternoons.
Great pay. Call Dina. 749-3945.
The Mathematics Department is now accepting applications for the position of undergraduate teaching assistants. Applicants must have a high school diploma or equivalent in mathematics; completion of Math 123 or the equivalent, communicate well in the English language, have undergraduate standing and a valid driver's license.
The Mathematics department is now accepting applications for the position of graduate teaching assistant. We have completed requirements for a bachelor's degree in 1987 and have a strong mathematical background. Applicants must pass an oral exam demonstrating English competency. Applications should submit a letter in writing to the Math Department, with two letters of recommendation to Charles Himmelmer. Dept. of Math. 217 Strong Hall.
Will assist in lecture classes, grade homework assignments, and help grade some exams. Student monthly, 40% time, August 15 to December 31. All registration applications may be obtained from the Math Dept. Room 217 Strong Hall Further information, contempo-rophy, Philip Montigorys 2E - E strength, EPHA - Joseph Montigorys 2E - E strength,
MISCELLANEOUS
XMCA Camp Gravysis in beautiful Lake of the Ozarks now hire summer staff. Desire for excellence, but no experience necessary Call (816) 265-9622 Keith Miller
PERSONAL
Summer softball men's division D team seeks players to drink beer and play ball in Overland Park.
BUG, After 22 years of trying you have failed to pull through. The flying Jawhawk will carry you and your scarlet V back to St. Louis, Better luck in the real world, Kneel, 067. Ex-Ep-Pyro, KV, Brother Maynard, Wizard, Gumby, Stan, Large. (Eric Fitzgerald, King O-Son, and Halb (remember him).)
Chris & Bryan-Glad you don't eat crabs and dog & Bryan-Glad you don't eat crabs and dog
Congratulations Nikki! We're so proud of you!
Love, the Algae Gams.
Get Leed at the LEWIS LUAU! Friday 24 April from 8 a.m. to 11 p.m. $60. Music Contacts, www.leed.edu.au
BUS.PERSONAL
Glen K'S graduation party it's almost here. For info call 749-3676.
Be creative in gift gifting. Fullfill your
beautiful beauty Portraits for all occasions. Call
(212) 634-7950.
WILDLIFE HIGHWAY
MUSEUM SHOP
SIDEWALK SALE April 22
9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.
next to the Ks. Union 644-1450
HEADCACHE, BACKCACHE, ARM PAIN, LEG PAIN Student and most insurance accepted. For complete quality caredronical care call Dr. Mark
20-75 per cent discounts
THE COMIC CORNER
NE Corner of 23rd & Iowa, B41-4294
Bloom Co. & Farside T-Shirts
ZZZZzzz. TIRED OF MAKING LESS THAN
SWEETNORthern Southwestern are looking for
students who are, seriously looking for a good summer job,
hard working with net $3000 this sum.
They want to get paid more than that.
★★★★★★★★★
GLEAVISHAN JESSH "For ks MK/MO info PER-
RAMAN" GLEAVISHAN JESSH "Bata, City
9406 9206 Mailed discreetly anonymously
Most reasonable rate in town for all your photo needs especially graduation, resumes, and portfolios.
--gare and Used Records. Buy, Sell, or Trade Quantrill's 811 New Hampshire
TEA TRAVELS
SUMMER TRAVEL?
Waduen & Reed, Inc.
1100 SW Wanamaker Rd.
Suite 103
Send resume to:
Topeka, KS 66604
- Lowest possible
- Make Plans Now!
- Lowest air fares to get you home.
- Lowest possible
SERVICES OFFERED
Need music for your wedding *Call Jean, 843-7304*
Give piano and voice lessons over summer
Need choreography in fall and winter
843-4013. Tuesdays-Saturday at 6, 9, eaves by appointment
Hair style done with you. Way through the week
Available on CD and online
Maupintour travel service
749-0700
FINANCIAL PLANNING
Leading financial services company offers complete training for college graduates for the Topeka and Lawrence area. Confidently market mutual funds, retirement plans, life insurance, and more through our personalized financial planning program.
rates to Europe.
AUTO-TINTING. Best scratch resistant solar
film to ensure warranty, PROTINT of
Lawrence 841-7738
See us TODAY!
- Eurail, Britrail passes.
- On campus location in the Kansas Union and 831 Mass.
- World wide travel information.
CHISSON SUN PHOTO for looking for young
passions in children. 15% off direct camera. No set fee. Cash
discount 10%.
John sings messages! $20. 841-1874 or 943-1209
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwinter Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-779
John sings messages? $20. 84174 or 843-209
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES. Ektachrome
processing within 24 hours. Complete BW wery-
dition. $65. 900. ART & Design Building.
Room 804. 867-454
MATH TUORER since 1976, M.A. $6/hr (cours.
species) 196, M.S. $8/hr 183, 0023
Bike Repair
Tune-Up
Gransport Bicycle
Cycling
PRIVATE OFFICE Obgyn Alison
Services. Overland Park... 9134-491-6878
MUSIC "MUSIC" MUSIC "MUSIC" MUSIC Red House Audio 8 track studio, P.A. and Lights, Mobile Party Music, Maximum Audio Wizardry, Call Brad 749-1275
Seamstress. All ladies' dresses can be made here in town. You choose your favorite designs or styles from the latest fashion magazines. I will make them for you. Call Sue, U81-3449.
D. W.I.'s & Tranlc
Fake I.D.'s & other criminal offenses
Family Law & other legal problems
DONALD G. STROLE
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL - get your
driver's license before completion. Transportation provided.
www.sunflowerdrivingschool.com
TYPING
11,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Acct
depressing, no business. 842-7945 or Karen, 784-2314
10.1 TRIO Word processing. Responsible.
Conscientious. Reliable. Call 842 3113 for service
A-Z Word processing Service. Quality resumes,
formal reports, presentations available.
Storage available 845-1800 to 9 p.m.
24 Hour Typing, 13th semester in Lawrence,
Resumes, dissertation papers, Paper to camp
author.
A-1 professional typing. Term papers, theses,
reasonable. IBM Computer Typewriter 84224.
AAA TYPING has low cost word processing/document storage storing at $11/pc. Call 842-1942 after 4 p.m. weekdays, any timeweekends. Campus pickup available.
Absolutely Fast Typing and Dependency ablaze and more. 200 watt power, 8490-2400 a.p.m. 5 p.m. & 789-2304 after 5 p.m. Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard graduate secretary. Call Mrs. Nancy Mathta, 841-1212.
Accurate Word Processing. Meadowbrook locat-
er years experience. Call 749-1861
EVENINGS
Dependable, professional, experienced.
Dependable, professional, experienced.
TRANSCRIPTION also, standard tape. 843-8877
DISSERTATIONS. THESES. LAW
Dissertations. Thereses. Law
will return. RETURN WATCHING THIS AD
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing.
Term papers, maps, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter quality
printing. spelled corrected. 842.7244
Experienced typist, tuxedo, dissertations, term paper 842 3210 at 6:15 p.m. M or F/Sat or Sun
Experienced Typist Dissertations, terms, tapes, papers, etc. Reasonable Rates. Call 842-3261
GOOD IMPRESSIONS Typing/Word Processing/TypingSets Typeset Typeset 84-160 84-160
GUARANTEED PERFECT typing done on word
Located near Lawrence Hospital,
Call 843-729-0610
For professional typing/word processing, call
Professional Office, 306 W. Spring special $12.90, paper,
space, pica
Smart Memory Processing includes editing and checking checker's reasonable rate, Folder, 749-2140
Quality typing; excellent editing, grammar,
spelling, punctuation skil. Fast, reliable.
SAT prep.
GU SECRETARY. Typing and word processing,
fondable, fast, accurate. Spelling corrected,
jetter quality. Pickup on campus. Monica 814 8246.
weekends-weekdays
Resume Service-laserwritten 10 copies ONLY
$80-749 23rd after 5 p.m.
ACT NOW, Papers $1.50/pg, Resumes $15.
WILLIE LIFETIME 843-3496
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing, manuscripts, resumes, theses, letter writing.
Term papers? Transcription Unlimited, 1012
Massachusetts, Suite 290. Please call ahead for all
your typing needs. 842-4619 Spelling, grammar
corrected.
very reasonable rates, will also assist with spelling punctuation and form. Call 843-2629 for typing when you can have word processing with Word. Theses, resume, history. Since 1983, 843-3147
WANTED
Policy
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, these, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes HAVE M.S. Degree. 841-6254
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Roommate Wanted:
1 person for 2 or 4 summer or for next year. person gives TWO roommates overnight. Only male.
Non-smoking, responsible female roommate for summer and/or fall semester. Room with 12 bath attached, microwave, washer/dryer. Must be 24 years old or utility units. Utilities: 749-392 or 842-946 ask for Sandy.
Need Roommate to share two bedroom apt. $134
untilies on bus route Call Martin.
841-0611
RELIABLE FEMALE GFA TWAS to HOUSEST THIS
summer. Claudia, 749-7566 (evenings)
Needed: roommate for a very nice fully
furnished apartment. On bus host, pool,
and gym memberships.
People to Join the Fun with SUA's Canoe Trip Down the Kaw. 864-3474 For Info
Roammate wanted to share large 2 Bti
40p. Available June 1, 187th for summer and school
year 1978-83 STl street location, Laundry facilities,
kitchen, Bent Rent plus 1/2 deposit and
utilities. 434-3973
ROOMMATE WANTED-FALL 1877 Need 2 people 4 br share RH, W/D, bus route or walk to campus, quiet neighborhood, near 21st & 22nd St, 60 month plus 1/4 utilities. 749-7333 keep trivia
SPANISH TRANSLATOR WANTED NOW easy!
Newly hired, last down time. Top Pay, allow
leave. 842-354-3888
842-354-3888
Wanted: Female roommate, nonsmoker for Fall and Winter; to share three bedroom apartments 842-260-963.
Summer Roommate: luxury 2 bdrm, Sunrise
Place townhouse fully furnished, pool $400/month
Wanted: Two bedroom furnished apartment
submitted Aug 25. Please Call Slave. B41-799 or
840-799.
Wanted: graphic artist to paint menu. Will pay $125.00. Call Chris, 841-1060.
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16
Tuesday, April 21, 1987 / University De y Kansan
"HOW I MADE $18,000 FOR COLLEGE BY WORKING WEEKENDS."
MASH
When my friends and I graduated from high school, we all took part-time jobs to pay for college.
They ended up in car washes and hamburger joints,putting in long hours for little pay.
Not me. My job takes just one weekend a month and two weeks a year. Yet, I'm earning $18,000 for college.
Because I joined my local Army National Guard.
They're the people who help our state during emergencies like hurricanes and floods. They're also an important part of our country's military defense.
So, since I'm helping them do such an important job,they're helping me make it through school.
As soon as I finished Advanced Training, the Guard gave me a cash bonus of $2,000. Then, under the New GI Bill, I'm getting another $5,000 for tuition and books.
Not to mention my monthly Army Guard paychecks. They'll add up to more than $11,000 over the six years I'm in the Guard.
And if I take out a college loan, the Guard will help me pay it back-up to $1,500 a year, plus interest.
It all adds up to $18,000-or more for college for just a little of my time. And that's a heck of a better deal than any car wash will give you.
THE GUARD CAN HELP PUT YOU THROUGH COLLEGE, TOO. SEE YOUR LOCAL RECRUITER FOR DETAILS, CALL TOLL-FREE 800-638-7600;* OR MAIL THIS COUPON.
*In Hawaii: 737-5255; Puerto Rico: 721-4550; Guam: 477-9957; Virgin Islands (St. Croix): 773-6438; New Jersey: 800-452-5794. In Alaska, consult your local phone directory.
c 1985 United States Government as represented by the Secretary of Defense. All rights reserved.
MAIL TO: Army National Guard, P.O. Box 6000, Clifton, NJ 07015
NAME □ M □ F
ADDRESS
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US CITIZEN □ YES □ NO
AREA CODE PHONE
SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBER BIRTH DATE
OCCUPATION
STUDENT □ HIGH SCHOOL □ COLLEGE
PRIOR MILITARY SERVICE □ YES □ NO
BRANCH RANK AFM/MOS
ARMY
National Guard
THE INFORMATION YOU VOLUNTARILY PROVIDE, INCLUDING YOUR SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBER,
WILL BE USED FOR RECRUITING PURPOSES ONLY. YOUR SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBER
WILL BE USED TO ANALYZE RESPONSE TO THE AQ AUTHORITY HOUSE 303
A1CLJC13047NP
ARMY
Army National Guard
Americans At Their Best.
Peeping out
BULLS
Details, page 2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
April 22, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 138
(USPS 650-640)
Students uninformed of contra issue, Abrams says
Gareth Waltrip/KANSAN
NO CONTRA
ELLIOT COULD HELP STOP MURDER STO
NATIONAL SOVEREIGN US DISTRICT
CONTRAS ARE SOMOZA'S MURDERERS
Abraam Aphrodite For State-Spain TERRO
A crowd of nearly 150 marches to the Kansas Union for a rally before a speech by Elliott Abrams, assistant U.S. secretary of state for inter-American affairs. Abrams spoke to about 900 people yesterday afternoon about the United States role in Central America.
Protesters rally to oppose contra aid
Bv PAUL SCHRAG
Staff writer
Chanting "no guns, no bombs, no more Vietnamese," about 150 people marched from Wescoe Hall to the Kansas Union yesterday to protest U.S. support for the contrasts.
Protesters marched down Jayhawk Boulevard at noon in rows of two, three and four, forming a line nearly a block long. Many carried banners and posters with slogans such as "Contras are Somoza's Murderers" and "Precedon Yes. Contras No." A police car preceded demonstrators.
The target of the demonstration was Elliott Abrams, assistant secretary of state for inter-American affairs, who defended contra aid in a speech before about 900 people at 1 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
"We made our point effectively," said Rhonda Neugebauer, programming assistant at KU libraries, who led some of the chants as marchers in the Union "Elliott Abrams knows the Kansas cann'ts support contra aid."
The march was sponsored by Latin American Solidarity.
Elliott Abrams, assistant U.S. secretary of state for inter-American affairs, responds to a question from the audience. Abrams spoke yesterday in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Some of the marchers briefly deviated from the prepared slogans of chant leaders to shout, "Ronnie, I don't do no good. Send him back [to Hollywood]."
One poster said, "U.S. tax dollars pay for murder, rape, torture in
A. F. Gilligan
I was surprised that so many students care about this issue. This turnout showed that students are not going to stand by and let Elliott and Ronnie murder people any more.'
Bob Kirch
Lawrence senior
Outside the Union, protesters cheered as several people gave short speeches denouncing Abrams and the Reagan administration's policies in Central America
Central America."
The crowd booed at the first mention of Abram's name. It roared approval when John Bode, Manhattan senior, said, "I have no experience in Central America, but that's what I'm in common with Elliott Brams."
tors, "We represent the majority opinion in this country. We can be heard if we unite our voices against this terrorist policy."
During the speeches, several people in the crowd shouted their opinions. "How can you sleep at night, soot!?" "Arrest that man." "Nazi!"
Bob Kirch, Lawrence senior and a member of Latin American Solidarity, said, "I was surprised that so many students care about this issue. This turnout showed that students are not going to stand by and let Elliott and Ronnie murder people any more."
Neugebauer told the demonstra-
Before and during the demonstration, some protesters described U.S. policies in Central America as simplistic, illegal and immoral.
Dan Parkinson, Lawrence, carried a banner with the words "Vive Sandi- nado, Vive Nicaragua." He participated in the demonstration to help educate people, and to encourage others to speak out, he said.
"In light of the recent disclosures of the administration's criminal policies, if we don't start bringing our government under control now, we will be involved in an invasion of Nicaragua within the next two years," he said.
Roger Holden, Lawrence, said,
"The contrasts are a darkness in Central America, and the U.S. is helping to create that darkness."
Contra supporter can't explain gap
By ROGER COREY
Staff writer
Congress' knowledge of the Nicaraguan situation has been growing in the last few years while college students' knowledge of the subject has remained stagnant, a spokesman of President Reagan's Central American policy said yesterday.
Elliott Abrams, assistant U.S. secretary of state for inter-American affairs, spoke to 900 people in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Abrams has been an active supporter of the contrasts, who seek to overthrow the Sandinista government in Nicaragua. He is at the center of a campaign by National Guard administration to win congressional approval for contra aid.
"I find the debate in Congress improving," Abrams said. "More and more members have gone to Nicaragua and the rest of Central America. The average member of Congress, senator or representative, is much better informed now than he or she was one, two, three or four years ago."
He said the dangers of the situation in Nicaragua now were more clearly understood by Congress. But there is no increase in the level of understanding on college campuses.
Abrams said he did not know the reason for the gap. Members of Congress want U.S. interests protected and are afraid of Soviet domination of the earth. But the majority of opinion polls indicate that the public does not support U.S. involvement in Nicaragua.
"That fear has not apparently
made him angry. Congress the col-
lege opposes."
He said the media had become better at reporting on Central American issues, but he also saw a gap between what was being printed and what the public read.
"If you read the New York Times, Washington Post, Miami Herald, Newsweek and Time magazine, you find a growing respect for the military capabilities of the resistance. You find increased reporting about Sandinista repression," Abrams said.
"But apparently these things are not being read by students on college
He said one reason the Nicaraguan issue was controversial on college campuses was because students were afraid of being drafted.
He said the United States initially offered a large foreign aid program to the Sandinistas after the overthrow of Somoza in 1979.
Abrams' speech was interrupted several times by hecklers and demonstrators shouting "No contra aid," but he only gazed at them and continued to read from his prepared text.
"We threw money at them," he said.
But the Sandinistas' immediate response was to begin a military build-up and to open military ties to the Soviets.
"We offered Nicaragua the Peace Corps and they rejected it, and began sending their young people to Cuba for training," he said.
Abrams said the Reagan administration would not rule out the possibility of U.S. military intervention in Nicaragua. The United States is taking part in a large series of maneuvers in Honduras, involving regular troops and national guard troops from a number of states. The maneuvers go beyond Honduras to South America.
"The purpose of the exercise is to familiarize our troops with the area, to show the Sandinistas our determination to help Honduras defend itself, to train Honduran troops and to give U.S. troops real training." Abrams said.
Abrams maintains that he knew nothing about the Teheran connection in the Iran-contra affair. But he has been mentioned by the Senate Intelligence Committee in connection with the administration's efforts to solicit private aid for the contras.
odd if I were not asked to testify. Abrams said at a news conference after his speech, "Who are they going to ask to testify if they don't ask the assistant secretary of state for inter-American affairs?"
He said Oliver North was the key man in the National Security Council on Latin American policy. Abrams was the key man for the state department
"I think it would be exceedingly
Charles Stansifer, KU director of Latin American studies, said Abrams' speech was considerably downplayed.
"I think he toned down the vigorousness of his support for the contras." Stansfer said.
Hugo Murillo, visiting professor in Latin American studies from Costa Rica, said Abrams' speech was nothing new.
"He put forward his line of thought," Murillo said. "It is a well-known position."
He said that U.S. support of the contras actus is strengthened by the government.
"The Sandistas would have a tough time if the United States left them alone," Murillo said. "Now they have the support of the people because they are under attack by mercenaries and the United States."
Bottom Line retains seats, faces fine
By LISA A. MALONEY
Staff writer
In a meeting that ended about 2:30 a.m. yesterday, the Student Senate Elections Review Board decided to fine the Bottom Line presidential and vice president candidates $156.42, instead of revoking the coalition's seats.
But the implications of the board's decision aren't quite as cut and dried.
Both Jason Krakow, Bottom Line student body president-elect and Stephanie Quincy, Bottom Line student body vice president-elect, said they were pleased with the results.
The elections review board had fined Bottom Line another $150 on Monday after it decided that the coalition had received a $200 discount on the cost of printing 1,800 campaign posters. Without the discount, the coalition would have gone about $150 over budget.
The board ruled that the poster discount, from Schifman Printing Co., in Kansas City, Kan., was not available to the general public, although the owner Bob Schifman, who worked for the board that he gave special discounts to nonprofit organizations, schools and churches.
"I don't want to seem like a sore loser, but the reason fair and democratic elections work here is because everyone's on the same financial plaveround."
Brian Kramer, First Class vice presidential candidate, said, "Sure, you can say $150 isn't going to influence 400 votes, but where do you draw the line? Obviously, the election becomes a matter of how many connections you have or how big your pocketbook is.
Krakow said, "It would seem to me that the term 'general public' would
refer to students at KU, and we had a signed statement from Schifman saying that he would grant that discount to any student group."
The amount of the discount was then added to Bottom Line's audit, pushing the coalition over budget by $156.41. According to the Senate's report, the power to revoke all of a coalition's seats if its audit is over budget.
The review board increased the amount by one cent so the amount is $1.89$.
See SENATE, p. 6, col. 5
INSIDE
Third test says victim not drunk
The KU rugby team, which qualified for the Western National Championship, will leave for Dallas tomorrow and compete in the single-elimination tournament this weekend. See story page 11.
Touah tournev
Every hotel, hotel, motel, inn and bed and breakfast place in Lawrence is booked for the weekend of graduation. May 15-17, and waiting lists are long. See story page 5.
No room
Bv PAUL BELDEN
A blood test ordered by the father of a KU student killed last month in a car-train wreck has indicated that the student was under the legal limit of intoxication, the student's father said yesterday.
Staff writer
The test was the third done on the blood of Dan McDevitt, Salina sophomore, who was killed March 27, along with three other KU students, when a train going about 65 mph struck their car broadside. The test ordered by the father indicated that McDevitt's blood was 98 percent alcohol.
One of the two previous tests had indicated that McDevitt's blood was below the legal limit of 10 percent and therefore indicated that it was just at the limit.
McDevitt's father, Bill L. McDe-
vitt, of Salina, said, "As far as we're concerned, two out of three is a
Although Kansas Highway patrolmen have said they could not determine who was driving because all the students were thrown from the car, McDevitt said he was worried that people would assume his son was driving because the car was owned by the McDevitt family.
He said he ordered the test, conducted at SmithKline Bio-Science Laboratories in St. Louis, out of concern that people would think his son caused the crash by driving sick.
Alan Sanders, Douglas County coroner, conducted the first unofficial blood test a few days after the accident. The result of that test was a .085 percent blood-alcohol content in McLatter. Mditter that week, Sanders
released the official results of a test conducted by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation. That test indicated that McDevitt's blood was 10 percent alcohol.
McDevitt said he and his family were shocked when they saw the KBI results on television news.
Bill W. McDevitt, Salina senior and Dan's older brother, said, "It seemed like they had no concern for the families involved.
"Nobody tried to get a hold of us before the (KBI) results were released."
See BLOOD, p. 6, col. 3
"I think that all the kids' fraternity brothers and sorority sisters need to know that it wasn't quite as bad as it
The victim's father said he ordered the third blood test for his own peace of mind.
Effect of faculty union on students debated
Staff writer
By BENJAMIN HALL
Debate over whether the KU faculty should form a union has so far revolved around the obvious group, the faculty. But students and faculty also disagree about how a union might affect students.
Gordon Woods, Ulysses graduate student and student representative to the University Senate Executive Committee, said yesterday, "My initial reaction would be that a faculty union could undermine University governance."
Woods said he thought a union might muffle the student voice in Koch's group.
"We really didn't attack it from that point of view." he said.
"I'm afraid that the impact of students would be lessened," he said. "It seems that a union might give faculty more strength in University governance and make them less receptive to student opinions."
David Downing, associate professor of aerospace engineering and a member of a University Senate committee on collective bargaining, said the committee didn't try to investigate a union's possible effect on students.
Downing was one of three committee members who visited Pittsburg State University to look at the effects of a faculty union there. He said he affected students in Pittsburg State's union affected students by improving faculty morale.
"At Pittsburg State, the morale of the faculty was really pretty poor
Faculty union issue
Editor's note: This is the third in a five-part series on the possible formation of a faculty union at the University of Kansas. Today's story focuses on how a faculty union could affect students.
- Tomorrow: The effects a faculty union has had at Pittsburg State University
Friday: The all-faculty forum on collective bargaining.
before the union," he said. "I can't imagine that some of that wouldn't get into the classroom."
T. P. Srinivasan, professor of mathematics and chairman of the committee on collective bargaining, said at a University Council meeting earlier this semester that it was difficult to assess some impacts of collective bargaining.
The committee's report said, "Unions do contribute to greater bureaucracy and higher operational costs. Their effect on quality' long term cannot be determined on the basis of the available fragmentary data."
A 1976 study by the National Student Educational Fund, "Students and Collective Bargaining," said
1
See STUDENTS. p. 8. col. 1
2
Wednesday, April 22, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Around the World
Sri Lanka death toll rises to 300 after bomb explodes in terminal
COLOMBO, Sri Lanka — A car bomb at rush hour created an inferno at the main bus terminal yesterday that officials said killed about 150 people, bringing the death toll from terrorism in five days to nearly 300.
A Health Ministry official said that about 200 people were injured and that some might die of burns or other wounds.
Many of the victims burned to death or were killed by smoke inhalation in six parked buses that were engulfed in flames, police and witnesses said.
The bombing was the third attack since Friday on this island south of India, where Tamil insurgents have waged a four-year war against the majority Sinhalese for an independent nation. Tamils killed at least 142 people in northeastern Sri Lanka Friday and Monday.
Although no one claimed responsibility for the bomb, the government issued a statement blaming Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam and the Eelam Revolutionary Organization of Students.
Witnesses said many of the injured at the bus terminal had severe burns. Rescue work was hampered by heavy rain. Police took over private vehicles to carry victims to hospitals.
U.S. returns Karl Linnas to Soviet Union
MOSCOW — Karl Linnas, who lost his eight-year battle against deportation from the United States, was delivered to the Soviet Union yesterday where he may face a firing squad on charges of killing thousands of prisoners in a Nazi death camp.
The 67-year-old Linnas was flown from New York to Czechoslovakia and handed over to the Soviets. The official Soviet news agency Tass said he was put on a flight and taken to Tallinn, capital of his native Estonia.
Linnas, handcuffed, struggled with U.S. officials Monday night when he was put aboard a Czechoslovak airliner at Kennedy International Airport.
Linnas directed a Nazi concentration camp in the Estonian city of Tartu during the early years of World War II and is accused of killing thousands of people, mostly Jewish women and children.
Tass said more than 12,000 people died at Tartu.
Argentine soldiers rebel, seek amnesty
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina -- About 250 soldiers rebellied yesterday in the northern city of Salita and hundreds of civilians gathered outside the army base to protest the uprising, officials reported.
It was the third army revolt in a week. The restive soldiers oppose the army's leadership and demand amnesty for officers accused of torture and killing during the "dirty war" against leftists. The war was conducted by military governments in the late 1970s.
The government said yesterday that 19 top officers had quit or been fired since revolts at two other army camps, but President Raul Alfonsin denied that the purge was part of a deal with the rebels.
Gov. Roberto Romero of Salta province told the Rivadavia radio network that 250 officers and men of engineer company C5 were rebelling against the amnesty issue and the civilian president's choice of Gen. Jose Dante Caridi as new army commander.
Across the Country
Japanese emissary seeks end to tariffs
WASHINGTON — A high-level Japanese emissary asked President Reagan yesterday to lift trade sanctions against Japan, but Reagan's chief spokesman said action was unlikely before Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone's visit next week.
the semiconductor sanctions should be lifted as quickly as possible.
Nakasone is due in Washington on April 29 and 30 for meetings with the president and other officials.
Former Japanese Foreign Minister Shintaro Abe said that during a 20-minute meeting with the president, he emphasized that
The administration Friday imposed a 100 percent tariff on some Japanese-manufactured lap-top and desk-top computers.
NSC approves sale of computer to Iran
WASHINGTON — The National Security Council has approved the sale of a $900,000 computer system to Iran, industry and administration officials said yesterday.
retly selling arms to Iran.
The sale would be the first large U.S. transaction involving Iran since disclosures in late 1986 that the administration had been see-
Analysts suggested that the move underscored a growing sensitivity of the Reagan administration to problems faced by U.S. manufacturers of high-technology goods as they try to compete in overseas markets.
From Kansan wires.
From the KANSAN Weather Service
Weather
LAWRENCE FORECAST
Sunny Day
will be mostly sunny with a high near 70 degrees. WEATHER FACT: April has the third most occurrences of tornados following May and June respectively.
Today, partly sunny skies will keep the high temperature the same as yesterday at 65 degrees and winds at 5-15 mph from the northeast. Tonight, skies should clear and the low will be 47 degrees. Tomorrow
Today partly sunny skies will keep the high
OMAHA
61 / 42
DES MOINES
59 / 39
LINCOLN
65 / 43
CONCORDIA
69 / 49
KANSAS CITY
64 / 46
TOPEKA
67 / 48
COLUMBIA
63 / 44
ST. LOUIS
62 / 43
SALINA
68 / 47
WICHITA
69 / 50
CHANUTE
67 / 47
SPRINGFIELD
63 / 44
TULSA
70 / 50
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Earn University Credit through Independent Study
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Soak Up Some College Credits This Summer!
Independent Study is flexible, convenient, and personalized. You can enroll at any time, set your own pace, and study at home.
Independent Study offers more than 100 approved college courses similar to those taught in-residence. These include:
COMS 246
COMS 455
ECON 104
ENGL 209
ENGL 466
ENGEL 486
HDEL 160
HIST 100
HDFL 160
HDFL 180
MATH 102
MET105
PHIL 148
HDFL 180
MATH 102
MATH 115
HDFL 288
PHIL 148
POLS 110
MATH 121
PSYC 104
REL 475
SPAN 104
SPAN 108
C&L 210
C&I210
For further information on Independent Study and its costs, or to obtain the complete catalog of courses, call 864-4440 or stop by Independent Study Student Services, Continuing Education Building Annex A, located directiv north of the Kansas Union.
Independent Study, a unit of the University of Kansas Division of Continuing Education, is a statewide service mandated by the Kansas Board of Regents to provide correspondence courses for Kansans.
1
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 22, 1987
3
Local Briefs
Memorial for retired teacher this afternoon
A memorial service for Frank Edward Hoecker, retired professor of physics and astronomy, will be at 3 p.m. today at the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, 1900 University Drive.
Mr. Hoeker, 83, taught at the University of Kansas for 39 years before he retired in 1973. He helped invent the cardiograph, the first method for picturing the heart as it works. He also was a research associate on the Manhattan Project, which developed the atomic bomb in World War II.
MIR. Hoeker died Monday at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. He was the wife of Mary, and Memorials may be sent to the Visiting Nurses Association in care of Warren-Meclain Mortuary, 120 W. 13th St.
Student Senate to have turnover
The Student Senate will have its transitional meeting at 7 p.m. today in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union.
Brady Stanton and Kelly Milligan, outgoing student body president and vice president, will hand over their offices to Jason Krakow and Stephanie Quincy, who were body president and vice president.
It also will be the first meeting for 52 newly elected senators.
KU deans to cook burgers for seniors
Members of the senior class will have a chance tonight to eat free hamburgers cooked by KU deans.
The senior cookout, sponsored by the Adams Alumni Center, in conjunction with the Student Alumni Association, will be from 5:30 to 8 p.m. at the alumni center, 1266 Oread Ave.
Hamburgers and beverages will be provided free. Seniors must bring their senior class I.D. to the center's north terrace. The cook-out will be moved indoors if it rains.
A tour of the center also will be offered, and seniors will be able to sign up for alumni memberships at discount rates.
Campus and Area
KU social welfare alumni have established a scholarship fund to honor Ase George, KU professor emeritus of social welfare.
Scholarship fund to honor teacher
More than 100 former students contributed to the fund, which will provide annual scholarships to social welfare graduate students.
George joined the KU faculty in 1948. She was director of social welfare graduate admissions from 1950-1957 and it remains active in social work.
George also is writing a history of KU social work education, to be published in July.
Hayden OKs bill for stronger state work-study
TOPEKA — Mike Hayden yesterday signed a bill designed to strengthen and coordinate the work-study program at state universities.
By JOHN BUZBEE
From staff and wire reports.
Staff writer
The new law officially creates the state work-study program. The program, which provides half the wages to students who work in a field related to their education, had existed informally since 1983. It is different from the federal work-study program.
The work-study program has been run differently at state universities. The law will help
coordinate the programs, said State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, a member of the House Education Committee.
"It is extremely important that this program be coordinated so it is a little more consistent Regents-wide than it has been." Branson said.
A provision allowing work-study money to be used to run the program was removed from the bill, but the new law allows money to run the program to be allocated separately.
"It was probably the best we could do," said Mark Tallman, director of legislative affairs for the Associated Students of Kansas.
"At last, if a school such as KU needs some
Branson said, "In order for the program to be effective, it's essential that we have some help with administrative costs."
administrative costs, they know how to go about making a case for them," he said.
The University of Kansas has a greater need for money to run the program. Branson said, because its program is bigger than those at KU and it has 70 students participate in the program at KU.
"We have a student aid office which has been very hard hit in terms of personnel and there's a lot of stress on that office," she said.
The House opposed using any money for
administrative costs and the Senate wanted no more than 4 percent used for administrative costs.
Tallman said ASK, which is the lobbying arm of student governments at state universities, had anticipated opposition to using money to run the program.
The new law won't affect the program until fiscal year 1989, which begins June 1, 1988, Tallman said. The work-study program's budget would be increased 2.5 percent next year under a bill for financing the Board of Regents institutions.
Schools may lose students because of fellowship cuts
By JOSEPH REBELLO
Staff writer
The elimination of one graduate fellowship program will hurt some professional schools' ability to compete with other universities in recruiting the best graduate students, school officials say.
The office of research, graduate studies and public service last week informed schools that had nominated candidates for the terminal master's fellowships that the fellowships no longer would be available.
Each of the six fellowships, which were open to graduate students in programs that do not offer a doctoral degree, would have carried a stipend of $1,100 a year for the duration of the programs.
The fellowship was open to master's degree candidates in programs such as urban planning, public administration, special education, journalism, health sciences administration and fine arts.
"It's going to make it more difficult for us to attract the top students," said W. Max Lucas, dean of architecture. "I think it's unfortunate. But there's nothing I can do except make my feelings known."
John Nalbandian, chairman of the department of public administration, said three of his students who had hoped to get the fellowship would have to look elsewhere for money.
Robert Bearse, associate vice chancellor for research and graduate studies, said, "We aren't in the process of cutting fat anymore. We've been cutting muscle and bone."
Del Shankel, acting executive vice chancellor, said Kansas University Endowment revenue had not increased to the degree anticipated. That left the University with fewer choices about what scholarships to finance.
Students who now are receiving the fellowship still will receive their stipends, he said.
This year National Merit Scholarship finalists are being offered a bonus of $1,300 if they come to KU, instead of the $200 offered in previous years, said Jerry Rogers, director of student financial aid.
Although Endowment Association revenues have grown this year, extra money already was committed for the National Merit Scholarship, he said.
That, Shankel said, has left the University with about $200,000 less than is normally available for schooling. She also says she can better enable in.scholarship.fonds last year.
Of all the University's scholarship programs, the terminal master's fellowship program benefited the least number of students, Shankel said. That made it low in the list of
priorities drawn up for allocating scholarship money.
"It was such a small amount that we didn't feel we were close to meeting the need for terminal master's fellowships. We weren't even close to funding it adequately." Shankel said.
Nalbandian said the program's elimination would not impair the public administration department's ability to recruit students. But the decision to cancel the fellowships was announced after students had been asked to apply for them, he said, and that has caused some difficulty.
Since students have to be admitted before they can apply for the fellowship, the department rushed its admissions process, he said.
"Where it really did hurt us was that we had to admit students before we had a full pool of candidates," he said. "We admitted students that we might not have admitted ideally."
Bearse said the decision to cancel the fellowships had been withheld until the University was sure that no funds could be raised to support them.
"It would have been nice if we could have told the departments ahead of time," he said. "But we could only make a decision a few weeks ago."
Independent study lets students learn at own pace, receive credit
Staff writer
By CHRISTOPHER HINES
Studying human sexuality under a tree this summer may be preferable to learning the same subject in a hot classroom, an administrator of KU's independent study program said yesterday.
"It's a very personal choice," said Josephine Lutz, executive assistant of independent study and continuing education. "Students can go at their own speed and fit the work into their schedule."
The Board of Regents offers a statewide program of independent study courses, including about 125 at the University of Kansas.
Students enrolled in the courses never enter a classroom, but instead mail their assignments to one of the independent study centers, where they are graded by a professor and then mailed back.
The program is a good option for students who wanted to take summer or fall courses that were closed because of budget cuts, Lutz said.
"We have a lot of students who take these courses to graduate." she said.
credit. Some of the courses include Human Reproductive Biology and Behavior, Unusual Weather, Math 101 and General Psychology.
"The thing I liked about it is that I could go at my own speed," said Donna Goodwin, a Lawrence resident who recently completed Math 101 through the program and now is enrolled in a calculus course. "I have two children and I couldn't have done it any other way."
Working on their own, students use textbooks and special study guides to complete the coursework. They are taught in class and earn the amount of
Students have nine months to finish the courses but some could complete a course in about 2 months if they organized their time well and were persistent. Lutz said.
"It all depends on the student's motivation," she said. "We used to allow them a year to finish the courses, sometimes with six-month extensions. But now with the ninemonth limit, students are doing a lot better."
Students take their tests at one of the independent study centers in Kansas or can make special arrangements with another school or university if they are out of state.
"We send the test to someone, usually a professor, who acts as a proxy," Lutz said. "They give the test and then send it back."
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences accepts up to 30 hours of
independent study credits toward a degree. However, only six hours of a student's last thirty hours may be done independently.
"I recommend that students check with their schools before enrolling." Lutz said. "Some require dean stamps and adviser approval."
Randy Jones, Kansas City, Mo,
sophomore, is about to finish a calculus course he started in January through the program. He said he had little trouble taking the course and would consider taking another through the program.
"I saved me a lot of time," he said
"You don't have to go to class and you can set up your own schedule for the tests. It's just a little expensive."
Most three-hour courses cost about $156, including the postage. Students also must pay for their textbooks.
Both Goodwin and Jones said their correspondence courses were about as difficult as class courses, but agreed that time management and persistence were very important.
"I'm getting about a 90 percent average on the homework I'm getting back," Goodwin said.
Anyone interested can pick up a catalog with an application enclosed at the Independent Study Center, across from the Adams Alumni Center.
VOIRSIPHER
Dan Walker, Kansas City, Mo., graduate student, displays two posters in an art show sponsored by the American Institute of Architecture Students. The exhibit features KU architecture students' work and continues through Friday at Marvin Hall.
Amy Rhoads/KANSAN
Architecture students display their artwork
Staff writer
By TIM HAMILTON
The American Institute of Architecture Students' annual art show opened yesterday in the Jury Room at Marvin Hall.
On display through Friday are more than 50 pieces of architecture students' work done outside of the school's classes. The artwork includes pottery, paintings, drawings and photographs.
"It's a great opportunity for students to show each other work that they normally would not be able to see," Thesis said. "It shows the wide range of expression that goes on."
Sharon Sears, Liberty, Mo. senior, and president of the KU chapter of AIAS, said the show allowed students to get away from the technical drawings and presentations they were used to.
"Architecture is both artistic and scientific." Sears said. "This is the artistic side you're seeing now. These are projects done outside of class to help with design."
Kris Dabner, St. Charles, Mo. freshman in architecture and co-coordinator of the show, said the students a chance to share ideas.
"We just basically started to show art work of students because a lot of architecture students take fine arts classes." Dabner said, "It's a chance to show off work and see what everyone else is doing."
Scott Hazelitt, a Topeka senior who is displaying some of his photography, said he thought the show was a good way to get students involved in the school's activities.
"A lot of things we've done are just attempts to get something going on in the school," Hazelitz said. "We've worked with the work that got put up."
But, Hazehlit said, participation in the show might have been limited because its timing concerns may detects due at the end of the semester.
Dabner said that the show was organized solely by students but that faculty supported it and engaged students to enter their work.
"We got a lot of help from faculty," Sears said.
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Wednesday, April 22, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Releasing a sigh of relief
The fate of the University of Kansas' efforts to win the approval of a favorable fee release from the Kansas Legislature has had enough highs and lows to make a person dizzy. But the roller-coaster ride through the statehouse finally seems to be coming to an end.
To refresh your memory, the University generated $2.2 million more than expected because of increased enrollment. The Board of Regents asked the Legislature to return $1.2 million of this amount to the University. Since then, the governor has recommended a release of 75 percent of the Regents request, the House wanted to release only 50 percent, but the Senate finally supported the 75 percent release.
If you have your breath back now, we can continue: A joint committee wheeled and dealed, and came out supporting Gov. Hayden's original 75
percent release recommendation. When the House and Senate return from their recess, they are expected to pass the release and send it to the governor.
But this is only the Reader's Digest version of the fee release negotiations. The full story, including some of the threats and proposals, would be too voluminous to handle here.
It is nice that the University most likely will receive a nice check for $953,000 out of the extra $3.2 million originally generated. But it would have been nicer if the University were not made to suffer for its popularity, or if it could have received the money before the end of the regular school year.
Now that the end is in sight, we can breathe a sigh of relief that the outcome wasn't any worse, and hope the University won't have to go through this mess again.
Computing the benefits
An offer by KU's Computing Services possibly can make computers more accessible to students and faculty at the University.
Computing Services is offering 13 Macintosh Plus microcomputers and a laser printer to campus organizations whose members could benefit from the computers. These computers have the software needed for word processing, graphics and illustration to publish newsletters, brochures and other publications.
No restrictions will be put on the use of the computers, said Herb Harris, director of academic user services at the center. However, he said he
hoped that the computers would not be used for secretarial purposes in organizations that were interested in obtaining them.
No deadline for applications for the computers has been set. Also, organizations can apply for more than one computer.
Other campus organizations should consider applying for a computer. There are a limited amount of places on campus where computer use is available, such as the Computer Center and some residence halls. Many students and faculty use computers. Making them more available for campus use is a good idea.
Virtue at what price?
"Honk if Gary Hart owes you money."
Across the country, this proposal is being slapped on the bumpers of thousands of cars, the owners of which have a bone to pick with Gary Hart. Being so close to Colorado, Hart's home state, it is surprising that we Kansans can't hear the sound of car horns rising from the Rocky Mountain state as drivers signal that they too are victims of Hart's whirlwind campaign for president.
Gary Hart is on the campaign trail again. Though his campaign oratory has
At one point in 1985, Hart's campaign debt stood at $4.7 million. Because most of his creditors have been small businesses, thousands of ordinary, non-string-pulling citizens have spent years in legal action to settle suit — usually coming up on the short end of the deal. His debt since has been reduced to $1.6 million, but his problems are far from over.
changed significantly as the front-runner for the Democratic nomination, his fund-raising tactics have not. Hart still refuses to accept any money from political-action committees.
Virtuous? He seems to think so. But rejecting special-interest influence at the expense of thousands of people who had put their trust in his campaign makes one wonder how accurately Hart has assessed virtue during the past few years.
Perhaps Hart should not be given such a hard time about these debts. Political campaigns are not renowned for scrupulous debt repayments. And besides, U.S. citizens have endured president guilty of worse offenses — blatant corruption, subversion of the constitution, ignoring their job duties. But, willingly closing our eyes to the disparities of campaign ethics, we should express no surprise at what they might do once they're in office.
News staff
News staff
Frank Hansel...Editor
Jennifer Benjamin...Managing editor
Juli Warren...News editor
Brian Kaberline...Editorial editor
Sandra Engelland...Campus editor
Mark Silbert...Sports editor
Diane Dualmeier...Photo editor
Bill Skeet...Graphics editor
Tom Eblen...General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Lisa Wemens...Business manager
Bonnie Hardy...Ad director
Denise Stephens...Retail sales manager
Kelly Scherer...Campus sales manager
Duncan Calhoun...Marketing manager
Lori Coppole...Classified manager
Jennifer Lumanski...Production manager
David Nixon...National sales manager
Jeanne Hines...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 a university or college, include that information as well.
Guest shots should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The writer will be photographed
Opinions
The Kansan reserves the right reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Fint Hall.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stairwater Fitt, Hall Law, Kanon, 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and on Wednesday, during the summer session. Second-class postage paid in Douglas County, Kanon, 66044. Subscriptions by mail are $40 per year in Douglas County and a $50 per county. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student activity fees.
POSTMASTER Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118
Str "fer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045
Marine baiting new international pastime
Soccer? Wrong! While soccer may be played in most countries, its popularity is nowhere near that of marine batting. With the recent scandal in Moscow, I thought I'd try to start one on this side of the ocean as well, by relating my experiences as a first-team marine baiter.
Quick, what's the most popular game in the world?
Glenn Shirtliffe
PARKER
Guest Shot
I was first introduced to the major-league sport of marine baiting as an undergrad at Carleton University in Ottawa, Canada. Ottawa happens to be my home. It also happens to be the capital of Canada, which probably explains why so many embassies, consulates and missions are strewn about the city.
Hanging out, as I did at the time,
with sons and daughters of upwardly
mobile diplomats and External Affairs office jockeys, I tended to be fairly well connected to the sons-and-daughters-of the diplomatic corps party circuit, the "DIPs" circuit. Jeee, could these kids party! Imagine having unlimited access to tax- and duty-free booze and butts, not to mention high grade controlled substances imported via diplomatic pouches. . . . You get the idea, eh?
Now put these DIPs in a red Porsche with red diplomatic license plates and red diplomatic passports and you've got yourself the perfect party vehicle. You can do anything you bloody well please — park anywhere, anytime; find out what the top end of a 444 really is; beerte any constable stupid enough to pull you over. Diplomatic immunity can be a real blast, as long as you don't main or kill anyone too important!
Anyways, marine baiting is one of the favorite pastimes of DIPS. To play a meaningful game, you need at least one peach-fuzzed U.S. Embassy Marine. (Bonus points for farm boys from Kansas, Iowa or
Step 1: An innocent marine is enticed to a DIPs party, usually by the most buxom member of the DIPs corps.
Wyoming; deduct points for California, they're too easy.
Once the marine is semi-conscious, it's probe and prod time. What's the ambassador's wife really like? Who're the intelligence officers? This stage can last anywhere from 20 minutes to two days, depending on the marine.
The tactics of marine baiting include spiking beers with grain alcohol ("Canadian beer is supposed to taste that way, Dude!!"), or insulting the honor of the Marine Corps, then challenging him to defend his honor by chugging Canadian Club with you (He gets the overproof bottle, you take the watered-down bottle.)
Step 2: Once the unsuspecting corporal arrives, there are no rules. The objective is to get the marine so messed up that he misses up that nice uniform that Uncle Sam bought him.
fected techniques that closely approximate the top-secret Canadian protocols.
I'd like to tell you about other tactics, but I'm bound by national security — a friend's dad taught me these techniques straight from the Canadian Security Intelligence Service handbook. No big deal though, most fraternities at KU have per-
Once the marine is rendered unconscious, the fun really begins. I have unnamed friends with Polaroids of marines with Canadian flags protracting from every orifice from every flag could possibly provoke it. Ensure you make your salute and start singing our national anthem, "Oh Canada," . . .
My sister once baited three Marines in one night with four Lowenbraus; a record that only recently was broken by operatives in another northern capital on the other side of the North Pole.
While marine baiting can be plenty of fun, it pales in comparison to the all-star sport of attache trashing. But that's another story . . .
BOZO
THE CLOWN
MAGIC
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Dear Mr. President—
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Deciding the news
This is in response to Paul Fambriani's letter in the April 17 Kansan concerning racism against Arabs. First, what type of censorship is he trying to advocate with his assimine statement, "What does he (Abu-Ali) know about when to put certain articles in the newspaper?" I would like to know why Fambriani feels he has total authority on the matter. He is suggesting that the Kansan publish only those articles that do not allow cause for debate?
Secondly, let me point out to Fambrini that what he so unknowingly termed as "Arab marches" was ONE march, sponsored by the General Union of Palestinian Students to commemorate "Land Day," April 9. I was there and noted several photos being taken by Kansan staff, yet none were ever published and the publicity the march did receive was minimal. But I noticed that several lines were dedicated to the remarks of someone, Daveen Litwin, affiliated with Hillel. Are the Palestinians ever asked their opinions on matters regarding the Jews?
I also sense that Fambrini is insinuating that the only time Arabs or Palestinians are involved in campus activities is when they are involved in "protests," not silent, peaceful marches as I witnessed on April 9.
The General Union of Palestinian Students sponsored a quite informative lecture on the Palestine problem on April 2, but I never saw any coverage of the event in the Kansan.
Furthermore, I believe Abu-Ali's statement regarding Hitler and the
Jews was not meant to show insensitivity to the Jews of the Hitler regime. I think it was meant to ask that the American people show regard for what is still going on in the Middle East TODAY, while still acknowledging the events that sparked this furor 40 years ago.
Zeta Mattioni Tulsa, Okla., junior
Judge skills, not sex
I would like to respond to the letter to the editor by Brian Courtney, which appeared in the April 16 issue of the Kapsan.
If privacy seems to be the issue, then by your reasoning, no reporter, regardless of sex, should be allowed to talk about yourself. You have had time to shower and dress.
According to the American Heritage dictionary, privacy is defined as "the condition of being secluded or isolated from others."
Male athletes may be embarrassed by the presence of female reporters, but that still does not excuse the actions of athletes such as Dave Kingman of the Oakland A's when he sent a mouse labeled "Sue" to the female reporter covering the team. That is plain harassment and an action that is demonstrative of immaturity.
What athletics seem to forget is that the reporter, male or female, is there to cover an event. They are there for the story, not the view.
It should not be the sex of the reporter that is debated, but the quality of his or her writing. Women should not be getting respect for
entering a previously male-dominated field, but instead for the quality of their writing and how well they report an event.
We do not give respect to doctors and surgeons because they are male or female, but because they are good at what they do and for the quality of medical care they give. There was a time when that was not the case, when female doctors were respected simply for being female. Fortunately, that time has passed. Hopefully, with more time, female reporters will also be respected for what they do.
And maybe readers of the Kansan and other newspapers will read sports stories for what they say, not for what sex the reporter is. But if the ideas of Courtney are any evidence of how the sentiment runs, there is a lot to be hoped for.
Elaine Sung Rochester, N.Y., freshman
In need of education
Neil Brown, in his letter of April 16, claims that, according to the Bible, homosexuality "has always been and will continue to be Wrong." He also said he thought that "if one refuses to accept certain portions of the Scriptures, he or she does not accept the Bible at all." If you condemn homosexual acts because of what the Bible says in Leviticus 20.13, then you must obey all the laws in Leviticus, including not eating unclean animals (Leviticus 20.25) and not trimming a beard (Leviticus 19.27).
I suggest you read your Bible a little more closely. In the New Testament. Jesus makes it clear that we are to love our neighbor (Luke 10:25-37). He also tells us not to judge others (Matthew 7:1-6). So I suggest that you stop condemning homosexuals and educate yourself about homosexuality so that you don't bear false witness against them (Exodus 20:16, Matthew 19:18).
Steven Predmore
Search for truths
In response to Paul Ahlensi 'letter that appeared in the Kansan on April 14, I have listed several more facts from the word of God in support of Joe Vusich's April 6 letter.
In your letter, you said Paul was relating his views of Christ's teachin' to us.
1) 2 Peter 1:20-21 (NASB) "But know this first of all, that no prophecy of Scripture is a matter of one's own interpretation, for no prophecy ever was made by an act of human will, but men moved by the Holy Spirit spoke from God."
2) 2 Timothy 3:16 (NASB) "All Scripture is inspired by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, for training in righteousness;"
I'll agree with you, Mr. Ahlenius,
that parts of scripture can and are
used out of context in ways that lead
people into making misconceptions.
Therefore, I urge you to continue to
search the Scriptures and discover
for yourself the truths that the Bible holds.
Steve Phillips
Prairie Village sophomore
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday. April 22,1987
5
Area hotels full for graduation
By PEGGY O'BRIEN
Staff writer
One of the first challenges the class of 1987 will face may be finding accommodations for relatives and friends coming to Lawrence for commencement.
Every hotel, motel, inn, and bed and breakfast establishment in Lawrence is booked for the weekend of graduation. May 15-17, and waiting lists are long. Hotel managers and desk clerks are recommending Topeka and Kansas City area hotels to people still seeking accommodations.
"I wish I had 100 more rooms." said Inesa Leha, manager of the witchcraft school.
Chalmers, the lawmaker.
Lehew, who doesn't expect many cancellations, said that people usually didn't cancel their reservations, they just didn't show up by 6 p.m., the deadline for reservation guarantees.
Many local hotel managers and desk clerks said their hotels had been booked since January.
The Holiday Inn Holdome, 200 McDonald Drive, is full for graduation weekend and has a waiting list of 30 to 40 names. Cynthia Glenn, reservationist at the Holidome, said a few cancellations might occur.
Dennis Shaffer, manager of the Econo Lodge, 297 W. Sixth St., said he was suggesting Topeka to customers.
He said that Econo Lodge employees weren't keeping a waiting list and
that they would offer the canceled
reservations on a first-come, first-
serve basis. The Econo Lodge has been booked for that weekend for four months, he said.
Jacqui Ainlay, Kailua, Hawaii,
senior, she said she up looked up
November for a Lawrence hotel
room for her father. Ainlay said she
checked three hotels and found each
one completely booked. She said her
father, who is coming from Hawaii,
probably would stay in Kansas City.
Laurie Kahrs, desk clerk at the Eldridge House, said the few cancellations the hotel had were filled immediately by names on a waiting list.
The Eldridge House, Seventh and Massachusetts streets, and Halcyon House Bed and Breakfast, 1000 Ohio St.. also are full for the weekend.
Esther Wolfe, co-owner of Halcyon House, said her establishment was booked for graduation through 1990. She said that although she kept a waiting list, she doubted she would have any cancellations.
Peter Johanson, manager of the Holiday Inn West in Topeka, said excess out-of-town guests in Lawrence definitely would filter over to Topeka.
"It will be a better weekend than we'd normally experience," Johanson said.
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Student engineers win honors
Two KU engineering students recently won honors in a student paper contest sponsored by the Society of Petroleum Engineers.
Eric Evans, Plains senior in petroleum engineering, placed third out of eight in the undergraduate competition. His work included "Computer Aided Design of Fracture Treatments in Gas Reservoirs."
Shahab Hejri, Rafsanjan, Iran, graduate student, placed third out of eight in the graduate division. Hejri's paper was titled "Development of Correlations to Predict Flocon 4800 Biopolymer Mobility in Porous Media."
The contest took place April 10 at the University of Kansas and was open to all schools in the Rocky Mountain-Mid-Countinent region. Schools in the region include the universities of Oklahoma, Wyoming, Missouri-Rolla and Tulsa, and Montana Tech and Oklahoma State.
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6
Wednesday, April 22, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Now listen up! We're going to do this alphabetically!
damn
4.22 xxmon © 1987 Universal Press Syndicate
seemed." he said.
Continued from p. 1
Blood
Sanders said he used the spectrophotometric method of measuring blood-alcohol content. That method involves measuring how the blood absorbs a certain wavelength of light. Its allowable error is 032. Sanders said.
The method used at SmithKline is gas chromatography, a SmithKline spokesman said. It involves measuring the amount of alcohol in the sample of air contained in the blood vial, rather than in the blood.
A KBI spokesman refused to specify the KBI's method of blood-alcohol analysis because of the possibility of a lawsuit.
Morris Faiman, professor of pharmacology and toxicology, said that a 150-pound male, to reach a 10 percent blood-alcohol level, would have to drink slightly more than four 3.2 beers and absorb all the alcohol, about nine grams a beer.
McDevitt weighed about 150 pounds, his father said.
On Campus
The Midwest Symposium on Public Policy is scheduled all day today at the Adams Alumni Center.
"What is Semiotics?" a University Forum, is scheduled for 11:40 a.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
A Naval ROTC meeting for those interested in becoming a nuclear trained officer on a submarine fleet on August 30 p.m. at 427 Summerfield Hall.
"El Tiempo en el Teatro," a lecture by Luís Iglies, professor of Spanish literature at the University of Santiago de Compostela in Spain,
is scheduled for 4 p.m. today at the Kansas Union.
Campus Christians are scheduled to have a fellowship meeting at 6:30 p.m. today in the Northeast Conference Room at the Burge Union.
- The KU Dr. Who Appreciation Society is scheduled to meet at 7 p.m. today in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union.
Krakow and Quincy are each to pay half.
Senate
Continued from p. 1
Sue Glatter, chairman of the board, said, "I think the decision was fair. Yes, the penalty was an option, but I don't want to do the facts merit such a penalty?"
Kevin Fossland, who ran for a Bottom Line off-campus seat and lost, said, "It comes down to a moral question. I mean, was it the posters that won them the election? I don't think so."
But some senators questioned the board's decision. Section 6.7.5 of the Senate rules states that any candidate or coalition that exceeds its budget "shall forfeit their seats." But another section, 6.7.9, states that the board "may" revoke all the coalition's seats.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said that although he had not reviewed the specific regulations, he was in favor of a rule that allowed the board to make a decision based on the circumstances of the case.
"If you put it in absolute terms then you might as well let a computer decide," he said. "I don't think that best decisions are made that way."
Some senators said the board chose the less severe punishment because
it was biased against the First Class coalition.
Phillip Duff, Synchronicity presidential candidate, said, "If First Class had done this, they would have lost every senator they had, so that reflects on the impartiality of the review board.
"If you can pay the price, you can be in. If I pay two grand, can I be president?"
But Krakow said, "I think a $300 fine is not indicative of a board that's too strong."
Kramer, of First Class, said that the elections committee should have investigated Bottom Line's audit more thoroughly and found the poster's discount before votes had been totaled.
"The elections committee is completely to blame for not getting rid of them," he said. "It should have happened, but it didn't."
Kramer said that he and Jeff Mullins, First Class presidential candidate, had not yet decided whether he should accept the University Judicial Review Board.
Krakow and Quincy have until the first day of fall classes, Aug. 24, to pay the $156.42. The other $150 fine must be paid by the end of the fiscal year, June 30.
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Announcing
Spring Picnic/ Meeting
When: Sat., April 25th at 3:30 p.m. Where: Pointe
When: Sat., April 25th at 3:30 p.m.
Where: Broken Arrow Park 31st and Louisiana
Welcome to those interested in joining the KU Amateur Radio Club. Speak with our members about FCC licencing and new frequency allocations. Bring softball gear! Call J.D. at 843-7869 for information
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SENIOR COOKOUT!
Here's your chance (it may be your only chance) to order a FREE burger cooked by KU's deans — exclusively for the senior class.
The Adams Alumni Center's north terrace and parking lot will be cleared so that seniors can party with FREE burgers, FREE beverages. good tunes and good times - all served with gusto!
You'll also want to tour inside of the Adams Alumni Center, check out the records system that will follow you the rest of your natural life and consider the many benefits of alumni membership at a discount for seniors.
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Tonight, 5:30-8:00 p.m. Adams Alumni Center • 1266 Oread Avenue
Cosponsored for the Class of 1987 by the KU Alumni Association and the Student Alumni Association
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday. April 22, 1987
Commission takes no action on mall
Information on contract with JVJ, status of Urban Renewal Agency needed
By TODD COHEN
Staff writer
Amid calls for quick action, the Lawrence City Commission last night took no action on a proposed 600-block downtown mall that was rejected by voters in the April 7 city elections.
Instead, after almost two hours of discussion, commissioners gave City Manager Buford Watson and his staff a warning about their next week is commission meeting.
New mayor Mike Amyx said the commission needed more information before it could act on the mail, specifically the city's contract with the Urban Renewal Agency or status of the Urban Renewal Agency, a mall-related citizen committee.
In the April 7 election, voters rejected the mail by a 3-to-1 margin on a three-question referendum.
Although the referendum was nonbinding, or advisory, the commissioners have said they will abide by the vote and stop the 3-year-old project.
The commissioners said last night that the city probably should void its developer-of-record contract with Jacobs, Visconsi & Jacobs of Cleveland before it takes any action about future downtown development.
But Watson said he didn't know how the city could void the agreement and that he needed more time to seek legal advice. The contract, signed in 1983, gave JVJ an exclusive right to shop at a downtown mall in the 600 block.
Commissioner Bob Schumm said, "If the commission wants to move in a different direction than the 600-block proposal, then the city needs to dissolve this contract."
Commissioners were scheduled to discuss the future of the URA, a five-member committee created by the city to collect citizen comment and help JVJ develop the 600-block mall.
In a letter to commissioners, Joel Jacobs, URA chairman, asked them to let the URA continue meeting and working on downtown development. When the commission created the 600-block proposal, it took its work to the 600-block proposal.
The URA and its three subcommittees, which were to issue reports on the mail project next week, suspended meetings after the election.
But Commissioner Mike Rundle expressed doubt that the entire URA board thought as Jacobs did Pete Curran, a URA member, said the URA had not met and Jacobs had not consulted all members of the URA or the committees.
After discussing several options, ranging from disbanding the URA to changing its charter, commissioners decided to consider reviving the Downtown Improvement Committee, a citizen committee that worked with the city's first developer-of-record, Sizerel Realty of Louisiana.
In other action, commissioners:
■ Approved the site plan for construction of a movie theater in the 20th Street. The theater, when completed in late November, will have 1,405 seats and six screens.
In other action, commissioners:
■ Received the report of the Mayor's Study Committee on Drug Abuse, and voted to make the committee permanent. Commissioners also adopted Lawrence High School representative Diane Cook's request that KU and high school representatives he added to the committee.
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Look What They're Saying About Terry
"Nineteen eighty-six was a pivotal year for women cyclists. It was the year when riders, dealers and other manufacturers awoke to the fact that there is a better way to design a woman's bicycle—Terry's way."
BICYCLE Guide
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"'... Terry has influenced the cycling industry far beyond the scope of her production ...'
BICYCLING
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February 1987
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8
Wednesday, April 22, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Students
Continued from p. 1
faculty unions could change existing university governance, restrict student participation in teacher evaluations and lead to tuition increases.
"There is not enough hard evidence to either refute or support the commonly expressed fear that collective bargaining usually leads to tuition hikes, although it is relatively easy to demonstrate that the potential exists," the study said.
Collective bargaining leads to higher operational costs, which could lead to tuition increases, the study said.
Downing said, "If you have more rules and regulations to follow, you're going to have more paperwork."
But he said those operational costs wouldn't add to tuition costs.
"That's really kind of stretching
things in terms of cause and effect," he said.
Michael Foubert, graduate student senator, said a faculty union could add to tuition costs by increasing faculty salaries. But a faculty union probably wouldn't affect governance or most students, he said.
"It's been my experience that unions in general do not affect students in terms of the classroom," he said.
But a KU union could affect graduate students because it would exclude graduate teaching assistants, Foubert said.
In 1975, the Kansas Public Employee Relations Board decided that a faculty bargaining unit at KU could include graduate teaching assistants.
"There are a number of universities where teaching assistants are full and equal partners in unions," Foubert said. "I think the graduate executive obviously is watching with interest what is going on."
Two union organizers say a faculty wouldn't directly affect most students.
Robert Hohn, a professor of educational psychology and research president of the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors, said he couldn't yet draw conclusions about effects on students.
"I would hope they wouldn't be involved in the issues," he said. "Typically, they're not involved at other institutions."
Clifford Griffin, professor of history and an organizer for the Kansas National Education Association, said
a faculty union would help students indirectly by improving the quality of education, faculty morale and governance.
"But I don't know that it will have any direct effect on students," he said.
And Griffin said he thought that a faculty union would give students a stronger voice in governance, not a weaker one.
"It is true that the union is going to strengthen University governance, and the student representatives will very definitely share in that increased authority," he said.
AIDS Myth of the Week
Myth: "I avoid public restrooms in order to avoid AIDS"
Fact: AIDS is not spread in bathrooms, on door knobs, in laundromats, or by sharing towels, cosmetics or other personal items. AIDS is spread only by exchange of certain body fluids, specifically, infected blood and infected semen.
If you are sexually active, you are at risk for AIDS.
For information, call: Watkins Hospital 843-4455, ext.46
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 22, 1987
9
Housing sessions planned
By TODD COHEN Staff writer
Laws require fair housing, but discrimination against potential tenants still exists in Lawrence, the city's fair housing assistance program manager said yesterday.
"It's still happening in our city," said Arvilla Vickers, the manager. "Often you'll find people who'll very readily rent to blacks. But if that black man has a white girlfriend, they'll often discriminate.
"Fair housing refers to equal opportunity in housing."
To combat such problems and inform tenants and landlords of their rights and responsibilities, three "fair housing" workshops are being offered free tomorrow, in recognition of the national Fair Housing Month.
The workshops will be at 9 a.m. 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. at City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts street. Each workshop will last about two and a half hour.
Vickers said some seats still were available at the workshops, especially at the morning and afternoon sessions. People interested in attending should call the department at 841-7722, extension 314.
A panel of representatives from the Consumer Affairs Association, Lawrence Housing Authority, Douglas County Legal Aid Society, Kansas Commission on Civil Rights, the Lawrence Board of Realtors and several local financial institutions will answer questions.
"The point of the workshop is to train people who are entailed in taking part." Wickershaw, *Falkirk*.
Often, neither tenants nor land-ers are aware of housing laws, she said.
Landlords also are sometimes unaware of what financial or personal questions they can legally ask prospective tenants, Vickers said. And because tenants also are often unaware of those laws, abuses can take place.
"Many times, we don't hear from the student as much as we should. We don't understand."
"We really want the students to take a little time out of their busy schedules to get informed."
Mary Richesson, Lawrence Board of Realtors president, said, "I would say the fair housing situation in Lawrence is fairly equitable."
Richesson said local realtors subscribed to a national code of professional standards.
Stephan refutes charges
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Consistent with testimony he gave earlier this month, Attorney General Bob Stephan said yesterday that he did not attend a meeting at the Phelps Chartered law firm in March 1985 to negotiate a settlement with a woman suing him for alleged sexual harassment.
Stephan said he made similar remarks in a deposition April 14 in connection with a $5.2 million lawsuit brought by Marcia Tomson against Stephan and Topeka lawyer Bob W. Storey.
"I just wasn't there," Stephan said of the alleged meeting at the Phelps' offices. Tomson is represented by Topeka attorney Marge Phelps. "I've been advised by my attorney not to say anything outside. The deposit was just what it were. And there was a letter sent, I was never aware of it."
Stephan said he did not have a copy of the deposition and reiterated his earlier vow not to settle the case outside the courtroom.
"I wouldn't consider (a settlement) under any circumstances of any kind," Stephan said.
Tomson worked in the attorney general's office and was a partner at cleft before being fired.
She filed a $750,000 sexual harassment lawsuit against Stephan in December 1982, accusing him of lewd kissing, pinching, patting and sexual advances on the job. In her sword deposition, Tomson also accused Stephan sexually propositioning her daughter and friends of her daughter.
Stephan has steadfastly denied her allegations.
Stephan signed a secret, out-of-court settlement with Tomson and the lawsuit was dismissed March 19, 1965. The confidential settlement created a great deal of negative publicity and eventually led Stephan to drop plans to run for governor in 1986 when it was revealed the settlement included a $24,000 cash payment to Tomson.
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10
Wednesday, April 22, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Crash victim left bills, questions
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Saddled with debt, relatives of a U.S. pilot killed last year in Nicaragua said yesterday that they had started legal action to determine who should pay bills he incurred while supplying the contraxs.
"The hurt of his death is just now beginning to be felt," said Wallace Blaine Sawyer Sr. in a telephone call from his home in Magnolia, Ark.
His son, Wallace Blaine Sawyer Jr., died Oct. 5 when a cargo plane loaded with guns, ammunition and
other supplies for the contras was shot down in southern Nicaragua.
After the crash, the pilot's widow, Kasanne, and her 4-year-old son were paid by his private life insurer, but they hadn't received any settlement from his unknown employer, the elder Sawyer said.
Sawyer had not yet determined who hired his son to fly weapons to the contras and who is responsible for the pilot's credit card bill of more than $3,500 in motels and other businesses in Central America, he said.
Winslow Drummond, the Sawyers' attorney, said he had asked to have a court administrator appointed to handle matters for the estate. Creditors would have 90 days to file claims.
two other men, U.S. citizen William J. Cooper and a Nicaraguan, died along with the 41-year-old Sawyer. Eugene Hasenfus, 45, of Marinette, Wis., was captured, but later released.
Hasfenus said he was hired by the Pennsylvania-based Corporate Air Services, an affiliate of Southern Air.
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STUDENTS
LEAVING FOR THE SUMMER?
If you are leaving for the summer, you must return your converter to Sunflower Cablevision at 644 New Hampshire. Billing charges will not be stopped until all equipment is returned.
If you don't have equipment, place a disconnect order by calling 841-2100. Charges will stop on the day the call is placed.
Thank you for letting us serve you. We hope to see you in the fall.
SUNFLOWER CABLEVISION 644 New Hampshire 841-2100
---
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all proceeds benefit the Community Children's Center.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 22, 1987
Sports
11
Clemens in old form as Boston shuts out Royals
The Associated Press
BOSTON — Roger Clemens says he isn't all the way back yet. After all, his no-hitter lasted only six innings last night.
"When it's meant to be, it'll happen," he said after allowing three hits and five base runners as the Kansas City Royals trounced the Kansas City Royals 8-0.
Clemens, who lost his first two decisions after missing all of spring training in a contract dispute, picked up his first victory of the season. He won his first 14 decisions last year and finished 24-4.
"This is like my third time out in spring training," said Clemens, last year's American League Most Valuable player and Cy Young Award winner. 'I'm getting there, I don't
Hearn put on disabled list
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo - Catcher Ed Ehnear, acquired in a spring trade with the New York Mets, was placed on the 15-day disabled list yesterday by the Kansas City Royals.
Hearn, who was batting .308 in five games, irritated a bursitis condition in his right shoulder and was placed on the disabled list
retroactive to Sunday.
The Royals recalled third baseman Bill Pecota, who was batting 231 with one home run and one RBI for the Royals' minor league club at Ormaa. Pecota may get some playing time at third base because regular third baseman George Brett also was placed on the 15-day disabled list Monday with torn cartilage in his right rib cage.
know when I'm going to be there."
"If he had been at spring training
he'd probably be 3-0 right now." said Royals manager Billy Gardner.
A sub-par Clemens, who had three two-hitters last season, was more than the Royals could handle as the fastball pitcher threw more off-speed pitches than he usually does.
"You don't expect him to throw the curveball and change-ups," Kansas City's Willie Wilson said. "What irritated everybody was they had an 8-0 lead, and he still threw curveballs."
It was the third time in four games the Royals had been shut out, losing a doubleheader Sunday in New York, 5-0 and 1-0.
Clemens, who struck out six and walked one, said that "from the sixth
This is like my third time out in spring training.I'm getting there.I don't know when I'm going to be there.'
Roger Clemens Boston pitcher
inning, I wanted to make good pitches, see how long I could string it out, but I was tiring quick."
He retired 16 consecutive batters before Frank White got the Royals' first hit, a clean single to short center leading off the seventh inning, on a forkball. Danny Tartabull followed with a single to left on another forkball, but Clemens retired the next three batters.
Bill Buckner, with a pair of two-run singles, and Dwight Evans, who homered and drove in four runs, provided the offense for Clemens, 1-2. Clemens struck out six and walked one.
KU Rugby Club to play in Dallas
By DAVID BOYCE
Rick Anderson, 0-1, took the loss.
Staff writer
The KU rugby team practiced from 6 p.m. until dark yesterday as a cool wind blew across Shenk Complex in about 60-degree weather.
The team went through its final practice at Shenk, 23rd and Iowa streets, before it leaves for Dallas tomorrow to compete in the Western National Championship during the weekend.
Twenty-five players from KU's club and varsity teams will send one squad to the eight team, single-elimination championship.
"Primarily, we were fine tuning and working with our 25-man roster." said Kansas coach Bill Mills.
The rugby team qualified for the championship by beating the Kansas City Blues 16-3 earlier this month and winning its division of the Heart of America Union with a 5-0 record. Saturday, the club team beat the Omaha Goat at Nebraska 12-3.
Kansas, which did not qualify for the championship last year, is seeded third in this year's tournament behind Dallas and Denver.
"It will take a terrific effort from everyone to get to the finals," Mills said.
The team will play Los Alamos from San Antonio, Texas, Friday in the first round. To finish in the final four, Kansas also must get by the Denver Barbarians and the Dallas Harleuins.
The National Championship will be held May 10 at Boulder, Colo.
The team has been to the conference championship several times but has qualified for the championship game only once. Mills said he hoped to make a return trip to the finals this weekend.
After 10 minutes of calisthenics, which started about 6 p.m., the team started running drills. It then divided to work on specific skills.
The team worked out at three stations: kicking, offense-defense
drills and the scrum down.
Scrum down is when three players go against another three players with two players behind the three and one behind the two.
Once the two teams lock in this position, the ball is thrown in the middle, and the front three players try to kick the ball backward to their teammates.
The scrum down players were practicing on a football-type training sled. Three players push the sled while another throws the ball in the middle.
At the second station, players worked on offensive and defensive moves.
"This drill works on strength and controlling the ball," said Scott Stites, a front-line player.
And at the third, the team's lone kickers practiced conversion kicks.
Paul King, who kicks most of the conversions, said a good kicker was a valuable asset to the team.
"I am pleased with my performance, and I am hitting about 70 percent," he said.
Unlike football, where conversions are almost automatic. King said many conversions after tries were not.
Tries are scored when a player reaches the end zone and places the ball on the end zone line.
King said the goal was to score in the middle of the field because that makes for an easier conversion kick.
When the try is scored in the corner of the end zone, the kicker must then kick from that corner angle sometimes forty feet out.
No tees are used. The kicker digs a small hole in the ground and kicks the misshapen football over a field goal.
After a try, the team that scores receives the ball again.
MARIO
Danny Ray/KANSAN
Matt O'Donnell, Leawood junior, practices penalty kicks with the KU Rugby Club. The team practiced yesterday at Schenk Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets, in preparation for a tournament this weekend in Dallas.
Late homer lifts Cubs, halts Cardinals win streak
The Associated Press
Davis' homer was his third of the year.
ST. LOUIS — Jody Davis homered in the ninth inning and gave the Chicago Cubs a 5-4 rain-interrupted triumph last night over St. Louis, snapping the Cardinals' three-game winning streak.
Lee Smith pitched the bottom of the ninth for the Cubs and gained his second save.
Vince Coleman, who had been in a 1-for-13 slump, singled home Steve Lake and Jose Oquendo in the tenth and pulled St. Louis into a 4-7 tie.
National League
The blow to left-center off Bill Dawley, 0-1, handed the victory to Chicago reliever Dickie Noles, 1-1.
Cubs starter Steve Trout through the first six innings.
The Cards were held to five hits by
Mets 9. Pirates 6
PITTSBURGH — Rafael Santana's three-run homer powered a six-run New York fourth inning, and the New York team defeated the Pittsburgh Pirates 9-6.
Bob Ojeda, 2-2, improved his career record against Pittsburgh to 6-0, retiring 13 consecutive batters at one point before being lifted during
the pirates' four-run eighth inning. The win ended the Mets' four-game losing streak.
Astros 7, Braves 6
HOUSTON — Denny Walling's bases-loaded single drove in the winning run and capped a four-run ninth-inning rally as the Houston Astros defeated the Atlanta Braves 7-6 last night.
cut Houston's deficit to 6-4. After a pair of strikeouts, Bill Doran walked, bringing on Gene Garber in relief of Paul Assmacher.
Padres 3. Reds 2
Alan Ashby led the ninth for Houston with a solo home run, which
SAN DIEGO — Garry Templeton's two-out single drive home Steve Garvey with the winning run in the eighth inning as the San Diego Padres defeated the Cincinnati Reds 3-2 last night.
The Associated Press
Streak ends for Brewers
CHICAGO — The Milwaukee Brewers' record-tying 13-game winning streak from the start of the season ended last night when they lost to the Chicago White Sox 7-1.
Starter Joel Davis, with relief help from Jim Winn, thwarted Milwaukee's bid for a major-league record 14-0 start. Donnie Hill and Greg Walker honored for Chicago.
American League
The Brewers set the American League record for the best start when they won No. 12 Sunday with a five-run rally in the ninth inning for a 6-4 victory over Texas. They matched the major-league record of 13 straight set by Atlanta in 1982 by rallying Monday night to beat Chicago 5-4. In all, the Brewers won eight of the 13 games by coming from behind.
But it was not another come-from-behind night for Milwaukee, which trailed 5-0 after three innings.
The White Sox jumped on rookie Mark Ciarki, 1-1, for five runs in the first three innings and Davis, 1-1, for nine. The Brewers hit before departing in the sixth
The Brewers hit into three double plays and did not threaten until the eighth, when Jim Gantner doubled and scored on Paul Molitor's single.
Yankees 3. Tigers 1
NEW YORK — Joe Niekro won the 214th game of his career, allowing only two singles before he was knocked out of the game by a line drive off his left wrist in the seventh inning, and Dan Pasqua hit his first home run of the season as the New York Yankees won their eighth straight game last night, defeating the Detroit Tigers 3-1.
Niekro, 1-1, a 42-year-old knuckleballer, walked four and struck out two in only his second appearance of the season. But he left, flexing his wrist, after Johnny Grubb's smash went for an infiltrate to start the seventh. The injury was not thought to be serious.
Indians 5. Blue Jays 0
CLEVELAND — Core Snyder and Pat Tabler hit two-run homers and Tom Candiotti, the American League leader in competitions a year ago, pitched a six-hitter for his first complete game of 1987 yesterday as the Cleveland Indians beat the Toronto Blue Jays 5-0.
The victory was the Indians' third in the last four games, after an eight-game losing streak.
See AMERICAN, p. 12, col. 1
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For example, while the Leading Edge Model 'D' comes complete with a high resolution monochrome monitor, the same model includes graphics and color graphics outputs, parallels and serial ports, a dual-speed 8088 2-microprocessor and word processing software with Spelling software with the IBM PC does not. Not even one.
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Cool Down Your Spring Fever at the Madhatter
Wednesday - "Cheap Drink Night"
"Cheap Drink Night"
$1.50 Beers and Shots
$1.25 Well Drinks (Highballs)
$3.00 Long Island Teas
The Madhatter 8 until? 700 New Hampshire 842-9402
Thursday - "The Usual"
MAD HATTER
12
Wednesday, April 22, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
American
Twins 6, Mariners 1
MINNEAPOLIS — Les Straker, a veteran of 10 minor-league seasons, allowed only three hits over seven shutout innings in his second major-league start as the Minnesota Twins beat the Seattle Mariners 6-1 last night.
Tom Brunansky hit a three-run home run to support Straker, 1-0.
Rangers 6, Orioles 4
ARLINGTON, Texas — Ruben Sierra, Larry Parrish and Scott
Fletcher hit home runs as the Texas Rangers broke a nine-game losing streak last night with a 6-4 victory over the Baltimore Orioles.
Sierra's first home run of the season was a three-run shot in the first inning off Mike Flanagan, 0-2. Parrish hit a solo homer, his third, in the third for a 5-3 lead, and Fletcher opened the eighth with his first home run.
Charlie Hough, -1,1. gave up 10 hits in his first complete game.
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- Notarization of legal documents
Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE!
Legal Services for Students
- Advice on most legal matters
- Preparation & review of legal documents
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8:30 to 5:00 Mon, thru Friday
148 Burge (Satellite) Unit 884-5665
Mon.-Thurs. - 11a.m.-2a.m
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MISSOURI BEACH SUMMER
- Leases being accepted for next Fall
842-1212
- Large, brand new, one bed room apts ($345)
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Still available! Close to pool, hot tubs, & laundry
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- Substantial closet space
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Sign a 12 month lease for a one bed room apartment (good from 4-19-87 through 4-30-87) and receive your last month's rent FREE. Not valid with any other offer or promotion.
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842-5111
PIZZA PIZZA 842-0600 PIZZA PIZZA DELIVERED
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CARLIS W. FLORENCE
1987
1950 to 1987! We've been in business for 37 years serving the men of KD and Lawrence. And, just as the city and the university have grown and prospered, so, thankfully, we have. We greatly enjoy our daily efforts in the rag business just as we did when we started 37 years ago. We thank all of you for the support you we've given us over the years. Please stop in the shop and help us celebrate.
I'll just put the image here.
Let me re-read. It says "and I will just put the image here."
Come In and Celebrate Our 37th Anniversary
- CASUAL SLACKS & pleated jeans $7.50 off
- spring & year 'round SUITS 10% to 33% off
- woven cotton SPORT SHIRTS 20% off
- DRESS TROUSERS 25% off
- light weight SPORT COATS 10% to 33% off
- spring cotton SWEATERS 20% off
- spring WINDBREAKERS 20% off
- entire stock of SHORTS 20% off
- Gant short sleeve RUGBYS $29.99 each
WHITENIGHT'S
the men's shop • 839 massachusetts • lawrence, kansas 66044 • 843-5755
hours:
Mon-Sat 9:30-5:30
Thurs 'til 8:30
Sun by appt.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 22, 1987
13
Leave school for less. BRANIFF
Fly Braniff and get a 15% Student Discount on any fare, to any destination in the U.S.
and Mexico. One of the best parts about going to school is getting those long vacations! And Braniff is now offering Student Discounts on The Best Low Fare In The Air. There is no membership club to join, so you'll automatically save 15% on our Everyday Low Fares or even lower Two-Day Advance Purchase Fares. To be eligible, you must be a student between the ages of 18 and 26. Proof of age (Student I.D. and Driver's License) is required upon purchase of ticket.
Fly Braniff to: Acapulco, Baltimore, Boston, Chicago Dallas/Ft. Worth, Detroit, Ft. Lauderdale, Kansas City Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Mexico City, Miami, New York Oklahoma City, Phoenix, San Antonio, San Diego San Francisco, Seattle, Tucson, Washington.
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14
Wednesdav. April 22, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Coffeyville penalized for illegal recruitment
The Associated Press
COFFEVYILLE — The men's basketball program at Coffeyville Community College has been placed on a year's probation by the National Junior College Athletic Association because of recruiting violations, the school announced yesterday.
The action, announced by college president Dan Kinney, means Coffeville will not be eligible for the Jayhawk Conference playoffs and the NJCAA tournament at Hutchinson at the end of the 1987-88 season.
The action stems from allegations of recruiting violations reported to the NJCAA by Marcus Zeigler, a guard at Wichita South High School, who signed a letter of intent to play at
Coffeyville.
--reg $28.00
Jim Eads, the head coach at Cofeeville, was fired April 10 after Kinney reported to the college board the findings of his investigation into the alleged violations. Eads, who had an 85-40 record in four seasons, was replaced by Tim Hicks, an assistant coach.
Kinney said yesterday that he had substantiated several of Zeigler's allegations, including his contention that Eads and an unnamed booster bought items of sportswear for Zeigler in Wichita; that Zeigler was given similar items, such as shoes, shirts and a hat, during a visit to the United States and written a check to a Coffeyville store to hold a stereo for Zeigler.
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CHECKERS PIZZA 2214 Yale Road • 841-8010
CHECKERS
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Monday-Sat.
9:30 a.m. - 8:30 p.m.
Thursday.
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CONTACT MAJOR REINKE MILITARY SCIENCE BUILDING 864-3311
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Gay & Lesbian Services, A Kansas General Meeting Thursday, April 23, 7:00 p.m. in Chapel Street at 570-946-8711.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
HILLEL
שָׂל
Events of the Week
Wednesday, April 22 United Jewish appeal
United Jewish appeal presents
Amy Cooper
Deputy Political
Mobilization Director
of AIPAC
11:30—1:30
Parlor A, Level 5
Kansas Union
Thursday, April 23
Thursday, April 23
Graduate Student discussion with
Dr. Sharon Lowenstein
5:00-7:00 p.m.
Hillel House
Friday, April 24
Friday, April 24 Shabbat Dinner and Services
For more information call Hillel. 749-4242.
Dinner—5:30 p.m.
Services—7:45 p.m.
R.S.V.P. by April 23
Services
Huge garage sale! T-shirts & Sweatshirts; first quality in assorted colors and sizes. Sneakers; good quality shoes. Great great prices. Saturday, April 25 9:00 a.m-00:25 t. Sportswear, 14 Riverfront Road in North Rockville, MD 19780
IS MESSAGE BETTER THEN PIZZA? **Find out. try steam & massage from Lawrence Message Therapy and R-E-L-A-K. Student rate tests** too (50) 814-6926 and student the anchovies!
PICNIC KU India Club
For further details call 843-9361
Food and Drinks provided by KUIC!!
Sertoma Shelter (lower part of Centennial Park - 9th Street between Iowa and Rockledge)
Saturday, April 25, 1987
Date:
Time:
4:00·8:00 p.m.
Time:
In case of bad weather it will be cancelled.
Venue:
Preparing for Finals Study Skills Workshop,
(Time Management, Reviewing, Testing
Strategies) Monday, April 27; 7:00 p.m. 100 p.m.
Strategies Monday, April 27; 7:00 p.m. 100 p.m.
Assistance Center, 121-864-9044
864-9044
Free to go free. six year old male LhasaApo.
Call 841 8649 after 5:00 p.m.
WEIGHT LOAD PROGRAM Lose 10 to 20 lbs in 30 days Doctor approved. All charges accepted.
The dangers facing the modern youth are becoming increasingly grave, and call for more protection. We must also save it from the pitfalls of the crust materialism of the age is the power of a religion. The true religion is combined with true ethics, then moral progress becomes a possibility and not a tragedy.
The need of our modern youth is for such a type of ethics founded on our religious faith as a way to build a society brought into full action can there be any hope for the future of race. From the Baha'i
Youth and the Future
Baha'i Faith, 842-4406
At Your Requests Lawrence's Best and Most Awaited D.J. Sound and Lights for Any Occasion
ENTERTAINMENT
4 Bathroom house near K.U. Available mid-May or June. Hardwood floors, lots of windows. W.D. 32'x18'.
LIBERTY HALL
'A MOVIE THAT MUST BE
SEEN' Jeffrey Lyon, Speak Preview
PARTISANS
OF VILNA
7.00 & 9.30
Have the Hottest Party in Town: Rent A Hot Tub Call Tub to Go, 841-369-269.
4 Bedroom house, fully furnished. Available Juice and Duty. Family preferred. Call for information.
Midweek Music Presents
THE ANSWER
Metropolis Mobile Sound Number 1, with a
phone number of +44 (20) 789 1234. Prima
Promax Graduation photography parties
numbered 1.
Midweek Music Presents
THE ANSWER
WEDNESDAY
APRIL 22
LAST BAND THIS SEMESTER
HAWK Glass Refills
Only $1.25
All Day Fri. & Sat.
(including T.G.I.F.)
It Could Only Happen at...
THE HAWK • 1340 OHIO
Ranch Rock 87 - Saturday April 25th *Don't miss*
it. For information call 749-2192 or 841-3661.
1 BLOCK FROM KANSAS UNION, for rent to serious graduate, Upper Class Student or KU employee. 1 Bedroom furnished, no pets, reptile and lease required. $196/mo. 843-3280
FOR RENT
Bedroom Apartment Summer Sublease 2
Room, bedroom, spacious. Close to campus.
1491-1600 750-2800
1.2 bedroom bungalow apartments new leasing for
new construction located at 484 7200 between 6:00 and 9:42
at 342 1130
Apartments for summer and fall at University Terrace Apartment, 1607 W. 9th l. Bedroom for 1 bedroom, furnished $205, plus all utilities. 2 Bedroom for 1 bedroom, furnished $205, plus all utilities. 2 Bedroom for $260, plus all utilities. 1 Bedroom for 1 month to August 1-June 1; furnished Bedroom for 1 month to August 1-June 1; $313 furnished, $280 unfurnished, plus all utilities. Central area for 1 bedroom, furnished $280, plus all utilities. Central area for 48, 167 J. W. 9th or 842-8330 if no
Apt for Sublease Water, Gas. Cable paid. Across from stadium, close to campus. Furnished rent.
2. Infm Townhouse for summer special rate,
laundry facilities, swimming, tennis U B.I.U.
Townhouse 5041-962-7883
ARE YOU ATTENDING SUMMER SCHOOL? **
STARTING夏校 at $210 per
bluebook Plates $48,2116
Aspen West now leasing for Summer. Energy efficiency 1 and 2 bedrooms. 3 Blocks west of Iowa on 15th Private patios/decks, ceiling fans, no pets. 6th Floor. 749-1288. Open house Saturday, 11:3 p.m
2 story, 3 bedroom older home in good condition,
near downtown and bus stop . $830/month plus
utilities. 12 month lead and $880 deposit required.
Carpool only. No parking. No. Nope. Available
June 14: 8612 or 8412 435 or 8423
2 bedroom furnished apartment for summer unit. 1 block from campus. 1/2 bath. A.C. Kitchen. Washing room.
8 Bedrooms, 3 Bathrooms. Adjacent to campus.
No pets. Call 842-8971
Available May 15 Furnished 1 bedroom Apartment for summer. Next to campus, $42,500. **No deposit required.** For sublease mid-May through December, $185/mo. Dishwasher, microwave, own bedroom. All rooms fully furnished.
Clean studio with air conditioning located close to campus. Water and electricity paid. Available May 1, 8250/month. Call 749-2913 or 841-8545 between 6:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m.
4 kibdm. 2 full bath, large bathtub, living room.
3 kibdm. 1 full bath, mastercraft Campus Place, Next to Nello
Mastercraft Campus Place.
Completely furnished 2 bdm rent. Low utilities.
Sublease. Close to campus. Rent neg. Call
Cary, carpeted studio apartment with bay window at 962 Missouri. Available May 20. 749-0166
Excellent location: 2 bedroom apartments in four-plex, carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, and low utilities. Available June 1. Summer Rate 89. Price at 104 Torrance and 1341 Ohio Call 842-4234.
Fabulous Lab. Available June 1, 2018. Fully furnished, utilities paid, A/C separat, off street parking. Easy walk to KU, downtown. $300 mo. Tenant MUST be QUET, mature, and respond.
Female Roommate Needed: Share 2 bedroom
or 3 bedroom rooms like cats or
under Student preferred: Call 844-9240.
Female roommate, close to campus, own
bedroom. 150.5 plus 1/2 utilities. 749-8127.
bedroom, 157.59 pm / 2 utilities. Call 486-282-482.
Fine location on bed room basement studio apartment CA, equipped kitchen. Low utilities. Call 117.59 am / 180.100m. Call 842-422-142.
PINECREST
Under New Ownership
& Management
COME TAKE A LOOK!
COME TAKE A LOOK!
Several 2 BR's
All new carpeting, cabinets,
and windows
Cable TV
block to bus route
Laundry facilities
Gas heat, very energy efficient
Glass for fall
749-2022
Pinecrest
209-2022
2563 Redbud Lane block E. of Iowa on 26th furniture by Thompson Crawley
FOR SUMMER SLULEASE Two bedroom apt.
Room 1 is nice with flat window. Close to
campus, very nice brick 726-276.
For Rent, May 15-August 15, 1 bedroom apartment, Kitchen, bathroom, living room All private. One block from campus. 180 month. 843-2233.
Farnished basement apartment for 1/3 baths
Furnished basement apartment for 1/3 baths
Available May 18 in August 29. Call 481-890-one
GREAT SUMMER RATES Special incentives, ask about our military and ROTI (Specials) benefits.
HARIOWOOD FLOORS. A.C. close to campus furnished one bedroom apartment available for rent.
Houses, Bedroom Apartments, Sleeping Rooms.
Available June 19; 2-bedroom apartments. 1,2 and
3-bedroom apartments; and sleeping rooms.
Near campus. No pets. Call 842-8971
Looking for a REAL roommate to help ward off loneliness, cut costs? Try not to make another roommate mistake! Do you dislike roommates who are rude, or trash, who talk on the phone all night every night! And whose friends call after midnight? Me too. Non-smoking law student who likes to play sports, cook, bake, plays tennis and viola, and cooks gourmet meals is looking NOW for compatible mate for next two years—including summers. I have a girlfriend in a computer, driver, computer, and dog. You have similar values, interests, living habits and are either girlfriend I can move or you interested! Let's get started.
Meadowhill Summer Sublease 2 dbr Twinhouse only $75 m. Don't wait! Call 843-1806
Must Sublaze for summer. Available mid May.
Dining Room, Entrance, Kitchen,
Bath, and Living Room. Partially furnished
with furniture including bed and bath.
Need to sublease Apple Lane Place studio apartment for the summer. Available May 1 or asap after May 1. Water and cable call 841-8272. Next to Campus; bedroom apartment. Price is subject to availability.
OPEN HOUSE
- June & July special: $200
- On the KU Bus Route
- Wired for cable TV
- Fenced Pool Area
- Tanning Deck
- Completely Privacy Fenced
- Washer & Dryer Hook-ups
- Beautifully Landscaped
- Washer F. Driller Hook-up
- 10, 11, & 12 month leases
- Dishwasher, garbage disposal, & pantry
630 Michigan 749-7279
630 Michigan 749-1279
Office Hours: 2-6 weekdays
Other Appointments Available
ON CAMPAUSE APARTMEMT for squarer-
on CAMPAUSE APARTMEMT in cubical tally
batterie 8x4x2x2.
one bedroom for summer suburbs. Fur
front porch house in space quiet street
200 plus square feet.
one bedroom $225.90 New Quot 864-4940 leave
message for Cindy, or 749-2584 (late) Keep
NO NEED TO READ ANY FURTHER' Summer Sublease: 3-bedroom - 1-story townhouse, available mid-May. Complete furnished, 2 full baths, dishwasher. local location 60 & Emery Street.
IF YOU LIKE SPACE & QUET
WE HAVE IT AND YOU
CAN STILL WALK TO CAMPUS
Spacious 2 bedroom
Laundry facilities
Waterbed fine
Swimming pool
10-12 month leases
VILLAGE SQUARE
9th & Avalon
842-3040
VILLAGE SQUARE
9th & Avalon 842-3040
Reserve your apartment now! Just 2 short blocks from university, 1, 2 and 4 bedroom apartments Furnished with some utilities paid and off street parking. No pets. 841-5500
Reserve your room now! For summer and/or fall
Furnished with most utilities paid. Shared cooking
and bath facilities. Just 2 short blocks from
University with off street parking. No pets.
Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apartments furnished & unfurnished
Now taking reservations for summer & fall
WEST HILLS APARTMENTS 1012 EMERY RD. 841-3800
Great location near campus
:00-4:00
Monday-Wednesday-Thursday
1.00 4.00
DISPLAY APARTMENTS OPEN
No appointment needed Stop by office located in middle of complex by pool
ROOMMATE for a brand new, well located
furnished, furnished, furnished 166 mom
47姐妹 49-99 49-99
8姐妹 49-99 49-99
Rooms available for summer and the 1987-88 academic year in the Christian living community "Koimona" at Ecumenical Christian Ministries. For information come to 1204 Oread or call
Roommate wanted. Beautiful Quail Creek Apts.
$140/mo. own room, pool, tennis cable
room, hot tub, sauna, spa, grill.
Room for rent in nice, clean, O. W. l. apartment.
Room has wood floors, private 1/2 bath entrance
Room has large, private bath, private 843. 8255.
Roomatee. Female to live in room, private
bdm Townhouse, great location, $125 plus,
garage, lot of room. Must be dependable, please.
Rent may be negotiated, must find 843. 9635.
- Custom furnishings
- Hardy great locations
- Professional management
- Designed for privacy
- Variety of floorplans
offers.
- Affordable rates
apartments--all near KU!
MASTERCRAFT
Completely furnished
- Professional management
Call center agent
CAMPUS PLACE—1145 Louisiana 941 841
HANOVER PLACE—14th & Mass:
841.1212
SUNDANCE-7th & Florida
TANGLEWOOD—10th & Arkansas 749-2415
OPEN DAILY 1-5
SPRING GRADS to Wichita duplex for 3 BR, 1/2 bath, bath appliances, close to park, central located, excellent condition. $475. Available June 1. Call 316-682-3679
Library available for summer in super pat. class.
Laundry available. I will assume part of expenses.
laundry available. I will assume part of expenses.
SUBLEASE Two bedroom, Village Square Apartment.
Large living room, eating kitchen, patio,
pool. Low utilities. Available mid-May. $101
843-8385
AMENITIES
Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the amenities of Naismith Hall. Applications for fall semester are now being accepted while space remains
NAISMITHHALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
913.843.8559
SUMMER Female tenants wanted for spacious bedroom house w/ fence in back yard. Furnished plus microwave and dishwasher. Available right after finals $15/mo plus 1/4 utilities. Call Erie.
SUMMER SCHOOL. 7 NO CAR? 2 dbm available
roommate needs on campus. Rent nests.
Call 1-800-569-1431 or visit www.summerschool.org
SUMMER SUBLASE. Need two non-smoking females to teach Trailrunner townhouse. Call
SUMMER SUMMER SULEANCE: 3 leap altm. 2 full baths,
close to campus; $25 plus utility; Tanglewood
room; free parking; 18-hour room rate.
SUMMER SUBLASE NURSE Place
on campus. Call 843-2690 or 841-9974.
Call 843-2690 or 841-9974.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesdav. April 22. 1987
15
SUMMER SUPERLEASE: Apple Lane Studio, Nice,
quiet, Water, cable free. $235/month. Available
mid-May. Pay only June, July. Call 841-7802 after
6 p.m.
SUMMER SUBLEASE: Large 1 Bedroom Apart-
ment, large 2 bedrooms. Negotiable. Bank at 947 7190. Keepying.
SUMMER SUBLEASE: Large two bedroom apt
close to Campus, AC, DW, Balcony, GK47-3621.
SUMMER SUBLEASE modern and spacious 2
bedrooms, full baths, central air wash/and
sweep.
SUMMER SUBLEASE 2 Bedroom Apt. New.
Close to campus. Call 749-2432.
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Very nice, new 1 BR/edust studio 130 & Ohio Furnished. Must be non-smoker, off street parking. NEGOTIABLE Available May 14. 841-4696.
Location
Located among 70 acres of rolling hills and trees, you'll enjoy the convenience of being close to campus and area shopping.
Lifestyle
Meadowbrook offers a selection of spacious and comfortable studios, 1,2, or 3 bedroom apartments, and townhouses to fit your lifestyle
RESERVE YOUR
UNIT NOW...
FOR SUMMER OR FALL!
meadowbrook
15th & Crestline 842-4200
Sb-Lease for summer *Sunrise Terrace* 320
Sb-lease for summer *University of Hawaii* 320
Sb-lease for summer *at Hampton Place*
Sublease for summer, studio at Hanover Place.
Call 789-5440
Call 299-799-696
Subject: bachelor, spacious, excellent location
Suggested Address: 180 W. 42nd St., Boulder, CO 80305
Email: wendy.mcgill@univb.edu
EDDINGHAM PLACE
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- 10 or 12 month
- Satellite T.V.
- Swimming pool
- Exercise Weightroom
- On-Site Management
Open Daily 3:00-5:00
Saturday 9:00-12:00
841-5444
Sublease 2 dmpt duplex. Available junt ist. Close to campus. b323/m. call 844-2440 evening.
Professionally managed by
Sub-base, May 18. One bedroom with loft, fully furnished, watered waid. 841-500.
Saturday 2/10 to Sunday 2/16, Nantucket Zone, Clove Beach.
Sublease. Traitridge 3 bedroom, 2/1/2 bath townhouse. Available mid-May, option to lease in August. Parking. Pool courts, tennis club. sport facilities. $490 Call
Sublease for summer: furnished two bedroom
pft. A/C / Great location! Call 841-0607
Sublisee 3 bedrooms 2 bathrooms Full furnish
near campus and fun bars Low utilities
aP. A/C *Great location* Call 841-0007
Sublease. S2bp 2Arant. near campus for 2 people. Available summer option to extend lease. Call 841-7533 after 7 m. or weekends.
southbridge
Southridge Plaza Aprs.
LEASING for fall
1 & 2 bedroom apartments
10 month leases
water & cable paid
pool
1704 West 24th
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
842-1100
Sublease for summer Furnished, 2 bedrooms very nice apartment one block from campus Cali
Sublease Immediately Wanted Roommate for Laboratory 1 bedroom 2 story townhouse. Very in good shape. No deposit required.
Summer Sublease very nice three bdch ranch style house. Near Campus $420 month. 843-305.
Summer Sublease. Need one or two females for a bedroom apartment, completely furnished, $165 per month, 1/3 utilities, clean to campus *Call 749-2723* or contact the Office for Fall 2 bd. AC water paid $22,740-1835
Summer Sublease: 3 bedrooms, close to campus
rivert negotiable. Call 844-1701
Summer Subway and Furnished Studio, close to downtown. Rent negotiable. Call 212-984-3094
Summer Suburban-Nice, roomy. 3HR, A B C.
paint, carpet, nice location. $150. Low utilities.
Affordable. Great area. No gas.
Summer Sublease 2 Bedroom Apt. Very close to
camp. Rent Negotiable. Call Please on
Summer Submarine-Barward Square, 2 bedrooms,
sapacious living for 3; all furnished, pool, clu-
mery, sauna. $149,000
Summer Sublease. Male roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom apartment. Close to campus, on bus route. Swimming Pool, Furnished. Please call 841-553 after 7 p.m.
Summer sublease. 2 bd. furnished. Close to campus.
841-3932
Summer sublease: 3 bedroom Apt. 2, bath, completely furnished, available starting May or June through July. Low rent plus possible reductions. Close to campus. Need 2 people. Super room rate. Sublease for summe rents $18,000, utilities paid. Close to campus. Washer dryer For at Trent A4 6712.
Berkley FLATS
843-2116
11th & Mississippi
LEASING NOW & FOR FALL
- Over 40 New Uni
* Great location
Great location walk anywhere
walk anywhere
- Laundry facilities
* Enriched Units
- Furnished Units
- Available
- On KU Bus Route
SHORT LEASES AVAILABLE
1123 Indiana Furnished by Thompson-Crawley
Top of the hill location, studio summer leaselease
house, 901-811-1200
Top of the hill location, studio summer sublease,
or rent to rent call; 841-790-
Wanted: Roommate to share 3 bedroom Apt for
87-88 school year. $1350 or no bargain. 842-625-
FOR SALE
14. 65 Mobile Home 2, bedroom, remodeled, nice carp, cabled fence, yard. Partial owner financing.
1982 Yamaha Seca 400. With only one owner,
1,000 miles. Excellent cond. 100 with Vette
warranty.
1986 Honda Spree moped for sale. Low mileage,
included basket, helmet, and cover. Best offer.
Call 841-1599 or 749-1103 and leave message for
jackie.
1986 Kawasaki NJNJA 600 R Like new, only 200 miles Call editions. 841-8091
22 "Club Fuji," good joke for beginning racer. New computer, asking 4,098; call Steve, 804-6753.
2 HICKENHACKERS, 1 Collector's 12 stunts or Suiters Buyer's only, John 847-5848 or 842-4210.
79 29333, Dark red, Low mileage, 5 pd. Good condition for only $4000 negotiable, call after 4:30
Accoustic GUITAR together with box in good condition sells under $100! *Call 864-6527*
AKC Dilation surgery, purchased 12 weeks old
Moto Mile, Motto Bike, Cobalt 850-3994
Must sell. More info Call John 842-5893.
Dustmaster D10 speed bicycle. Like new, ex-
cellent condition.
$79.99
civilien condition Call 749-5364 after 5 p.m.
Nom du Camion Maritime 749-5364 Blvd. Bicly NC
Baredd, ridden. Great Bike. Good Price. 842-1824
Complete set McGregor Tourney Number. I sahf
a bike from the range of our shop.
Computer Disk Selsoit : Certified-Guaranteed 7.
Computer Disk Selsoit : Certified-Guaranteed 17. $54.
846-616 F 912 m a. 9, 69. $15.
Computer Disk Selsoit : Certified-Guaranteed 846-616 F 912 m a. 9, 69. $15.
6dmdu Astrosat Telescope 15mm RKE eye and bar.吹 $185 492 356) after 6.
R
Gransport
Athletic Sandals
GHEITTO BLASTER New new Sony, still in Box Auto Reverse,Equalizer, and Detachable Speakers Only $75. Perfect for Summer. Call Brian at 842-9286.
Do everything in 'em — Run, Climb, Hike, Raft— The Ultimate, Footwear
For sale. six piece stereo, 70 watts per channel.
Furniture. Stereo console, Garage Sale 3-Family. Baby furniture computer, oak dg set, t.v., laser disk, many goods. Satur-
tion. Computer in. free coffe. 300 University Airplane.驾441,850.
Ft ORLANDO, FLORIDA $19.00 Round trip.
April 23 May 2 8:43 6898 after 5 p.m.
Outdoor Sporting Goods
7th & Arkansas 843-3328
Never Been Used. Fanatic 100 Sailboard, 12 x
seats. North sail, Norton $600 or less.
for 749, 849, 949, 1049
IBM PC/XT compatible, includes monochrome graphics, monochrome monitor, switchable Turbo motherboard w/ 512K. 1 Flippy disc drive.
*4-month warranty included. 842 5495.
**** MOTHBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
8:30 p.m. 30 p.m. 12:00 p.m.
8:30 IEE 94-155
754-5000
MOPED 1981 Motobane runs OK, but needs
tune-up. Ask 150 Vice; 84-7650
Moving back to Europe, must part with my Honda A125. In great condition. OBD Call 804-2822.
PIANO for Upright good condition $400.
749-2227. Keepying.
Older model Fuji Gran Tourer; 30 inch frame;
Beige and teal dresses, sleeper almost. Call after
8am or before 5pm.
Realistic Micro Recorder 65.00, Minolta 16
Camera 65.00, Stereo unlimited plus mini
speakers 75.00, Rossi 22 Pump new 120.00,
841-4217
NITES now available for variety of classes
from the school. Students take Yahayawk Study Services 'We're here to Help'
Rickenbacker bass black 401 **Excellent**
75.00 L Bass Warding Board *Professional*
23.00 L Piano
Sailboard for Sale: 2010 Olympic Class Flying Dinghys
at $995,000 or best offer Call e-mails:
A900.006 or best offer Call e-mails:
ALL, SIZES! Jacket with tails or plain, complete set, with pants, vest, or cumberbat, low tie-iems, or a pair of jeans. Ice-Bite 10.4 Vermont. Get yours early for that special spring fling! TUXEDOS, we have your jacket. $39.95.
1975 Ford Granada: New tires, exhaust, electric systems, 77,000 miles. 7400, 841, 940-943.
Stereo speakers Omega 50 2-way speakers plus Alphasonic subwoofer 10wwber. 842/796.
AUTO SALES
Water ski. kP emp x 2, 180 Good condition,
$20.00. Ask for Scott. Ph: 749-1472
1974 Velo 142 Good condition. Very dependable.
ml. avail from May 18, $1,000
Call (800) 555-3333
Tireo, Stereo cassette, Pop Up updroop, Great mileage, 4 cyl. Ackling $5,000 but negotiable. 56,000 miles. Call to use. 729,426 after 5 p.m.
150 years later
2013 AM-FM. New Tires, Very Good
400-877-6990, 510-644-6993
LOST—FOUND
FOUND 7 keys outside StairFall Hall.
8 as p. 49/17/87. Come by 19 StairFall Hall.
25 as p. 30/17/87. Come by 19 StairFall Hall.
For Sale 1977 Chrysler. Cordoba, Fair Condition 400
came. Call after 8:436-856-4966
71 VW Beetle, good body, newly rebuilt engine,
reliable transportation. $900, Jason. 843-8424
1982 Class Ring in Women's Restroom in Lindley Hall Call 749-1416. Please keep trying.
LOST on 4/11/77, Men's Seiko watch, reward. Call Steve at 842-4780.
HELP WANTED
Are you good with children? Would you like to be a parent? HELP I PARENTS-790 Menlo Ave. 139
ARLINES CRUSELINEWS HIRING! Summer,
Career; Good Pay, Travel; Call for Guide.
SCHOOL STUDENTS IN CITY OF
ARNELLES.
ASSISTANT MANAGER JAYHAWK TOWERS
The University of Kansas Housing Department is seeking three live-in, one-half time Assistant Managers to assist with the construction buildings. Must be enrolled at KU, graduate student preferred. Group work experience is required. Resume should include desirable Apartment furnished plus stipend. App.
Artist Needed for Next Semester Graphic Design
Please Call 842-3538 and ask Jin Houfe
Hall. Application priority date, 5 p.m. Wednesday, April 29, 1987. Interested persons, submit letter of application, resume, and names of two students to Steve Keeffe. Housing Office, Todd Hall. Law enforcement, KS 66455, (913) 864-4560 AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
desirable. Apartment furnished plus stucco.
Appointment starts 1 July; 1, 1877 and continue
until completion of renovation. Available in
the Housing Office, 205 McColum
Hall. Application priority date, 5. p.m.
Wednesday.
Bakery Su/ S cleaning one position Monday-
Thursday, 8 p.m. m-binding, Friday, 8 p.m. t-1
m. $35/hr to start. Up to $4/hr after trained 3
days. Free lunch and snacks for every day,
April 27, 14 p.m. Apply at Macher's Bakery.
Boston family looking for mothers helper, start
July/August, min. 1 yr. commitment, room &
board plus salary, 2 children aged 5, 7 write/call
collect 619-905-3821, Burrillite, 2 Overlook
warehouse, 222-568-4325
Cocktail Waitresses Needed Part-time weekends
Apply in person. Just A Playhouse, 90 W. 24th
St., New York, NY 10019.
DATE TELPHONE Sales needed in our Office
Experience a plus. Good Call vs 85
Call vs 85. No phone calls.
The Mathematics department is now accepting applications for the position of graduate teaching assistant, in preparation for a bachelor's degree by August 15. Applicants must have completed four requirements for a bachelor's degree by August 15. The Mathematics department will require foreign applicants will be required to pass an oral exam demonstrating English competency. Applicants should submit a letter indicating their willingness to serve as a teacher and two letters of recommendation to Charles Fay, with 217 Strong Hall, University of Kansas, AA-EOE.
XMCA Camp Gravys in beautiful Lake of the Oarsks now hit summer staff. Desire for excellence, but no experience necessary. Call (816) 214-9224-Keith Miller
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
Summer Job Opportunities available with the U.S. Marine Corps - No obligation to be a Marine Earn between 7 and 10pm on weekdays or by housing 'Call 913-841-1821 (collect)
Denton person: cut/fry donuts, assist bakers.
Midnight 8 a.m. 5 nights per week *4 hr to start;
raises commemorate with skill level. Apply Mun-
don for Monday, April 23, p 8 or t/week,
April 28, p 8.
*****
EVENINGS OR SATURDAY Telephone Sales in
Boston, MA. Call 800-721-5960, call 799-3292,
Call between 9 am and 5 pm. Ask for Karen
Davis.
Godfather's Pizza now hiring delivery drivers.
must be 18 years of age and have good driving record. Dependable car also required. Position plus commission. Apply in person at 71 W. 23rd.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16,040-$22,920 yr. Now
$68,000-$60,000 Ext. R 7840 for current
federal job.
FULL AND PART TIME HELP! National Firm preparing for Spring and Summer work. If accepted, you will earn 8.0 start training. Some evening classes in the spring are required; flexibility is allowed during final exams. If you qualify, corporate scholarships are awarded, internships are possible, and you may earn 2.34 credits/qt or semester. During summer break you can apply to these programs 931-645-9675 Mon-fri at 9 a.m. p.m.
Have a Boston Adventure
- Live-in child care for
American Au Pair
(617) 244-5154
P.O. Box 97
New Town Branch
Boston, Mass. 02258
- Must love children
- round-tip air fare
- no fees
and Benefits
We make excellent
- 1 year commitment
- round trip air fare
NATIVE SPEAKERS of Greek, Italian, Korean,
Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, and Vietnamese
with good understanding of English. Call Seve-
t 749-4775, evenings of English.
area families
K. U. Student Assistant, General Office work in Business Office, Start or on August 15, May 15, time available to August 15, $200 per month (PTE). Salary increase July, 1. Three-month probationary period. Type 60 wpm accurately calculate hourly wage. Calculate calculator. Preference to applicants with previous KU office experience and interest in construction. Resumes accepted. Academic year. Application deadline: April 29, 1987, 9:00 p.m. Submit letter of application with resume and application fee to K.U. Lawrence, 1930 Constant Avenue, Campus West, Lawrence, SC 65064. OR complete application form at K.U. Lawrence, 1930 Constant Avenue, Campus West. Receptionist's Desk, Moore Hall EO4444
and Benefits
Massachusetts Street Deli and Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse need food service and table service employees. Must have a least one year exp in an IT position, or at least service startup pay 3.75 per hour plus share pricing. table service 2.61 per hour plus tips. Apply to Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse. Massachusetts
Nanny Placement agency looking for nannies.
Great salaries and benefits. Positions available nationally. Nanny Finders, P. O. Box 4033, Chapel Hill, NC 27514.
Need Friendly Office assistant who can work in independently, Typing, Filling, Running Errands, Telephoneoning, Assisting with Downtown Promo Campaigns, Marketing for Phone Call 842-3838. Downtown Lawrence Association Part time advertising sales representative needed in Lawrence for small weekly newspaper
$ ^{+} $ The Southwest Co. is inter-
viewing this week for our sales &
management training program
that will help ensure quality have the opportunity to.
PROPEL NEEDED IMMEDIATELY for
transportation of cargo in good
light. Call Donna: 749-785-0621
STILL SEARCHING FOR SUMMER WORK?
---
2. Get good experience
3. Get in touch with major companies (IBM, Proctor & Gamble, etc.) for future career.
NANNY POSITIONS AVAILABLE; Good salary.
Nice Families, Dallas, Texas. Call 9-3 p.m. (214)
458-2507
STUDENTS WANTED Part time or full time. No experience necessary. Good pay. Start immediately. Days, evenings, or Saturdays. Call Dia. 749-3945.
SUMMER JOBS A new fifties dance club is opening in Lenaqua. We hire cocktail waitresses and baristas. WT训 train. Apply in person. 9 M.S.-M. at Fargo. Apply Rd. Lenaqua. Located in Four Colonias Plaza.
STUDENTS WANTED For very light delivery,
please call 512-406-8711 or email
own transportation. Mornings or afternoon.
The Mathematics Department is now accepting applications for the position of undergraduate teaching assistants. Applicants must have a bachelor's degree in mathematics; completion of Math 123 or the equivalent; communicate well in the English language, have undergraduate standing and grade point average of at least 3. Will assist in lecture classes, grade homework assignments, and help grade some exams. Student monthly, 40% time, August 15 to December 15. Reqs include a Master's degree. Applications may be obtained from the Math Dept. Room 217 Strong Hall. Further information, contact Philip Montgomery, 25-E Strong Street.
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$469 Round trip
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Depart May 29 or June 11
Space is limited!
Call today for details.
Chris & Bryan-Glad - don't eat crayons and food dog anymore! Thanks for bein' the best girl in school.
Frank: Surprise-At least one better he! Thanks for last week. "Shit this" "much"
Gleed Laet in at the LEWIS LUAU! Friday, April 24 from 8 a.m. to 11 a.m. $10. Music堂
I glide into you find myself
Happy Belated Birthday to my wife Fafi Junam Love Juju April 21, 1987
Glen K's graduation partyIt's almost here. For info call 749-3676.
Hey X Ray. Wanna go for a windy boat ride? You gimme the shakes all over.
PUMPKIN, 21? You're so old! Have a great
DRUNK day! KRIAN! love you. Frances.
BUS. PERSONAL
Be creative in gift gifting. Pullfairish with
occasions from your collection. In all its
calligraphy or Grape or Atlas Phone Plate.
Use a gift card.
Leading financial services company offers complete training for college graduates for the Topeka and Lawrence area. Confidently market mutual funds, retirement plans, life insurance, and more through our personalized financial planning program.
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1100 SW Wanamaker Rd.
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HEADACHE, BACKACHE, ARM PAIN, LEG PAIN Student and most insurance accepted. For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark Johnson 843-3079
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The Southwestern Company is looking for students who are seriously looking for a good summer job, hard working, willing to net $3500 this summer for
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WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
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Call or drop by Headquarters.
We're here because we care.
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We are here.
Most reasonable rates is town for all your photo
work. You can also rent a 48" portrait
portrait with Photos Plus, port-407
and a ProRes camera.
New Connection, 300 Elm, North Lawrence,
924 401. Tuesday Saturday to 9.6 evenings by appointment.
Hair styles done your way. Through April and May; $8 cuts and sets, $3 perms
Need music for your wedding? Call Jean, 843-3704.
Gives piano and voice lessons over summer.
Wildlife
MUSEUM SHOP Museum of Natural History
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9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.
20-75 per cent discounts
Next to the Rs. Critton 6044-430
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CHIMSON SUN PHOTO is looking for young
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D. W. I. s. & tramic
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DONALD G. STROLE
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**stresses**. All ladies dresses can be made here as styles from the latest fashion magazines, I will
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TYPING
1-1-1 TRIO Word processing. Responsible.
Consistent. Reliable. Bailable. 842 38113 for service
1,100 pages. No job too small or too large.
An affordable typing and wordprocessing,
web development.
A-Z Word processing Service. Quality resumes,
addresses, and letters. Available at:
843-1800 19 p.m.
storage facility.
34 Hour Typing, 15th semester in Lawrence
Best quality and best service 841-5006
Best quality and best service 841-5006
A3 professional typing. Term papers, Theses,
BISM Electronic Typewriter 842-1966
Electronic Typewriter 842-1966
AAA TFIPING has low cost word process
strength. The same program was used
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cessor.
Absolutely Fast Typing. Dependable and easy to use. Works with and at reason 789-394a after 5 p.m. Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard secretary, Call Mrs. Nancy Mantayi, 841-1231.
Accurate Word Processing Meadowbrook loca
tions years experience. Call 749-1601
EVENINGS
Dependable, professional, experienced.
Dependable. Acceptable for TRANSCRIPTION also; standard tape: 843-8877.
DISSERTATIONS. THESES. LAW
Discusses dissertations and law.
will return. WERE watching TISHAD AD
Experienced typist : these, dissertations, term paper,
842 3210 at 1:58 p.m. on M-F or Sat/Sun
9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Donnar paper, tapes, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter quality
printing, spelling corrected. 842-2742.
Experienced Typeist Dissertations; theses, term papers, etc. Reasonable Call. Rate 842.3303
GOOD IMPRESSIONS Typing/Word Processing
Typewriter Spelling correction 841
Typesetter Spelling correction 841
GUARANTEED PERFECT word done on work
Located near lawrence hospital (Call 843-7971)
Quality typing, excellent skill; grammar,
spelling, typing skills. Fast, reliable.
Writing skills.
Resume Service-laserwritten 10 copies ONLY
$29.74-2193 after 5 p.m.
For professional typing/word processing, call
814-840-4860. Spring special $27.95/page, double
margins.
TYPING-Call 842-4868 before 10 p.m.
KU SECRETARY. Typing and word processing.
Affordable, fast, accurate. Spelling corrected,
letter quality. Pickup on campus. Monica 841 8346
Evenings-weekends.
ACT NOW, Papers 1.50/pg, Resumes 15.
WRIFF LIFELEVEL 841-349.
Term papers? Transcription, Unlimited, 1012
Massachusetts, Suite 200, Please call ahead for all your typing needs. 842-4619. Spelling, grammar
corrected.
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word pro-
fessionals in advertising, resumes, theses, letter
quality printing, etc. 843-7621
Smart Word Processing includes editing and spelling. Very easy reasonableness. Foster, 749-2740
TYPHING PLUS assistant with composition,
writing of publications, presentations,
dissertations, papers, letters, applications
and publications.
very reasonable rates, will also assist with spelling punctuation and form. **Call** 842-8269. Pay for why you can when you have work pro-
duced by me. **Call** 842-8314. These, lessons, legal. Since 1983. 843-3147
WANTED
2 Female Roommates Wanted for summer. Own room 124m². Rent Pool. Close to campus. 842-797-6050.
Donations of books and magazines need. Supplying books and magazines to libraries. Bring items to the Library, 707 Vernor
Nested: Roommate for a very nice fully
fitted room with large beds, sofa,
loofer, and more. $180/mo plus 1/2 rate. 749-607-
2 Housemates for 3 brm house $170 & $130 mo-
plus 1/8 utilities. Convenient location. Iel
Graduate students preferred. Rooms available
1 June and 1 May respectively. 942-0038
Need Roammate to share two bedroom apt $134
needed. Utilities on bus route. Call Martin,
843-6611
Roommate for very nice furnished house in nice, quiet neighborhood near campus & shopping. D/C. For summer or fall. $165 monthly. Send resume to rookie@mcginniscollege.com making good student or senior 843-0091. Dan
RELIABLE FEMALE GTA WANTS to HOUSESET this summer. Claudia, 749-7566 (evenings).
**Ocommotes Wanted for Summer 410th month**
utilities between downtown and campus. 841-7133.
SPANISH TRANSLATOR WANTED Now-easy
money. Work on own time, Top Pay, Call, leave
room.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Policy
Roammate wanted to share large 2 BR apt. Available June 1st, 1987 for summer and school year 87-88 th Street location. Laundry facilities, laundry room. Rent plus 1/2 deposit. offices 843-3675.
Summer Roommate: luxury 2 bdrm, Surrey
Place to roommate fully furnished, pool 100m²
Kitchen and bathroom with dishwasher.
Wanted: graphic artist to paint menu. Will pay $125.00. Call Chris, 841-1060.
Wanted: Two bedroom furnished apartment
sublease Aug. Dec. Please Call Steve. 841-793 and
506-3542.
Words set in ALL CAPS as 2 words.
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16
- Wednesday, April 22, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
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H
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details, page 2
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Thursday
April 23, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 139
(USPS 650-640)
Union issue splits Pittsburg faculty
By BENJAMIN HALL
Staff writer
They also said it had divided the campus and hurt faculty morale.
Faculty members at Pittsburg State University recently said that the faculty union there had unified the campus and improved faculty morale.
Peter L. Hamlet, professor of chemistry and president of Pittsburg State's chapter of the Kansas National Education Association, the group which represents the school's faculty and students, said both bers had been treated more fairly since they formed a union in the early 1970s.
A set of rules now controls how decisions are made, he said.
"The two sides have to sit down and talk about how things ought to be done," he said. "Universities without that tend to be segmented."
Before the union, department heads at Pittsburgh State awarded merit pay increases arbitrarily and without consulting faculty. Hamlet said. The merit pay procedure under the union gives faculty an opportunity to protest.
"Everybody feels that it's much fairer. The procedure encourages communication he said. "We've been saying something that everybody can live with."
Hamlet said faculty unions improved faculty salaries in the long run.
"There is reason to believe that being organized can affect the shape of the pie somewhat," he said. "If they're organizing to get rich, they're wasting their time. But it is going to produce better pay in the long run."
But the chairman of one of Pittsburg State's departments said the union hadn't helped salaries and had complicated his job.
"Any time you have a union, your arrangements become more formal," he said. "You have more paperwork to deal with. In some cases you have a certain divisiveness on campus."
"It's just too touchy a topic here," he said.
The chairman did not want to be identified.
Department chairmen, whose jobs include both teaching and administrative work, are not included in Pittsburgh State's faculty union and would not be at the University of Kansas.
"As an administrator, it not only complicates my job, in some ways it makes me less effective," the chairman said.
The union has promoted equity and uniformity in the way faculty members are treated, he said. But he also said the union served the majority and didn't benefit all faculty members.
When Pittsburg State's faculty voted to form a union, 175 of 207 eligible voters participated. Ninety-two voted for KNEA, 47 voted for representation by the American Association of University Professors and 38 voted for no representation, which was a vote against a union.
Pittsburgh State is the only Board of Regents school that has a faculty union. But Hamlet said he would like to see the other Regents schools organize
Faculty union issue
Faculty union issue
"If all the Regents institutions are
Editor's note: This is the fourth in a five-part series on the possible formation of a faculty union at the University of Kansas. Today's story focuses on the effects a faculty union had at Pittsburgh State University.
Tomorrow: The all-faculty forum on collective bargaining.
working together, it will give us even more lobbying power," he said.
Gene DeGrunson, president of Pittsburg State's faculty senate, said that the new rule was intended to
Ron Jeffries, Douglas County resident, searches for the queen of the hive. Jeffries replaces the queen bees in his hives two years to increase honey production. Jeffries owns more than 50 hives in the Lawrence area.
"I was vehemently anti-union," he said. "I didn't feel that it had any place on university campuses. But we knew that something had to be done."
"Each person realized that he was unhappy in his academic situation. But we didn't know everybody else was unhappy."
"It has been enormously successful. The union process brought us all together with a cohesiveness that is really quite healthy," he said.
Organizing unified the faculty,he said.
The image shows a person wearing a protective mask and gloves, examining a large area covered in bees. They appear to be inspecting a honeycomb or a hive, likely for pollination purposes. The background is blurred, focusing attention on the individual and their activity.
Before the union was formed, the situation between administrators and faculty at Pittsburgh State was bad, DeGruson said. Administrators dominated faculty governance and failed to consult with faculty on matters of promotion, tenure, salaries and working conditions.
"That used to just come out of the blue," he said. "We now have a strong voice."
Donald Kerle, a professor of social sciences who served two terms as president of Pittsburgh's kNEA chapel and served on a union member since its beginning.
"I think it's been very successful. The administration's now aware that the faculty can have an effect on decisions." he said.
But Robert Ratzlaff, Pittsburg State's chief academic official and negotiator for the the administration, said the union had sometimes hurt faculty morale.
"Until about four years ago, we were in a very adversarial position," he said. "It was detrimental to the company and to our house we couldn't reach a contract."
Ratzlaff, a professor of history who also has been chairman of his department, said the union was successful in standardizing procedures.
"In that way, I think we're a long way ahead of a lot of other institutions," he said. "I think we've done a very good job of eliminating the surprises. You know what you need to get tenure.
"But I'm still not convinced that higher education and collective bargaining are compatible. In many ways, you would like to foster the kinds of collegiality that you don't have in a bargaining-unit situation."
"I think there's much to be said for not dealing with a backshop situation," he said.
And Ratzlaff said many faculty members belong to State's professors' college.
Beekeeper installs his new queens
By JERRI NIEBAUM
Staff writer
A Lawrence man received a living package in the mail Friday.
Stacked into a box that might have carried a pair of shoes were about 15 three-by-one-inch wooden boxes with screen lids. Under each tiny screen were about five honeybees fussing around a larger bee, their queen.
Ron Jeffries, who lives on Rural Route 1 northwest of Lawrence, was glad to get the package. He has about 50 honeybee hives at his home and at nearby farms, and he needed the 15 queens to start new hives and rejuvenate old ones.
'When they get their honey stomachs full,why, they can't bend over and sting you.'
The truck's license plate says "Bee Man." A bumper sticker on
"If you can get young queens in there, they lay a lot more eggs, and you get more honey," Jeffries said recently over the bumpy whir of his four-wheel drive truck as he drove to one of his six bee vards.
— Ron Jeffries Lawrence resident
the cab's rear window says, "Beeekeers make sweeter honeys." Jeffries started raising bees about four years ago after he took an adult education course on beekeeping at Lawrence High School.
"It itted out as a hobby, and it's progressed to where it's a little bit more than that now." he said.
Before handling his bees, Jefries took off his cap to don a veil that covered his face and head.
critter around. I've got bees now, so I've got all kinds of them."
"Some old-time beekeepers don't wear veils, but boy, I do," said Jeffries, who has suffered only minor stings. "If you get stung in the eye, it can blind you."
"I've always got some kind of
"If they think their home is on fire, they'll gorge on as much honey as they can." Jeffries said as he lit a section of a burlap bag and then put the smoldering fabric into the smoker.
"When they get their honey stomachs full, why, they can't bend over and sting you," he said.
He pumped smoke into the hive and removed the lid. As expelled the bees sucked up honour and not pay much attention to Jeffries.
He took trays of honeycomb,
See STINGER, p. 6, col. 3
Stanton passes authority
Staff writer
By LISA A. MALONEY Staff writer
With Hersey's kisses and with song, Brady Stanton and Kelly Milligan, outgoing student body president and vice president, turned over their offices last night to Jason Krakow and Stephanie Quincy.
"There are people on the Student Senate that you can fight like dogs with, and then go out and have a beer with them," said Phillip Duff, outgoing architecture senator. "And those are the best people."
Glenn Shirliffe, former elections committee chairman, passed out Hershey's kisses at the start of the meeting to "kiss Senate goodbye."
With a miniature Sesame Street Ernie perched on the lectern in front of him, Stanton told the newly elected Senate. "Details are important, but never let them get so labyrinthine that you loose sight of your original cause.
"I would suggest that you carry with you a very strong sense of humor. Take your job seriously, but don't take yourselves seriously."
Milligan said the Senate's greatest accomplishments had been the success of the Associated Students of Kansas, ASK's lobbying efforts on the fee release issue and the completion of revenue code and student organization financing.
"For every one campaign issue we didn't get accomplished, we had one barbrowner of an issue that put us on Daly University Daily Kansan," he said.
He praised Martie Aaron for her work on ASK; Clarissa Birch and Steve Gilchrist for their work on the finance committee; Michael Anderson for his efforts; and Michael Foubert, "for doing what he thought was right and for compromising the issues but never his integrity."
Then Stanton and Milligan threw their arms around each other, sang the Carol Burnett theme song, "We're So Glad We Had This Time Together," and turned over the chair to Quincy amid wild applause from the floor.
Krakow told the new senators,
"The most difficult thing to do gracefully is to get off your high horse. But let's do it from the beginning.
"Compromise is vital to our survival and success. Until you're convinced that you've looked at all sides in issue, don't jump to conclusions."
Holdover senators elected for next year were Milligan, Korey Kaul and Chris Dalton. Brian Kramer of the Rangers, who was elected for a holdover seat but was defeated
Krakow's recommendations for Senate officers were voted on and approved. His appointments were Spencer Colvin, treasurer; Matt Kerr, administrative assistant; Roger Templin, Student Senate Executive Committee chairman; Michelle Roberts, executive secretary; Martie Aaron, Associated Students of Kansas director; and Victor Osmolak and Kevin Fossland, Jaybaw Course Source directors.
Elected members of committee board were Michael Foubert, Sue Glatter, Lori Nobert, William Sanders and Stacey Walsh.
INSIDE
INCIDE
Plagiarism often hard to detect,but prevalent,prof says
Sunglasses are popping up everywhere with the coming of spring. Sunglasses, which can cost anywhere from $1 to $250, have become a fashion statement, but buyers also need to make sure the glasses are protective. See story page 3.
Nice shades
KU athletes are educating Lawrence school children about the harmful effects of drugs as part of an HPER class, Drug Use and Drug Prevention. See story page 11.
Making the grade pushes students to brink of cheating in preparing papers
For no drugs
By PAUL SCHRAG
When a U.S. student submitted a term paper in which labor was consistently spelled in the British-style labour, it was almost a sure giveaway of plagiarism.
Staff writer
Plagiarism, stealing the ideas or writings of someone else, often is difficult to detect and to prove. Although it's impossible to tell how often plagiarism occurs, some KU professors say it is a problem.
"It's pretty prevalent," said Anthony Genova, chairman of the philosophy department. "In my view, I'll will admit that it's fairly common."
That's a true story, said Sakari Sariola, professor of sociology, and it illustrates a serious problem.
But Michael Johnson, chairman of the English department, said plagiarism was virtually non-existent in upper-level English classes. He said he had not heard of any cases of plagiarism in the department in his three years as chairman.
Haskell Springer, director of freshman-sophomore English, said that in a typical academic year in lower-level English, one to four or five cases occurred in which students were disciplined for plagiarism. The cases almost always are resolved between the professor and the student, he said.
Usually, a student is punished by receiving a failing grade on the plagiarized assignment. Springer said. Extreme cases of academic misconduct are punishable by expulsion. But Springer said no lower-level courses will be bempelled for plagiarism in his six years as assistant director and director.
Students accused of academic misconduct can appeal cases to the University Judiciary. Sandra Wick, administrative assistant to the judicial board chairman, said the board had not dealt with any cases of pliarism this year.
But professors say that plagiarism frequently is difficult to prove. Norman Yetman, chairman of the sociol
ogy department, said a lack of time to obtain confirming evidence often prevented charging a student with plagiarism.
Yetman said most of the plagiarism he detected was the result of students re-using papers written by others.
Students who pliagiarize sometimes go beyond campus connections. Companies that sell research papers are doing successful business for years.
Bart Lowe, owner of Research Assistance, a Los Angeles firm, said his company sold academic information in the same way that a library made information available. His company is not held responsible, he said, if students plagiarize from the information they buy.
"It's not up to us to be the moral judge of that," he said.
Research Assistance advertises that it employs 75 professional writers and that its catalog contains detailed descriptions of 14,278 research papers.
Lowe declined to say how many orders his company received.
The causes of plagiarism, professors say, range from laziness to severe academic pressure.
But Lowe said the company did not sell complete research papers. Besides, no definition exists of what a complete research paper is, he said. Students who buy information from Research Assistance must sign a waiver that states they will not pliarize.
"If a student uses one of those services and doesn't list the paper that was purchased as a source, that's plagiarism." he said.
Professors remain unconvinced that research assistance companies don't expect their products to be used dishonestly. Yetman said that when students bought papers from a company, they almost always plagiarized.
"The emphasis that is placed on making a grade rather than on receiving an education is so intense and substantial that students perceive plagiarism as a short cut, and easy way out." Yetm said.
"We have preached to these students: grades, grades, grades," he said, "to the point where, frankly, it's not surprising that they make a mistake under pressure and plagiary. I'm not condoning it, but this aspect is often quietly ignored.
Genova said plagiarism didn't occur because students were immortal but rather because of the tremendous stress and energyiness in the U.S. educational system.
1
"People go around deploring the ethical values of the young, but basically that's a lot of balcony. They don't understand that has the power to reward them."
Genova said it was absurd that competition, not cooperation, dominated education.
"The central principle should not be one of competition," he said. "Knowledge has nothing to do with that. Ideally, I would like a situation where people could learn for their own benefit.
2
Thursday, April 23, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Around the World
Iran sentences U.S. engineer to 10 years in prison for spying
NICOSIA, Cyprus — Iran has sentenced a U.S. engineer to 10 years in prison on charges of spying for the CIA, the official Iranian news agency reported yesterday.
The Islamic Republic News Agency, monitored in Nicosia, quoted informed sources for its report on the sentencing of Jon Patils, a 50-year telecommunications worker, and did not say when the trial occurred.
Pattis, employed by Cosmos Engineers of Bethesda, Md., worked at the Asadabad telecommunications center 200 miles southwest of Teheran. He was arrested in
June, shortly after an Iraqi raid on the center that interrupted Iran's communications with the outside world.
In an appearance on Iranian state television in October, the U.S. engineer said he had passed information about Iranian military activities, oil production, inflation and food distribution through his company to the CIA.
According to the news agency, he faced seven charges related to espionage and using a forged passport to enter Iran. The agency did not specify the charges of which he was found guilty.
Death toll nears 400 in Sri Lankan civil war
COLOMBO, Sri Lanka — Government planes bombed Tamil rebels and guerrillas attacked government soldiers yesterday, adding more than 100 to the death toll that has reached almost 400 in six days of civil war.
The attacks came a day after a car bomb tore Colombo's main bus station apart, killing at least 106 people and wounding 295.
The government said 80 Tamil rebels were killed in the air raid. A military source reported that at least 36 soldiers and police were slain in guerrilla raids. Eight
rebels were also killed, the source said.
Government and military figures put the death toll at 374 people since Friday. Tamil extremists have attacked police in Kerala for a separate nation since 1983.
Tamil terrorists stopped vehicles on Friday in eastern Sri Lanka, pulled out passengers and killed 77 people, most of them Sinhala.
Monday, Tamil guerrillas killed 15 Sinhalese at a village in the same region.
Across the Country
High court upholds Georgia death penalty
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court ruled yesterday that state death penalty laws could be valid even if statistics indicated they were carried out in racially biased ways.
In its most important ruling on capital punishment since 1976, the court split 5-4 in upholdning Georgia's death penalty system even though killers of white people in that state are far more likely to be condemned to death than those who kill blacks.
The ruling dashed what many death penalty opponents considered to be their best chance of saving hundreds of the nearly 1,900 men and women on death rows across the country.
The decision removed the last legal claim many of those inmates had raised in fighting for their lives, but it is not expected to dramatically quicken the pace of executions.
Since the Supreme Court reinstated capital punishment in 1976, 70 U. prison inmates have been executed by electrocution, poison gas, firing squad and lethal injection.
Officials say U.S. knew of KGB bugs in '79
embassy site to intercept listening devices.
Robert E. Lamb, assistant secretary for diplomatic security, told a hearing of a House Foreign Affairs subcommittee that U.S. personnel were placed on the
WASHINGTON - U.S. officials were fully aware as long ago as 1979 that the Soviet KGB was bugging the U.S. Embassy in Moscow during its construction, but believed they had a strategy for finding the spy devices, a top State Department official said yesterday.
"We had a strategy for finding it," he said. "Where this strategy was weak was in the sense that the structure itself was the structure itself as the bulging."
Investigators have said some large components of the building were constructed away from the construction site by a Soviet contractor and away from the eyes of U.S. inspectors.
LaRouche siphoned millions, papers say
WASHINGTON — The Justice Department has charged in court papers that fringe presidential candidate Lyndon LaRouche, who claims he is penniless, has unsecured bank accounts and three corporations forced by the government into involuntary bankruptcy proceedings.
Interim trustees appointed by a federal bankruptcy court assumed control yesterday and assessed the
company's inventories, as LaRoche organization lawyers searched for ways to escape forced bankruptcy. Followers generally stayed away from the Leesburg, Va., headquarters.
LaRouche, who left the United States for Europe in December, has acknowledged filing no personal income tax returns in more than 10 years and contends he has no income.
Weather
From the KANSAN Weather Service
LAWRENCE FORECAST
Tomorrow, the good weather will continue with a high in the mid-70s.
temperatures as the high reaches 72 degrees. Tongn;
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mostly sunny skies will accompany warmer
WEATHER FACT: Record high temperatures of 100 degrees or greater do not begin until mid-May.
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3
Local Briefs
Birthday suit gets attention of KU police
It was his birthday so he wanted to do something special, the KU student told KU police Tuesday after they had clapped him down.
In honor of the occasion,
the student stepped up to the Chi
Omega fountain at 3:30 p.m.
toook the camera.
The teacher, jumped on.
and made a serious misjudgment. He ran north along West Campus road, straight past KU police headquarters at Carruthen-Olary Hall.
He soon attracted the attention of two KU police officers, who immediately gave chase, one on foot and one in a car.
The student made it to the Kappa Sigma sigma hierarchy house, 1045 Emery Road, where several people were holding open the doors for him, just before police officers arrived, a KU police spokesman said.
For his one-man birthday-suit party, the student received a notice to appear in Lawrence Municipal Court on charges of indecent exposure, disorderly conduct and interfering with a police officer, the KU spokesman said.
Campus and Area
KU director gets arts fellowship
The National Endowment for the Arts has awarded an Arts Management Fellowship to Jacqueline Davis, director of the KU Concert and Chamber Music Series.
Davis, one of 15 arts administrators in the country to receive the grant, will work this summer in the endowment's national office in Washington, D.C. She also will attend special seminars and field trips.
Mark Bieri, membership coordinator for the Swarthout Society, will serve as acting director of the Music Series while Davis is away.
Trip to Mars topic of student contest
The Planetary Society of Pasadena, Calif., has announced that its Mars Institute is having a Mars Student Contest. The prizes are $750 and an all-expense-paid trip to Boulder, Colo., this summer for a Mars conference.
The institute is sponsoring two contests. The first asks students to design an international Mars mission that uses the technological capabilities of various space programs. The second asks students to examine the social, political and economic benefits of an international mission to Mars.
Students must submit their entries by May 1 to Mars Institute, The Planetary Society, 65 North Catalina Ave., Pasadena, Calif., 91106.
Faculty Senate to meet for forum
The Faculty Senate will have a forum on collective bargaining today.
The University Senate will meet at 3:30 p.m. in Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas Union. Immediately after the meeting, the Faculty Senate will have a meeting and an informal forum on collective bargaining.
Members of an ad hoc committee on collective bargaining will participate in a brief panel discussion about issues raised during their research. The forum also will include a question and answer session.
Gov. Hayden adjusts to new executive position
Bv CHRISTOPHER HINES
Gove Mike Hayden came into office last year with two major campaign promises — the death penalty and a new state gasoline tax to finance Kansas highway construction.
Staff writer
The Senate defeated the death penalty by four votes, and the House so far has failed to address the gasoline tax issue.
"I think it has been a time of shakedown this session for the governor and the new leadership in the city," he said. Betty Jo Charlton D-Lawrence
Charlton worked for former Gov. John Carlin during his first year as the Kansas chief executive, while he was making the transition from speaker of the House to governor. Like Carlin, Hayden also launched himself to the governorship from the position of speaker of the House.
"It's hard to realize that you're in a
different branch of government." Charlton said. "I think he has already proved himself as a leader in the House, but it's a different type of leadership when you're in the executive branch. It's that old check and balance built into the system."
“It's not all roses.” Winter said. “You just can't call people in and bully them or use legislative tactical maneuvers on an issue such as the death penalty. It's a very personal issue. Legislators have to come to grips with it themselves.”
Winter questioned why Hayden had made the death penalty such a personal goal but said he supported Hayden's initiatives in other legislative areas, such as education.
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., RLawrence, was part of a coalition of Republicans that helped defeat the death penalty in the Senate for the first time in four years.
"As governor, he can only sign the
death penalty," Winter said. "It's not like being speaker of the House. You have to use less force and more style with the legislators. That's how the system works."
Hayden also has battled with the House this year over revenue estimates for fiscal year 1988, with the House Republican leadership cutting his budget by $23 million and renegade Republicans pushing for an additional $10 million in cuts.
A state economic consensus committee meets twice a year to make projections on the state's revenues for the next fiscal year. The committee this year also has had to estimate how much money the state would take in from changes in the federal tax structure.
This has created some of the new political divisions at the Legislature, with each lawmaker making his judgment of the committee's predictions.
"The governor has a right to his opinion," said State Rep. Bumpen, R-Topeka, chairman of the House Appropriations Committee. "But we're not quite as optimistic."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said it was a surprising situation when Democrats were supported by a Republican governor's budget.
"I think what you have are Republicans jockeying for power in the House," Solbach said. "Hayden is playing a different ball game as governor."
Winter said Hayden's budget recommendations this year were better than he had expected, especially in higher education.
"We need to get the faculty and classified employee salaries up," he said. "But I think the governor is moving in that direction."
The Legislature has not brought up yet the issue of a 5 cent per gallon
sales tax supported by Hayden that would finance highway construction in southeast Kansas, Charlton said the possibility existed that Hayden might call a special legislative session this summer to address the issue.
"I know the governor feels stongly about the issue," she said. "Unless the Legislature does something about it when it returns April 29, it's a real possibility that we'll be back this summer. But that is expensive."
Winter said that supporters of the new highway construction had put a lot of pressure on Hayden to keep his campaign promise.
"These people want their highway yesterday," he said. "I don't know how much support there is for it in the house if we're at the end of the session, and they haven't even discussed it."
Bad shades could be hazardous
by JERRI NIEBAUM
Staff writer
Students with bright futures are quickly realizing that they "gotta wear shades."
"Any pair of ophthalmic quality frames is going to be fairly expensive," said T.J. Speckman, Garden City sophomore, who works at Visions, 806 Massachusetts St.
And they can spend anywhere from $1 for a pair of Mickey Mouse sun glasses to $250 for a pair of handmade glasses with python skin frames.
Wild sunglasses may look good to everyone else, but the wearer's eyes may suffer for the stares. In addition to buying glasses that are fashionable,
Chad DeShazo/KANSAN
Paying for quality frames doesn't ensure quality lenses, however, and quality lenses are necessary to protect the eyes, he said.
Sunglasses protect the eyes by absorbing light, especially ultraviolet light, which can cause cataracts, and infrared light, which can cause retinal and eventual vision damage.
So if the glasses do not protect against ultraviolet light, more damaging rays will enter the eye through a pair of unprotective glasses than through no sunglasses, McMinn said.
Christine McMinn, sales clerk for Sunflower Surplus, 804 Massachusetts St., said sunglasshoppers should be careful to buy ultraviolet-protection glasses. Sunglasses cause the pupil to open because the glasses are dark, letting more light into the eye, she said.
"You can be doing damage without knowing it," she said.
She said glass, even clear glass,
naturally blocked ultraviolet light.
but lenses made of plastic had to be specially made to block the rays. Safe lenses are labeled ultraviolet safe.
Ultraviolet rays from a relatively small amount of sunlight can damage eyes, but infrared rays are most damaging when they are reflected from snow, water or other highly reflective surfaces. Speckman said.
"Your pupils can only dilate so far," McMinn said. "And then you're just sort of left with the hand over the eve or the squouting."
buyers need to make sure they are protective. Cheap shades without the right protection can harm retinas and can lead to cataracts.
Although glass and specially designed plastic both filter ultraviolet light, only certain colors of lenses filter infrared light.
"A dark gray lens isn't going to do it," Speckman said.
Lenses come in amber, copper,
blue, gray, and brown.
Snow skiers and other people who
are outside in high intensity light should wear sunglasses with darker lenses because they absorb more light. Speckman said.
He said amber lenses were good for activities like skiing because the yellowish lenses increased contrast, enabling the person to see bumps while skiing, and were dark enough to block the sun.
Mirror coatings also are good in intense light, Speckman said, because they reflect the light away from the eyes.
Like amber lenses, copper lenses are high contrast. But copper lenses are used on photochromic glasses, those that change from lighter to darker. Because they adjust for different lighting conditions, these lenses are especially suited for driving, Speckman said.
Copper lenses also filter all blue
light, which causes glare, Speckman said. Glare results from reflections of blue light rays which are at the end of the color spectrum, making them relatively long. Longer rays cause more glare, which tires eyes and makes them sore, he said.
Blue lenses let in more blue light, causing glare and tiring eyes, Speckman said, so they aren't good for use in any lighting situation.
Green, gray and brown lenses are all-purpose lenses. Speckman said green lenses were the most comfortable because they absorbed light the same way eyes would without glasses. Gray lenses are like green lenses only darker, he said. Brown lenses block blue rays like copper ones do to them also good for driving, but they don't adjust with changes in lighting.
While different colored lenses
absorb light in varying degrees, different shaped lenses will reflect light differently. Poorly shaped lenses cause distortion, which makes eyes work harder to focus, so they tire quickly.
By looking at a reflection in the lenses, a customer can tell if the glasses create distortion. Glasses that distort will reflect an image that is out of focus or oddly shaped.
"It's like looking through a lens with a prescription in it when you're supposed to have none." Speckman said.
Cheap lenses usually create a lot of distortion, because they are pressed plate glass or plastic and aren't shaped correctly. Speckman said.
"It's stamped out with a cookie cutter," he said of cheap lenses.
Students face many policies if they want to drop classes
Staff writer
By JENNIFER FORKER
With less than two weeks of classes left, KU students face several different policies if they still want to drop a class.
Students who want to drop a class may do so until May 1. But each school at the University of Kansas has different procedures that must be followed before approval to drop a course is granted. The KU timetable lists each school's policy.
"Each school at the University has the authority to form its own drop policy," said Gary Thompson, director of student records.
said. The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences makes it difficult to drop a class, but the School of Journalism readily approves requests.
Pam Houston, assistant to the dean of the college, said that the college had strict petition policies in the last third of the semester but that they were straightforward.
And although some schools make it easy for students to drop courses, they don't.
"I've very difficult to drop a class in the last third of a semester," Houston said. "Basically, a student has to show that extenuating circumstances occurred."
Approved circumstances include an illness or a family crisis in the last third of the semester that required the student to spend an abundance of time and energy away from the class. Another viable excuse is if the
student hadn't received feedback about a class grade before the petition period began April 2.
"Students often don't know how difficult it is to drop." Housain said.
The college approved 17 of the 29 petitions it received this semester. But Houston said that number was misleading because it appeared that students had a good chance of having petitions approved.
She said college officials explained the street policies to students who criticized the school.
"We're not trying to be punitive, but the college does feel that a student enrolled in the last third of the semester should complete the course." Houston said.
follow the policies of the school that offered the class rather than working through the student's school.
For instance, a journalism major who is taking a business class would have to go to the business school to drop the class.
Thompson said a student must
Thompson said this policy ensured fairness. All students enrolled in a particular course must go through the same procedures to drop it.
"It would be most fair that all students follow the same policy." Thompson said. "If you think of that as the premise for the whole thing, then the process falls together."
The business school has three procedures for petitioning to drop a course. Business majors who want to drop business courses have to obtain
their advisers' signatures on petition forms and drop cards. Then they must receive permission from instructors, who sign the drop cards and can issue W's or F's as grades. Finally, the business dean stamp is required.
Non-business majors dropping business courses must have drop cards signed by the instructors and then obtain the business dean stamp. The professors may issue W's or F's as grades.
But business majors dropping non-business courses must have their advisers sign the drop cards and obtain the business dean stamp. Then they have to work through the school offering the course.
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Thursday, April 23, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Opinions
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A class alternative
The skimpy summer timetable could have some students worried about whether they could graduate in August.
But before panic sets in, students should consider other options that University officials have provided for them. Administrators and faculty realize that KU's summer school offers a limited number of courses. Because of financial cutbacks, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and the professional schools cannot offer as many courses or as many sections as in the past.
The University Senate Executive Committee recently approved guidelines that would allow students to take classes at another school if KU doesn't offer a class required for graduation or a substitute
for the class.
SenEx has developed a way to help summer graduates cope with problems they could face if they aren't able to enroll in a required class. The committee also is trying to ease the burden on the University.
Administrators are trying to resolve the problems that KU faces. Students should try to understand the University's situation because the University's problems become the students' problems. Everyone will suffer because of the financial strains, but the University has to live within its means.
The University's guidelines are temporary. Let's hope that such guidelines aren't needed in the future.
Ignorant advice
"How to solve racial problems in the United States," as told to a group of visiting congressmen to the Soviet Union by Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev.
First, according to Gorbachev, establish a couple of separate states as a homeland for blacks and minorities. It probably would be easiest to clear out a couple of Southern ones; since many blacks already live in that area of the country, that would cut down on transportation problems. Next, gather together all the minorities, ship them to these empty states and voila! The country's racial problems have been solved.
Gorbache made this "off-the-cuff" remark to the visiting delegation during a lecture condemning the United States for its interference in Soviet human-rights practices. Some congressmen in attendance commented that, apparently, Gorbache had a "fundamental misunderstanding of how Americans viewed minorities"
Fundamental misunderstanding? Rather uninformed? Those are understatement. What could Gorbachev possibly have been thinking when he addressed a group of visiting U. S. congressmen, one of whom was black?
and that he was "rather uninformed about the desires and aspirations of black people in America."
The United States and the Soviet Union haven't been exactly the best of friends in recent years. So, if the Soviet Union wants to pursue better relations with the United States, it would be in everyone's best interest for it to stop giving "advice" on this country's internal problems and stick to ironing out the problems existing between the two countries. That alone is enough for the Soviets to worry about.
Maybe it was just an off-the-cuff remark and made out of ignorance on the subject. But that is no excuse to offend foreign dignitaries.
An indecent decision
And while the FCC hopes the new policy will clean up broadcasts, it will do so only at great
Barry W. Lynn, legislative counsel of the American Civil Liberties Union, said the ruling might scare stations away from shows that raise sexual topics, such as Ruth Westheimer's show.
Acting on the thousands of complaints it receives each year about offensive radio and television broadcasts, last week the Federal Communications Commission imposed stricter limits on what can be broadcast. The FCC had limited its action to broadcast of the "seven dirty words," which comedian George Carlin taught us. The FCC now will take action against shows that contain explicit descriptions of sexual or excretory activities, also.
expense to the freedom of broadcasters. The policy censors broadcasters into compliance, and most likely a good deal of overcompliance, by holding the threat of fines and license revocation over their heads.
It is much safer to avoid all controversial matters than to risk being knocked out of the business. Subsequently, broadcasters will be gagged as they try to determine what is and isn't safe. In the end, the viewers and listeners lose as they are deprived of all controversial programming.
News staff
News staff
Frank Hansel ... Editor
Jennifer Benjamin ... Managing editor
Juli Warren ... News editor
Brian Ketterine ... Editorial editor
Sandra Englandell ... Campus editor
Mark Siebert ... Sports editor
Diane Dutmeier ... Photo editor
Bill Skeet ... Graphics editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Lisa Weems ... Business manager
Bonnie Hardy ... Ad director
Denise Stephens ... Retail sales manager
Kelly Scherer ... Campus sales manager
Duncan Calhoun ... Marketing manager
Cory Copeland ... Classified manager
Jennifer Lumianski ... Production manager
David Nixon ... National sales manager
Jeanne Hines ... Sales and marketing adviser
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A quick guide to Middle East politics
To most of us, the Middle East is that no-man's land somewhere in the East that seemingly has been bugging us for eternity. While most of us readily associate Arabs, Israelis and Iranians with that part of the world,
from a native of that area, is the Middle East.
Malek Bouzid
unfortunately that's the extent of our knowledge of that area. No wonder, then, that the constant barrage of news from the Middle East seems repetitious, and almost boring, as we fail to grasp the details of the reported events.
Guest Shot
Israel: Holy Land. Democracy with Western standards.
Thus, with the hope of alleviating this boredom, here, in a nutshell,
Iran: Not an Arab country, really
provoked the Middle Ages.
Avatolian Iran
Arab World: Actually a collection of 20 countries created by France, England and Italy after World War II. Here they are from west to east:
Algeria: Ah, l'Aligerie, pays de la Casbah. Mediterranean dictatorship.
Morocco; Oriental rugs, hashish.
Family dynasty.
Tunisia: Club Mediterranee colony. Family dynasty.
Libya: Ghadaifduck land. Military dictatorship.
Egypt: The Calcutta of the West. Democracy a la Mexico.
Sudan: No one knew it existed until
Somalia: Really part of black Africa, but Arab in order to get money from oil sheikdoms. Military dictatorship.
7-foot-6 Manute Bol, signed with the Washington Bullets.
Syria: Soviet colony. Military dictatorship.
Lebanon: A movie ought to be coming out soon titled, "To Live and Die in Beirut." Not a country anymore.
Jordan: The queen of this Bedouin country once to an Ivy League game.
Iraq: Iran with a "q." Military dictatorship.
Saudi Arabia: Oil. Land of the authentic Abduls. Sheikhd.
Kuwait: More oil than water.
Sheikdom.
Bahrain; Oil again, Sheikdom.
Qatar: Where else have you seen ... "q" not followed by a "u?" Oil again. Sheikdom.
United Arab Emirates: Sorry, oil rain. Sheikdom.
North Yemen: Who cares. Military dictatorship.
So there you are. Now you're an expert on the area. Just remember, next time you hear something from the Middle East that you don't understand, don't feel so ignorant. It is cuckoo land out there.
South Yemen: Soviet colony. Military dictatorship.
Oman: Unofficially a British colony. Sultan for life.
Malek Bouzid, a native of Algeria, is a Lawrence graduate student studying electrical engineering.
AND SO, ON BEHALF OF THE MANAGEMENT OF MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL...
AND SO, ON BEHALF OF THE MANAGEMENT OF MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL...
WE DEDICATE THIS STATUE...
JACKIE 40 YEARS PROGRESS
WE DEDICATE THIS STATUE...
JACKIE
40 YEARS
ERROWS
NBA won't fall into same trap as Campanis
I have a female assistant who knows almost nothing about professional basketball. As she puts it: "I
The Al Campanis foot-in-the-mouth fiasco inspired me to conduct an experiment the other day.
Mike Royko Columnist
Bernard Coghill
That, I reasoned, would be the perfect state of mind to pursue an interesting story. She knows as much about basketball as Ted Koppel seems to know about baseball.
know who Michael Jordan is and Larry King. .or is it Bird. .but that's about all."
So I told her to call the National Basketball Association and ask a simple question: Why are there so few white players?
Now, before anybody jumps on me for trying to compare the dominance of blacks in basketball with the dominance of whites in baseball management, that wasn't my intent.
My reason for asking the question about the NBA was simply curiosity at how basketball executives would respond. Would they say blacks are obviously better at playing this game?
If so, the next question would be why? Are they simply better athletes? Or is it because in the impoverished, big-city ghetto neighborhoods, a hoop and a ball make for the least expensive game.
Although I think Campanis may have been treated more harshly than he deserved, it's obvious that blacks have been systematically shafted by the people who run baseball. There should be black managers, front office executives, and so on.
So my assistant put the question to
a spokesman at the headquarters of
the National Basketball Association:
"Why are 70 percent of the players
black and only 30 percent white?"
His answer: "Teams of the NBA put the best players in the world on our basketball courts. Period. There’s nothing else to be said. Race is not a factor. The best players are featured."
Next question: "I still don't understand why the ratio is different from the general population. There must be some theory."
His answer: "You can propose all the theories you want to. We just put the best product on the court."
I think most people would agree that his answer was a non-answer.
Question: "Why are there so many more black players than whites in the NBA?"
So I asked her to put the question to somebody who runs a professional basketball team. She called Jerry Bulls, the general manager of the Bulls.
Question: "But are there reasons blacks make better basketball players? Do they possess the athletic and physical characteristics needed in this game?"
Krause: "I don't look at color. I look at a player's ability and charac-
Question: "But that seems like such an obvious question, why are there so many more blacks?"
Krause: "That is a very sensitive issue these days, in many ways. I don't look at color one way or another. I look at an athlete's performance and character. Why different or certain people are in the league, that's a question that can't be answered in a short time or at all. There's no answer one way or another."
Krause: "That might be an obvious question. I'm sure that sociologists
Fascinating. Nobody is accusing them of being racist. Just the opposite. In their business, the overwhelming number of employees is from a minority group.
might have better answers than 1 could give. There's just no way to answer it. I've been in basketball 20 years and I've seen it through so many cycles. There's no answer as to why certain groups are in it. There's no way to answer it. You're asking a question that most people would say 'no comment' to."
Yet, they almost hyperventilate from nervousness when asked a question you would imagine they had given some thought to. If my profession was basketball, I don't see how I could avoid asking: "Why are most of our players black?" Is it physical or
But as Krause says, "that is a very sensitive issue these days."
sociological or both?"
It doesn't seem sensitive. But maybe he's right. Any answer he might give probably would offend someone. If he said: "Yes, they seem to be better at running, leaping and defying gravity," someone would say, "Aha, you are dealing in genetic generalities, which is racist."
But if he said, "No, they really aren't superior athletes," someone would demand: "Then why don't you hire more white players?"
It just shows what skittish times we live in.
Maybe tomorrow we'll call some Chinese restaurants and ask why so many of their cooks are Orientals.
Mailbox
'Clearing up' views
After reading Laura Bostrom's feature on the small town of Mound City in last Monday's Kansan, we would like to thank you for that brilliant piece of satire. Both of our families' ancestors settled in the Mound City area over a century ago.
Although it's true the residents in the town live much the same as they did in the 19th century, most of the families added indoor toilets in the late 1960s. In addition to this, a few people now drive cars instead of horses, despite the fact that they are much more likely to Scott or "The City" to get gasoline. We are especially appreciative of certain rustic charms that Lawrence and "The City" don't have, such as high school girls
with children.
We used to wonder why some people have such mistaken views about the Midwest. Your story clearly points to the explanation. By the way, what is a tanning salon? Our parents always took us to the woodshed to "get tanned."
Ken Snow
Pleasanton junior
Ward Rowe
Pleasanton junior
BLOOM COUNTY
HEY! WHOA!
HOLD IT! GET
THAT OUTTA YER
MOUTH!
4-27
by Berke Breathed
FISCAL REALITIES DEMAND WE SHARE A ROOM AND BED...BUT NOT MY TOOTHBRUSH.
MY GOD, THAT'S DISGUSTING.
EXCUSE ME,
MISTER
SQUEAMISH.
SMELLS LIKE
FISH OIL.
TO EACH HIS
DENTIFRICE.
1
University Daily Kansan / Thursday. April 23, 1987
Airlines extend discount air fares
By PEGGY O'BRIEN
Staff writer
Discount air fares, which travelers have been taking advantage of since January, will continue through the summer as major airlines extend supersaver offers.
Continental and Eastern airlines, units of Texas Air Corporation, started a heavily discounted "Maxsaver" program in January. They will continue to offer reduced air fares but at a slightly higher rate, according to sales officials.
Jim Gentry, district sales manager for Continental and Eastern Sales Inc. in Kansas City, Mo., said that starting Monday travelers could book reservations with new summer
"Maxsaver" rates
Other major airlines are expected to follow suit. An account manager with Northwest Airlines in Kansas City, Mo., said Northwest would match "Maxsaver" prices, although the company hadn't made the offer yet. The account manager said he thought Northwest's bargain fares would begin May 4.
Gentry said Continental and Eastern's rates were more steeply discounted this summer than in the past, at about a 70 percent to 80 percent discount from full coach fares. He said, however, that the summer fares were $30 to $40 more each way than the prices that were offered this spring.
Gentry said low fares definitely would encourage people who might have taken a car, bus or train under normal circumstances, to travel by plane.
Dorothy Pogge, a travel agent with Sunflower Travel, 704 Massachusetts St., said travelers who had reservations but had not already purchased tickets were calling to change reservations. They may do so if their plans fall within "Mxaasver" rules.
To qualify for "Maxsaver" rates, travelers must buy tickets within 24 hours of making reservations, which must be made at least seven days in advance, up from the two-day advanced purchase offered this spring.
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NAME THE Clue Set #2
Hot Shot
Here is the second set of clues to match with the Hot Shot Legends of Rock & Roll Poster inserted into this poster, the limited supply is available at the newspaper office. The first set of clans ran last week.
This sketch represents the right half of the poster with outlines of the faces. Each face outline is numbered 22 through 38. Match each outline to the poster, using the clues listed below to determine the names of the final 17 Rock Acts featured and remember to answer the 99th question on the back of the HOT SHOT. Schgaps bottle?
Write legally on Official Entry Form or on an B2" x 11"
piece of lined paper your name, school, school address,
home address, age, phone number, jacket size (S, M, L),
phone number, grade level, answer 39 answers,
numbered in correct order, and mail to:
LEGENDS OF ROCK & ROLL AND WIN!
Hot Shot Rock Legends Sweepstakes
Observation Hall
Church Hill, MD 21690
Only one entry per envelope. No mechanically reproduced entries will be accepted. Please abide by all rules and regulations listed on the backside of the poster.
And remember, you must be of legal drinking age in your state of residence and state where you attend school at time of entry.
Clues
30 LATIN ROCKER WHO HIT BIG WITH "LA BAMBA"
28 HER FREQUENT PARTNER WAS #8
BETTE MIDLER SHE AINT
(Set #2)
22. HIS FIRST BAND WAS THE ALLMAN JOYS
23. HIS ACT WAS A REAL EXPERIENCE
24 HE HAD A FOUR-LETTER HIT CALLED "W.O.L.D."
27. HIS BAND WAS KNOWN FOR SMASHING
THEIR INSTRUMENTS
31. HE TRIED TO PUT TIME IN A BOTTLE
32. WHEN YOU WAS MISSING DOGGIE LICE
25. HE WAS THE HIGH CARD ABOUT WHOM PAUL SIMON SANG ABOUT
LATIN HACKER WHO HIT BIG WITH
HE, HISTRIBUTOR BUT 'TIME' IN A BOTTLE
26. HER BROTHER IS A "CARPENTER"
HIS BAND WAS KNOWN FOR SCM
HE TREED TO PUT "I'M IN A BOTTLE"
32 "LOVIN YOU" WAS HER BIGGEST HIT
33 HE ANNOUNCED A RARE DUE FOR A
COMEBACK IN 75 YEARS
34 IF YOU CAN'T GUESS HIM, YOU'RE NOT
CUT OUT FOR THIS KIND OF WORK
35 HIS 'BROTHER' WAS DAN
36 HE ASKED "WHY DO
FOOLS FALL IN LOVE"
37 HE LIKED LIZARDS
AND SNAKES AND
WILLIAM BLAKE
38 HIS SON JULIAN
FOLLOWS IN HIS
FOOTSTEPS
22 23 24
25 26
27 28
29 30
31 32 33
34 35 37 38
36
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Show Off Your Legs!!!
With 20% off our entire stock of men's and women's shorts, you can get great savings on your spring wardrobe at Litwin's. All styles are included in this three day sale, so come in now and show off you legs.
litwin's
Topeka & Lawrence
6
Thursday, April 23, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
©1987 Universal Press Syndicate 4-29
"You eat what's there, Mitchell. . . I know you're just spreading it around."
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--eggs and bees from the rectangular hive one at a time. Elongated queen egg-houses on the comb's edges showed that the bees had been busy raising a new queen since Jeffries had separated them from their old hive and queen several days earlier.
Jeffries wedged the queen's tiny empire between two trays of honeycomb in the hive. He will return to the hive in a few days to see if the bees have accepted their new queen.
candy. The bees in the hive immediately were drawn to the smell. The liquid is a synthetic copy of a pheromone that bees naturally produce to communicate with each other.
Stinger
Continued from p. 1
All the eggs are the same initially, Jeffries said, but the worker bees feed the eggs from which queens will hatch with a special substance called royal jelly. The other eggs will receive some of the royal jelly, but, unlike the queen eggs, they also will be fed honey and pollen.
"So far they're acting real good," Jeffries said as he handled the comb. He flicked bees from his bare hands when they landed on him.
The queen will grow larger than the other bees and will be the only bee capable of laying eggs. And she might lay as many as 2,000 eggs a day.
"Usually if I get stung once or twice I'll go put my gloves on," he said. "I'm not a glutton for punishment."
Jeffries' new bees are from Mississippi. Each one's tiny crate has a plug of "bee candy," a
sugary, waxy substance that the bees eat during the mail flight and their first few days in the new hive. The queen and her subjects will eat through the candy in two or three days and will leave the little crate to join the new hive.
"They'll be glad to get a new queen," Jeffries said. "I hope they accept her."
He typically introduces the new queen to the hive gradually. Each hive has its own smell, jiffies and sweetness. What happens if they aren't used to her scent.
"Hear that noise they're making!" Jeffries said of the low humming coming from the hive. "They know there's a new queen in there now."
With a Q-tip, Jeffries spread a clear liquid on the crate and on the
On Campus
"Bird Migration in Argentina," A Brown Bag Lunch Merienda Program, is scheduled for 11:30 a.m. today at 109 Lippincott Hall.
"The Constitution as a Living Document: Brennan vs. Meese," a lecture by Arthur Kinoy, is scheduled 12:30 p.m. today at 104 Green Hall
A Latin American Solidarity Rice and Beans Dinner is scheduled for 6 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
University and Faculty Senate meetings are scheduled for 3:30 p.m. today in Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas Union.
■ "Ansel Adams and Dorothea Lange. An Essay on Three Mormon Towns," a lecture by David Jacobs, is scheduled for 7 p.m. today at the Spencer Museum of Art auditorium.
A concert by classical guitarist David Tanenbaum is scheduled for 8 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
southridge
campground outdoor living
On the Record
NOW LEASING for fall
A Slavic Club panel discussion is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. today in the Pine Room at the Kansas Union.
1 & 2 bedroom apartments
A student recital with Patrick Sweeten, trombone, is scheduled for 8 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
Southridge Plaza Apts.
"The Church in Central America," a lecture by Bishop Sean O'Malley, is scheduled for 8 p.m. today at Saint Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road
A KU student told Lawrence poce that when he was taking out his trash at about 3:30 a.m. yesterday in the 1600 block of West 23rd Street, he saw someone damaging his car. The damage amounted to $150, Lawrence police said.
842-1160
Lawrence. Kansas 66044
Four pieces of luggage and three sweaters valued at $375 were taken between Friday and Monday from a KU student's residence in the 1900 block of Heatherwood Drive, Lawrence police said.
SING SING SING
if only the bird that sings best sang.
PREPARING FOR FINALS
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How silent the woods would be
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Thursdav. April 23, 1987
7
Arts/Entertainment Guitarist prefers a classical sound
Bv IERRI NIEBAUM
Staff writer
In 1974, David Tanenbaum was a guitar player for The Vegetables, the first U.S. rock band to the Soviet Union.
Now he's playing classical music and performing at the University of Kansas tonight as a Reader's Digest Affiliate Artist.
"I was hearing classical music as long as I could hear," he said.
Tanenbaum, 30, chairman of the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, started playing music when he was 5.
Tanenbaum's father is a trumpet player, composer and director of electronic music, and his mother is a pianist and piano teacher.
My mom says when I was little, used to wear out Mozart records.'
David Tanenbaum
guitarist
"My mom says when I was little, I used to wear out Mozart records," he said.
Tanenbaum has been playing concerts all week at various clubs and schools in Lawrence and will conclude his stay with performances on non today for the Lawrence Kiwianis Club, at 8 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall and tomorrow morning at Lawrence High School and at Hallmark Cards Inc., 101 McDonald Drive.
Markie Bieri, membership coordinator for the Swarthout Society, which is presenting Tanenbaum's visit, said the society chose him to play the concerts because of recommendations from affiliate artists.
"We like someone who is very good with the audience." Bieri said.
Tanenbaum said he developed rapport with his audiences by relating to each member individually. He talks about his high school days with high school students and about the guitar business with business people.
"An audience is a heavy mass, and it has to be moved slowly at first," he told.
Like his audiences, Tanenbaum needed to be moved slowly at first. He started his music career playing classical piano and cell, but he tired of the instruments by the time he was about 9.
"They were sort of forcing me to
take lessons," Tanenbaum said of his parents.
So he quit. But he soon grew interested in both electric and classical guitar, and by the time he was in high school, he was practicing up to eight hours a day.
He said the guitar provided him with a way to express himself musically in private.
"I could just sort of lock the door," he said.
He said the cello and the piano had been too loud, so his parents could always listen.
Tanebenau first studied guitar in New York with Rolando Valdes-Blain, a Cuban art dealer. He taught him to play the saxophone for about five hours once a week.
"He would spend his entire afternoon with me." Tanenbaum said.
After high school, Tanenbaum started touring as a guitar soloist with the Joffrey Ballet. His high school days of rock music, and The vegetables ended, and Tanenbaum became a full-time classical guitarist.
"The more structured the music is, the more I like it." he said.
After touring with the Joffrey to the Soviet Union, Tanenbaum cut back on his performance schedule and studied under Aaron Shearer at the Peabody Conservatory in Baltimore, where he said he revamped his classical technique.
Tanenbaum has given recitals throughout the United States, Canada and Europe and has performed with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and the San Francisco Symphony.
He said classical guitar was becoming increasingly popular in orchestras, although few symphonies had guitar parts. For most of his performances with orchestra, Tanenbaum plays "Concierto de Aranjuez," by Jujaquin Rodrigo. He said that this was because Spanish music traditionally used the guitar and that few other old classical styles did.
Tanenbaum said one of his life's goals was to encourage composers to write guitar parts for classical music. He now spends many hours arranging traditional classical compositions so they can be played on the guitar, although he doesn't write his own music.
Tanenbaum plans to do more playing and less teaching in the future, and he hopes to tour Asia someday.
"I feel very lucky that I do what I do," he said.
Tanenbaum will give a free performance at 8 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
Ralph Fletcher
Classical guitarist David Tanenbaum will give a free performance at 8 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
Pot-Pourri plays offer variety
Bv JERRI NIEBAUM
Staff writer
Pot-Pourri Productions offers audiences a choice of seven plays this week as student directors experiment with theater at the Inge Theatre in Murphy Hall.
"It's like a sglamborg of theater," said Jack Wright, artistic director and professor of theatre and media arts.
Wright chose the seven directors from a group of students who shared with him ideas they had for directing.
"It gives us an opportunity to work on plays or projects that might not otherwise get shown," said Joe Brande斯基, Lawrence graduate student.
Brandesky is directing "Lunin," which will be performed tonight. The three-hour play is about a political prisoner in 19th-century Russia who is in a Siberian prison cell, awaiting execution. The play was written by Edward Radzinsky, a Soviet playwright who visited the University of Kansas several weeks ago.
Brandyks directed "The Suicide" at the I inge Theatre in 1986.
"Every time you direct a play, it's a learning experience," Brandesky said.
"Beyond Therapy," directed by Neil LaBute, Lawrence graduate student, will be performed tomorrow night. Written by U.S. playwright Christopher Durang, the play is a "nervous romance" about a trio of lovers, including a bisexual attorney, a homosexual and a neurotic woman magazine writer.
LaBute said "love, or something like it, conquers all," was the theme of the play.
LaBate said that directing the show taught him about working under time constraints and working with a variety of actors.
"It's been thoroughly degrading, and I love it." he said.
"Finders Keepers," directed by James Claflin, Lawrence graduate student, will be performed Saturday, and "The Misunderstanding," directed by Masoud Delkah, Iran graduate student, will be performed Sunday.
Pot-Pouri Productions will be performed at 8 p.m. today, tomorrow, Saturday and Sunday at the Inge Theatre in Murphy Hall. All performances are sold out.
Monkey business in "Project X" isn't worth watching
"Project X" is a children's movie for infantile adults. This laughable film's only merit is a fine performance by a chimpanzee.
Gil Chavez
Columnist
PETER ROBINSON
Never mind what the ads say. Matthew Broderick, the star of "Ferris Bueller's Day Off," is not the star of "Project X." Broderick plays a supporting role to the real star, Willie, a chimpanzee who plays a budding aviator named Virgil.
Virgil gets all the glory when he foils a secret Air Force project. The experimental program trains chimps
to fly flight simulators and then zap them with radiation to test how far they can fly before dying. Somehow, this demonstrates the usefulness of bombers in nuclear war.
We first meet Virgil in Africa, but soon he's off to the University of Wisconsin. While he's there he wears toddler clothes and charms a psychology student named Teri (Helen Hunt). Teri is doing some sort of Dr. Doolittle graduate work that involves teaching Virgil sign language.
Virgil's education takes an abrupt turn and he ends up at an Air Force base in Florida, where Jimmy Garrett (Broderick) trains him to fly a flight simulator.
Jimmy discovers that his star student is a Wisconsin grad. With
Virgil's help, Jimmy shows he has the right stuff by whipping his raw recruits into a top-notch squadron of simulator pilots.
But Virgil uncovers the terrible truth about the program and, in a scene reminiscent of "Gremlins," proves any ape can be a Top Gun.
The chimpms have all the good lines and do better acting than the humans. They even act like humans, engaging in such self-destructive human activities as smoking cigarettes, eating Twinkies, and messing with nuclear power. The most human gesture is saved for Virgil's sweetheart, Goofy (Okko). She gives the Air Force a one-finger salute.
It's hard to believe this screenplay, written by Lawrence Lasker and Stanley Weisser, was "inspired" by
anything, let alone actual experiments conducted by the Air Force
This movie is full of things that are hard to believe, particularly Broderick's acting. His character is supposed to be an undisciplined maverick pilot. But Broderick, despite smoking cigarettes and sporting a faint five o' clock shadow, still looks and acts like he's playing hooky from high school.
At one point the soundtrack betrays Broderick. When he says, "Let's get the hell out of here," the "hell" appears to have been dubbed over a much harsher word.
You can't even believe the chimps when they say anthing. In a phone, hokey effort at simian vocalization, the hoots of a half dozen actors are dubbed in.
Within this context, it is surprising that director Jonathan Kaplan would like us to believe he's made a movie that entertains while addressing serious subjects. There seems to be some hope that this will be a variation of "War Games," but there isn't enough here for that to be true.
There are hints that Kaplan may have thought about science and technology that concerns cruel experiments on animals or an obsession with "winning" a nuclear war that has deprived us of our humanity, but that's as far as it goes.
Kaplan seems to want the luxury of being taken seriously without making anyone feel uncomfortable. He wants to keep everyone happy. He certainly doesn't want anyone wearing furs or elephant boots to feel
guilty about animals. The chimps are worth saving for their humanly ways, not for any intrinsic value of their own, which shows Kaplan has a long way to go in his own appreciation of animals.
I doubt that "Project X" ever will make it to cult status, as other silly science fiction films have done. But that's its only hope.
Willie, on the other hand, has the potential to be a matinee movie idol. He's the brightest chimp Hollywood has seen since the golden age of Cheetah and Tarzan, Bonzo and Reagan.
As for Broderick, Hunt and Kaplan, they have injured their careers. Broderick's character put it best when he said, "I feel like an idiot." Really, it's no wonder why.
Folk musician takes solo tour of Midwest
Rv IENNIFFER FORKER
Staff writer
Although Thompson usually tours with a full rock band, he is performing solo during this 10-city tour through the Midwest.
Richard Thompson, described by Spin magazine as "the most interesting white guitar player of his generation," will perform at 8 p.m. today at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St.
Thompson is a British folk singer, songwriter and guitarist who has enjoyed little commercial success during the past 20 years. However, he continues to make albums.
His highest album, "Daring Adventures," was released in 1986 and was hailed by music and entertainment magazines as his best work yet. Rolling Stone magazine described the song "Nearly in Love" as "a hilarious declaration of romantic indecision. It also has a good beat, and you can dance to it."
Spin magazine said, "Richard Thompson on a bad day is better than most any other guitarist, or songwriter, for that matter, on his
Rick Friedman and his brother, John, formed a production company this semester called "Ethnic Cowboy." Thompson is the fourth
performer that they have scheduled to appear in Lawrence.
Local singers Lance Burr and Patty Boyer will open the show with five or six songs, and Charlie Mead and Mike Janas, members of a Lawrence band called The Homestead Greys, also will perform.
Friedman said that tonight's hour and a half performance would be Thompson's first in Lawrence, although he played at Parody Hall in Kansas City, Mo., in the fall.
"He can really appeal to a lot of different people," Friedman said. "I see his music as a synthesis of small ballads with a lot of history in his music."
Friedman said that Thompson played a variety of music, from rock 'n' roll to updated versions of British and Irish folk tunes.
Thompson blends other ethnic music into his songs. Friedman said Thompson knew dozens of local musicians and the sound into his music.
"He's able to take different rhythms from different cultures and synthesize them with rock 'n roll," Friedman said.
Joe Frankel, Chicago junior, has seen Thompson in concert twice.
"Those were two of the best shows I've ever seen," Frankel said. "He's really an electrifying
"He can take you on a trip with the music and bring you right back. He seems to have so much control over his music."
performer.
Brad Schwartz, Chicago junior, said Thompson was one of the best guitarists alive today.
'He's not with his band, but from what I've seen, he can't put on a bad show.'
Joe Frankel Chicago junior
Schwartz said, "Richard does things no other man can do. He has these fingers that look like they're six inches long each.
“He hasn't received much popularity. It's a secret. I’m glad the mainstream hasn’t accepted that. He’s more exciting for me.”
Thompson began his musical career in 1967 with Fairport Convention, a folkish rock 'n' roll
band. After releasing four albums with the band, "Fairport Convention," "Unhalfbricking," "Liege and Lief" and "Full House." Thompson left in 1971.
His first solo album, "Henry the Human Fly," was released in 1972. His wife, Linda, sang backup on the album. Their first album together, "I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight," appeared in 1974.
The two released seven other albums until they divorced in 1982. Thompson released "Hand Of Kindness," in 1983, followed by "Small Town Romance," and "Across a Crowded Room."
Although the couple broke up five years ago, songs on Thompson's latest album still reflect the split. Frankel said.
"His music really, really reflects that relationship." Frankel said. "They broke up on bad terms."
Although Thompson will be performing solo tonight, Frankel said the show would not be a disappointment.
"It's the kind of show that gets you into a good mood." Frankel said. "He's not with his band, but from what I've seen, he can't put on a bad show."
PHILIP C. BURNS, ARCHIVES
Courtesy of Dennis Keeley
Richard Thompson will perform at 8 p.m. today at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St. Thompson is a British folk singer, songwriter and guitarist. He is on a 10-city tour of the Midwest.
8
Thursday, April 23, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Anne Frank's nightmare relived in drama
BY JENNIFER FORKER
Staff writer
Staff writer
Anne Frank and the seven other inhabitants of the small attic bicker, laugh, eat and sleep. They tread softly on the floor, fearful of being heard. They can't leave but must spend days and nights trapped in the claustrophobic room.
Frank lived in the attic for two years during World War II, trying to evade the Nazis and imminent deportation to a German concentration camp. Anne was 13 and living in the attic when she started keeping a diary of her experiences.
Frank's attempt to hide from the Nazis was unsuccessful. She later died in a concentration camp after the Nazis discovered her family's hiding place. After the war, her father, the sole survivor of the family, published portions of Frank's diary.
The hardship of Frank's confined life will be illustrated in the Lawrence Community Theatre, 1501 New Hampshire St., production of "The Diary of Anne Frank." The play is adapted from Frank's diary, and the first performance is 8 p.m. today.
"It's the story of their struggle, their courage and their faith," said Art Sloan, the play's director and an English and humanities teacher at Lawrence High School.
Sloan said that many plays had a large cast but that few plays featured the same actors on stage for the duration of a play. In this play, eight of 10 actors remain on stage throughout the play. The actors' uninterrupted presence on stage helps demonstrate the confinement that the attic's inhabitants endured, he said.
He said it was difficult to create non-distracting and realistic stage activity for the actors to create aenable rendition of life in the attic.
The play incorporates 218 props which help make the stage look realistic, Sloan said.
Larry Sherr, professor of business,
plays Frank's father, Otto Frank.
"I've never seen so many props on a stage," Sherr said. "We need to convince people that we've lived there for two years."
Sloan also said it was difficult to perform the play on a small stage where curtains were not used. The
audience will watch activity that curtains would have hidden.
"We've had to adapt. Here the actors have to do everything," Sloan said. "We've figured out ways to incorporate that into the play."
Sloan was referring to clothing changes in the play. The actors must change clothing in front of the audience because the changes were part of life in the attic.
He said scene and clothing changes would be done discreetly. Sloan added recorded diary selections to scenes and will be played when scenes change.
"It sort of looks like they're living, and you added them to real life—they've changed their lives," she said.
Emily Johnston, Lawrence sophomore, plays Anne's sister, Margot. She said the costume changes were the most difficult aspect of the play.
"That is the hardest part," she said. "We have 10 seconds to change our clothes, which is kind of a hassle."
Sloan said that 68 sound cues were used in the two-hour play. The sound effects simulate airplane engines, church bells, marching soldiers and children at play in the street.
Sherr said that many producers were needed to put on the play.
"We've recorded sounds so there is a feeling of life outside," he said.
"There's a lot people putting tins on. The 10 people on stage are only the tip of the iceberg." Sherr said. "The play is fun but difficult to fit into your life. I wouldn't want to count the number of hours we've worked."
"I try to leave the weekend free so the people can relax. People need time away from it." Sloan said
Other cast members include Becky Sherr, Lawrence High School senior, as Anne Frank; Laurie Vander Pol-Hosek as Mrs. Frank; Judith Scheff as Mrs. Van Daan; Maury Peters as Mr. Van Daan; Michael Boring as Peter; Charles Neuringer as Dussel; Arnold Weiss as Kraler; and Hannes Combes at Miep.
The play first was performed in 1955 in New York. The Lawrence theater will give eight performances. The play will be performed at 8 p.m. today, tomorrow, Saturday, April 30 and May 1 and 2. Matinees are scheduled for 2:30 p.m. Sunday and May 1. Sign language will accompany the Saturday performance.
KOCH
During a Hanukkah celebration, Anne Frank, portrayed by Becky Sherr, points at the pachu fuzz on Peter's upper lip in "The Diary of Anne Frank," which opens tonight at the Lawrence Community Theatre. Peter is played by Michael Boring, Charles Neuringer plays Dussel, seated at left, and Emily Johnston plays Margot, also seated.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 23, 1987
9
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10
Thursday. April 23, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Program helps asthma victims cope
By IENNIFER WYRICK
Staff writer
Jim Ryun is the most successful miler ever to come out of the University of Kansas. He was the first high school athlete to run a mile in less than four minutes.
And he did it despite having asthma.
Superbreathers, a program for families with asthmatic children, tries to help asthmatics live normal lives. The program is sponsored by Lawrence Memorial Hospital and the American Lung Association of Kansas.
The four-week course, for 6 to 12-year-old asthmatic children and their parents, is designed to enable them to better understand and cope.
While parents attend informational sessions on asthma, conducted by
local health care professionals, children participate in breathing control exercises and educational activities, said Nancy Donahay, community education coordinator at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
The first session on Monday acquainted parents with the anatomy and physiology of the respiratory system. The remaining sessions deal with medications and their effects, family relationships and the asthmatic child's nutrition. Donahey said.
Children engage in activities, such as swimming, breathing control exercises and asthma education, which are designed to develop their self-confidence and ability to take care of themselves.
Swimming and karate were especially effective because they involved both controlled movements
Asthma is the most common chronic disease of childhood. Many adults also suffer from it. During the most serious of attacks, victims fight to expel air, only making it more difficult to breathe. The panic or overexcitement that seizes the child or adult only makes the attack worse.
and breathing, Donahey said.
In an effort to take in more air, victims usually sit up. They perspire, and the lips and nailbeds may take on a bluish cast as the severity of the attack increases. Such episodes in a child or an adult can be life-threatening.
But children and adults can and should lead a normal life, said Ron Weiner, a lawrence specialist in asthma and allergies.
An important factor in living with asthmatics is the emotional atmosphere around them. They should be encouraged to learn and to develop normally without feeling that they are different.
The Superbreathers staff consists of a program facilitator, allergist, pulmonary specialist, water safety instructor, certified karate instructor, registered nurse and nutritionist
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The American Lung Association also has a summer program called Camp Superbreathers, said Susan Hall, northeast region director for the American Lung Association of Kansas. The camp is designed to reinforce the idea that asthmatic children can spend all night away from home and participate in a variety of sports.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday. April 23, 1987
11
Sports
Athletes talk to kids about drug abuse
Bv LAURA BOSTROM
Staff writer
One seventh-grade girl asked the three KU athletes speaking to her class how she could help a friend who was addicted to drugs.
Manning told the girl that he had been in a similar position with one of his friends.
Danny Manning, KU forward; Tracy Jordan, KU tight end; and Brad Hinkle, KU free safety, spoke Tuesday to 22 West Junior High School seventh-grade students about the "sports" of drugs and possible solutions.
"It took awhile for me to realize
me friend had a problem." Manning
laughed.
The athletes gave presentations as part of Drug Use and Drug Prevention, a health, physical education and recreation class at KU, taught by Raymond Tricker, assistant professor of HPER. All class members made presentations this week to area schools about drug use.
The class examines drug use, reasons why it occurs and how to help those addicted. Tricker said. It also helps class members clarify some of their own feelings about the issue, he said.
Athletes have special needs, Tricker said.
"We need to understand their pressures as students, and as highly pressured athletes," he said.
Although the class is open to any one most of the 35 students are KU athletics.
Athletes need to be more aware of their potential to be positive role models, he said.
Manning said that he idolized college athletes when he was young, and the revelations about the drug use of McClain and McClaim as a basketball player from
Villanova who told his story of cocaine addiction in a recent Sports Illustrated magazine article, really hurt him.
McClain's story also was discussed at one of today's programs at West. Mia Elizabeth, 14, said she had liked her classes and felt well prepared. She had watched many of his games.
When the story of his drug use came out, she was disappointed.
"I couldn't believe it," she said.
Drugs are not worth the costs, Manning said.
"They hurt your family, your friends," he said.
The continual stories of drug use have hurt all those involved in athletics.
"It sheds a bad light on all of us," Manning said.
The athletes told the students reasons not to try drugs.
"At first you may like them," Jordan said. "But in the long run, they will hurt you, either physically or mentally."
The three athletes said they never had tried drugs, but they all knew it.
"People look for drugs as a way to ease the pain." Hinkle said. "Once you come down you still feel the pain."
The athletes asked the students about drug use at West, and the students spoke of rumored users, alcohol and cigarette smokers.
manning said the students needed to be ready with an answer if some-
"You have to be your own self. Do what's best for you," he said.
Manning said he found someone that he could talk to about his friend's problem.
"He's not back straight yet, but
he's turned his life around," he said.
KC suffers 4th shutout in 5 games
BOSTON — Bob Stanley finally got some cheers. Kansas City Manager Billy Gardner is still waiting for some runs.
Astros skunk Braves 6-0; still undefeated at home
In only his fourth start this season after six years as a reliever, Stanley pitched a four-hitter last night in the Boston Red Sox' 1-0 victory over the Royals, who were shut out for the fourth time in their last five games.
Stanley, 2-2, retired the truce to Kansas City batters and picked up the seventh shutout and 18th complete game of his 11-year career. His last shutout and complete game was June 19, 1980, against Seattle.
"I had everything working tonight," Stanley said. "The sinker was good, and the forkball was outstanding. I threw every pitch where I wanted to throw it."
See related story
"Getting the standing ovation in the ninth inning was nice. I liked that," said Stanley a frequent target
of boys from Boston fans. "It's nice to be wanted."
prised to see him go so long with so much control."
Stanley threw only 102 pitches, 70 of them strikes.
But Gardner is tired of seeing his Royals go so long with so few runs.
"I've seen him pitch well in relief before," Gardner said. "I'm sur-
The Associated Press
"What did Custer say? Where did those Indians come from?" Giurgeo
Dwight Evans drove in the only run for Boston, which had seven hits.
The Royals had gone hitless for the first six innings against Boston's Roger Clemens Tuesday night when they finished with three hits in an 8-0 loss. On Sunday, they were shut out twice by the New York Yankees.
Jim Rice led off with a walk and took third on a single by Don Baylor, who was caught in a rundown between first and second and tagged out. Evans, who drove in four runs Tuesday night, then singled Rice home.
off Danny Jackson. 0-3.
Stanley struck out four and walked no. BeJackson, who came into the game with 10 strikeouts in his previow. He pitched out twice in three at bats last night.
Boston, which has won four of its five games, scored in the fourth
Jackson got the Royals' first hit, a fifth-inning double, but the next two batters grounded out and ended the
ST. LOUIS — Andre Dawson, hitting only .157, connected for his third career grand slam and capped a five-run seventh inning last night and powered the Chicago Cubs to a 5-4 triumph over the ST. Louis Cardinals.
The Cards, with Jack Clark hitting a triple, came home cups built a 3-10 lead after four minutes.
But in the Cubs' seventh, Leon Durham and Gary Matthews, pinch hitting for winner Rick Sutcliffe, 3-1, both singled. Dawley, 0-2, relieved St. Louis starter Connyro
defeated the Atlanta Braves 6-0 to remain undefeated at home this season.
Bv ROB KNAPP
Cubs 5. Cardinals 4
Atlanta's David Palmer, 0-3, went five 1-3 innings and took the loss.
KU tennis team looks for 2nd-place finish
Deshies, 1-0. walked two in his first start of the season. Larry Anderson and Dave Smith finished up.
Staff writer
The Associated Press
HOUUSTON — Left-hander Jim Deshaines gave up four hits and struck out a career-high 11 in seven innings last night as the Houston Astros
The Kansas women's tennis team begins play at the Big Eight Conference Tennis Championships today with hopes of locking down second place.
Defending champion Oklahoma State heads into the tournament with a sizable lead. But Colorado, Oklahoma, and Kansas are within all a few points of one another.
National League
Kansas enters the championships with two defending Big Eight champions, junior Tracy Treps at No. 1 singles, and sophomore Jeanette Jonsson at No. 2 singles. Defending champions face a special test, Perelman said.
Houston took a 1-0 lead in the first when Bill Doran led off with an
The new doubles teams have not played enough matches to be seeded, though, and will have to face seeded competition in the first round.
"We're 20 points out of first." Kansas women's tennis coach Scott Perelman said. "We lost to Kentucky, but didn't show up. There are three
"Any time you are defending a title, you become a big win or an important match for your conference opponents," he said. "I't pro
match since.
But for Treps, the season has been much more difficult. She lost two of her first three conference matches.
teams fighting for second, and that's what we're focusing on now."
Perealm said the team's new doubles lineup must do well for Kansas to finish high in the tournament. Perealm changed the doubles pairs after the dual match with Colorado on April 10, and the Jayhawks have not lost a doubles
Play begins today at the Oklahoma City Tennis Center with first and second round singles and first round doubles. The championships conclude tomorrow with the singles finals and the final two rounds of doubles.
Jonson has met that challenge,
going undefeated in Big Eight
play. She enters the tournament as
the top seed at No. 2 singles.
vides one with a new set of challenges."
The turnaround for Treps came in the Colorado match.
"Before I went out against Colorado," Treps said, "I said to myself, What do I have to lose?"
See NATIONAL, p. 14, col. 1
Treps is one of three No. 1 singles players with two losses.
AIR
Christine Kim, Overland Park junior, makes a return during a match today at the Big Eight Conference Tennis Championships in Oklahoma against Oklahoma. The women's team is beginning competition City.
Jayhawks' errors result in late Shocker rally; KU loses 10-6
Staff writer
By DAVID BOYCE
in the bottom of the eighth.
A change of seenery did not help the struggling KU baseball team yesterday at Wichita.
The Jayhawks entered the bottom of the eighth inning leading 6-5 against Wichita State and let the victory ship away.
With one out, Kansas' first baseman John Byrn committed the first of three Jayhawk errors, which led to five unearned runs for the Shockers
The final score, Wichita State, 10 and Kansas, 6.
The game in many ways mirrored the two teams' previous confrontation on April 2 at Quigley Field.
In that game, Kansas held an 8-5 lead before the Shockers scored eight runs in their final at-bat. This game, the Shockers won five times during its final at-bat.
Kansas has now lost six in a row.
Its record is 11-28-1 overall and 1-15 in
the Big Eight Conference.
The Jayhawks' leading hitter, Hugh Stanfield, also had his 13-game hitting streak snapped.
But the ending of Stanford's hitting streak does not compare with the bad luck starting pitcher Mike McLeod has suffered in his last three starts.
Once again McLeod fell victim to his team's defense.
In his loss to Kansas State two weeks ago, an error late in the game cost him a victory.
"I did okay." McLoead said. "I felt good all the way through."
He said the team was still finding ways to lose games.
"We have a chance to win every game we play, but we just have not been able to get the breaks," he said.
The Shockers took the lead in the bottom of the first by scoring the first goal.
Last night, McLeod gave up five earned runs but suffered his fifth defeat against two victories.
Kansas tied the game in its next at-bat. Wichita State, though, scored three in the bottom of the third.
Both teams scored a run in the fourth making the score 5-2 Wichita State.
Kansas then scored four runs in the top of the fifth and held a 6-5 lead until the disastrous eighth.
In the eighth, two runs scored on consecutive throwing errors by catcher Joe Prister and third baseman Tom Bilveu.
Shocker catcher Eric Wedge scored the final run of the game on the throwing error by Pfister.
The Jayhawks will play the Shockers again tomorrow at 5 p.m. Wichita.
WICHITA 10. KANSAS 6
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Matt. Fri., Sun. *3:00, 9:00
Daily 7:20 ONLY
Walt Disney's Classic
Daily 9:30 ONLY
GEORGETOWN APARTMENTS
- June & July special: $200.00
- Wired for cable TV
- Fenced Pool Area with Tanning Deck
- Completely Privacy Fenced
- Beautifully Landscaped
- Washer & Dryer Hook-ups
- 10, 11, or 12 month leases
- Dishwasher
- Pantry
- Garbage Disposal
OPEN HOUSE
Saturday, April 25 10-4
Sunday, April 26 12-4
The superb features of Georgetown Apartments deserve your immediate attention. Come by; then make yourself a home.
630 Michigan 749-7279 Office Hrs. 2-6 weekdays
TIME OUT TAVERN
34 oz.
1 QT
cups thirst
I drink... Therefore, I am!
Fraternities & Sororities—
Check into our special keg
prices for keg parties at TIME OUT
Every Thursday
34 oz. Mug
first draft-$1.50
$1.00 Refills
all night long
Every Saturday
$1.00 Pitchers
25 Draws
All Day
$2.00 Cover Charge after 7 p.m.
Take TIME OUT
For A Change
2408 Iowa
842-9533
12
Thursday, April 23, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Sports Briefs
Football player injured in motorcycle accident
KU right linebacker Stacy Henson was admitted to Lawrence Memorial Hospital shortly after 10 p.m. Tuesday for treatment of injuries he received in a motorcycle accident.
Henson said yesterday from his room at Lawrence Memorial that he hit a post in the second level of the east parking garage at Jayhawker Towers where he lives. He said he suffered cuts on his right leg.
Henson said he was being kept overnight at the hospital for observation and because of blood loss. He also said that the doctors were not sure of the extent of the injuries.
Henson was the Jayhawks' second man at the right linebacker position last season, but started at that position April 11 during the team's annual blue and white spring scrimmage.
Henson is a junior from Kansas City, Mo.
Javhawks win 2 in Springfield
The KU women's softball team swept a doubleheader from Southwest Mississippi State yesterday 10-9 and 3-1 in
Sherri Mach, Cypress, Texas, senior, stepped in as relief pitcher and claimed the victory in both games for Kansas, giving her an even 6-6 record for the season.
Springfield, Mo.
The win gives the Jayhawks a 23-19 overall record. Kansas is 3-3 in Big Eight Conference play.
The Jayhawks will meet Nebraska and Iowa State for Big Eight play on Saturday and Sunday in Ames, Iowa. The games begin at 10 a.m. both days.
The team then will return home for a doubleheader against Friends University on Tuesday, April 28. The team will be back in action on Saturday.
It will be the Jayhawks' final game before the Big Eight Conference Tournament begins on May 1 in St. Joseph, Mo.
Clippers fire Chaney as coach
LOS ANGELES — Don Chaney was fired yesterday as coach of the Los Angeles Clippers after the club's 12-70 record this season, second worst in NBA history.
Clippers General Manager Elgin Baylor made the announcement, noting that Chaney would not be rehired as coach after Chaney's contract expires June 30.
From staff and wire reports.
Sterling Silver
Jewelry Repaired
Kizer
Cummings
jewelers
800 Mass. 749-4333
Video Player
Four Movies
Two Days
$9.95
(Higher Weekends)
Videoxpress
1447 W. 23rd
Open 9 a.m.-10 p.m. Daily
The Diary of
ANNE
FRANK
By Frances Goodrich & Albert Hackett
April 23,24,25,26*, 30 May 1,2,3* 8:00 p.m., *2:30 p.m. April 25 show will be interpreted for the hearing impaired
心
Lawrence Community Theatre
1501 New Hampshire
843-7469
(THE-SHOW) for reservations
CLIP AND USE BUSTY'S COUPONS
DON'T YOU BE GUILTY OF MISSING A
GREAT DEAL!
AMOUNT INITIAL
LIMIT 2 WITH COUPON
FRESH
BROCCOLI
LARGE BUNCH
LIMIT ONE
COUPON PER
FAMILY
.49 EA.
COUPON GOOD
THUR. ONLY
APRIL 23, 1987
IGA
DISCOUNT
IN RUSTY'S WE TRUST
Need Some Extra Cash?
---
ADC KU FEDERAL CREDIT UNION
Wouldn't it be great to do everything you want this summer? What about that hot new car you are so close to buying?
is ready to help with easy term loans. Come in or call about the command line of credit loan. It works like a credit card.
749-2224
9th & Louisiana
PUTT-PUTT
GOLF COURSES
- 36 Holes of Golf
®
- Batting Cages
Sunday thru Thursday open 'til 11 p.m. Friday and Saturday 'til Midnight!
- Edy's Ice-Cream
Buy One Three Game Ticket at the Regular Price and Get a Second Three Game Ticket FREE ( $5.00 value) exp. 4/30/87 8 Batting Cage Tokens For Only $5.00 (reg. $8.00) exp. 4/30/87
31st & IOWA
843-1511
Looking for a large 2 bedroom Apartment? Look here!
WEST HILLS 1012 EMERY ROAD
841-3800
DINING AREA
GALLEY KITCHEN
8-8
450 WALLACE FEET
LIVING AREA
14.01 x 17.01
CLOSET
ENTRY
NH
FUR
FULL BATH
HALF BATH
LINEN
HALK CLOSET
BEDROOM
12.01 x 12.01
BEDROOM
12.01 x 14.01
BOLLONY OR RETIO
Now taking reservations for Summer and Fall
DISPLAY APTS. OPEN MON/WED/THUR 1:00-4:00
or by appointment!
Furnished or unfurnished, 11/2 baths, dishwasher an disposal, swimming pool, laundry. Close to campus and on bus route large enough for 3 or 4 to share comfortably ONE BEDROOM UNITS AVAILABLE ALSO
MOONLIGHT
MADNESS
10-8 p.m.
SALE
Step into Summer with
CAROUSEL
TANKS-from
$3.99
SHORTS-from
$5.99
SUNDRESSES-from
$14.99
SWIMWEAR-from
$9.99
10% OFF ALL reg. Spring/Summer
Merchandise
THURSDAY
ONLY! 10-8 p.m.
711 W. 23rd
THe Malls
carouse
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 23, 1987
13
Yankees win 9th in a row 4-1
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — The New York Yankees won their ninth consecutive game and equaled their best start in 38 years last night, defeating the Detroit Tigers 4-1 on two-run homers by Rickey Henderson and Ron Killett.
American League
The triumph ended a 9-0 home-
stand for the Yankees.
Mariners 4. Twins 3
Bob Shirley, 1-0, combined with two relievers on a five-hitter. The left-hander, normally a long reliever, allowed four hits in five and 1/3 innings, including Terry Harper's fourth-inning homer.
MINNEAPOLIS - Harold Reynolds' second single of the game drove home Mike Kingery with the winning run in the eighth inning and gave the Seattle Mariners a 4-3 victory over the Minnesota Twins yesterday.
Mark Langston, 2-2, pitched a seven-hitter, walking two and striking out nine. George Frazier, 1-2,
took the loss after relieving Bert Blyleven in the seventh.
Athletics 7. Angels 6
NAHEIM, Calif. — Stan Javier hit his first major-league homer, a three-run shot, and Oakland held on for a 7-4 victory over the California in a game marred by a collision between two Athletics outfielder.
Center fielder Dwayne Murphy and right fielder Mike Davis crashed into each other chasing a fifth-inning drive by Gary Pettis, which went for an inside-the-park home run. Both players had to be helped off the field, Davis on a stretcher and Murphy supported by teammates.
Davis suffered a concussion when his head hit Murphy's right knee. Murphy's knee was X-rayed.
Blue Javs 6. Indians 3
CLEVELAND — Garth lorg lined a tie-breaking sacrifice fly off Steve Carlton in the ninth inning last night, and the Toronto Blue Jays went on to beat the Cleveland Indians 6-3.
With the score 3-3, Ernie Whitt opened the ninth with a single off Carlton, 1-2, and Kelly Gruber beat out a bunt single. Mike Sharperson sacrificed the runners along, and Tony Fernandez was intentionally walked, leading the bases.
Iorg's fly ball to right scored Whitt, and Carlton was lifted after walking Lloyd Moseby, reloading the bases
Orioles 3. Rangers 2
ARLINGTON, Texas — Ray Knight, the leading hitter in the American League, drained a bass-loaded walk from Texas reliever Greg Harris in the 10th inning last night, giving Baltimore a 3-2 victory over the Rangers and ending the Orioles' three-game losing streak.
ORCHARDS
GOLF CLUB
NOW OPEN!
843-7456 3000 W. 15th St.
ORCHARDS
Friday Night
Free Movies
"Annie Hall"
7:30 p.m. 4/24/87
Popcorn and Drinks Provided
Free
1204 Oread
ECM Student Christian Center
Sponsored by
EQUINEUM CHRISTIAN MONTRESIN
The Glenn Christian Church
The Presbyterian Church (USA)
The Episcopal Church
The Church of the Brethren
SUNRISE PLACE
9th & Michigan
9th & Michigan
Featuring: Luxurious two bedroom townhouse living
- Prices start from $385
- Energy efficient
- Swimming pool
- Free cablevision
- Within walking distance to campus
We are open for show Monday-Saturday 1:00-6:00 p.m. Please stop by our office or call 841-1287
CONGRATULATIONS UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS GRADUATES
841-1287.
H
You've earned your degree and have an exciting career ahead. Laird Noller Ford in Topeka would like to reward your efforts with a $400 cash rebate toward a new Ford car or truck and offer you a SPECIAL FINANCE PLAN through Ford Motor Credit.
For V.I.P. treatment and more information, please call or stop by Laird Noller Ford in Topeka. But hurry, this program is available for a limited time only.
The Largest Ford Dealer in Kansas!
Laird Noller FORD·SAAB
21st to 23rd & Topeka
P. O. BOX 946 • TOPEKA, KANSAS 66061 • 913-235-9211
8:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. Mon., Tues., and Thurs.
8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Wed. & Fri.
9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Sat.
EQUAL HOUSING LENDER
LOAN OPPORTUNITY
wer cost
Pursue higher education at a lower cost with a government guaranteed student loan from The First National Bank of Lawrence.
Because we offer student loans that work in conjunction with federal guarantees, you pay only 8% (for first time borrowers). Guaranteed. And unlike other loans. The First student loans don't require collateral. Or credit references. You need only borrow a minimum of $1,000 (if a first time borrower), be enrolled at least half-time at an eligible college or university, and not be in default on any guaranteed student loan with any institution. You don't have to start repaying your loan until at least 6 months after you graduate or drop below half-time study, and you can take up to 10 years to repay.
Apply now for The First Student Loan. For more information, contact your college financial aid office, or
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF LAWRENCE
900 Massachusetts • Lawrence. KS= (913) 843-0152
The First
Picnic in the Park with a Bucky's
Brown Special
1/4 lb. Buckaroo, regular fries and a medium soft drink
$2^{25}
Buckys
BUKKYS
Prices good through Sunday, April 26, 1987
Buc
Bucky's
ky's
come as you are . . . hungry
2120 WEST NINTH
2120 WEST NINTH
PIZZA SHUTTLE
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
1601 W.23rd
NO COUPONS ON TWO-FERS
Use these Coupons or ask for our TWO-FER Special
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
Expires 6/3/87
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
842-1212
--lunch Alternative!
$3.75
Wednesday
$2.00 OFF
Any 3 or more pizzas
842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
$100 OFF
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
NAME ___
ADDRESS
DATE ___
$1'00 OFF
Any Pizza Ordered
11 a.m.-4 p.m.
842-1212
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE DELIVERY
50¢ OFF
Any 1 pizza
842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
Expires 6/3/87
KU Amateur Radio
KOKU
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
Expres 6/3/87
Announcing Spring Picnic/ Meetina
When: Sat., April 25th at 3:30 p.m.
--lunch Alternative!
$3.75
Wednesday
Where: Broken Arrow Park
Welcome to those interested in joining the KU Amateur Radio Club. Speak with our members for FCC licencing and new frequency allocations. Bring softball gear! Call J.D. at 843-7869 for information
KC4AAA
AMUNOSEN-SCOTT
SOUTH POLE STATION
UNITED STATES AMANACATIC RESEARCH PROGRAM
LATITUDE 30 DEGREES
AMNWUNDEN-SCOTT SOUTH POLE STATION
Certified January, 1975
U.S. ANTARCTIC RESEARCH PROGRAM
Operated for
NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION
Washington, D.C. 20550
ITT ANTARCTIC SERVICES, INC.
SOUTH JOBE BIRTH
DEC
1986
To tablein KBKL Confirming
SSG SSO $ of AL MSGS
AL MSCS $ of
Equipment KCV Color KWM KZA
Linear Meter L001 1001
Amplifier AM001 KLM MW MW "Booster"
KLM MW "Booster"
SOUTH POLE ST.
DEC 7
1986
Kansas Univ. Amateur Radio Club
L'Art D'un Ressourd
<% ECE Dept · Learned Hall
TNX for OSI. 73's
Operator Dick Moore
University of Kansas
Lawrence K566045
Operators DICK JONES
OBJECTS = (CR) LINE, WRITING S FILE, MARKING REALTHIN
Antarctica -- one of the many continents we talk to everyday
Spice! oh so nice.
Ranchera Especial
All served with chips & sauce and non-alcoholic beverage.
Gutierrez Restaurant & Club
Fine Mexican Dining
2600 Iowa Street
842-1414
MILL
Autiérrez
Restaurant & Club
Autiérrez
OPEN SUNDAY
14
Thursday, April 23, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
National
Continued from p. 11
Dawley then walked Ryne Sandberg to force home Durham before Worrell came on to relieve and gave up Dawson's grand slam homer.
after Bob Dernier walked to load the bases.
Mets 8. Pirates 7
PITTSBURGH — Tim Teufel drove in New York's first three runs, and Mookie Wilson and Kevin McReynolds homed last night before the Mets held on to edge the Pittsburgh Pirates 8-7.
The Mets led 7-1 before Pittsburgh made a run for the lead, capped by home runs by Sid Bream and Barry Bonds.
Ron Darling, 2-0, contributed a run-scorning double and was credited with the victory after allowing four runs and seven hits over six %
innings, Gene Walter, David Cone and Jesse Orosco followed Darling, with Orosco earning his fifth save.
Expos 7. Phillies 3
MONTREAL — Tim Wallach's leadoff勇 and Mitch Webster's bases-loaded triple highlighted a six-run sixth inning as the Montreal Expos beat the Philadelphia Phillies 7-3 yesterday.
Padres 6. Reds 3
SAN DIEGO — Kevin Mitchell drove in a career-high four runs with a double and a homer and led the San Diego Padres to a 8-3 victory over the Cincinnati Reds last night.
Dodgers 5. Giants 3
SAN FRANCISCO — Alex Trevino's pinch-hit double in the ninth inning drove in two runs last night and gave the Los Angeles Dodgers a 5-3 victory over the San Francisco Giants.
Winning pitcher Fernando Valentín upped his record to 3-0. He
had a three-hitter.
Now Offering Vine-ripened Tomatoes (hydroponic)
Open
M-Sat. 8 a.m.-6 p.m.
Sun. 1 p.m.-6 p.m.
843-3192
Come pick your own Asparagus or we'll pick some for you!
15th street Penderson's Fresh New Valley Asparagus LAWRENCE DG 442 Hwy 10 to Eudora
You can earn excellent base wages, cash bonuses, and incentives while working part-time evening and weekend hours. Scheduling is flexible and the atmosphere is relaxed and fun. No experience is required just a willingness to learn a must. If great money is what you want to earn this summer while spending your days at the beach and nights with your friends call us today for an appointment.
1974
Nights out... days on the beach.. and a $1000 for my efforts!
ENTERTEL
841-1200
E.O.E. m/f/h
Natural Fiber Clothing
920 Mass. 841-0100
A SUBSIDIARY OF ENTERTAINMENT PUBLICATIONS, INC
BOCO CLASS CARDS
COUPON Now Open!! Frozen Yogurt by ICBIY arrives in Lawrence!
FREE Samples Every Time You Come In
Tastes like ice cream but with half the calories and one-fifth the fat! Nine flavors daily-- chocolate, French vanilla, apple pie, wild raspberry, lemon custard, banana, pecan praline and many more.
on small or medium cone or cup with this coupon LIMIT TWO--Coupon Expires May 10, 1987
50% Discount
I Can't Believe It's YOGURT! Frozen Yogurt Store
NATURAL WAY
Frozen Yogurt Stores
Louisiana Purchase Shopping Center--
23rd and Louisiana, Lawrence
OPEN: 11 A.M.-11 P.M. Night; Noon-11 P.M. Sundays
For the month of April:
present your class card at
the following places and
receive these discounts:
Sunday Evening ...
Worship
5:30 p.m.
+ + + + +
--lay & Sheshian Services, A Kansas General Association this Thursday, April 23rd, 7:30 p.m. International Golf Tournament garage sale *Tshirts & Sweatshirts* first quality in assorted colors and sizes. Also, one-of-a-kind, overalls, misprints, and test shirts all at the following locations: North Carolina sportswear, 101 Riverfront Road in North Carolina.
1204 Oread (one block north of the Kansas Union)
1. $ 50^{o} $ games Mon.-Fri.
between 12:30 and
6:00 p.m. at the
JAYBOWL.
2. $1.00 off a 3 game ticket plus one free medium Coke at PUTT-PUTT.
ClassifiedAds
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Free to good lease, six year old male Lhasa Apso.
Call 841-8646 after 5:00 p.m.
A workshop designed to help women improve and enhance interviewing skills and resume writing techniques
Marketing Yourself
Tuesday, April 28,1987 3:00-5:00 p.m.
International Room, Kansas Union
火
Sponsored by the Elysian Tailor
Women's Resistance Center, 218
Strong with force for more intrepid
Rolls of Ribbon
Bald at dk4552
IS MASSAGE BETTER THEN PZZA? **Find**
our, try steam & massage from Lawrence
Massage Therapy and R-E-L-A-X. Student rates,
Gift Certificates too! Call 861-9626 and he尔
Need a date? Or perhaps a rivacious gift for the girl who has (almost) everything? Send an inflatable Mr. Right. It'll be a gas! Balloons-N-More. 749-6341. 749-0148
Preparing for Finals Study Skills Workshop
(Time Management, Reviewing, Testing
Assistance), April 27, 7: 00 p.m. to 9: 00 p.m,
Strong, Free; Student Assessment Center,
121 Holmes, 804-4644
HILLEL
הלל
Thursday, April 23 Graduate Student discussion with
Dr. Sharon Lowenstein
5:00-7:00 p.m.
Hillel House
WEIGHT LOSS PROGRAM Lose 10-20 lbs in 3 days. Dector approved. All accepted equipment.
Shabbat Dinner
5:30 p.m.
and Services
7:45 p.m.
R.S.V.P. by April 23
For more information call Hillel, 749-4242.
Friday, April 24
ENTERTAINMENT
Ranchock 87°-Saturday April 25th. Don't miss it. For information call 749 2128 or 81 9616.
At Your Requests Lawrence's Best and Most Affordable D.J. Sound and Lights for Any Occasion
Have the Hottest Party in Town. Rent A Hot Tub.
Call Tub-to Go, 841-2691.
FORRENT
**[3] bedroom luxurious apartments new leasing for**
**courtyard property at bifurcation bifurcation bifurcation**
**bifurcation bifurcation
Metropolis Mobile Sound. Number one with a bait! DJ EXtradinaire, Weddings, dances, Parties, Proms. Booking graduation parties now. Hot Sips for Maximum Party Thirst! 841-7083
1 Bedroom Apt. for summer sublease. Furnished and very nice. Adjacent to campus. Rent negotiable. Call 841-8076 and ask for Trina or Kristen.
DANCE-O-GRAM
Private parties for all occasions, for more information call
843-0510
Hassat needed for rock-n-roll band. Covers and originals. Vocal ability preferred. Tapes and charts provided. Call Susan, 843-5658 or Jim.
1 BLOCK FROM KANSAS UNION, for rent to
senior graduate, Upper Class Student or KU
employee 1 bedroom furnished, no pet re-
lease, lease required, $195 mo. #413
after 6 p.m.
* Private parties for all occasions, for more information call 843-0510
LIBERTY HALL
"A MOVIE THAT MUST BE
SEEN." Jeffrey Jones, Snake Preyron
PARTISANS
OF VILNA
7:00 & 9:30
425 Mass
749-1812
2. Bdm Townhouse for summer special rate, laundry facilities, swimming, tennis, K-U-B soccer. $199 per month.
4:Dbm, 2 full bath, large kitchen, living room,
Brand new furnished apartment. Sublease sum-
mer. Mastercraft Campus Place, Next to Yello
Sub. Cheap) 841-3176
2 story, 3 bedroom older home in good condition, near downtown and bus stop $800/month plus utilities. 12 month lease and $300 deposit required. No pets. Available June 15. 8419 4012 or 8419 4022. No pets.
4 Bdrm Apartment near campus. Meadowbrook area. 2 baths, dishwasher, refrigerator, garage. Summer sublease with option to pick up lease in August. Rent negotiable 841-3813
2 bedroom furnished apartment for summer sublease. 1 block from campus. 1/2 baths. A.C. Available mid-May. Call 749-2670
4 Bedroom house, fully furnished. Available June and July. Family preferred. Call for information.
8 Bedrooms, 3 Bathrooms. Adjacent to campus.
No pets. Call 842-8971.
in measurements for summer and fall at University Terrace Apartments, 1607 W. King 1 Bedroom for fall; 1300 W. King 2 Bedroom furnished $205, plus all utilities. 2 Bedroom for summer; June and July only, $240 unfurnished, furnished $280, plus all utilities. 1 Bedroom for fall; 1300 W. King 2 Bedroom furnished $250, unfurnished $235, plus all utilities. Bedroom for fall; August 1-June 1, $310 furnished $290 unfurnished, plus all utilities. Central air, on bus route, large rooms, gas heat. See see at answer B: 90 W. 9th or B: 941-320. No answer call B: 943-1433.
For sublease Water, Gas, Cable paid. Across
stadium, close to campus, furnished Rent
in the building.
bpt to Sublease: New, immaculate, furnished 1 bpm apt w/ refrigerator, dishwasher, disposal 1 block from campus. Regular price $28-For items $20 Availability May 1 Call 748-1365 For items $30 Availability May 1 Special summer rates starting at $210 disc. Berkeley Flat, 843-2116
Aspen West now leasing for Summer. Energy effi-
cent, 1 and 2 bedrooms. 3 blocks west of onca
15th Privat patios/decks, ceiling fans, no pets.
14th Privat patios/794 1288, ceiling house,
11:3 p.m.
Available May 15 Furnished 1 bedroom Apartment for summer. Next to campus. 842 6308
Clean statues with air conditioning located close to the base. May 5, 2014-month 7, 2019 or 8, 2014 bds.待定
May 31, 2014-month 7, 2019 or 8, 2014 bds.待定
Excellent location: 2 bedroom apartments in fourplex carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, and low utilities. Available June 1. Summer Rate $349, M 104 Tennesseen and 1341 Ohio Call 842-4242
Completely furnished 2 bfrm apt. low utilities.
Susquehanna Close to campus Reng nect Gap
Carpet, studio apartment with bay window at 960 Missouri. Available Mar. 20. 749-6166
Fabuoun Libaule. Available June 1, 1987. Fully furnished. utilities paid. A/C separate, off street parking. Easy walk to KU, downtown. $200 mo. Parking fees: maturity, and response. 749-5675; afterpay.
Female Roommate needed. Share 2 bedrooms
and 1 bath. Dedicated to like care.
Old Student preferred. Call 842-8438.
FOR SUMMER SUBLEASE: Two bedroom apt. Fully furnished with microwave. Closet to the right.
For Heal May 15-August 15, 1 bedroom apart.
Private One room from block from campus, 180/month.
Private One room from block from campus, 180/month.
Five location on bedroom bathroom staircase apartmnt; CA equipped kitchen. Low altitude. Available June 1, $175 at 180t Mississippi | Call 842-4324
Furnished basement apartment for 1/3 utilities in exchange for housekeeping, yard and plant care. Available May 15-August 20. Call 843-9690 after 5:30 p.m.
Female roommate, close to campus, own
bedroom 157.50 plus 1/2 utilities. Call 749-8187.
GREAT SUMMER Rates SPECIAL incentives;
ask about our Military and ROTC Speciale!
SUMMER Rates SPECIAL INFORMATION.
GREAT SUMMER SUBLEASE. 1, Block from Campus, 2 bedrooms plus Huge Lift, 2 Baths, DW; Microwave, W/D; Low Utilities, Option for FAIL: RENT NEGOTIABLE Call 842.9853
HARDWOOD FLOOR A.C. close to campuses
furnished in a discount rate available for
a sale at 50% price 798-731-2144
HEY LOOK AT THIS! Brand new I Bermt. Ampt for summer subtree. Close to campus. W/D / A/C
Looking for a REAL roommate to help ward off, loneliness, cut costs? Trying not to make another roommate mistake? Do you dislike roommates who trash, who talk on the phone all night (every night) and whose friends call after midnight? Me too. Non-smoking law student who likes to play tennis, cook and plays hikes, plays tennis and violas, and cooks gourmet meals is looking NOW for compatible roommate for next two years—including summers. I have a partner who works as a dryer, computer, and dog. You have similar values, interests, living habits and are either moving or live in. Interest? Let's talk 843-6153.
Looking for 2 female KU students to share love with bedrooms. Veteran home close to campus. Send resume to kuwait.edu/ku.edu.
Meadowbook Summer Sublease a berm Twelfen only $75 m. don’t wait! Call 843-1896.
Must Sublease for summer. Available mid-May: A 1barm apartment in house. Large Kitchen, Bathroom, and kitchen furnished. $220/month plus utilities. 749-4838.
Next to Campus: 1 bedroom apartment. Price is
southridge
comfortable natural living
to Campus: 1 bedroom apartment. Price is lower than last week. 842-6308
Southridge Plaza Apts. LEASING for fall 1 & 2 bedroom apartments
10 month leases water & cable paid
pool
1704 West 24th
Lewrance Kansas 66044
842-1160
NO NEED TO READ ANY FURTHER! Summer
Sublease: 3 bedroom - 1 level townhouse,
available only May (Committed furnished, 2 full
bedrooms, 1 half-bath). Call 841-7581.
Call 841-5835. Ask for John, Phil, or Mark
ON CAMPUS APARTMENT for summer
Negotiable rent, low utilities. Call 843-4782.
ON CAMPUS APARTMENT for summer
rent. 700-625-3000, low interest
843-474-8728
one bedroom. $225.00 New. Quiet 784-949-1490
message for Cindy, or Call 784-949-1490 (keep)
in touch.
AMENITIES
Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the amenities of Naismith Hall. Applications for fall semester are now being accepted while space remains.
NAISMITHHALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
913-843-8559
One bedroom house for summer sublease. Furnished, front porch, garden space, quiet street.
PENTHOUSE! Summer Sublease 2 bedroom,
furnished, 5 minute walk to Strong. Rent
negotiable. Non-smoking females call 842-0374.
Reserve your apartment now! Just 2 short steps from
university, 1 and 4 bedroom apartments.
The parking is paid and off street
parking. pets 1.81-5.500
Reserve your room now! For summer and/or fall Furnished with most utilities paid. Shared cooking and bath facilities. Just zz short blocks from University with off street parking. No pets.
ROOMMATE for A in brand new, well located 4 Br F1 Bath. fully furnished 160 mm
Roommate wanted: Beautiful Quail Creek Apts
$140/month. Own room, pool, tennis cable
Location
Located among 70 acres of rolling hills and trees, you'll enjoy the convenience of being close to campus and area shopping.
Lifestyle
Meadowbrook offers a selection of spacious and comfortable studios, 1,2, or 3 bedroom apartments, and townhouses to fit your lifestyle
RESERVE YOUR
UNIT NOW...
FOR SUMMER OR FALL!
meadowbrook
15th & Crestline 842:4200
Summer Roommate. Female to live with in 2 others in a bdm btwroom, great location, $125 per month. Resume online, please call, ask for Jennifer, or leave message. Rent may be negotiable, must finish
Rooms available for summer and the 1987-88 academic year in the Christian living community "Kronona" at Ecumenical Christian Ministries. Information come to 1024 Owra or call 843-4833.
Pnacspace: Poppertree 2BK 2 bath
Churchill Business Bus BI Sublease for
purchase 1986
SUBLEASE. 2 BHR furnished apt. 1.1 / 2 bath.
Near Campus "3 month plus amenities. Available
for free." Room sizes vary.
SUMMER Female tenants wanted for spacious 4 bedroom house w/ fenceed in back yard. Furnished
plus microwave and dishwasher. Available right
in room with 4 + 1 utilities. Call Earl;
evenings. 841.3481
SAVE TIME
SUBLEASE Two bedroom Village Square Apartment. Large living room, eating kitchen, patio, pool. Low utilities. Available mid May. $310-812-835.
Staff available for senior management in sage pc. com,
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Find your apartment or rental home in the Kansas City area.
- FREE SERVICE
- 50,000 CHOICES
- ALL LOCATIONS AND PRICES
- VIDEO PREVIEWS
Call or stop by.
6600 College Bvld.
Overland Park, Ks.
GREAT PLACES (913) 345-8777
841-5797
SUMMER SCHOOL'S NO CAR' 2dbm available
or roommate furnished in campus rent package
NOW LEASING FOR FALL!
Starting at $260
SUMMER SUBLASELE • 3 bremt atm. 2 full baths,
close to campus; $55 plus utilities. Tangwood.
SUMMER SUBLEASE • Sunrise Place
Summer Suite • 12 bath atm. pool, close to
place; B4 834-298-6701
- On bus route - near shopping
HILLVIEW APTS.
1745 W. 34th 841 5707
SUMMER STUBLEASE Apple Lane Studios, Nice,
Oakland, CA 94068
May Pay only June. Call 811-7492-7002
or visit www.applestudios.com
- Rental furniture available
- Ample off-street parking
- Rental furniture available
- On bus route - near shopping
- Ample off-street parking
1 & 2 BR units
from Thompson-Crawley
SUMMER SURLEASE 2 Bedroom Apt. New
close to campus. Call 749-2432.
SUMMER SURLEASE: Large 1 bedroom Apartment at Hanover Place, 14th and Kentucky Hill Center. Call Grant at 841-7900 Keep trying. SUMMER SURLEASE: Large 2 bedroom Apartment close to Campus. AC D.W. Balaenoptera. Call 792-8611.
WEST HILLS APARTMENTS 1012 EMERY RD. 841-3800
Now taking reservations for summer & fall
DISPLAY APARTMENTS OPEN
Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apartments furnished & unfurnished Great location near campus
Monday-Wednesday-Thursday
1:00 4:00
No appointment needed Stop by office located in middle of complex by pool
SUMMER SULFABLEE modern and spacious 2 room baths, centrally airwasher/and wetzer. 784-9821.
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Very nice. new 1 BR (studio apt 131 & Ohio. Furnished. Must be non-smoker, of street parking NEGOTIABLE. Available May 14, 841-4696.
SUMMER SUBLEASE two bedroom and 1/12 bathroom apartment. Furnished with swimming pool, 10 minutes to campus; and on bus route $900 negligible. Call evenings at 749-788.
SUNRISE PLACE TOWNHOUSE AVAIL FOR
SUMMER BULLEASE 12th and Michigan 2 bdr;
1/2 baths basement. Perfect for 4 pool
enclosures. included. Will negotiate on H仑. Call
749-2513
offers.
MASTERCRAFT
apartments--all near KU!
Completely furnished
apartments—all near KU!
Consider:
• Custom furnishings
• Energy efficient
• Affordable rates
• Variety of floorplans
• Designed for privacy
• Many great locations
• Professional management
CAMPUS PLACE -1145 Louisiana
841-1429
HANOVER PLACE -14th & Mass
841-1212
SUNDANCE -7th & Florida
841-5255
TANGLEWOOD -10th & Arkansas
749-2415
OREN DAILY 1.5
Sublease for summer, studio at Hanover Place.
Call 749-5440
Sublease: 4 bedroom, spacious, excellent location
(next to Yello Sub) Call 841-3907
Sublease 2 bm2 duplex. Available jint. Clone to campus. `bm2` (mail: Ca81-244 evenings)
Sublease. Trailridge 3 bedroom, 2/12 bath townhouse. Available mid-May, option to lease next fall. One large bedroom with own bathroom. Pool, tennis courts, sport club facilities. **$48 Call**
Sublease 3 bedrooms 2 bathrooms. Fully furnished. Near campus and fun bars. Low utilities.
Sublease for summer: furnished two bedroom
apc A/FC Great location! Call 841-007
--southern Immediately Wanted Roommate for Luxurious 3 bedroom 2 storey house. Very in style. Near UWS.
Sublease. Spacious 2 BR apt, near campus for 2-3
people. Available summer option to extend loan
terms.
Sublease for summer Furnished, 2 bedrooms,
very nice apartment one block from campus. Call
Sublease Apartment Low rent, includes 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths, tennis court, basketball court, club house, on bus route 1 Month Free. 841-359-036
University Daily Kansan / Thursday. April 23. 1987
15
IF YOU LIKE SPACE & QUET
WE HAVE IT AND YOU
CAN STILL WALK TO CAMPUS
Spacious 2 bedroom
Laundry facilities
Waterbed fine
Swimming pool
10-12 month leases
VILLAGE SQUARE
9th & Avalon
842-3040
Sublasse a nice 2 bdm apt. 10 min from campus,
on bar route. Pool Call evenings Paolo or Roberto
--disposal, & pantry
Summer Special, 3 bedroom apartment with washer and dryer, utilities paid $300; also room in spacious West Lawrence home, $150, washer/dryer, utilities paid 841-444.
OLD MILL APTS.
1 & 2 BR apartments
Close to KU & on bus route
Laundry facilities
Starting at $250
Rental furniture available from Thompson-Crawley
905 Emery Rd. 841-5797
Summer Sublasevery nice three Rd brrch style house, Near campus, $420 month, 843-305.
Summer Sublease. Need one or two females for 3 bedroom apartment, completely furnished, $165 a month, 1/2 utilities, close to campus. Call 749-272-8386. Summer Sub lease with option for Fall. 2 bd. AC. 120' x 180'. 11' x 10'.
Summer Sublease: Furnished Studio, close to campus and downtown. Rent negotiable Call 800-625-3411.
Summer Submarine Harvard Square, 2 bedrooms,
3 bathrooms, pool, pool, pool, pool to campus,
$18 monthly, 794-353
Summer Sublease 2 Bedroom Apt. Very close to campus, Rent Negotiable. Call soon
OPEN HOUSE
Saturday, April 25 10-4
Sunday, April 26 12-4
- June & July special: $200
- Wired for cable TV
- Beautifully Landscaped
* Weather S- Drink Heavy 1 oz
- Completely Privacy Fenced
- 10, 11, S 12 month leases
Washer & Dryer hook-ups
- 10, 11, & 12 month leases
Other Appointments Available
630 Michigan 749-7279
Summer Sublease: Male roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom apartment. Close to campus, on bus route. Swimming Furnished. Please call 841-5538 7 by 7 p.m.
Location: four additional Studio, Summer Terrace Apartment Apl. Pursuit, next to Campus Call after positional addition. Next to Campus Call after positional addition.
Summer sublease. 2 bd. furnished. Close to campa-
mium. 841.3932
Summer Sublease: nice 18% fully furnished apartment.
$220 monthly. Close to campus. Tanglewood.
Summer Sublase to female: 2 bdrm furnished
1/4 bits 1/2 compounds from. Campus 841-5704
BEST VALUE!
Gatehouse
Three blocks from Union, two bedroom apt for
ten people. One bedroom basement, neal place $30.00 and low utilities.
Large size 1, 2, 3 bedroom apts, on bus route. All have gas heat, appliances, carpet and drapes. Extra room. Choose a room to choose from. If you want the most room for your dollar, then come see us a 2166 W. 26th or call 843-6446.
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24th & Eddingham (next to Gammons)
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
contract
Satellite T.V.
- Exercise Weightroom
- Laundry room
* Fire place
- On-Site Management
Open Daily 3:00-5:00
Saturday 9:00-12:00
841-5444
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Professionally managed by
Kaw Valley Management Jord
Summer sublease; 3 bedroom Ap1, 2 bath,
completely furnished, available starting May or June
option through July. Low rent plus possible re-
sale for October. Summer Vacation apartment for rent this
may 19 throughJuly 31 Reasonable rent, pool,
backyard, patio, covered porch, comfortable,
comfortably Call Siac Ll., or Linda 841-6065.
Super large room in house to sublease for summer
$14 month, unpaid费用. Close to campus.
Avalon
- On KU bus route
- 1 & 2 bedroom
9th & Avalon Rd. 841-5797
Top of the hill location, studio summer subses
Wanted: Roommate to share 3 beddng Apt for:
Wanted: Roommate to share 3 bedding Apt for:
FOR SALE
14 x 68 Mobile Home, 2 bedroom, remodeled, nice
financing $700,000, 8401-8836 Keep living.
financing $900,000
1980 Honda Spree moped for sale. Low mileage,
15,400 miles. Chassis number 641-1549 or 749-1012 and low message for sale.
1969 Kawasaki NJNJA 600 R Lite new, only 200 miles. Call eveilns. 841-8091.
bike computer, asking $200, call Neve. 844-5765
2 RICKENBACKERS, Collect's 12 string
1 new 330, Serious Buyers only, John 841-5768 or
842-6210
79 29030s. Dark red. Low mileage. 5 pd. Good condition for only $499,000. callable. live 4:30 to 8:30am.
Accountant GLUTAR together with box in good condition sells under $100! $104-6527.
R1000
Athletic Sandals
Do everything in 'em
—Run, Climb, Hike, Raft-
The Ultimate in Footwea
AK Dalmation puppy, purebred, 12 weeks old.
Must sell. More info. Call John 842-5893.
Gransport
Austro Daimler 10 speed bicycle. Like new.
Call 749-3364 after 5 p.m.
Brand New Mountain Bike. Black Fuji Blvd 824.
Barely reden, Good bike. Price $182.84.
Complete set mcGregor Tourney量手 shafts 190 $100.96. Call 842-5230.
For Sale. Music Man Sting Ray Bass with Hard Shell Case. $30 or less. Brendan at 843-5237. For sale 1922 BMW Motorcycle R60/5/200, must be leather. Shape must. Ship! Ask for Thad at 844-6688.
For sale: six piece stereo, 70 watts per channel,
good condition, exceptional sound, call 749-2616.
Garage sale family tiny furniture computer
school office desk a.m. free coffee 300 University
first floor 110-3597
IBM PC/XT compatible, includes monochrome graphics, monochrome monitor, switchable Turbo motherboard w/ 512K. 1 Floppy disc drive. $875. 4 month warranty included. 842-5495.
LEADING EDGE MODEL "D", "466, IBM Compile. Complete with surgeon protector, Sharp color monitor, Panasonic XK-P1001 printer, word processor, spreadsheet spreadsheet, 8140, Carlton 741-3918
MAX'S COMICS. Comic Books, Playboys, Penthouse, etc. 811 New Hampshire.
MOPED 1801 Molobecane Runs OK, but needs
tun-up. Anake $130. Vice; #487-7060
*** MOTHBAIL GOOD USED FURNITURE
* **
8:20 p.m. Saturday 10:2 p.m.
8:20 p.m. Sunday 10:2 p.m.
Moving back to Europe must part with my Honda
in great condition. $600 Box Call 862-1543.
(Yonti).
Never Been Seawater | Fanatic 101 Sailboard 12 x
Never Been Seawater | North Sail 600.00 best for
749-8485
Nikon FE2 $91.00 - 35-105 lens with Micro $15.10
Bike $41.60 - 842d, Riad
NOTES now available for variety of classes.
**Jacqueline B. Hicks**
Jayhawk Study Services. "We're here to Help."
Older model Fuji Gran Tourer, 30 inch frame,
16-inch sleeper, almost new Caller
481-943-3572
PIANO for sale. Upright good condition $400
749-222- Keep crying.
**realistic Micro Recorder** 60.00 Minilab a
speaker speakers 75.00 Rose 2 Pump 129.00
129.00
Rickenbock bass black 4001 Excellent Competition
Professional Quality 2000 B O O B 892 966
B O O B 892 966
Sailboat for Sale: 202. Olympic Class Flying Dutchman, Good Condition. Light Weight and Fast. Asking 900.00 or best offer. Call evenings. 749-305.
TUXEDOES. After Six formal wear TUXEDOES come in a variety of colors, complete with pants, vests, or cumberbuns, low cost to expensive to than to rent! Come to Everything Outlet for the best special spring fling! TUXEDOES, we have your tuxedo.
AUTO SALES
1977 Red Chevette, two door, good shape, must
have Call Amy at 842-266-0000
after 6:30.
1975 Ford Granada: $400, exhaust, electric systems. 77,000 miles. $410,841-9493.
1740 Volvo 142. Good condition. Very dependable.
120.00 ml. Available from 181.00 ml. Call
(866) 352-3930.
WINDSURP never been used 12 ft. Comes Comp
$600.00 or best price. 843.187 Petite
Katie
LOST-FOUND
181. Dalam 210 AM-FM. New Tires, Very Good
at 90,000 miles. $1500; Call 843-6923
For Sale 1977 Chrys. Cordoba. Fair Condition 400
Call enquire at 843-9656 $400.
FOUND. SET keys outside Stauffer Fint Hall.
14 p.m. @ 01/17/7. Come by 11Stauffer Fint Hall
at 11:30 a.m.
A 1969 Firebird, 350, AM/FM, Cassette. A.C.
Body and interest in excellent condition. 864-2028
www.mcphotoshop.com
71 VW Beetle. good body, newly rebuilt engine.
responsive transmission.
74 Superbettec, Sunroof, Pioneer Stereo, $120.00 Scott, 841-3661
Tires. Stereo casetek. Pipelup sumur mileage. (c) asking $5,000 but negotiable. 56,000 miles. (c) asking $10,000 but negotiable.
LOST on 4/11/97. Men's Seiko watch, reward. Call Steve at 843-7400.
Wendell in Lindley Hall, Call 794-1416. Please keep tryin
LOST: 1892 Class Ring in Women's Restroom in Lyndon, Call 764-305-2860.
HELP WANTED
AIRLINES CRUISELINES HRING! Summer Career! Good Pay! Travel! Call For Guide
*irst Needed for Next Semester*. Graphic Design and Illustration. Please Call 822-3538 and ask for a demo.
Are you good with children? Would you like to be paid to live with a California family and help with children? **HELP 4 PARENTS** 770 Mena Ave. 219, Minneapolis Park, CA 94053. (805) 322-3861
Lost: A set of keys, contains a Subaru key. $10 reward.
Call Jim at 843-2312
available in the Housing Office. 205 McColum Hall. Application priority date. 5 p.m. Wednesday, May 13th. A current member of the officer of application, resume, and names of two references to Steve Kee, Assistant Director of Housing. 205 McColum Hall, Lawnress. Ks. 205 McColum Hall, 450-480. ANEQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
ASSISTANT MANAGER JAYHAWK TOWERS
The University of Kansas Haus Department is seeking three ivy-level half-time Assistant
Assistants for Jayhawk to help build buildings. Must be enrolled in KU, graduate student.
dent preferred. Group work experience is required and residential management experience is required. Appointment starts July 1, 1987 and continues through June 30, 1988. Complete job description below.
Cocktail Waitresses Needed Part-Time weekends
4:30 - 5:30 p.m. W 24th
(behind McDonald's) 7:40 p.m. w 3:30
p.m.
DAY TELEPHONE Sales needed in our office
phone plus calls pay call between 8
p.m. ask for TELEPHONE number
Donut person: cut/fry donuts, assist bakerists,
Midnight-8 a.m. 5 nights per week $4/hr to start;
raises commissure with skill level. Apply Mum-
ney, April 23, 7 p.m. or tuesday,
April 28, 7 p.m.
Bakery Subs' Cleaning one position Monday Thursday, 4 p.m. midnight; Friday, 9 p.m. a.m.
three weeks paid vacation after 1 year. Interviews Monday April, 27, 7 p.m. apply at Mutter's Bakery. Boston family looking for mothers helper, start July/August, min 1 yr. commitment, room & kitchen equipment. Call 617-693-3811, collect: 617-693-3811, C. Birrithie, 7 Overlook PK, Newton, Mass. 02191
Godfather's Pizza now hiring delivery drivers. Must be 18 years of age and have a good driving record. Dependable car also required. Position at 711 W. 21st flr., commission. Apply in 111 at 711 W. 21st flr.
EVENINGS OR SATURDAY Telephone Sales in Your Office. No experience necessary. Good Pay Call between 9 a.m. p.m. Ask for Dennis, 749-823-9650 or Jeff, 749-823-9651 to prepare for Spring and Summer work. If accepted, you will earn 8.10 start. Some evening and weekend positions are available and some weekend positions are offered by our quality, corporate scholarships are awarded, internships are possible, and you may earn 2.34 credits/or semester. During summer break from April through October (Call (913) 346-9675 Mon-Fri between 9 a.m. p.m.
GOVENMENT JOB'S, $16.90 $49.250/jr.yr
GOVERNMENT JOB'S 009-607-8000 Curry for current (editional)
job.
"Leverest!" A skincare product proven successful in Sandwichina for Oily and Problem skin will be available in our new locations in near future. We are looking for dedicated persons for a series of "Free" tests. If interested please contact us.
8:00, 9:00 p.m. Submit letter of application with resource to Lila Walkins, Kansas Geological Laboratory, Lawrence, KS 66946, OR complete application Lawrence, KS 66946, OR complete application Desk's办公室, Moore Hall EO-AA employer
K. U. Student Assistant, General Office work in Business Office Start on or about May 15. Full time available to August 17; three-fourths time available to September 23. (FTE); Salary increase; July 15. Thenthrough probationary period. Type 60 wpm accurately Demonstrate typing skills at interview. Operate a computer keyboard and complete previous KU office experience and interest in continuous employment through summer and next fall.
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
Summer Job Opportunities available with the U.S. Marine Corps—No obligation to be a Marine! Earn between $18,000 and $24,500 housing* 913-841-1821 (collect).
★★★★★★★★★★★★★
Massachusetts Street Deli and Bobo Bald's smokebase now hiring food service and table service employees. Must have a least one year exp in the food service industry or start serving pay $3.75 per hour plus profit sharing, table service 2.61 per hour plus tips. Apply Monday-Friday, 9-5 at 719 Massachusetts above.
NATIVE SPEAKERS of Green, Italian, Korean.
Has strong command of English, with good understanding of English. Call Speaker.
**6ANNY POSITIONS AVAILABLE:** Good salary.
Dallas, Texas. Call 9-39 m. (214)
252-7977
Nanny Placement agency looking for nannies.
Great salaries and benefits. Positions available
nationally. Nanny Finders, P.O. Box 4033, Chapel
Hill, NC 27314
Need Friendly Office assistant who can work in a busy office environment. Telephone, Assisting with Downtown Promises 20:30hrs Per Week Flexible Schedule Part Time Advertising sales representative need
PEOPLE NEEDED IMMEDIATELY for delivery. Must have own transportation. Good driving.
P-40 client delivering sales representatives based on data provided by a computer. Make your own hours. Call Traci, 816-5643
The Southwestern Co. is interviewing this week for our sales & management training program to help improve quality have the opportunity to...
STILL SEARCHING FOR SUMMER WORK?
Johnny Pilot. What we initially have is here a great guy who's really going to be missed next semester. Thanks for the good times. Easy champ! Love Ya! Di & Trace
Summer job: Part-time Nanny needed for 2 year old boy at daycare. Volunteer to help with non-smoker, smoke-free rooms or no fire, Monday through Friday, beginning May 11th. We call you your references. Pay $2.90/hour. Please call us.
The Mathematics department is now accepting applications for the position of graduate teaching assistant, a job that requires requirements for a bachelor's degree by August 15, 1987, and have a strong background in mathematics. Applicants will be required to pass an oral exam demonstrating English comprehension. Applicants should submit a letter indicating their interest in the position and two letters of recommendation to: Charles H. Cox, Ph.D., 217 Strong Hall, University of Kansas, AA, EOE.
1. Make $4300
STUDENTS WANTED For very light delivery.
Lawrence Area. Start immediately. Must have
own transportation. Mornings or afternoon.
Great pay. Call Dina. 749-3945
YMCA Camp Gravais in beautiful Lake of the
obarks now hire summer staff. Desire for
excellence, but no experience necessary. Call
(816) 324-9622 Keith Miller
on resume
3. Get in touch with major companies (BMI, Proctor &
& Mercer) for future career.
Get Listed at the LEWIS LUAU! Friday, April 24
from 8 a.m. to 11 p.m. Contents:
Epics, Funny Stuff! Everyone欢迎!
Julie, O.K. I succeed to the Superior Power of you, no doubt. No foolish! You also might want to go to German class, what with the semester about to begin? A niece is worried sick. I heart you real much!
PERSONAL
STUDENTS WANTED Part time or full time. No experience necessary. Good pay. Start immediately. Days, evenings, or Saturdays. Call Dina, 749-3945.
Chris & Bryan-Glad you don't eat crayons and the food anyway? Thanks for bein' the best girl on earth.
Leading financial services company offers complete training for college graduates for the Topeka and Lawrence area. Confidently market mutual funds, retirement plans, life insurance, and more through our personalized financial planning program.
Z I bear Lincoln's crazy of time of year. And Jeff, Well we be no scary, but we'll drag him out of his shell. So, I guess my answer is: Your biscuit-eating friend.
X-RAY: Wanna do that dinner again? Get
unraehly! The Stick Wielding Friend.
Peace and Love to the Ad Staff.
Peter: Adopt big bros are loved ! too!! "I'm only ones that can make ice cubes! Love ya, Suana."
FINANCIAL PLANNING
Dunkie: We will miss you at inserts Thursday. Staff pay the $40.00 Love. The Ad Staff
To the 2 girls in the Brat we saw on Kasand, want you to join us? I invited you to the Good Friday Party. 841.274
BUS. PERSONAL
Send resume to Mr. Jennings
1100 SW Wanamaker Rd.
Suite 103
Be creative in gift giving. Fulfill your fantasies with custom gifts that call to mind Graces at Photo Plus, 286-706-3701.
Toneka. KS 66604
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.
HEADACHE, BACKACHE, ARM PAIN, LEG PAIN? Student and most insurance accepted. For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark Johnson 843-9079
TIRED OF WORKING LESS THAN
YOUR BEST WORK IN THE SUMMER
The Southwestern Company is looking for students to study at its campus in Colorado Springs. Students must be willing, working, with net $1500 to $4000 this summer. For more information, call (808) 269-3700.
--or professional typing/word processing, call
for support. 1080. Spring special $29/pgd, double
page.
GVLASSEMAN Write for KS/MO info PER-
GLASSEMAN 901284 Mailed confidentially
901284 Mailed confidentially
Barb's Vintage Rose
Flapper dresses, gangster hats, 50's
formals & accessories, Hawaiian
shirts, "Tom Jones" dresses.
927 Mass. 841-2451 M-S 10:5:30
Most reasonable rates in town for all your photo
shoots. Call (714) 349-7070
for portrait calls. Call Phone Plus: 714-349-
7070
Enjoy smooth, creamy
Frozen Yogurt
that tastes like Ice Cream
but with 80% less fat!
--FREE SAMPLES-or professional typing/word processing, call
for support. 1080. Spring special $29/pgd, double
page.
I Can't Believe It's YOGURT!
Frozen Yogurt Stores
OPEN: 11 a.m..-11 p.m. Daily
Noon-11 p.m. Sundays
Louisiana Purchase Shannon Center
Need music for your wedding *Call Jean, 843-3704*
Give piano and voice lessons over summer.
New Connexion, 300 Elm, North Lawrence,
842-4013. Tuesday-Saturday, 9 to 6, evenings by appointment.
Hair styles done your way. Through April and May *$8 cuts and sets, $3 permits*
Leaving Town?
WANTED: engineer student or professional to design idea for patient. Must have knowledge of wave transmission, garage door openers. Call George, 749-0489 Quickly!
GREENS PARTY SUPPLY
808 W. 23rd
Weekly Beer Specials
Maupintour
749-0700
Coors Light 12 pk. $5.37
Old Style 12 pk. $4.12
Busch 12pk. $4.26
Weidemann 12 pk. $3.49
PAN AMERICAN
CRIMSON SUN PHOTO is looking for young women interested in developing a modeling portfolio, 15% over direct cost. No set fee. Call 841-9689.
Why go off campus to make your travel arrangements? Maupintour offers guaranteed lowest air fares and complete travel planning.
On campus location. in the Kansas Union and 831 Mass.
AUTO-TINTING: Best scratch resistant solar
film availability. Last warranty. PROT-I TINT
- Sculptured nails
- Rediures
Rare and Used Records. Buy, Sell, or Trade Quantillum's 811 New Hampshire.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest
Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20
years, driver's license obtainable, transportation
provided, 841-7749.
John sings messages? $20. 841-1764 or 843-1392
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ektachrome processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W service for large prints. 400 Art & Design Building, Room 208. 844-1767
MATH TUORIST FOR 1976, M.A., $/hour (courses
above) 196 % /hour : 843-9032.
D.W.I. s & tranf
Fake I.D.'s & other criminal offenses
Family Law & other legal problems
DONALD G. STROLE
PRIVATE OFFICE Obj Gyn and
Burial Services. Overland Park ... 9134-4687
MUSIC" "MUSIC" "MUSIC" "MUSIC"
Red House Audio 8-track studio, P.A. and Lights,
Mobile Party Music, Maximum Audio Wizardry.
Call Brad 749-1275.
Stanestram. All indie dresses can be made here and they range from the classic fashion magazines, I will styles from the latest fashion magazines. I will showcase all of my work.
LAWYER
HARPER
1101 Mass.
Suite 201 749-0117
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided 841.2316.
TYPING
1-1-1 TRIO Word processing. Responsible.
Conscientious. Reliable. Bake 843-3119 for service.
A-Z Worst Processing Service. Quality resumes,
24-hour support. Fax resume to P.O. Box 1980.
File storage available. 843-1800 unit 19.
13,100 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing.
24 Hour Typing, 13th semester in Lawrence
Best quality and best service: 814-5006
www.lawrence.edu
A-3 professional typing. Term papers, Theses,
Booklets. Available from IBM Electronic Typewriter 842-3548.
Electronic Typewriter 842-3548.
AAA TYPING has low cost work processing/document storage starting at $19.1p; Call 842-1942 after 4 p.m. weekdays, any time weekends. Campus pickup available.
Absolutely Fast Typing. Dependable and easy to use. Attend Katy at 8:40 a.m. 9:00 a.m. and at 17:59 a.m. Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard secretary. Secretary Call Mrs. Nancy Matachi. 841-1231.
Accurate Word Processing Meadowbrook location experience Call 749-1691 EVENINGS
Accurate affordable typing by former Harvard secretary. Three miles east of campus. $1.25 per double-spaced page. Call Mrs. Mattila, 841-1219
Dependable, professional, experienced.
TRANSCRIPTION also, standard tape 843-6877.
DISSERTATIONS, THORES, SLEAW, LAW PAPERS. Mommy's typing is in Australia but will keep. WATCHING THIS AD.
Typing and Word Processing.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
2 Female Roommates wanted for summer. Own rooms, $125 rent. Pool. Close to school. 842-707-9630
Donations of books and magazines needed. Support Friends of the Library, Brary.
Needed: roommate for a very nice fully furnished apartment. On bus route, pools, and tennis courts.
2 Housemates for 3 brm house $170 & $130 mo.
2 ush/1 utilities. Convenient Location. Ion,
Graduate students preferred. Rooms available
June 1 and May 1 respectively. 842-0038
Roommate wanted to share large 2 BR apt. Availate June 1st, 187 for summer and school year. 87-88 St. street location, Laudry facilities, year 87-88 Rehl plus 1/2 deposit and积水 83-657.
Roommates Wanted for Summer 110/month plus utilities between downtown and campus. 841-1733.
Roommate $15.00 Deposit. Negotiable. Cheap!
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Policy
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student or senior. 843-001.
Summer Roommate: lizard 2 bdrm, Sunrise
Place townhouse-fully furnished, pool $100 mth
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summercommercial.com
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Wanted: Good used computer with these features (IBM compatible, minimum keypad, 300 MB hard drive, Leave Message)
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16
Thursday, April 23, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details, page 2
Friday
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
April 24,1987 Vol.97,No.140 (USPS 650-640)
Diversion of money to contras confirmed
Government can trace the money to the contras
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Congressional investigators, relying on Swiss bank records and other material provided by businessman Albert Hakim, have confirmed the diversion of more than $1 million in Iranian arms sale profits to contractions fighting the Nicaraguan government, sources said yesterday.
"We now have a way to trace the money from Teheran" to the rebels, said one source, who asked not to be identified.
No precise estimate of the size of the diversion was available, although sources said investigators had told members of House and Senate committees that the amount was over $1 million.
It was not clear whether investigators have been able to confirm a diversion in the range of $10 million to $30 million that Attorney General Edwin Meese III referred to on Nov. 25, 1986, when he first disclosed the movement of funds.
The confirmation of the diversion by congressional investigators came as Sen. Daniel Inouye, D-Hawaii, chairman of the Senate investigating committee, told reporters that Senate investigators probably would never be able to completely trace the affair's complex, international money trail.
Committee weighs merits of faculty union
Inouye spoke after a closed-door committee session at which lawmakers voted to give limited immunity from prosecution to two witnesses in order to compel their testimony. He described the two as very minor figures but refused to identify them.
Inouye also said that a key figure in the case, former Air Force Major Gen. Richard Secord, may agree to testify voluntarily at committee hearings. Other principal figures, including former National Security Adviser John Poindexter and his former NSC aide, Oliver North, have cited their constitutional rights against self-incrimination in refusing to testify.
Poindexter has been granted limited immunity, and investigators are expected to begin questioning him in private on May 2 or shortly after.
The public hearings are scheduled to begin on May 5 and will last through July.
Hakim was questioned on Monday in Paris under a limited grant of immunity, and the material he provided gave investigators a major break in their effort to track money from the Middle East to Central America.
"Records that we obtained confirmed that some money was diverted," said one source. It was not clear whether Hakim, in addition to providing Swiss bank records, also handed over records from Caribbean bank accounts where money reportedly was placed for use by the contras.
Faculty union issue
Editor's note: This is the final story in a five-part series on the possible formation of a faculty union at the University of Kansas. Today's story focuses on the findings of a committee on collective bargaining. The committee presented its report yesterday at a faculty forum.
By BENJAMIN HALL Staff writer
Members of an ad-hoc committee on collective bargaining yesterday lent support to the idea that KU faculty would benefit from a faculty union.
working conditions, faculty morale and faculty governance.
Staff writer
The committee members did not endorse efforts to form a faculty union here, but they said faculty unions elsewhere had improved
The committee, which spent several months researching the effects of faculty unions, spoke to about 40 people gathered for a meeting of the Senate.
T. P. Srinivasan, professor of mathematics and chairman of the committee, said the committee members had started their work with a variety of preconceptions about faculty unions.
"We do not have prejudices that we had before our work on the committee."
One committee member, Pete Johnsen, associate professor of educational psychology and research, said one of the most striking effects of collective bargaining was that it disclosed how money was allocated within universities.
"Most of the people we interviewed said that prior to collective bargaining, these sorts of decisions were made behind closed doors." Johnson said.
John Nalbandian, chairman of the department of public administration and another member of the committee, said faculty unions improved due process and faculty involvement in decision-making.
"Where there is a low tradition of faculty involvement in decisions, there seems to be an increase," he said. "There seems to be an awful lot of attention paid to personnel matters."
"The faculty seemed to coalesce around non-monetary issues, and that's what seemed to hold the union together."
Committee member Felix Moos, professor of anthropology, said faculty unions also improved relationships between faculty members.
"We came to conclude that collegiality is probably increased by collective bargaining," he said. "People may find they have something in common that they can discuss with one another."
Srinivasan said faculty unions also had a positive influence on existing
faculty governance.
"Faculty unions have carefully avoided any conflict with faculty governance," he said.
Conflict with faculty governance would endanger the union's clout, Srinivasan said. "And any conflict between the union and governance would be exploited by the administration."
Amy Randles, student senator and student representative of the University Council, asked the committee whether an organized faculty would pre-empt student input into University decisions.
"We did not look into that specifically," Srinivasan said. "But it seems to us that in academe, the faculty and students are in partnership. It seems to us that any change that strengthens one part of the partnership strengthens the whole partnership."
Moos said, "We would do our jobs better. The administration would probably listen more. It seems to me the students would benefit."
Morris Kleiner, professor of business and a committee member, said he thought unions used their lobbying power effectively.
"We found a lot of lobbying going on," he said. "I think, in many cases, that served to increase the pool of funds into an institution."
But collective bargaining has only a modest effect on faculty salaries, KEITH M. BURKE
Jacob Gordon, associate professor of African studies, asked the committee whether it had found any negative aspects of collective bargaining for faculty.
"There is no doubt that collective bargaining brings with it a lot of bureaucratic tasks," he said. "But they may not necessarily last forever."
Nalbandian said, "Some of the people I talked to were very concerned with the over-proceduralization."
MADISON
Chad DeShazo/KANSAN
Blast off
Some KU faculty members face an uncertain summer
An employee of Commercial Waterproofing Inc., Parkville, Mo., sandblasts part of a swimming pool lane marker. Two employees were working yesterday to remove old paint from the bottom of the Lawrence Municipal Pool, Eighth and Kentucky streets, in preparation for the summer.
Budget cuts reduce available summer school money
By KJERSTI MOEN
Staff writer
Some faculty members who have expected to teach summer school this year have been forced to make other plans because of cuts in the KU budget.
The budget for faculty salaries for the summer semester has been cut about 30 percent from last year, officials from the office of academic affairs said Wednesday. The cut doesn't mean faculty must take cuts in their paychecks; it means many of them won't get paychecks at all.
The $416,000 salary cut, a part of this year's overall 3.8 percent cut in state financing for the University of Kansas, has led most schools and departments to offer fewer summer semester courses and to employ fewer teachers than previous summers.
Carl Locke, dean of engineering,
said that the school's summer course
offerings had been cut almost in half
and that the school had employed
only about half as many teachers as
summer 1986.
It's most unfortunate for students who can't get the courses they need, but also for faculty who won't have the income they depend on," he said. "My impression is that there's sort of a resigned acceptance."
Teachers who won't be able to teach this summer can compensate by applying for research or teaching grants, doing consulting, taking industrial or governmental summer employment or taking vacations, Locke said.
'We never have enough money.'
Robert Adams
liberal arts and sciences
Robert Adams; associate dean of liberal arts and sciences, said the college's summer school budget had been cut almost in half. But he said there were always more faculty wanting to teach and more students wanting to enroll in summer school classes than were able.
"We never have enough money." he said.
Peter Casagrande, professor of English and scheduling officer for the English department, said the department had only about half as much money as the 1986 summer school budget.
Last year, 13 faculty taught summer courses. This summer, only six will be working, he said.
"Some have been angry. Some are wondering how they are going to supply their nine-month income," Casagrande said. "In effect, they are losing a 10th salary."
"When the rescission occurred, it was said that faculty salaries wouldn't be affected, but in effect, that's just what's happened." Casagrande said.
number of summer courses. Most affected is the political science department, where one professor is teaching, as opposed to the usual four or five, said Jarosław Piekalkiewicz, professor of政治科学.
The division of government also is offering only about half its normal
Piekaliewicz had hoped to teach at the University this summer but
"I'm upset for two reasons," he said.
One reason is concern for students, he said. Piealkiewicz teaches a course that's required for political science majors. Some students put off taking the class until the summer session as the last course before graduation, he said. Because the department will not be offering the course this summer, those students cannot graduate until December, he said.
Piekalkiewicz said he also was upset out of concern for his own financial status.
"Summer income is important financially to me," he said. "In my case, I have children at the University that I have to support."
Piekalkiewicz said he was lucky because he had received an invitation to teach part-time this summer at Princeton University, in Princeton, N.J., where he will make about half the money he would teaching fulltime at KU.
He said he thought few other faculty members were as fortunate.
"I think my chance was one in a hundred," he said. "Everybody is really upset. They're really mad."
Sciences need more good women, researchers say
By PEGGY O'BRIEN
Staff writer
As many KU fifth-year seniors have, Becky Comfort had a difficult time deciding on a major. She's a good writer with a strong interest in English and philosophy.
This is the '80s. Women in medicine, law and business have created a tidal wave washing over the workforce.
She considered herself "completely unscientific," but had always done well in math and science classes. She liked the idea of knowing something existed outside of herself and the objectivity of science.
"It is pleasant to study science and the standard for success is fairly objective," said Comfort, a Davis, Calif., senior and now a math major.
Traditional sex roles are losing their grip on women wanting to pursue careers that, until recently,
But Comfort often is the only woman in her physics classes.
were entered only by men.
But women still are underrepresented in science careers. Educators and researchers are finding that women have not entered the physical sciences and engineering in the numbers they have other fields. The statistics aren't encouraging.
Research done by the Commission on Professionals in Science and Technology indicates that although the proportion of women receiving professional science degrees has
increased dramatically since 1960 women still aren't equally participating.
Numbers taken from the commission's 1986 report, "Professional Women and Minorities," show that woman are not getting close to an equal representation in math and science fields.
Marylin A. Hulme of Rutgers University and Walter S. Smith, KU professor of curriculum and instruction, used those statistics in a book
they are writing. The two concluded that "without conscientious, positive intervention on the part of educators and others," equal participation would not be achieved.
A 1986 report by the Commission on Professionals in Science and Technology stated that two clear trends appeared in students who studied the physical sciences in high school and headed toward those majors in college.
Legislator donates time, expertise to KU course
See SCIENCE, p. 6, col. 3
Bv PAUL SCHRAG
Staff writer
State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, finds that her political experience helps her teach Sartre and other writers on the KU Western Civilization reading list.
Charlton has taught one section of Western Civilization every semester since 1973. She is one of 10 people who teach Western Civilization discussion groups for no pay.
Philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre may have had a low opinion of politics, but that doesn't mean a politician dislikes teaching about him.
The other volunteer instructors are regular KU faculty or staff members. Charlton describes her position as time voluntary assistant instructor.
"I do it partly to help out the program and the University," she
James Seaver, professor of history who was chairman of Western Civilization from 1957 to 1985, said the tradition of having several unpaid, voluntary Western Civilization instructors began in 1957. He said non-faculty members such as Charlton brought a different perspective to their teaching that was healthy for the program.
said. "But I also do it for myself. It gives me an opportunity to keep in touch with college students. It also keeps me reading."
"She's an excellent teacher," he said of Charlton. "Over the years, her students have praised her very highly."
Sitting on comfortable chairs around a small fire in Charlton's softly lighted living room Wednesday night, Charlton and four class members discussed Sartre's philosophy.
"It's a more relaxed and personable atmosphere," Gay Holladay, Lawrence junior, said. "It's an atmosphere where you can stand on the sterile as in the typical classroom."
Nor is Charlton, 63, a typical instructor. She was elected to the Kansas Legislature in 1980.
"It's a good idea to elect grandmothers to the state Legislature," she said, referring to herself and State Rep. Jessie Brinson, D-Lawrence. "It's a good second career for a woman who're raised a family. We can give pretty much all our time to it."
But even during spring semester when the Legislature is in session, Charlton finds time to teach. Her political experience contributes to her teaching, she said, but she tries not to let politics dominate class discussions.
Charlton enjoys academia both as a teacher and a student. In fall semesters of odd-numbered years, when neither legislative nor campaign duties make demands on her time, she audits a class.
"I'm afraid I would tend to emphasize the political aspects too much," she said. "That's one of the reasons why I have a student start the discussion."
Charlton began teaching Western Civilization discussion sections after she received a bachelor's degree in political science from the University in 1970. She received a master's degree in political science in 1976.
C. S. KIRCHNER
Betty Jo Charlton
Closet art
INSIDE
Twenty-nine plaster statues that have been restored recently are being brought out of warehouses and will be a part of the new Mary Grant Museum in Lippincott Hall. See story page 3.
The ump's a bur
Verbally abusing the umpires is a baseball ritual. Kansas fans religiously practice this art at Jayhawk baseball games. See story page 11.
2
Friday, April 24, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Around the World
Soviet media say that dissident receives permission to emigrate
MOSCOW — Anatoly Koryagin, who spent six years in a labor camp for accusing authorities of sending sane dissidents to mental hospitals, has been granted permission to emigrate. Soviet news media said yesterday.
The two-sentence statement by both the English- and Russian-language service of the official Tass news agency was believed to be the first time the Soviet media have announced a dissident's departure.
"Anatoly Koryagin, who was recently released from detention, has been allowed to leave the USSR, it was confirmed to a Tass correspondent today at the USSR Ministry of Internal Affairs," Tass said.
"Koryagin is leaving for Switzerland for permanent residence," the statement said. It provided no other information.
Dissident sources said that Koryagin would leave Moscow today.
Koryagin, a 48-year-old psychiatrist, was pardoned by the Supreme Soviet in February in a review of dissident cases and released from a labor camp where he had been imprisoned since June 1981.
He had been sentenced to seven years in prison camp and five years in internal exile on charges of anti-Soviet agitation and propaganda, a charge used frequently against dissidents.
Students throw stones at police in Seoul
SEOUL, South Korea — About 700 students hurled firebombs and stones at police yesterday in clashes at Seoul National University after a memorial service for a student who died after police torture, witnesses said.
Protests against the government also were reported at 13 other universities.
Last week there were campus protests almost every day, but intermittent rains this week seemed to cool the situation until yesterday.
Campus sources said at least 6.600 students were involved.
Witnesses said at least five students were taken away and three others injured in a three-hour clash at state-run Seoul National University that followed a memorial marking the 100th day after the death of dissident student Park Chong-chul, who died after police torture on Jan. 14.
A 100th-day rite is an important Buddhist practice in which mourning for a deceased person formally ends.
Across the Country
Geneva missile-reduction talks resume
WASHINGTON — President Reagan said yesterday that further progress in the Geneva missile-reduction talks will not come until the Soviets "respond in detail" to U.S. verification proposals.
But he also said, as the discussions resumed in Geneva, that prospects for an intermediate nuclear force agreement have moved forward.
On Capitol Hill, meanwhile,
House Democratic leaders said
they foresaw a "very big majority"
voting for a pair of nuclear
arms-control provisions opposed
by the White House.
The administration contends
that the proposals would reduce Soviet motivation to make concessions to the United States.
House Speaker Jim Wright, D-Dexas, said backers of the proposals have so much support that opponents might not even fight against the two issues. But Vice President George Bush said he did not think the proposals would be approved by the full Congress.
Meanwhile, in Geneva, the U.S. side said it planned to propose new protocols on anti-cheating measures to be included in an eventual treaty banning such missiles in Europe.
7 die, 21 missing after building collapses
"The chances of finding anyone alive are very minimal." Mayor Thomas Bucci said at a news conference.
BRIDGEPORT, Conn. — A multi-story apartment building under construction collapsed yesterday, killing seven workers injuring a dozen and trapping 21 others under tons of crumbed concrete and twisted steel, the mayor said.
Police superintendent Joseph Walsh estimated that it might take rescue worker a week or more to rubble and find all the victims.
Walsh had said that about 40 workers were thought to be trapped when stacks of concrete flooring and steel beams collapsed at the L'Ambiance Plaza project about 1:30 p.m. Hospitals reported treating 12 injured.
Gunman kills at least eight in Florida
PALM BAY, Fla. - A man armed with high-powered rifles and handguns opened fire at two downtown shopping centers yesterday, killing at least eight people, wounding 11 and holding hostages in a supermarket for several hours before he was arrested, authorities said.
"The man has been arrested," police Lt. Candice Leek said shortly after 2 a.m. EST, more than 74 hours after the shooting began. "They chased him down and subdued him. He is being brought to the station right now."
The gunmen had released the last of his three hostages about a half hour earlier, and Leek said then that police had gassed the store and that he said he was going to kill himself.
From Kansan wires.
Weather
From the KANSAN Weather Service
LAWRENCE FORECAST
Today will be sunny and warmer, high near 75 degrees.
Winds will be south, southwest at 5-10 mph. Tonight
will be mostly clear with winds southerly at 5-10
mph. The law will be near 40 degrees.
ph. The low will be near 49 degrees.
WEEKEND OUTLOOK: Mostly sunny and warm. High temperatures will be in the low 80s. Low temperatures will be in the low 50s.
av will be sunny and warmer, high near 75 degrees.
OUT LOOK: Mostly sunny and warm. High
DES MOINES
70 / 43
OMAHA
73 / 40
LINCOLN
79 / 42
CONCORDIA
80 / 44
KANSAS CITY
76 / 45
COLUMBIA
73 / 42
ST. LOUIS
69 / 47
TOPEKA
77 / 44
SALINA
79 / 43
WICHITA
81 / 41
CHANUTE
79 / 42
SPRINGFIELD
76 / 49
TULSA
84 / 49
Gams
and
Gangsters
April
25, 1987
Black Student Union & Delta Sigma Theta present: Greek March Down & Lip Sync Contest
where: Templin Hall Basketball Court
Sigma Kappa
Initiation
and
Initiation Ball
Saturday, April 25, 1987
Congratulations
Pledges!!!
March Down (6 p.m.): free
Lip Sync (9 p.m.): $2.00
(no admission fee for lip sync participants)
when: Sat. April, 25
call 864-8702 for more info
ANTIGONE
The University of Kansas Theatre presents • ANTIGONE
By Jean Anouth • In new translation by Robert Anderson
7:30 p.m. April 30, 1987 • 8:00 p.m. May 1, 2, 1987
2:30 p.m. May 3, 1987 • Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved • For reservations call: (913) 864-3982
VISA/MasterCard accepted for phone reservations
Partially funded by the KU Student Activity Fee
Half price for students
GETTING SPRING FEVER?
THIS FRIDAY NIGHT! DON'T MISS THE . . .
Pineapple Banana Flamingo
8:00 p.m.—1:00 a.m.
April 24th
LEWIS
LUAU
- Take super "Party-Pics" with your friends
- Dancing all night to Metropolis Mobile Sound
- The only cost is a dollar/person at the door
prizes are donated from local businesses to be awarded at the party to the winners of:
The Limbo Contest — 9:00 p.m.
The Hula Hoop Contest — 9:30 p.m.
Couples Dance Contest — 10:00 p.m.
Great prizes are donated from local businesses to be awarded at
10
1950 to 1987! We've been in business for 37 years serving the men of KU and Lawrence. And, just as the city and the university have grown and prospered, so, thankfully, we have. We greatly enjoy our daily efforts in the rag business just as we did when we started 37 years ago. We thank all of you for the support you've given us over the years. Please stop in the shop and help us celebrate.
1950
1987
Come In and Celebrate Our 37th Anniversary
- spring & year 'round SUITS 10% to 33% off
- CASUAL SLACKS & pleated jeans $7.50 off
- light weight SPORT COATS 10% to 33% off
- woven cotton SPORT SHIRTS 20% off
- spring cotton SWEATERS 20% off
- DRESS TROUSERS 25% off
- SILVER FERN sportswear 25% off
- spring WINDBREAKERS 20% off
- entire stock of SHORTS 20% off
- Gant short sleeve RUGBYS $29.99 each
WHITENIGHT'S
the men's shop 839 massachusetts lawrence, kansas 66044 843-5755
hours:
Mon-Sat 9:30-5:30
Thurs 'til 8:30
Sun by appt.
University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 24, 1987
3
Local Briefs Informational scholarship meeting is set
An informational meeting about the Rhodes and Marshall scholarships will be at 3 p.m. Monday at Nunemaker Center. Students with a grade point average or 3.5 or higher are encouraged to attend.
The Marshall Scholarship program is Britain's way of thanking the United States for starting the European Recovery Program, which helped Britain and other European nations rebuild after World War II.
The program allows U.S. citizens who are graduates of U.S. universities to study for a degree at a British university for at least two academic years. Thirty students in the United States receive the scholarship annually.
The Rhodes scholarship, established by Englishman Cecil Rhodes, is awarded annually to 32 U.S. students and pays full tuition, fees, travel expenses and an allowance for two years of study at Oxford University in England.
Student wins prize for illustration
A University of Kansas senior in the School of Fine Arts has been selected as a national award winner in the Society of Illustrators 1987 Student Scholarship Competition.
Stephen T. Johnson will receive a $1,000 Kirchoff/Wohlberg Award at the society's awards ceremony May 1 in New York City. Johnson's winning piece, a charcoal drawing, will be exhibited at the society's annual show in New York City. The society received 4,000 entries from the 110 college-level arts schools. A panel of 16 judges selected 34 winners to receive grants totaling $25,000.
Seminar to discuss legal drug testing
Hallmark Cards Inc. will match the awards with grants given to the illustration departments of the winner's schools.
The Lawrence Chamber of Commerce and two area drug abuse treatment centers will sponsor a seminar on the legal aspects of employee drug testing.
"Drug Testing in Industry;
Issues and Answers" will take place from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. May 15 at the Eldridge Hotel, Seventh and Massachusetts streets.
For reservations, which cost $50 a person, call the Douglas County Citizen Committee on Alcoholism at 841-4138. The fee includes lunch at the hotel. Deadline for reservations is May 13.
Making presentations at the seminar will be David Schien, an attorney for Tenneco Oil Company, Houston; Nina Rogers, general manager of Daman Labs, Dallas; and Jack Gress, employee assistance program director at AT&T.
Center to dedicate pipe organ Sundav
The newly installed pipe organ at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center will be dedicated at a recital at 8 p.m. Sunday.
Campus and Area
James Higdon, associate professor of music, will perform at the center, 15th Street and Engel Road.
From staff and wire reports
New I.D.s to fight cafeteria abuses
By JOSEPH REBELLO
The days of sneaking into residence hall cafeterias with borrowed or fake 1.D.s may become a thing of the past after this summer.
Staff writer
Monday, hall residents will be informed that when they return this fall, they will not be able to eat in the cafeterias unless they have a new KUID equipped with a magnetic strip.
Dine cafeteries will have the Valli-
Dine computer system, and cafeteria
employees will use the computer to
determine whether they paid to eat.
The system, designed by Griffin Technology Inc. of New York City, will be installed July 14.
To help residents make the change to the new system, about 1,500 I.D.s.
will be prepared for students who have signed hall contracts for next year, said April Retherford, administrative assistant for the office of educational services.
Those residents will not be charged for the new I.D.s, but all new students must pay $5 for the I.D.s after this summer. Retherford said.
Also, hall residents will not be able to bully cafeterias' student checkers into letting them in. Checkers will now be full-time food service employees, she said.
Members of the office, which has supervised the design of the new LD.s, and about 11 student volunteers will visit each of the residence halls between 4:30 and 6 p.m., Monday through Thursday for the next two weeks, to photograph residents for the LD.s.
The only difficulty that students might face in adjusting to the new system would be that they must be careful not to lose or damage their I.D.s, said Peggy Smith, assistant
director of food services
The combination of technology and toughness in enforcing cafeteria policy will save students money in the long run, Smith said.
"Students sneak in to eat at the cafeteria all the time. And the student is jumping for the meal plan is the one that is organizing all those free meals," she said
Smith said students would no longer have to obtain meal transfer tickets to eat at another hall cafeteria. The new I.D.s will permit them to eat at any hall.
But the best feature of the system is that it will enable the housing
office to make accurate studies of residents' eating habits and to plan programs that would more effectively serve them, she said.
The Vali-Dine program has been designed to compile information every three days on how many students miss their meals, how many order sick trays and which residence hall each diner lives in.
Smith also said the system will guide the University in adjusting meal hours at various halls so as to keep students satisfied. He opened to students any three of the day.
"We could have one hall that opens for breakfast at 10 a.m., another hall that serves lunch until 2 p.m and another that serves dinner until 7 p.m. so that food will be available to students all day," Smith said.
Hermes, Apollo will grace new museum
By JOSEPH REBELLO Staff writer
"Nude Youth" and other plaster casts of famous Greek and Roman sculptures stand in a storage garage in east Lawrence. The casts will be moved to Lippincott Hall on May 4 to become part of a permanent exhibit there.
In a damp and musty warehouse on Bullene Avenue in east Lawrence, a likeness of Demosthenes, the great Greek orator, stares lifelessly into the darkness. Nearby, stand statues of the Greek god Hermes, Diskoboles the disc thrower, and Apollo Belvedere.
Staff writer
For 21 years, these plaster statues, part of the University of Kansas' Wilcox Collection, have been prisoners of neglect, said Paul Rehak, assistant professor of classes and acting curator of the collection.
But after years of being shifted from one damp warehouse to another and facing years of decay, 29 of the works will become part of the newly created Mary Grant Museum in Lippincott Hall.
On May 4, the statues, recently restored at a cost of $7,000, will be moved to Lippincott. They will be on display starting in August.
"We feel we're rescuing something that was in danger of being lost forever," Rebak said.
"This cast collection is unique," he said. "Seeing a cast collection brings you one step closer to the original. For most of us, seeing the original would mean having to travel halfway around the world."
Once, the statues were part of a 114-piece collection put together in 1888 by A.M. Wilcox, a professor of Greek at the University. The collection included reproductions of some of the greatest pieces of Greek art, and until 1965, it remained on exhibit at Old Ferman Hall.
When Fraser was closed that year, the statues were moved to a warehouse on West Campus. Since then, the classics department, which manages the collection, has been trying to find a place where it can be exhibited.
"Their real deterioration occurred when they went into storage in 1965. Unfortunately, when they were put into storage, the University simply picked the most convenient location." Rehak said.
He said that plaster was especially prone to decay under conditions where heat and humidity could not be controlled. When the statues first
Wesco Hall originally was intended to be, Rehak said.
went into storage, rain leaked through the roof of the warehouse and damaged several of them, he said.
Until the early 1970s, the department had hoped that the collection would soon be taken out of storage and put on exhibit. University officials had promised space for the collection in the 29-story building that
"But when the plans for the building changed, the fate of the collection was pretty much up for grabs," he said. "The art museum didn't want them because they were not originals. The collection simply became an unwanted stepchild."
Project gets grant to assist AIDS fight
By JENNIFER WYRICK Staff writer
See related story p. 8.
The National AIDS Network has awarded a grant of $1,000 to the Topeka AIDS Project, a non-profit organization that educates people about the disease and helps those who have it.
The money will be used to provide emergency housing, food and medications to people with AIDS in the Topea area, said David O'Brien, TAP treasurer.
O'Brien added, however, that $1,000 would last the organization on a month for those types of services and revenue always are needed, he said.
"But the grant indicates to us that a national organization thinks that we're doing a good job in serving clients." O'Brien said.
TAP has helped 20 patients with AIDS-related diseases, but only seven still are living.
Coburn said that his organization had awarded 18 grants of $1,000 each to AIDS service organizations across in direct services to AIDS patients.
The national network raised the grant money through a program called "Stamp Out AIDS." The network sold stamps for envelopes bearing that message. The drive is expected to bring in about $25,000 for distribution at a future date.
TAP is a support network that trains "buddies" to deal one-on-one with people with AIDS and AIDS related complex, or ARC, said Judy Miller, a team supervisor for TAP.
Buddies undergo an intense three-day training program where they learn about AIDS, the Red Cross home health care system, legal aspects of AIDS and how to deal with death and dying. Miller said.
The main thrust of TAP is to teach buddies to be a friend to people with AIDS and ARC and to help if their client needs transportation or medicine, Miller said. TAP also tries to keep patients out of the hospital unless it is necessary.
Students, faculty will sign quiet variety show
Staff writer
By JENNIFER FORKER
An "Evening of Song, Sign and Mime" will be one of the quietest variety shows on campus this semester.
KU students and faculty will perform a one-hour variety show in sign language at 7 tonight in 303 Bailey Hall. The students are performing to complete requirements for a class, Conversational Sign Language, offered through the department of music education and music therapy.
This is the second year that the show, which includes songs, poem recitals and mime acts will be performed. Most of the songs will not be sung.
Alice-Ann Darrow, instructor for the course, said that the show initially was designed for hearing-impaired people in Lawrence. But it attracted the attention of others, and this year, people from the Topeka deaf community were invited. The show is free and open to the public.
Darrow said the mime acts were important parts of the show because mime and body language were necessary for learning how to sign.
"It ites them to sign bigger if they can act it out," she said.
Darrow said that performers used various techniques in signing a song
David Brown. Kansas City, Mo.
senior, who is deaf and participating
in the show, said that people's body
language helped him read their lines.
"By doing the show, other people can see how you can communicate without talking," Brown said.
"Anything that has language is signed so nobody has to watch an interpreter." Darrow said.
so that hearing impaired people in the audience didn't become confused.
She said that performers would use body language and costumes to help explain songs. For example, people signing country tunes at the show will wear western clothes.
The country twang in the song also will be described through body language.
"Most of the style of a song is auditory. So what you have to do is listen to it. It's really hard."
Song interludes, when words stop but instruments continue to play, must be explained to deaf people so that they understand why performers have stopped signing. The
instruments must be mimed.
Brown said that when two or more people signed a song, he could see
"You can see the harmony even though you can't hear it." he said.
Brown, who has read lips since he became deaf at the age of 5, began learning sign language last semester in Darrow's American sign language class.
He said that it had been difficult to read lips in classes because it took so much concentration. If he had to do his college years over, he would ask for an interpreter.
Darrow said that Brown's presence in class helped her remember to constantly sign and not to avert her face away from him.
Sign language was brought to the United States in 1816 by the founders of the American School for the Deaf, Darrow said. The roots of American Sign Language come from French, not English.
"It makes me aware of what a
ASL employs a minimum of finger spelling, omits helping verbs and does not follow English word order, she said.
hearing-impaired person needs in class," she said. "It's a beautiful language and many people, when they see it, want to learn it."
"It is a separate language. It is not English," said Lisa Stover, a graduate assistant at the speech, language and hearing clinic and a participant in the show. "There are even regional differences."
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4
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Opinions
'As the Senate Turns'
Hopes for a new and improved Student Senate already have been dashed by the high drama, or was it comedy, of the Election Review Board.
In the soap opera atmosphere of the Senate since the elections, students have been treated to name-calling, charges of election rule violations, fines and a question of favoritism by the review board.
As a sort of last grasp for power, the First Class coalition charged the Bottom Line with a number of campaign violations. The review board dismissed most of the charges but did find the Bottom Line coalition guilty of going over the campaign budget limit when a discount on poster printing was found to be unfair.
Under the indecipherable Senate rules, the board either "had to" take away seats won by the Bottom Line coalition or "could" take away the seats depending on which section was followed. They instead chose to fine the coalition's presidential and vice presidential candidates the amount they exceeded the budget limit by, plus an additional $150.
And now that this episode of "As the Senate Turns" ends, many questions remain: Will the Senate define the powers of the review board for future reference? Would the punishment have been harsher if the violations had been committed by a coalition with fewer ties to the members of the review board?
Missed the boat
Elliott Abrams came to the University of Kansas on Tuesday to talk about his belief in freedom and individual rights. He missed the boat, however, when he went further into his explanation for the Reagan administration's policy in Central America.
Abrams is the assistant U.S. secretary of state for inter-American affairs and one of Reagan's most trusted advisers on policy in Central America. More specifically, he is one of the main throttles which moves to pump U.S. funds into the contra rebellion in Nicaragua.
He is headstrong and strident in his commitment to restoring democracy in Nicaragua. His wish, as he says, is to dishage a government that derives military and economic support from the Soviet Union and which increasingly restrains the freedoms of the Nicaraguan people, people who he insists do not support the Sandinista regime.
These rational goals are
quite beautiful and flowery, particularly when they evolve from a cushiony chair in a spacious office a few blocks from the banks of the Potomac. His sail may well be guided, but his vision obviously is blackened to the real shores.
When probed, as he was Tuesday, Abrams seems to be promoting only his own individuality — one that prescribes to lofty ideals. He dismissed allegations of inhumane atrocities committed by his freedom-fighters as common war behavior. He scuffed at suggestions that he, "a 39-year-old man," should fight in the war himself and then suggested, himself, that the possibility of committing U.S. troops in combat never is dismissed — even if the young and strong U.S. men don't believe in his cause.
Happily, the turnout on Tuesday indicated that a large number of vocal U. S. citizens are not going to christen Abrams' boat.
Offer them immunity
What's the best way to get someone to open up? Offer them something they would like to have. What's the best way to get a government official involved in the Iran- contra affair to talk? Offer him limited immunity.
This is what the Senate panel investigating the Iran-contra affair voted to do this week. The Senate decided to grant Rear Adm. John M. Poindexter limited immunity, hoping to clear up some of the mystery surrounding the scandal. Limited immunity means that whatever Poindexter says right now cannot be used against him in later investigations. Poindexter is one of the key figures involved in the affair. He resigned as President Reagan's security adviser in November because of the events surrounding the Iran arms deal.
Poindexter is considered a
key witness because of the close working relationship he had with Reagan. It is hoped that his testimony will shed some light on "what the president may or may not have known of the apparent diversion of the money."
If this is what is needed to clear up the largest scandal to hit the Reagan administration since it first entered office, then the panel made the right decision by granting limited immunity.
Those key officials who participated in the affair should not be completely immune from punishment. However, the Reagan administration made a terrible mistake that has damaged this country's reputation abroad and destroyed our faith and trust in the government. They owe the citizens of the United States an explanation.
News staff
Frank Hansel...Editor
Jennifer Benjamin...Managing editor
Jill Warren...News editor
Brian Kaberline...Editorial editor
Sandra Engelland...Campus editor
Mark Siebert...Sports editor
Diane Dulmeet...Photo editor
Bill Skeet...Graphics editor
Tom Eblen...General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Lisa Weems...Business manager
Bonnie Hardy...Ad director
Denise Stephens...Retail sales manager
Kelly Scherer...Campus sales manager
Duncan Calhoun...Marketing manager
Lori Coppe...Classified
Jennifer Lumianski...Production manager
David Nixon...National sales manager
Jeanne Hines...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 photographed.
The Central American militaries would then have a strong pretext to overthrow their countries in the face of the weakness of the civilian governments. This would again strengthen the communist resolve and the pendulum of extremism would again start to swing, cutting down the hopes and aspirations of the Central American peoples for freedom and democracy.
The Kansan reserves the right reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer-Finn Hall, Lawton, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and on Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage paid in Canadian dollars is mailed by mail are $40 per year in Douglas County and $50 per 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, Lawen. Kanen, 66045.
While a direct U.S. military presence is not the preferred option for the United States to defend its legitimate interests in the region, Abrams was correct to state that "we must never, under any circumstances, rule out the military possibilities."
Should the United States be limited in its options in Central America as the protesters seek, events might occur that necessitate a direct U.S. military intervention, either by President Reagan or his successor.
If the opinions of the vocal protesters at the recent speech given by Elliott Abrams, assistant U.S. secretary of state for inter-American affairs, are any indication, opponents of the Reagan administration's policies in Nicaragua appear most intent on encouraging the very events that will precipitate either direct U.S. military intervention or take-over bids by the national militaries.
Protesters misguided on Nicaraguan policy
Paul Campbell Columnist
One truly wonders whether their intentions actually are to help the people in Nicaragua or to rekindle the fire of the Vietnam years.
Their primary goal is expressed briefly by one of their favored chants, "no more contra aid," which was bleached monotonously at various times before and during the speech. The congressional battle for contra aid has become an annual event that is approached wearily by supporters of the Nicaraguan resistance.
Members of the audience who disrupted Abrams presentation took it upon themselves to interfere with his right to freedom of speech. Possibly because they felt that the unswaved were unable to make up their own minds or that Abrams was correct. They have every right to express their opinions, but none to interfere with the expressions that they find disagreeable.
A cut off of aid would signal to our democratic allies in Central America that the United States is an unreliable ally, whose capricious support changes with the winds of scandal.
Congressional resolve for freedom in Nicaragua will be tested soon. It is hoped that Congress will affirm its support for the success of Reagan's foreign policy. Not to do so would jeopardize the
future of Central America on account of a domestic scandal. But then, Congress has not always risen above such things in the past.
One unnerving question repeatedly asked of administration proponents is, "What if the contrains can't win?" This type of question betrays a telling ignorance of guerrilla movements which do not actually win the wars, but destroy the people's confidence in the government. This is the contra's long-term mission, which necessitates a long-term commitment by the United States.
The effectiveness of the contra struggle, when is a guerrilla struggle as opposed to a military struggle, also would be hindered greatly by a cutoff of aid.
support of communist movements in other nations of the Central American isthmus.
One common myth held by some is that it was the Viet Cong, the communist guerrilla movement in Vietnam, that won the war against the conventional U.S. Army. Former Vietnamese officials who have defected to the West attest that while the Viet Cong succeeded in preventing a U.S. victory, it could not have won the war alone.
After the U.S. pullout, the North Vietnamese army made quick work of the struggling South Vietnamese government, which could not count on any support from the United States.
The struggle of the Viet Cong was a long one. Likewise, the struggle of the contras must be long. Unfortunately, the U.S. mentality prefers things to be over with quickly.
Should the United States abandon the Nicaraguan resistance, whose strength is now estimated at about 20,000 volunteers, the Sandinistas would extend their totalitarian control over the entire country. They would be able to increase their
If they had pulled similar stunts — interfering with a government official or even just marching in the streets — in Nicaragua to protest Sandinista policies, they would not be around the next day to read about their antics. The Sandinistas, well versed at denying free speech, should be pleased with their North American contemporaries.
Mailbox
Election worthless
Once again, a band of the Liar's apprentices and epigones has contrived to exercise the last shred of legitimacy from the Student Senate elections. For the second time in four academic years, the very questionable "will of the students" has been thwarted by various means.
During the 1983 fall election, the results were found to have been miscalculated, and a new election was called. I was a freshman when I voted for the Costume Party in the first election. Only later did I find out that my ballot probably never was counted and more likely went blowing down the gutters of Oread Avenue. After that, I decided to boycott elections of these resume-building, promise everything, do nothing, conniving little varlets.
Sources like the Kansan decry the meager turnout at elections while I applaud this trend. It is a testimony to the finer instincts of the non-voting majority that they shun this ritual bugging of democracy.
The recent "horrible scandal" involving discount printing and the Bottom Line coalition only affirms the vernal and bickering nature of the elections and the Senate. This "treachery" reinforces my decision to abstain from voting and encourage others to do so as well. I further advocate the termination of the ineffectual Student Senate with the money saved going to deserving charities.
Doug Huppe Roeland Park senior
In others' defense
Paul Campbell, in his excellent column condemning Gary Hart's call for a new draft in the April 17 issue, made the primary argument against conscription, or compulsory "national service," that it violates the right to individual liberty. I would add, however, that more than 2 million men and women in uniform are not required to defend the United States.
Both draft opponents and advocates accept today's foreign policy paradigm which prescribes the stationing of hundreds of thousand of U.S. troops overseas and the expenditure of some 70 percent of the defense budget for the defense of other countries.
Other bases, such as those in Japan and Europe, are ludicrous in light of the wealth and potential self-defense capabilities of these countries who thoroughly have recovered from their post World War II poverty. Yet,
U. S. bases in Asia and the Middle East are tripwires for more Vietnams or worse.
the draft debate often narrowly centers on whether the All Volunteer Force can provide sufficient manpower to maintain these overseas committments.
Conscription and its civilian counterpart, "national service," are not the answer. We need a new foreign policy — one that defends our country and the ideals of minimal government and individual liberty.
Jay Hilgartner Lawrence senior
Fact versus opinion
This letter is written in response to Greg Gideon's criticism of the St. Lawrence Catholic Center's construction achievements. Gideon has a point.
The church did spend a lot of money on the construction, and some people might argue that they might have gone a little overboard — that's a matter of opinion. As opposed to opinion, the fact is there are many community services available that I didn't even know about; I seriously doubt Gideon was even faintly aware of any, except for the occasional Sunday mass he might have attended.
A few to mention are the badly needed marriage preparation sessions, weekly invitation scripture study groups, evening retreats, science-law-education groups that meet to discuss how their studies fit in with their beliefs, and even a few social events such as the Friday Socialis (T.G.I.F.'s), Sunday suppers, Friday movies and e舞ances.
Don't you think more things would be accomplished in the world if we educate people (which costs money) to do things for themselves, as opposed to blaming the church for being negligent without reason.
The question still remains on whether the construction was a good investment or not. This can only be answered by asking, what are YOU going to do about it?
It is very easy to criticize something from afar, but you really haven't a case unless you get involved.
Rash statements
Jaime Prieto Jr.
Overland Park junior
I was surprised by the attacks made against my paper and myself by Jon DeVore. He made several rash statements with no substantiation. Name-calling isn't a substitute for facts.
DeVore made no attacks on the
MR. BADGER
by A.D. Long
THE SEVEN VOYAGES OF SINBAD,
THE GARBAGE MAN
TOWN OF ISLIP, NY
Here it is, Cap'n. Up the Missouri, then hang a left.
Aye!
content of the Stalwart. I wonder if this isn't silent congratulations to our writers and editors.
DeVore also said that the rights of religious minorities had been violated. Is this a sign of support for the Rev. Pat Robertson and the Rev. Jerry Falwell? Or maybe even an indictment against the way the press reported on sex-starved Jim Bakker, his multimillion dollar estates and his wife's single-handed monopoly on the cosmetics industry?
Finally, he mentioned Oliver North. If Col. North broke the law, then he should be punished to the full extent of the law. However, a man is innocent until proven guilty. Or has the Left made changes in the Constitution that I am unaware of?
Instead, he chose to attack the way the paper looked, the military and Oliver North. My staff is still trying to figure out what all that has to do with radicals stealing the Stalwart
Victor Goodpasture
Topeka senior
Few U.S. institutions have shown greater indifference towards intellectual achievements than unions, making the unionization of University faculty as absurd as, given its mission, the pacification of the Marine Corps.
Maynard Shelly professor of psychology
Unions indifferent
Avast, landlubber! Got any room in yer landfill?
Sorry, boy. We're full up.
Have yall tried Kansas?
They've been takin' our radioactive stuff.
Welcome to Louisiana
Rusty Scooper
Full speed ahead!
Thar he goes!
Follow that barge!
NASSAU COUNTY
NEW YORK
TOWN M HUNTINGTON MY
Ridiculous idea
Christian Colbert's recommendation that Kansas pull out of its compact with four other states to store low-level radioactive waste is as myopic as the policies that have put us in this nuclear mess to begin with.
Colbert seems to believe that the only equitable compact is a compact where Kansas isn't stuck with the disposal site. Even more ridiculous is his notion that Kansas should "go it alone" and dispose of only its own waste in its own disposal site. One easily can imagine other states adopting this mentality. Instead of several regional waste disposal sites, we would have 50.
Kansas should work toward positively address nuclear waste management. It is the mismanagement of that technology that causes problems. I mean specifically those political decisions that don't take responsibility, don't implement a workable set of regulations, or don't commit to the enforcement of those regulations.
A responsible nuclear waste management program would prove to be a wise investment. It would keep Kansans safe from radioactive contamination, set a precedent for others to follow, and could be profitful. The other states were charged for the privilege of using our disposal site.
Steven Kidwell Leawood graduate student
BLOOM COUNTY
STEVE ?
WAKE UP...
I CAN'T SLEEP.
WHEN I WAS LITTLE, MY
MOTHER WOULD TELL ME STORIES
AT BEDTIME...WONDERFUL
STORIES OF MAGICAL KINGDOMS,
EVIL KINGS AND
BEAUTIFUL HEROINES..
by Berke Breathed
STEVE ?
AWRIGHT
ONCE UPON A TIME,
THERE WAS A
TV EVANGELIST,
SOME DRUGGED WAS
WINE AND A HOT SHE
CHURCH BEAUTIFUL?
SECRETARY...
University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 24, 1987
5
Headquarters Inc. to praise workers
City Commission declares 'Volunteer Recognition Day' for counseling center
By TODD COHEN
Staff writer
For 24 hours a day and 365 days a year, the volunteers at Headquarters Inc. are available for people who need help.
On Sunday, however, the 60 volunteers who staff the local crisis intervention/counseling center will take an afternoon for a potluck picnic in South Park to celebrate and recognize each other's work.
The day was declared by the Lawrence City Commission as "Headquarters Inc. Volunteer Recognition Day," in honor of the volunteers.
Lawrence Mayor Mike Amyx; David Hopper, Douglas County Commission chairman; and Barbara Smith, executive director of the United Way, will present certificates of appreciation to the volunteers and to nine training session graduates at 3:30 p.m.
The picnic will start about 1 p.m in the west portion of the park at 11th and Massachusetts streets. The public is invited.
But Headquarters won't close for the event. Several volunteers will have to stay behind to man the phones.
assistant director, one of three paid staff members, said yesterday that Headquarters could not survive without volunteers.
Larry Carter, Headquarters, Inc.
"It would be absolutely impossible," he said.
Headquarters Inc., formed in 1970, provides free counseling either over the phone or at its office at 1419 Massachusetts St. The volunteers, half of whom are KU students, work an eight-hour shift each week, Carter said.
First though, volunteers must complete 85 hours of training, he said. A new training session will start in June. Interested people should call
Headquarters for more information.
Mike Rollet, administrative assistant at the KU Affirmative Action office, who will be recognized for her six years as a volunteer, said yesterday that Headquarters' volunteers did valuable work.
"You really have to be committed. It isn't twitching at all," she said.
"Sometimes it can be the difference between life and death," she said.
The volunteers must have good training skills and be committed to help them.
"We are a really unique, caring group of people."
KU team preparing for national quiz bowl
By KIERSTI MOFN
Staff writer
Mickey Mouse and Goofy will have competition on the Disney Channel in June when the station broadcasts five KU students playing mind games in the 1987 National College Quiz Bowl.
The KU team, known as Onan's Angels, was selected last month as the 16th team to participate in the national college bowl tournament June 13-17 in Los Angeles. The College Bowl Inc. sponsors the trip and the tournament
"It will be good exposure for KU," I said to one eaam member, Erik Mather. "It's the best."
In the tournament, four-member
teams compete to answer trivia questions both accurately and quickly.
"We'll need to work on speed," Matheis said.
Richard Turk, Overland Park junior, also stressed the importance of speed. "You can't wait for the question to be finished." he said.
The other team members are John Chappel, Overland Park senior; James Mamalis, Prairie Village sophomore; and Sakunthala Gunasegaram, Sri Lanka junior. One member serves as an alternate.
The team finished second in this year's regional competition in Oklahoma, but because only 15 regions participate in the game, the 16th team is selected by drawing. This
time. Onan's Angels lucked out.
Gene Wee, adviser for Student Union Activities, which co-sponsors KU college bowl tournaments, said he thought the team would do well in the national tournament.
"We have a very good team this year," he said. "I think we can get our hopes up. They're not the 16th team there."
Turk said the team participated basically for fun, but that members took the game seriously. Their experience helps them look for events that
later might show up as game questions, he said.
Matheis said team members had not worked out a preparation strategy yet but thought it would be a challenge if the friends quiz them on trivia questions.
The five team members cover sight majors between them and are prepared for most question category maybe for biblical ones. Durk said,
Matheis said that even after five earlier tournaments, he was not getting tired of playing.
"The game itself is really a lot of fun," he said.
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6
Friday, April 24, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
©1987 Universal Press Syndicate
BONUS QUESTION:
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what's the name
of that thing that
hangs down in the
back of our throats?
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The first trend is that majority of men and women drop out of science. The second trend is that the dropout rate for women far exceeds the men's rate, except in social and life sciences.
Science
The report said that few women received doctorate degrees in physical sciences or in engineering.
The program, COMETS - Career Oriented Modules to Explore Topics in Science - is used in elementary and junior high schools across the country. Smith said that no important evidence existed that said males were better in math or had superior science and math skills.
Presented by the Student Assistance Center
Continued from p.1
Smith has developed a program designed to enhance science education, especially in young women and minority students.
He said that non-femininity associated with science had an influence on girls. Girls might experience a role conflict, thinking that a career in science isn't compatible with the roles of wife and mother they have been conditioned to fulfill.
"The problem is the image of science." Smith said.
"The kids can see that these scientists are interesting women," Smith said.
The role of parents in encouraging and supporting daughters' scientific efforts is important. Smith said. He
Smith said sex stereotypes were started at home and maintained all the time.
said that children picked up on images and messages from parents, even when nothing was said. Many girls have been subtly discouraged from scientific interests.
Bill Kelly teaches science to eighth and ninth graders at South Junior High School, 2734 Louisiana St. Keller said that at the junior high age, children weren't concerned with the direction of their classes. The young students are more interested in themselves and the opposite sex.
Comfort, who has switched back and forth between majors in physics and math, said she thought some college students subconscious dismissed science as an option. Opportunities for money and scholarship for science students are as available, if not more available, than awards available for students in other disciplines, she said.
Comfort's father is an aeronautical engineer. She said her father had always been supportive of her interests and was happy she chose a technical field because he saw so many opportunities for women.
Comfort's female role model, who greatly influenced her choice of major, graduated from the KU and is now studying at Cornell University
The report said relationships and activities had a negative effect on the commitment to majors women possessed.
on a fellowship from the National Science Foundation.
"The seeds that were planted and back again until I came back," Whigman said.
"She is a really nice person, who is interested in science and getting a lot out of it," Comfort said.
A study sponsored by the Department of Education and the National Institute of Education examined the role that college peer groups play in the formation of women's career paths.
The project found that, of those women who declared a math or science major in college, 45 percent were from the middle of their sophomore year, the middle of their sophomore year.
Mara Whitacre, Kansas City, Kan. graduate student, is in the computational physics master's degree program and would like to get a doctorate in astronomy.
Whitacre said she had always been good at math and particularly enjoyed science. But in high school, she had a bad math teacher and was burned out on the subject by the time she entered college, she said. She chose to major in psychology.
Whitacre also said she was influenced by a supportive family. Her father, who was a watchmaker, was influential in the development of her mechanical interests.
She came back to the study of science after working "in the real world" for about three years. She kept in touch with a professor she had worked with in college, and he helped to renew her interest in physics.
On Campus
An awards luncheon for the Snyder Book Collecting Contest is scheduled at noon today in the English Room at the Kansas Union.
A student recital with Turt Cryst, voice, is scheduled at 8 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
- Janette Turner Hospital, Canadian novelist, will be at an English department reading scheduled at 4 p.m. today at 4002 Wesco Hall.
■ Lindley Hall Observatory is scheduled to have an open house at 9 p.m. today if the sky is clear. Call 864-3166 for more information.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 24, 1987
7
Afghan students worry about conflict
By CHRISTOPHER HINES
Staff writer
Gun-running in the mountains of Afghanistan has created a political problem of superpower proportions, but seen through the eyes of some Afghan students at KU, it seems a little closer.
"The they send you to war and obviously you don't want to go because you have to kill Afghans," said Mohammad Nasim, an Afghan who is now a senior at the University of Kansas. "But if you don't fight, they kill you."
Nasim left Afghanistan in 1979 when the Soviet Union swept south across the nation's border with more than 100,000 troops and captured its capital, Kabul. He escaped into the mountains and was helped to a refugee camp in Pakistan by Afghan freedom fighters.
Shorif Byaquobi, a secretary of political affairs at the Afghan embassy in Washington, D.C., said the Afghan government had asked the Soviet Union for help in surprising a political uprising.
"In 1979, the foreign intervention was very strong." Byaqubi said. "The Democratic Republic of Afghanistan asked the Soviet Union for help in restoring order. The Afghan people were suffering."
The Soviet Union has accused the United States and other nations of prolonging the conflict by supplying Afghan freedom fighters with arms and money.
A U.S. congressional task force on Afghanistan reported last week that the nation's prewar population of 15 million had been reduced by 40 percent as result of killing and people fleeing.
"After the invasion there was a lot of fighting and suffering," Nasim said. "For a young person there wasn't much choice. I think those of us who left are resented by those that stayed to fight the Russians. Maybe they're right."
Nahid Noury, an Afghan student who is now a sophomore at KU, was only 14 years old and attending school in Kabul when the Soviet Union invaded. She said that for the
first few days people didn't even know what had happened.
"I remember they let us out of school early," Nour said. "There was shooting and bombs exploding all over. I couldn't find my mother. People were running around the streets searching and screaming. My mother found me, and we went to a friend's house in the country where it was safer."
"It was hard losing your home, your country, everything," she said. "It's like someone walking into your home and taking everything you own. You understand what that would be like?"
Noury said that her sister-in-law, dressed as an Afghan mountain peasant, had made her way through the mountains and reached the Pakistanian border with the help of freedom fighters.
Nourry left Afghanistan in 1979 with her family when her father, who works for the United Nations, was transferred to Beirut.
"We were one of the lucky ones," she said.
Most Afghans who wish to leave the nation must cross the mountains to Pakistan and wait there in a refugee camp until they receive a visa to enter another nation.
Byaquobi said that if the United States would quit supplying the Afghanistan freedom fighters with arms and money, the conflict would end.
"It can mean months and sometimes years of waiting in a refugee camp," said Nasim, whose mother and father still live in Kabul. "I would like to return someday, but it looks like the situation is only getting worse."
"At the beginning of the year, the government announced a new reconciliation policy with the rebels," he said. "We asked the groups inside and outside the country to come to a political settlement."
"Some groups surrendered themselves and accepted the policy, but neither of them was."
Noury said it would be very difficult for the freedom fighters to surrender without achieving total victory.
Art of sound will be featured at KU museums
Noisemakers, from tissue-paper kazoos to windchimes, will be on display Sunday at the University of Kansas' seventh annual Museum Day.
By a Kansan reporter
ages.
The event, from 1:30 p.m. to 4 p.m. in the exhibit areas of the museums of natural history and anthropology, Spencer Art Museum and the Snow Entomological Museum, will feature exhibits, games and prizes for all
Elizabeth Patton, program developer for the Museum of Natural History, said KU students would find several events interesting.
She said she was always surprised when upperclass students told her they had just discovered the museums.
"Once they come in, they're hooked," she said. "They just want to look at more and more and more."
will be people at the Museum of Natural History to demonstrate various animal calls, including the call of a wounded rabbit, which attracts coyotes, Patton said.
For students who like to hunt, there
Natural noisemakers such as windchimes and blades of grass also will be shown at the museum. A prize will be given to visitors who are able to match 12 animal sounds with pictures of the animals.
The Museum of Anthropology will feature a tape of a North American
Indian courting flute and such instruments as a Hawaiian ukulele and an African thumb piano.
At the Entomological museum, visitors will be able to look through a microscope and see the body parts that insects use to make noises.
The museums also will have a grand prize drawing of a $15 gift certificate for any of the museum shops. The drawing is open to those who tour all the museums.
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8
Friday, April 24, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
KU AIDS researcher looks for a cure
By AMBER STENGER
Special to the Kansan
When KU's sole AIDS researcher walks into his laboratory in Haworth Hall, he tries to be hopeful.
Each day, Charles Wood, assistant professor of microbiology, works to crack the code of the AIDS virus. He enters his office, which is permeated by the musky odor of chemicals, dons a white lab coat and sits behind a desk covered by charts, papers, studies and scientific journals.
"There are so many problems to tackle. What we can do is really minor. It is frustrating. The AIDS virus is such a smart virus." Wood said.
Wood is one researcher upon whom the country depends for a solution to the public health threat posed by acquired immune deficiency syndrome. Kansas has three or four AIDS researchers.
According to a spokesman for the National Institutes of Health in Washington, NIH has allocated $252,483,000 for AIDS research for fiscal year 1987. Wood receives $70,000 of that each year.
Wood views his research as a discovery, which helps him overcome his daily frustrations.
"When youaire doing research, you are looking into something unknown," he said. "It is a challenge. One you hope you can meet."
Wood's life has been filled with challenges. He left his home in Hong Kong for a college education in the United States. After he graduated from the University of Kansas in 1975, he earned master's and doctorate degrees at Columbia University in New York City.
Wood began studying AIDS in 1983 at Abbott Co., a Chicago pharmaceutical company.
AIDS is a disease that attacks the body's immune system. It is transmitted through the exchange of bodily fluids such as semen or blood.
Wood has clear goals as a researcher.
"The two main questions we are trying to answer are: One, is there a possibility to develop a vaccine against the virus?" And two, can we develop an early detection of AIDS?" Wood asked.
Research is difficult because of the virus' complexity. It has 10 known strains, and each strain has hundreds of mutations.
Every virus is encompassed by an
envelope coat within the body, which produces antibodies to neutralize the virus. On this envelope, there are viral protein markers that look like small dots. Normally, the antibodies can rid the body of the disease by targeting these protein markers.
"The reason why we cannot effectively protect ourselves from AIDS is because the surface markers change from strain to strain. There is a tremendous amount of variability." Wood said.
Wood is trying to find patterns in the variations between each strain. He looks at different strains of the virus and compares the degrees of variation between each.
"We and others have found that there are certain regions that vary, and there are certain areas that are much more conserved." Wood said. "So, presumably, these conserved areas may be a good target to develop protective antibodies."
Wood's research, using recombinant DNA techniques, concentrates on the envelope markers. Because the cells require a specific gene, and his staff cannot become infected.
Three graduate students assist Wood in his lab. Mindie Windheuser, who is working on a doctorate degree in microbiology, was apprehensive about working with AIDS at first.
"Initially, I was a little afraid. But, I thought that Wood would not be working with it if it were not safe for himself," said Windheuser, who is from Lawrence. "Then, I learned that since we work with the DNA of the virus, unless you have a complete infectious form of the whole DNA, it is not infectious. Even if I were to inject myself with part of the fragment, the most I could do is cause my body to produce antibodies."
Recently, the Food and Drug Administration approved the drug azidothymidine, or AZT, for widespread treatment of AIDS. The prescription drug, called Retrovir, will be marketed by Burroughs Wellcome. AZT now is the most promising AIDS treatment, but it only stops the reproduction of the AIDS virus within the body.
"AZT contains the disease, but it is not a cure." Wood said. "Clinical studies have shown that damage to the cells has already been done."
AZT, because the manufacturing of the drug lagged far behind the demand for it.
But AZT has several complications. Wood said that not all of the 34,000 people in the United States who have AIDS could be treated with
Another backdraw of AZT treatment is its enormous cost. AZT is usually taken every four hours and may be needed the rest of the patient's life. This treatment can cost the patient from $7,000 to $10,000 each year. Many AIDS patients have lost, or never had, health insurance.
Besides problems with the cost and availability, AZT also can cause side effects. Some patients treated with AZT develop anemia and require blood transfusions regularly. AZT also can cause headaches and nausea.
"We don't know the long-term side effects from AZT. There could be complications from it. And, not everyone will benefit from it," Wood said. "Hopefully, it will be carefully monitored until another drug is found."
Developing a more reliable AIDS test is another objective of Wood's research. Because of the continuous mutations of the virus, researchers do not know by every strain of AIDS is detected by the current AIDS tests.
The AIDS tests detect the production of antibodies in the blood, which is a sign that the body is trying to ward off a virus. But it can take two to four weeks for the antibodies to develop, depending on the individual. So if a person was infected as long as a month ago, the blood test may not show that he has contracted AIDS.
"For example, if I contracted the virus two days ago, the virus would be inside me. But, I haven't developed any antibodies yet." Wood said. "So, if you screen my blood, it will come out negative, when in fact, I will be infected. That is the danger of these tests."
An initial AIDS test costs from $2 to $3. If the test results are positive, another test, which costs about $60, is performed.
A more accurate test does exist. Cells are taken from the individual and placed in an artificial culture and observed to see if the virus develops. But several weeks are required for the virus to grow in the
culture.
It is performed only on individuals who are thought to be in the high-risk population. It cannot be used to meet the increasing demand for more AIDS tests because of the length of time it requires and because of its cost.
Although Wood's research is financed by the NIH, KU provided the initial funds to help Wood equip his laboratory.
"It would help to have others working with me—the more collaboration we have,the better it is," Wood said. "But there is a lack of researchers, because there is so much fear in working with this disease."
Lawrence Draper, professor and chairman of the department of microbiology, said he did not know how many research would take place at KU.
"The University is not in the position to specify an area of research to the professors," Draper said. "We may recognize important areas of research, but we do not make specifications on types of research."
Since June 1981, 19,658 people have died in the United States from AIDS. The national Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta estimates that 179,000 people will die of AIDS by 1991.
In Kansas, 40 people have died of AIDS, and as of April 13, 67 cases were reported. About 20 of the Kansans with AIDS are between the ages 20 and 29.
Despite these discouraging statistics and obstacles, Wood's determination to defeat AIDS has not waned.
"I hope my work will lead to some very useful discoveries in the medical world. That is what motivates me."
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April 42
Gardeners hoe rows ignore frost warning
By LAURA BOSTROM Staff writer
Warm temperatures have ripened many Lawrence gardeners to begin their spring planting, but gardening experts advise holding back until May 10.
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Pence said a plant's name often dictated its commercial success.
"They're just going wild, they're planting everything," said Fred Pence, owner of Pence Landscaping and Lawn Care, 15th and New York streets.
"Like Big Boy tomatoes," he said. "I've got 10 varieties out there better than Big Boy, but people still come in and ask for that name."
Debutts said he often changed plant brands, although he had some favorites. Last year, he planted Ken's and Blake's. He switched to Blue Lake Pole Beans.
Klein said Jet Star and Supersonic were some other memorable tomato names. But this season's front-runners are Presidential and Celebrity brand tomatoes.
The threat of frost hasn't slowed down Roy Debutts, or his garden. Debutts, 80, was weeding around his strawberry plants yesterday afternoon in North Lawrence.
Much of Debutts' 3/4-acre garden has been planted, and already he has picked and eaten some of his lettuce
The date of the area's average last frost is April 25, said Sam Hoffman, Pence garden center manager, but he didn't know if there was a possible cold freeze May 7 or 8.
But that chance of a frost has not discouraged eager gardeners, said Dave Klein, manager of Earl May Garden Center. 3200 Iowa St.
"People are buying vegetables, lots of peppers and tomatoes," Klein said. "But keep in mind, if we get a frost they're gone."
HOW ABOUT ONE MONTH'S FREE RENT
Cathy Rosebaugh, Lawrence resident, was looking at some of those tomato plants yesterday at Pence Landscaping. She said she always planted her own tomatoes because of the poor quality of grocery tomatoes.
Rosebaugh said she would plant now, regardless of any frost threat.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 24, 1987
9
Branch banking law will help urban areas first, officials say
The Associated Press
A new state law that allows banks to buy other banks anywhere in Kansas and operate them as branches may have some unexpected effects on the industry, experts said yesterday.
The prediction came from banking officials attending a public policy symposium at the University of Kansas. They said that the new law probably would have more of an impact in urban areas than in rural areas at first. Big-city banks also will not rush to gobble up smaller, rural banks, they said.
"It will offer a few options to a few banks," said Harold Stones, executive vice president of the Kansas Bankers Association, whose group pushed for the law, signed Tuesday by Gov. Mike Hayden.
The measure, which will take
effect upon its publication April 30 in the Kansas Register, basically allows unlimited branch banking through acquisition.
A bank can take over a failed or failing bank and operate it as a branch, if the acquiring bank is within 100 miles and no one bids to operate the troubled bank independently. The exception also applies only to one-bank towns with a population of less than 3,500.
A bank now can operate only three branches within the corporate limits of the city in which it is chartered with one exception.
Supporters of new law have said it will help keep banking services in small, rural towns. Stones said more than 300 of Kansas' 613 banks are the only banks in their towns.
However, Wilbur Billington, executive vice president of the Federal
Reserve Bank in Kansas City, Mo., said that urban areas probably would be affected first. He said that city banks probably would want to acquire banks in suburbs rather than more troubled counterparts in rural areas.
"Clearly their moves will be the most attractive," Billington said.
Such a move could save on paper, work, labor and overhead costs without affecting services if the banks are close enough together. Stones said.
Stones said that the new law might help rural banks because they could join with other rural banks to form a multi-bank holding company, then designate several banks as branches.
"I expect to see quite a little bit of that." Stones said.
Campus aid award notification to be mailed soon, director says
By a Kansan reporter
The first wave of campus-based student aid awards for next fall should be mailed to students within a week, Jerry Rogers, KU director of student aid, said yesterday.
Students who have applied to the aid office for loans but haven't sent all the necessary information should do so immediately, he said.
"They ought to get on it because sometimes it takes longer than you think," he said.
Campus-based awards will go quickly,he said,and federal Guaranteed Student Loans and Pell Grants soon may be among the few options left for fall financial assistance.
"The limited funds we have are usually gone on the first two runs," he said.
Students who want Pell Grants or GSLs by fall enrollment probably will be out of luck if they don't send financial information packets to American College Testing by July 1, he said.
The financial aid office, which processes applications after they leave ACT, needs to get them to
lenders by Aug. 1 if students hope to receive aid for enrollment, he said
Rogers said that although the number of applications ready to process had increased from 1986, he didn't know how much aid he'd need for financial aid had increased.
The financial aid office is handling the increased paperwork, he said, even though a staff member resigned this month.
"We're hanging in there pretty well," he said.
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Woman starts trek home after ordeal
IOLA — An Idaho woman whose trip to Kansas to visit her sister in lace became an odyssey of blizzards and wrong turns is hoping that a trip home Friday will bring an end to her troubles.
The Associated Press
"I just told my sister I hope they don't hijack the plane — that would be the last straw," Nellie Obendorf, 65, said yesterday, her sense of humor intact.
Her husband, Orville Obendorf, 71, suffered from frostbite after the couple spent 13 days trapped in their car by a succession of Kansas blizzards. He flew to Idaho last week and was hospitalized to a hospital in Caldwell. Nine Obendorf said that his feet were amputated Wednesday.
Orvile Obendor, who was listed in fair condition Thursday at West Valley Medical Center, was hospitalized for several months.
"He seemed to adjust to it real well, he seemed real well," she said after talking with him Wednesday.
She also learned this week of
another setback
"We had a little bad luck. Somebody broke into our house (in Nampa, Idaho) and kind of cleaned us out. As if enough hadn't happened," she said.
Detective Riley Newton of the Nampa Police Department said that a family member reported that some things were taken from the home, but there was no evidence of forced entry.
The Obendorfs were traveling from Nampa to the Iola home of her sister, Georgia Roberts, when they took a wrong turn and became stuck in a blizzard that buried their car up to its roof near Norton.
After a few days in the hospital in Norton, the Obendorff set out again for Iola, about 300 miles to the southeast. They went the wrong way again — heading west
A second blizzard came days later, and the couple was trapped in their snow-covered car until a farmer discovered them April 4. They survived on soda and Girl Scout cookies during the ordeal.
and ran out of gas near Colby. near the Kansas-Colorado line.
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Friday, April 24, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Census plans begin
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — The project coordinator of a special state census to be conducted next year said yesterday that administrative headquarters for the headcount would be located in Topeka. The operations office might be here, or in Wichita or Johnson County.
Brent Anderson, legislative counsel for Secretary of State Bill Graves, said there also would be regional offices of the census in Topeka, Wichita, Iola and Johnson County, probably in Olathe or Prairie Village. Graves is doing the preliminary planning for the census.
Anderson said that western Kansas probably would not have a regional office because it is so far flung and that individual contact people will be placed in each of the 53 counties in the western part of the state.
"We will probably have someone in each county, probably a county official, who will be responsible for completing the count for that county," Anderson said about the arrangement being planned for western Kansas.
Anderson said that he had looked at 10 potential sites for the census headquarters in Topeka. He plans to seek lease proposals from the owners of those properties next week and wants the state office open by June 1.
The administrative headquarters will be the main office of the census, including the director, payroll personnel and administrative and data processing people. The operations officer is responsible for point for the population data, including census enumerators and data gathering and entry personnel.
Location of the operations office will be dictated by such things as
available postal services, central location and availability of personnel. Anderson said
The Legislature passed a bill this session and Gov. Mike Hayden signed it into law April 15, creating the one-time census to be used to reapportion the state's legislative districts in 1989.
It calls for Graves' office to conduct the census, counting people where they are living next Jan. 1 and certifying the figures by Nov. 1, 1988, so the Legislature has them available for the redistricting task in the 1989 session.
Graves' office has placed the cost of the census at $3.36 million, of which $47,000 is being sought for the current fiscal year so that an administrative headquarters can be leased in Topeka. Another $3.31 million is sought for fiscal year 1988 to pay other costs of the census, including those associated with the operations and regional offices.
The money has not been appropriated, but is expected to be included in the omnibus appropriations bill that the Legislature will vote on next week when lawmakers return to Topeka to conclude the 1987 session.
"Until the Legislature appropriates the money, we're not going to make any final decisions," Anderson said.
He said that present plans were to mail out, either from Topeka or Wichita, one million census information cards to every household in Kansas about Feb. 1, 1988.
Those receiving the cards will be asked to mail them back to one central office, where computers will be used to sort out the returns, which then will be processed to count all Kansans at their home residence.
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jury returned a verdict rejecting McMillan's claim that he was damaged by an editorial cartoon in the Kansas City Times that showed a figure thumbing his nose at a grave marked "Hyatt victims." The figure was identified as a reinstated building inspector, and McMillan was one of three inspectors reinstated to the job.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Kansas City Star Co. won a jury verdict yesterday in a libel suit filed by a former city building inspector who said he was defamed by an editorial cartoon.
NEW YORK — Ivan F. Boesky, the millionaire stock speculator whose meteoric Wall Street career crashed in an insider trading scandal, pleaded guilty yesterday to one count of violating federal securities laws.
Michael McMillan, one of 18 building inspectors suspended after a 1983 newspaper investigation into falsified work reports, sued the Star Co. for publishing a story and editorial cartoon.
Jury verdict favors Kansas City Star Co.
McMillan's lawyer, Craig A. Strayer, argued yesterday that publication of the editorial cartoon by cartoonist Lee Judge amounted to "McCarthyism" and urged the jury to award damages of up to $5.5 million.
libelied by a Jan. 30, 1983, story in The Kansas City Star story that was headlined "Taxpayers lose as inspectors cheat."
Strayer told the jury that the cartoon led people to believe that building inspectors were responsible for the 1961 collapse of skywalks at
The Associated Press
Judge Forest W. Hanna disposed of the other portion of the suit Wednesday when he ruled that McMillan failed to prove that he had been
Boesky pleads guilty, faces prison and fine
The Associated Press
A Jackson County Circuit Court
He faes penalties of up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine when sentenced Aug. 21 by U.S. District Judge Morris E. Lasker.
The count to which he pleaded guilty charged him with conspiring to make false statements to the SEC.
The 50-year-old financier, looking
subdued and exhausted, entered his plea in a courtroom packed with nearly 200 reporters, sketch artists, lawyers and other defendants
He admitted to conspiring with
The Securities and Exchange Commission announced on Nov. 14 that Boesky had settled charges that he engaged in illegal insider trading, or the illegal use of non-public information to profit from securities trades
Boesky, who had been the leading speculator in stocks of companies
that were potential takeover targets, settled the charges by paying the government $100 million. He also agreed to cooperate with the continuing investigation into stock trading improprieties and agreed to plead guilty to a criminal charge which was unspecified until yesterday.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 24, 1987
Sports
11
Baseball fans save loudest, most creative yells for men in blue
By DAVID BOYCE
Staff writer
KU baseball fans routinely find enjoyment sitting in the stands and criticizing the men in blue.
Even Kansas basketball coach
Larry Brown and his assistant Mark
Parker go to Quigley Field to
participate in a baseball ritual of
abusing umbrellas.
Last weekend was a perfect example of the verbal punishment umpires must endure, especially during doubles or singles sometimes last as long as seven hours.
tion exclusively to the umpires.
The games that weekend featured Kansas against No. 1 ranked Oklahoma State. And since most of the games were decided by the fifth inning, the fans directed their atten-
The insulting barbs directed at the umpires were sometimes amusing, stinging, justified and unjustified.
"Hey ump, Stevie Wonder could have made a better call on that pitch than you," one spectator yelled.
Umpire Carl Nothnagel heard the statement and laughed.
"I thought it was very original," he later said from his home in Kansas City.
"At Omaha, the fans are right on top of you and you can hear everything," he said. "They are a little more intense."
Omaha.
"Everybody knew the previous pitch was in the dirt," Jones said.
The funniest comment he said he heard during his time as an umpire was on a called strike three.
Jones, of Blue Springs, Mo., said
that he also heard the comments
directed by Mr. McGraw.
The fan said of his call, "Hey, blue,
why didn't you call the last pitch a
strike, because both pitches were in
the same spot."
"Umpires need to have a thick skin and block out those comments because a lot of times you do hear
Some of the comment coming from the stands in the two blowouts the Cowboys handed the Jayhawks might be viewed as slanderous.
what they say," he said. "My wife's skin is not as thick."
"Ump, do you realize what team is paying you? I bet you have another check coming after the game," are examples.
When Kansas' right fielder Pat Karlin was called out at first after a bunt, a fan yelled out, "Ump, you made the call before the play was completed."
And late in the second game Sunday, when some fans felt more strikes than normal were being called, they said, "Ump, I guess you have dinner waiting."
Jones said the hardest part about umpiring was maintaining concentration during a lopsided game.
"They pay to get in." Nothnagel said. "Well, I guess at KU they don't, but they are just having fun."
Both Nothnagel and Jones say they would never eject a fan for abusive language.
"It's hard to stay on top when the game is a blow out," he said. "You sometimes start to lose concentration and you need a close play that needs to be called."
"I try to control the game from start to finish."
"I figure if a guy is yelling things, his wife must have holstered at him."
Said Jones, "I would like to tell a few fans to come on down, put on the
shin guards, and ampire for a half inning and see how they like it."
Jones began umpiring because he liked baseball
Before coming to the Big Eight, Jones did some major league games when the umires went on strike.
Big Eight umpires who work Kansas home games, such as Jones, are hired by the baseball department
Jones said he enjoyed umpiring Big Eight games and as far as the fans comments, "I just laugh at them.
"Some of the things they say are really funny."
After nine years of umpiring, Jones is used to comments like, "Hey ump, can you see, or do you need my glasses?"
St. Louis beats Chicago for split
The Associated Press
ST. LOUIS — A freak injury spoiled Danny Cox's 1968 season, but he's making up for it in a hurry.
"Last year I didn't win my first game until June, so I'm way ahead of schedule," said Cox, who raised his record to 3-0 yesterday as the St. Louis Cardinals beat the Chicago Cubs 5-2. "I'm happy with the results."
National League
Cox, who won 18 games in 1985, started the following season on the 21-day disabled list after breaking a bone in his right ankle jumping off a three-foot-high sea wall. He had three victories at the All-Star break and finished with a 12-13 record.
His performance yesterday wasn't pretty — the Cubs had 11 hits — but Cox gave up most of the hits with two outs and didn't walk anyone.
"Otherwise, I might have spent the whole day pitching from the stretch," said Cox, who also defeated the Cubs April 9.
"He didn't have overpowering stuff, but in this ballpark you don't need it." Cubs catcher Jody Davis and Cox. "He kept us offbalance."
Jack Clark and rookie Jim Lindeman drove in two runs aopie, pacing
The Cubs scored their runs on in RBI single by Andre Dawson in the third and an upper-deck home run by Keith Moreland in the eighth.
Lindeman, who was back in the lineup after missing three games with a hamstring injury, is second on the team with 11 RBI.
Second baseman Tom Herr left the game in the third inning with a groin injury, and Cardinals Manager Whitey Herzog said the team may put Herr on the disabled list. Herr was to be examined this morning by team trainer Gene Gieselmann.
The victory gave St. Louis a first-place tie with the idle New York Mets in the National League East. The victory also salvaged one game of a three-game series with Chicago, but it may have been costly.
KU golf team expects better finish
St. Louis has already lost catcher
Jimmy Johnson and pitcher John Tudor to
injuries.
Lindeman's two-run single in the first inning gave Cox all the support he needed. The Cardinals made it 3-0 in the second when Vince Coleman's RBI single scored Tom Pagnozzi, who had walked and gone to second on a sacrifice.
"We're beat-up right now," Herr said. "We've just got to hope we can keep going out there and stay competitive."
Rookie right-hander Greg Maddux was the loser, falling to 0-2. He gave up five runs in six innings, walking five and allowing seven hits.
The Cubs cut the margin to 3-1 in the third when Chico Walker doubled and Andre Dawson drove him in with
See NATIONAL, p. 12, col. 5
The image shows a person in a golf stance, holding a golf club and preparing to hit the ball. They are wearing a polo shirt with a patterned neckline and a cap. The background is blurred, suggesting an outdoor setting, likely a golf course. The person's posture indicates they are in mid-swing, focused on the target.
MARIEAN Marilee Scheid, a member of the Kansas women's golf team, practices at Alvamar Golf and Country Club, 3000 West 15th Street. Scheid was trying to qualify for a spot on the Jayhawks' team that will compete in the Big Eight Conference Championship. The meet will be Monday and Tuesday in Oklahoma City.
Dale Fulkerson/Special to the KANSAN
By DIANE FILIPOWSKI Staff writer
The Kansas women's golf team doesn't expect to finish sixth as it did last year at this year's Big Eight Conference Championships.
Third-year coach Kent Weiser said yesterday that this year's team was more prepared for the tournament, which will be held Monday and Tuesday in Oklahoma City, Okla., than any KU team had been in the seven years that he has followed the program.
"They have proven to themselves this season that they can play almost any team," Weiser said. "I hope that they remember that and don't take a back seat to anybody."
Weiser said seventh-ranked Oklahoma State, the defending Big Eight champion, and 13th-ranked Oklahoma would be Kansas' toughest competition.
Representing KU at the tournament will be Sherri Atchison, Tina Gnewch, Donna Jo Lowen and Susan Pekar. Weiser said the fifth player would be named today.
"The key for the team is not to worry but to play the best that they can," Weiser said. "Then the finish will take care of itself."
When the Jayhawks played to their ability this season, Weiser said, they shot a first-round total of 305 at the Illini Spring Break Tournament in Tampa Bla. Fla., one of its best single-score ever.
"We finished a stroke behind ninth-ranked Indiana that day." Weiser said. "We have the ability to play with the nation's best teams if each player plays well."
Pekar, a team captain, said all five of the team's tournament players had been playing consistently this season, which had allowed the team's stroke average to drop significantly.
Pekar, a junior, said the teamwork would make a difference at this year's conference championship
"It's nice to see everyone happy when the team does well because golf is such an individual sport." Pekar said. "It's easy to concentrate on what you are doing and not the team."
In its five tournaments this season, Kansas has finished third twice, sixth once and seventh twice. Pekar was the individual champion at the Missouri Invitational in Columbia, leading a Jayhawks team that finished third.
Pekar said the addition of Atchison and Lowen, who are freshmen, had added momentum to the
"They came from good teams that were used to winning. Poker said, "Some of their enthusiasm had to come."
Weiser said the freshmen had increased the team's confidence by solidifying four of its five tournament positions.
"We are aggressive and not defensive," Weiser said. "We go out and expect to do well rather than hope that we don't bad."
Yanks extend streak
The Associated Press
CLEVELAND — Dave Winfield hit two home runs, including a three-run shot with two out in the ninth inning last night, as the New York Yankees extended their winning streak to 10 games with a 5-4 victory over the Cleveland Indians.
American League
In five career at-bats against Cleveland starter Greg Swindell, 1-3, Winfield is 3-for-5 with three home runs. The other owner came in the Yankees' home opener this season.
The Yankees are 13-3 and just one game behind Milwaukee in the AAA division.
Swindell struck out six and limited the Yankees to two runs on three hits through the first eight innings. But he walked Rickey Henderson with one in the ninth, and, after Henderson stole second, walked Don Mattingly before Winfield lined the game-winning homer to left.
Dennis Rasmussen, 2-0, threw a six-hitter for eight innings. Dave Righetti recorded his six save.
Anaels 7. Twins 3
See related story p.12
MINNEAPOLIS — Darrell Miller's single in the sixth inning drove in the winning run last night and home runs by Devon White, Wally Joyner and Brian Downing led the California Angels over the Minnesota Twins 7-3.
John Candelaria allowed four hits, struck out six and walked one in seven innings, earning his third straight victory of the season. Donnie Moore pitched the final two innings for his third save, allowing one hit.
Rangers 9. Orioles 4
ARLINGTON, Texas — The Texas Rangers scored seven runs in the fourth inning on six hits, two by bate Incaviglia, and three Baltimore errors, and beat the Orioles 9-4 last night.
Mike Loynd, 1-0, who relieved Rangers starter Mike Mason in the second, got the victory with $4\frac{1}{3}$ innings of three-hit, one-run pitching.
Royals' Seitzer no hometown boy to Middletown
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Never have a Kevin Steider Day in his hometown of Middletown, Ill.? Unthinkable, says the mayor.
Jealousy over his athletic ability, he said, led to bad feelings and came
Earlier in the week, Seitzer, the hot-hitting rookie infielder of the Kansas City Royals, said in an interview with The Associated Press that he had some very bad memories of his high school days in Middletown.
"The story about ill-will between Seitzer and Midtown residents is biased unfairly against Midtown," Paul Poole, mayor of the central Illinois community of about 500 people, said yesterday.
The next week, he said, his father Cliff Seitzer moved his family to Lincoln, Ill., 12 miles away, to remove Kevin from the unfriendly atmosphere.
to a head one night during his junior year when he teammates refused to pass him the ball in a high school basketball game.
"Whatever happens to that town is up to them," the infielder said. "I don't think they'll ever have a Kevin Seitzer day in Middletown."
"My phone has been ringing off the hook," the mayor, a cousin of Carolyn Seitzer, Kevin's mother, told reporters. "There may be jealousy about Kevin, but it is one-sided. Kevin is liked here. Kids look up to him."
Yesterday, Seitzer's parents and a number of Middletown residents said they wanted to set the record straight.
Jim Vipond, a science teacher in Middletown and one of Kevin's high school coaches, confirmed his recollection of events, saying, "There are people in this town who hope Kevin falls flat on his face."
The mayor also said Midtown residents have already been talking about some sort of celebration for the rookie.
Cliff and Carolyn Seitzer said they never doubted that their son was still bitter about his high school experiences.
"When I read his comments, I could just hear him saying those things because I know that's the way he feels," his mother said. "Kevin just does not understand that by far the majority of the people in Middletown are happy for him and proud of him."
"There were some bad experiences in high school, yes," she said. "But you know what they say . . . a few bad apples."
"Kevin has been away from here so long, I think he may have lost contact with some things," Cliff Seitzer said. "After his senior year in Lincoln, he went off to college. Every summer he was playing ball somewhere."
Terry Steinhour, who farms near Middletown, also took exception with the how the situation was characterized.
"I haven't talked to anybody in Middletown who has anything bad to say about Kevin Seitzer. "Steinhour said. "People in Middletown are proud of him. I think we are going to have a Kevin Seitzer Day."
"He does have a lot of fans down there, and we've got a lot of friends there," Cliff Seitzer said.
"We consolidated with New Holland, a very small town about six miles away," Carolyn Seitzer said. "When Kevin talks of Middletown, he means the New Holland-Middletown school district, not the town."
Shockers rout 'Hawks second night in a row
Rv DAVID ROYCF
Baseball
The Kansas baseball team continued its losing days yesterday with an 18-6 loss to the Wichita State Shockers at Wichita.
In the fourth, Wichita State scored seven times and took the lead for the first time in the game. 9-3.
Staff writer
Kansas took the early lead in the first. With two outs, Hugh Stanfield
The Jayhawks took a 3-0 lead after singles by Scott Serrae and Tom Bilyeu, followed with a two-run double by Steve Estes.
singled and John Byrn doubled him home.
From there, Kansas enjoyed little success on the field.
Both teams scored one run in the fifth, which made the score 10-3 in favor of Wichita State.
Wichita State scored two in the third and put the game out of reach with 14 points.
The Shockers made the game a rout with five runs in the bottom of sixth. Dan Raley's three-run homer in the sixth ended what little hope the Jayhawks had.
Kansas scored its final two runs in the eighth, but by then, the runs meant little.
Kansas has now lost seven games in a row and is 11-29 one overall and 15 in the post.
Unlike Wednesday's game against the Shockers, when Kansas displayed some offense and pitching, the Jay-Sun not pitch well in yesterday's game.
Coach Marty Pattin used four pitchers who gave up 16 walks and 11 runs.
When the pitchers were allowing Wichita batters to hit the ball, the Kansas infielders were committed five errors in the game.
ICHITA STATE 18. KANSAS 6
Steve Purdy, 1-5, started, and despite suffering the loss, pitched well until the fourth inning. Purdy had relief help from Steve Renko in that inning.
Kansas will try to break its losing streak this weekend when it plays a four-game series with the Iowa Hawkeyes at Quigley Field. The games start at 1 p.m. tomorrow and 12:30 p.m. Sunday.
Kansas 120 010 020—6 75
Wichita State 002 715 015—18 11 04
Purdy, Renko (4) , Hinkle (5), Stopper (6) and Pfister, Boeschen; McIntyre, Kelly (4), Marshall (6), Biuma (7) , Pumphrey (8) , Lunnon (9) and Koch (10) , L Purdy (1-3) , Hirsa, Wichita State, Riley
By a Kansan reporter
Jayhawk track teams to compete at Drake
Cliff Roello, assistant women's coach, said the Drake meet was considered more competitive than the Kansas Relays because fewer
The Kansas track teams will travel to Drake to compete today and tomorrow in the Drake Relays, the third leg of the triple crown of outdoor track.
Five women and 12 men from KU will compete in the meet. The KU Relays and the Texas Relays are also included in track's triple crown.
athletes have qualified to compete.
The Drake Relays are not a team meet, but are for individuals to achieve season bests and qualify for nationals. Rovelo troted.
The NCAA Outdoor Champion ships are June 3-6 in Baton Rouge La.
Men's coach Bob Timmons said he was expecting some good competition and performances.
"If anything," Timmons said,
"It will let us know where we stand
this season."
12
Friday, April 24, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
KU crew goes to championships
By DIANE FILIPOWSKI
Staff writer
The Kansas Crew program is only nine years old, yet it has managed to become one of the top rowing teams in the Midwest.
The Jayhawks will compete today and tomorrow in the Midwest Rowing Championships in Madison, Wis., which Coach Cliff Elliott said was a stepping stone to compete on the national level.
Kansas will compete in a 32-team field which will include last year's national champion, Wisconsin, and nationally ranked Purdue. Elliott said that Kansas finished a solid third to these teams last year.
"We have only been around for such a short time," Elliott said, "but we have still managed to be competitive."
Elliott said that Wisconsin's crew program was almost 100 years old. The crew had been in the park since 1934.
The regatta includes six women's and 10 men's events. Last year, Kansas' novice men's and women's eight-man boats finished third, the novice lightweight men's eight-man 'A' and 'B' boats finished first and second, the varsity eight-man boat finished second, and the varsity women's four-man boat finished fourth.
"We have become successful because the students on the team take special pride in what they are doing," Elliott said. "I don't think we would have that special feeling if we were a part of the athletic department and took what we had for granted."
progress without a weight program, video equipment or indoor rowing tanks. He said that teams such as Wisconsin and Purdue, which were a part of their school's athletic departments, had access to such equipment.
Elliott said that Kansas had made
Kansas Crew, which has about 120
members, still has managed to grow
"Having more members each year has helped us improve," Elliott said. "I have more people to select from because of our population, and other boats to practice against."
Elliott said that more boats from Kansas were competing in Madison than ever before. In 1984, the team only had two boats that placed and went on to the Dad Vail Regatta in Philadelphia.
Elliott said that the Dad Vail Regatta, which will be May 1 and 2, was the national regatta for crew teams without the prestige of teams from Eastern schools such as Harvard and Yale.
"The Midwestern Rowing Championships is used for qualifying in our minds for national meets," Elliott said. "Crews that do well here can compete on the national level."
Elliott said that he thought the men's novice and lightweight eight-man boats, the women's varsity four-man boat and the women's lightweight eight-man boats were capable of competing on the national level.
"We have had some success on the national level and that has helped the team move ahead," Elliott said.
Elliott said that members of the Kansas crew team had tried out for national teams and had competed on sports festival teams.
Darcy Chang/KANSAN
MILLA
Near miss
Bill Bruning, Overland Park junior, squeezes past the catcher of the Oliver Hall second-floor softball team and scores a run. Brunning's Oliver sixth-floor team played the Oliver 2nd floor team yesterday evening on the diamonds south of Watkins Hospital.
Yankees,13-3,win 10 in a row New York off to fastest start since 1949
The Associated Press
This season, the New York Yankees lost three of their first six games but have since won 10 straight.
A year ago, the New York Mets lost three of their first five games before reeling off 11 straight victories.
NEW YORK — Baseball fans might be excused for thinking if it's not one New York team, it's the other.
Col. Jacob Ruppert, who owned the Yankees when they began a dynasty that produced 33 pennants in 61 years, used to say his idea of a perfect afternoon was "watching the Yankees score 10 runs in the first inning and gradually pull away."
The 1987 Yankees may not be quite that hot, although they did score 12 runs in the seventinning against Kansas City on April 11. But their 13-3 record, including a 5-4 victory last night over Cleveland, is their best start since the 1949 squad won 12 straight.
Before anyone gets too excited, however, it should be pointed out that the rapid getaway is only one game better than the 11-4 mark of a year ago, when the Yankees led the American League East by $2^{1/2}$ games and eventually wound up second. $5^{1/2}$ games behind Boston.
Wednesday night's 4-1 victory over Detroit completed a 9-0 homestand —
the best Yankee Stadium start since the 1951 club won its first 10 home games — but still left them $ _{1} $ games behind the record-setting Milwaukee Brewers.
'We're playing good right now, you can't deny us that. And we're a good road team. We've got a lot of fans on the road.'
road."
Bob Shirley Yankee pitcher
Now, the Yankees do not return home until May 8, playing 22 of 29 games on the road. Last night was the start of a 12-game swing through Cleveland, Texas, Minnesota and Chicago. "It's an important road trip for us," Manager Lou Piniella said.
"We're playing good right now, you can't deny us that," pitcher Bob Shirley said after closing the homestand with his first victory since Sept. 6, 1985. "And we're a good road team. We've got a lot of fans on the
Although home runs have been the Yankees' trademark through the years, they generally won with pitching and defense, which often were overlooked as Babe Ruth, Lou Gheir, Joe DiMaggio, Yoji Berger, Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris gave it their best home run trots.
The current Yankees, to almost universal surprise, are doing it with pitching and defense. They have gotten virtually no offense from Mike Pagliarulo (.196), Dan Pasquo (.161) and Joel Skinner (.108). Even Don Mattingly, the $1.975 million first baseman, is struggling at .242 despite 15 RBI.
But the Yankees have committed only six errors and Wayne Tolleson, whose previous claim to fame was leading the National Collegiate Athletic Association in pass receptions for Western Carolina University in 1977, seems to have solved the shortstop problem.
Rickey Henderson . (422), Dave Winfield . (385), Gary Ward . (351), Tolleson . (340), Willie Randolph . (309) and Ron Kittle . (304) also have delivered offensive consistency.
The pitching staff, after a shaky season-opening road trip, has apparently settled down. And it has done it without Ron Gudry, who is expected to re-sign May 1, and Detroit ace Jack Morris.
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a single. Walker had a pair of doubles to the leads 'cats' attack.
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Expos 6. Phillies 5
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rarker connected for his fifth homer of the year with one out of San Diego starter Andy Hawkins, 0-2, giving the Reds a split of the four game series.
Tom Browning, 2-2, allowed severer hits in 75% innings, beating the Padres for the second time this season. He struck out three and walked none
MONTEREAL — Vance Law hit his third homer of the season, and Reid Nichols had three hits as the Montreal Expos beat the Philadelphia Phillies 6-5 yesterday.
Randy St. Claire, 1-0, pitched $ _{1/3} $
innings of relief to get his first victory of the year for Montreal.
Andy McGaffigan pitched the ninth inning to pick up the save.
Montreal trailed 5-4 entering the seventh inning, but took the lead when Dave Engle lined a single to center with men on second and third. The second run scored when Phillies center fielder Milt Thompson mishandled the ball.
Reds 3. Padres 2
SAN DIEGO — Dave Parker, who had struck out in his previous three at-bats, hit a solo homer in the eighth inning yesterday, breaking a 2-2 tie
and lifting the Cincinnati Reds to a 3
2 victory over the San Diego Padres.
Astros 5, Braves 3
HOUSTON — Kevin Bass had three hits and drove in three runs last night as the Houston Astros won their ninth straight home game, beating the Atlanta Braves 5-3 and sweeping a three-game series.
Rookie Dave Meads, 1-0, got the victory in relief, striking out the only batter he faced. Dave Smith recorded his fifth save, pitching 1½ innings of scoreless relief. Rick Mahler, 2-1, was the loser, going 6½ innings and giving up four runs on eight hits.
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COMMENCEMENT The University of Kansas
Degree Candidates and Faculty
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All participants, including faculty doctorate, law, Master's and Bachelor's candidates, wear traditional regalia during the commencement ceremonies.
Candidates and faculty members may order caps, gowns, and/or hoods by mailing in the order form from the graduation mailing, OR by visiting Booth 1 on level four of the Kansas Union between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m.on any weekday until Friday, April 24.
University Daily Kansan / Friday. April 24, 1987
13
Sports Briefs
Former lineman for Dallas dies of gun wound; suicide suspected
NEWPORT NEWS, Va. — Larry Bethea's troubled life began when he left pro football. It ended yesterday when he apparently shot himself in the head within hours after he was identified as the gunman in two robberies.
Drug abuse was blamed for the problems of the former Dallas Cowbies defensive lineman, a first-round NFL draft pick.
"This man, who had so much going for him, lost everything, including his life. I believe that Larry Bethea would be alive today if he had been able to stay away from drugs," Newport News Police Chief Jay A. Carey said in a statement read by Sgt. Lynn Pearson.
On Jan. 23, Bethea was given a four-year suspended prison term for his guilty plea in December to stealing his mother's life savings of $41,000.
Newport News Circuit Judge J.
Warren Stephens also ordered
Bethea to spend two years on
probation and repay the money.
Bethea was arrested by Dallas police on Aug. 4 with $61,375 in cash in his pockets after he allegedly accosted his estranged wife, Gloria. She summoned police, who found her with bruises and a bloodied lip.
Bethea's mother reported the next day that her $64,000 was missing.
Bethea said in January that he was grateful for his lenient sentence. "I got a little confused in the big picture, and I hurt my family," he said. "I didn't mean to hurt them."
Bethea pleaded guilty in 1985 to setting three fires in Mount Rainer National Park in Paradise, Wash. He was ordered to pay $1,000 to the park to cover the cost of fighting the fires.
In the latest incident, police were called by an unidentified friend of Bethea's while officers were still questioning witnesses who said Bethea robbed two convenience stores shortly before midnight Wednesday.
Bethea, 30, was found in the friend's backyard with a gunshot wound to his right temple and a 38-caliber automatic pistol near his body. He was taken to Hampton General Hospital, where he was pronounced dead at 2:08 a.m., said Jan Dunning, a hospital spokesman.
The friend told police that Bethea had given no warning that he was going to commit suicide. He left no suicide note, Pearson said.
The gun used in the shootings and the two robberies is believed to be a weapon that was reported stolen from a parked vehicle in the city Wednesday, she said.
Barr and Fiori share lead in Houston Open
HOUSTON — Ed Fiori and his house guest, Dave Barr, tamed the Woodlands Country Club fairways and greens with 6 under par 685 to share the first-round lead in the $600.00 Houston Open yesterday.
The co-leaders held a two-shot lead over four other golfers bunched at 68 at the par-72, and won the Tournament Players Course.
Barr had a bogey-free opening
round that included long-range birdie putts of 35, 25 and 25 feet and an 18-foot downhill birdie on No. 15.
Fiori birdied four of the first six holes, but he had no long putts. Instead, he used his short game effectively to remain in a tie with his house guest.
Keith Clearwater, Howard Twitty, Ray Stewart and Perry Arthur were tied at 68.
Leaders tie with birdies in Legends of Golf
AUSTIN, Texas — Miller Barber and Bob Charles finished off a 61 with birdies on the last three holes and gained a tie for the first-round lead yesterday in the $500,000 Legends of Golf.
Charles, a New Zealand left-hander, and Barber played the back nine in 29 and came within a single stroke of the tournament record in this best-ball competition for senior players 50 and older.
But it only brought them a tie with Bobby Nichols and Butch Baird, who also combined for a bogey-free 9-under-par effort on the Onion Creek Country Club course.
"We were never in trouble, never in danger of making a bogey. Butch is such a steady player, I
felt like I could do almost anything and we're still in the hole," Nichols said.
Baird dropped a 15-foot side-hill birdie putt on the 17th hole, and Nichols chipped to within 30 inches of the cup on the 18th for a closing birdie.
Charles birdied the 16th from about 15 feet and hit a 9-iron to within three feet on the 17th. His partner, Barber, gave them a share of the lead with a 15-footer on the 18th.
Dow Finsterwald and Dale Douglass were one stroke back of the leading teams at 62.
The teams of Orvile Moody and Bruce Crampton, and Charlie Sifford and Jim Ferrese were another shot back at 63.
Paper says Gooden not addicted
From Kansan wires.
NEW YORK - New York Mets pitcher Dwight Gooden was found to be an occultive cocaine user, not an addict, and will end one month of treatment for drug use at a rehabilitation center Thursday, according to a published report.
The Associated Press
Friday's New York Times quoted a source at the Smithers Center for Alcohol and Drug Treatment as saying that Gooden was doing fine and would be released April 30th. But, according to the newspaper, neither his doctors nor Mets officials can predict how soon Gooden will resume his baseball career.
By leaving April 30, Gooden would spend only the minimum 28 days at the center undergoing counselling and therapy.
The source, quoting doctors at the Smithers Center, said Gooden was "a perfect patient, very humble, very cooperative. There's no indication he addicted to cocaine. He definitely started on beer. They don't think he's an alcoholic, but they want to nip any such thing in the bud."
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Friday, April 24, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Senate tells airlines to improve services
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A string of senators warned airlines yesterday to shape up, improve services and cut delays or face possible relegation or heavy government-imposed penalties for shoddy operations.
"The airline industry in its zeal for competition has gone absolutely hog wild." declared Sen. J. James Exon, D-Neb., during a hearing where senior executives from three major airlines acknowledged a consumer backlash because of the rising number of delays and other complaints
The executives from American Airlines, Continental Airlines and Delta Air Lines told the Senate panel that they are prepared to make ontime flight information and other consumer information available to travelers if other air carriers are required to do the same.
Robert Crandall, chairman of American Airlines, said he would agree to put the information into the airline-owned SABRE computer reservation system, which is widely used by travel agents. Delta and Continental are also periodic reporting of the information to the Transportation Department.
The federal government, which once kept on-time statistics, has not done so in years as part of the overall move by the Reagan administration to reduce government paperwork. No airline has offered to supply the information independently for fear of being put at a competitive disadvantage.
Consumers do not currently have the information they need to make meaningful choices about competing airline services, said Thomas G. Plaskett, president and chief executive officer of Continental Airlines. Continental has been cited as a leading target of traveler complaints.
But Plaskett, Crandall and Murp Dulum, vice president for government affairs for Delta, said that if
consumer information is made available by all airlines, the competitive marketplace, not government edict, will improve airline service.
Airline delays increased by about 25 percent last year and the delay problem has continued into 1987. Complaints about airline service to the Transportation Department have soared in recent months.
The cries about poor delays, lost baggage and poor flight selections have been loud in Congress as well, prompting the introduction of a flurry of airline passenger protection legislation, most of which would require increased disclosure of consumer information by the air carriers.
"We're going to act. The question is what is the industry going to do," said Kasten.
Sen. Bob Kasten, R-Wis., told the airline executives that he is confident that Congress will approve passenger protection legislation this year and that the sentiment for stronger regulatory action, including possible imposition of stiff fines for shoddy service increasingly is being discussed.
Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., said that while more airline consumer information is needed, airlines must also take steps to reduce the bunching of flights and reform scheduling practices as well as do more to assist passengers whose flights are cancelled or delayed.
While much of the senators' criticism stemmed from the increasing number of delays, the three airline executives argued that much of that problem rests with the Federal Aviation Administration and not airline scheduling practices as claimed by the Transportation Department.
"This administration has failed to adequately rebuild the air traffic control system since the (controller) strike in 1801," complained Dullum of Delta.
Star Wars a decade away, scientists say
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Challenging Reagan administration assumptions about Star Wars, a group of top U.S. physicists said yesterday that at least a decade of research is needed to determine whether high-energy lasers and particle beams can be used to knock down enemy missiles in space.
"On purely scientific and engineering criteria, one would not make a decision on early deployment. But in the international arena, there are other forces," said Kumar Patel, a physicist at AT&T Bell Laboratories and co-chairman of the study group. Another author, Jeremiah Sullivan of the University of Illinois-Urbana, said deployment in the early or mid-1990s would be a gamble.
In a 422-page technical study, 17 members of the American Physical Society delivered the sharpest scientific challenge yet to administration plans to deploy space- and ground-based ballistic missile defenses as early as 1994.
"Even in the best of circumstances, a decade or more of intensive research would be required just to provide the technical knowledge needed for an informed decision regarding survivalability" of lasers and other "directed energy weapons," the report said.
A Pentagon critique said the report's conclusions were "subjective and unduly pessimistic about our capability to bring to fruition the specific technologies needed for a full-scale development decision in
the 1990s."
But Patel and others rejected that view at a news conference.
"In spite of the progress that has been made, a substantial amount of research remains to be done before an informed judgment can be made about the effectiveness and the reliability and survivability of such weapons if and when they are deployed." Patel said.
The Pentagon's Strategic Defense Initiative Organization, which directs War Wars research, said in a statement that recent breakthroughs have brought some high-energy devices closer to the weapons stage.
The report played an immediate role in congressional debate on President Reagan's request to spend $5.8 billion next year on Star Wars.
Members of a Senate Appropriations subcommittee raised it in a closed session yesterday with the head of the SDI Office, Air Force Ll. Gen. James Abrahamson, said one congressional source, who declined to be identified.
The authors of the report, "many of whom have important roles in developing those technologies," received classified briefings from Defense Department officials, Patel said.
Patel's co-chairman on the study group was Harvard University physicist Nicolauss Boememberg, a Nobel Prize recipient in 1861 for his work on lasers. A six-member committee that reviewed the report included two others who won Nobels for laser research.
Black Student Union Presents: A Community Carwash!
when: Sat. April, 25
where: Kroger Parking Lot 23rd & Naismith Dr.
time: 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
price: free!!!!
ClassifiedAds
ANNOUNCEMENTS
GANT OREAD GARAGE SALE SATURDAY, April 25, 8 a.m. 2 p.m. 12 locations—something for everyone! 11:36 Tennessee-maps of all locations, flea market, hot dogs, treats. 942.5440
Free to good farm: six year old LhasaApso
Call 841 8643 after 5:00 p.m.
Huge garage sale T-shirts & Swearstails, first grade students in assorted colors are invited to shop. Prices are $10, and test shirts at all great prices. Saturday, April 25 9:00-5:00 at KD Sportswear 10 Riverfront Road in North Charleston, SC
IS MASSAGE BETTER THEN PIZZA? !A
try out. steam & massage from Lawrence
Massage Therapy and R-E-L-A. Student rates,
Gift Certificates !oal 841-6062 and both the
Is it that time of month? Well, we think it is. Party with John, John, and Jim.
Need a date? Or perhaps a trivial gift for the girl who has (almost) everything? Send an inflatable Mr. Right. 'It be a gas!' Balloons-N-More. 749-4341, 749-0148
Preparing for Finals Study Skills Workshop,
(Time Management, Reviewing, Testing
Strategies) Monday, April 27, 7: 09:00 p.m. 300
(Mon., April 26, 7: 09:00 p.m. 300)
Student Assistance Center, 121
804-6944 804-6944
PICNIC KU India Club
Date:
Saturday, April 25, 1987
Venue:
Sertoma Shelter (lower part of Centennial Park - 9th Street between Iowa and Rockledge)
Time:
4:00. 8:00 p.m.
Time:
For further details call 843-9361
Food and Drinks provided by KUIC!!
In case of bad weather it will be cancelled
Tired of uninspired cover bands and metdocre DJ J's? Get into the grove with Metropolis Mobile Sound Professional club and radio DJ J.s. Professional lighting. Hot Spirals for all occasions. 841-7630.
WEIGHT LOSS PROGRAM Lose 10-20 lbs in 30 days. Doctor approved. All charges accepted. C.O.D Mail order. Call Gery | 818-6587 6867
WARNING INHALING WITH ALCOHOL 24% / 6% / 12% / 24% / 6% / 12% / 24%
ENTERTAINMENT
They're Back!
ONE TON TOMATO
Two performances Friday afternoon and evening at the ROCK CHALK
Basis need for rock-n-roll band. Cover and lyrics provided by Chris Cunningham. Charts provided. Call Sunan, 841-606 or Jim,
Have the Hottest Party in Town: Rent A Hot Tub.
Call Tub-to-Guil; 841-2691
KEYBOARDIST Needed for Established Rock Band. Paul at Paul 814-962 573
"Delightful and illuminating... a provocatively down-to-earth movie about sex." [Love Away. NWFS]
Ranch Rock 37-Saturday April 25th. Don't miss it. For information call 749-2192 or 841-3661.
The Decline
of the
American
Empire
7:30 & 9:30
MIDNIGHT FRI. & SAT
"AN UNQUALIFIED
DELIGHT."
AN AUTUMNED DELIGHT"
Vincent Cady NEW YORK TIMES
ONLY $3.00
DOWN BY LAW ™
SAT & SUN. MATINEE 5:30
LIBERTY HALL
一
ONLY $3.00
DANCE-O-GRAM
At Your Requests *Lawrence's* Best and Most Apt
Middle D J. Sound and Lights for Any Occasion
ons, for more information call
Private parties for all
★★★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
FOR RENT
1-2 bedroom luxury apartments new leasing for summer and next fall. 2/1/2 blocks from campus. Jeff at laf 842-7200 (before 6:00) and at 542-3513 (after 6:30).
1 BLOCK FROM KANASS UNION, for rent to serious grade, Upper Class Student or KU employee. 1 Bedroom furnished, no pet rets. 2 Bedroom based required, $150 mw, 84:3826 after 6 p.m.
1 Bedroom Apt. for summer sublease. Furnished and very nice. Adjacent to campus. Rent negotiable. Call 841-8076 and ask for Trina or Kristen.
843-0510
1 BLOCK FROM THE KANSAS UNION. For Reni Eight to 1 serious grade or upperclass student or 1 IV employee only 1 HR, suitable for renewal of lease required. $25/mo. 841-3822 after m.
2 Bifrm Townhouse for summer special rate.
1600 sq ft. (commercial) 1, K-Bin
843-957-284 between 8 m and 9 ft.
2 Bedroom, 2 Bath for Sublease with Fall option.
3 Bedroom, 1 Bath for Sublease with fall option,
and basketball court. Tree of reading books on cellar.
For additional information call (212) 507-8641.
Avalon
Apartments
- 1 & 2 bedroom
- 1 & 2 bedroom
* Gas and water paid
* Laundry facilities
* ( KU & HILCrest
Shopping Center
* On KU has route
* Extra storage space
* Available
* Rental furniture available
from Thompson-Crawley
Summer Sublease. Male roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom apartment. Close to campus, on bus route. Swimming Pool, Furnished. Please call 841-583 after 7 p.m.
Summer Sublease: mce 218 fully furnished apartment,
$320 monthly. Close to Campus, Tanglewood
Summer Submarine to female: 2 bfrm furnished
appl. 1/2 blocks from campus. Call 841-5704
Summer Sublease, Luxurious Studio, Sunrise Terrace ApT Furnished, laundry facility, $200.00 per month plus utilities. Next to camps. Call after 5:00 p.m. 749-7280.
Summer Sublease. Nice, room 3 BIR duplex. AC good location on bus route 856. Low utilities. Rates are $214 per month.
9th & Avalon Rd. 841-5797
HEATHERWOOD
VALLEY
NOW LEASING
FOR FALL
- Short term leases
- accepted
- Lowest utility bills
- in town
- Gas heat, C-A, D-W
- FF retrig, Disposa
- FF refrig. Disposal
- Quiet location
2 story, 1 bedroom older home in good condition,
near downtown and bus stop $380 plus
utilities. 12 month lease and $380 deposit require.
Available June 15, 2014 or 6912 or 8422. No pets.
Available June 15, 2014 or 6912 or 8422. No pets.
For more info. call between 9-6, Mon.-Fri., 843-4754
2 bedroom furnished apartment for summer
house. 3 bedrooms, 1/2 baths, A/C
Available mid May. 80%
--accept deposits for summer or fall at Park Plaza South. Summer-1 bedroom 1/802/bedroom 200. Fall (10 month lease) 1 bedroom 2/222/bedroom 255. Water gas, water heated. Furnished available for $30 additional. On KU busining. Available for $30 additional. Date: 1912 W 23h. 842-341s. weekends. 843-476
3 Bedroom Apartment, Summer Suite; Bath,
dishwash间, spacious. Close to campus.
Spacious 2 bedrooms
Laundry facilities
Waterfired fine
bedroom
10-12 month leases
4 Kibbon, 2 full bath, large kitchen, living room.
3 Guest Room, 2 full bath, Master's Campus Place. Next to Yelpio
Master's Campus Place.
WE HAVE IT AND YOU CAN STILL WALK TO CAMPUS
9th & Avalon 842-3040
4. Bdrm Apartment near campus. Meadowbrook area. 2 baths, dishwasher, refrigerator, garage. Summer sublease with option to pick up lease in August. Renew negotiable. 841-3913.
VILLAGE SQUARE
1 Bedroom house, fully furnished. Available June
and July. Family preferred. Call for information.
IF YOU LIKE SPACE & QUIET WE HAVE IT AND YOU
1 Bedrooms, 3 Bathrooms. Adjacent to campus.
No pets. Call 842 897-81.
Apartments for summer and fall at University Terrace Apartment, 1607 W. 9th I Bedroom for summer; June and July only $190 unfurnished; June and July only $280 unfurnished; June and July only $240 unfurnished, furnished $260, plus all utilities I Bedroom for all, 10 month lease, August 1 June I furnished bedroom for fall; August 1 June I, $310 furnished bedroom for fall; August 1 June I, $310 furnished, plus all utilities. Central air, on our route, large rooms, gas heat. Come see at an emergency power or 81-94 or 81-431. No power call 81-443-1433.
for Sublease Water, Gas, Cable Paid Across
stadium from stadium, furnished Rented
museum 749-9054 749-9054
apt to Sublease: New. immaculate, furnished 1
apt wr. aft wicker, dishwasher, dispensal.
block from campus. Regular price $29.-For
*unmerder* $25. Available May 15. Call 749-1635.
ARE YOU ATTENDING SUMMER SCHOOL?@
summer rates starting at $10.25
for students ages 16 and up.
apest West now leasing for Summer. Energy efficiency 1, and 2 bedrooms: 3 Blocks west of Iowa on 8th Private patios/decks, ceiling fans, no pets. Room per month: 749-1288. Open House Saturday.
Available May 15-Furnished 1 bedroom Apartment for summer. Next to camper $42,000 a.m.
Brand new Colony Woods Apt. available for sublease mid-May through December, $185/mo.
Dishwasher, microwave, own bedroom.
Female bathroom. Furniture 841-2617
Best Location on Campus, Summer Sublease in
HRpt, above Jayback水库, Furnished
on campus.
Clean studio with air conditioning located close to campus. Water and electricity paid. Available May 1, $820/month. Call 749-2193 or 841-8545 bets. 6:09 p.m. and 10:00 p.m.
Oz, carpeted studio apartment with bay window.
Missouri. Available May 20. 749-106
evenings.
Excellent location. 2 bedroom apartments in four-plex Carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, and low utilities. Available June 1. Summer Rate 75%. Call 842-324-1341 at 104 Temple Avenue and 1341 Ohio Call 842-324-1341
Fabuola Studio. Available June 1, 2017. Fullly furnished. Utilities paid; A/C separate; off street parking. Easy walk to KU, downtown $300 mo. Utilities paid; A/C separate; mature, and reasonable. 749-562; afterworks.
AMENITIES
Female Roommate Needed. Shave 2 bedrooms; house $200 per month / 1/2 utilities. Must like cats and dogs. Send resume to RMJK@aol.com
Female Roanoke needed to share beautiful
studios and classrooms to go to campus. Summer
or fall leave. Call Nesbitt 212-536-4087.
Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the amenities of Naismith Hall. Applications for fall semester are now being accepted while space remains
NAISMITHHALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
Fine location on bedroom basement studio apartmnet. CA equipped kitchen. Low utilities. Available June 1, $173 at 1901 Mississippi. Call 849-9297
FOR SUMMER SUBLEASE Two bedroom apartment. Close to city center. Compare Very nice. C97 208-351-7474
For Rent. May 15 August 15; 1 bedroom apartment. Kitchen, bathroom, living room All private. One block from campus. 180/month. 843.2233.
Furnished basement housework for 1/3 utilities in exchange for housing, yard and plant care. Available May 15-August 20. Call 843-9099 after 5:00 p.m.
GREAT SUMMER SUBLEASE 1. Block from Campus, 2 bedrooms plus Huge Lift 2: Baths; DW. Microwave, W/D. Low Utilities, Option for RENT: RENE NEGOTIABLE Call 942 8285.
GREAT SUMMER DATES Special incentives
Royal Air Force (RAF) Specials(
Pinecrest Air Base 749-202
HEY LOOK AT THIS! Brand new 1 Bemp. Adm.
for summer camp. Close to campus. W/D A/C
MERCURY.
Looking for a REAL roommate to help ward off lonely, cutout cups? Try not to make another roommate mistake! Do you deal roommates with other girls in your home or trash, who talk on the phone all night every night? and whose friends call after midnight? Me too. Non-smoking law student who likes to play sports, plays tennis and volley, and cooks gourmet bikes, plays tennis and violin, and cooks gourmet bikes is looking NOW for compatible roommate for next two years—including summers. I have ALL the furnishing down to microwave, washer and dryer.
--customer and dog You have similar values. --gender and gender You can move or you, Interested Let's help.
Looking for 2 female KU students to share lovey 3.0
students in a half term course (10 weeks)
$300 monthly place with 64921 or 84232
http://www.ku.edu.au/
Meadowbrook Summer Sublease 4 btw Tremble
only $75 m. Don't wait! Call 843-1866.
Must Sublease for summer. Available mid-May.
Must 2 barmat room in house. Large Kitchen,
Bath, and Living Room. Partially furnished
$320/month plus utilities. 749-4838.
Next to Campus: 1 bedroom apartment. Price is lower than last week. 842-608-0
NO NEED TO READ ANY FURTHER' Summer Sublease 3-bedroom 3-live townhouse, available mid-May Completely furnished, 3 full baths, dishwasher ideal location 6 & Emery
ON CAMPUS APARENTMENT for summer
on campus rent, low utilities AT 434-4722
or 610-5999.
one bedroom house for summer suburbs. Furnished, front porch, garden space, quiet street view. $79,000.
SAVE TIME
Find your apartment or rental home in the Kansas City area.
- FRFF SERVICE
- 50,000 CHOICES
- ALL LOCATIONS AND PRICES
- VIDEO PREVIEWS
Call or stop by.
6600 College Bvld.
Overtland Park, Ks.
GREAT PLACES (913) 345-8777
PENTHUISEN) Summer Sublance 2 bedroom,
1800 Southwest Ave call 455-6734
non-smoking. Non smoking calls 854-0734
Dessert basement apartment Walking distance
campus downtown, private entrance, furniture
center.
Reserve your apartment now! just 2 short blocks from university, 1.2, and 4 bedroom apartments. Furnished with some utilities and off street parking. No pets. 841-5500
Reserve your room now! For summer and/or fall Furnished with most utilities paid. Shared cooking and bath facilities. Just 2 shut blocks from the kitchen off with street parking. No pets. 841.335
Roommate wanted Beautiful Quail Creek Apks
14$0/month. Own room, pool, tennis cable
room.
Rooms available for summer and the 1987-88 academic year in the Christian living community “Koronaia” at Ecumenical Christina Ministrica; information come to 1024 Orland or 843-893.
Napoleon Poppertie 28R 2 bath
Sapphire Bus Isle Sublease for
summer 450-3880
Summer Roommate. Female to live in with 2 children in a house near the city. Required a graduate's degree in storage or room. Must be dependable, please call, ask for Jennifer, or leave message. Hent may be negotiable, must find a suitable roommate.
Female roommate, close to campus, 8-1
bedroom, 157.50 plus 1/2 utilities. Call 749.187
Studio available for summer in super ap. capit.
great maintenance, recreation facilities and
laundry available I will assume part of expenses
Call 842 9766 after 6:30 p.m.
SUTHEASE Two bedroom Village Square Apart-
ment. Two bathrooms. Low utility. Available mid May $139
APARTMENTS
OPEN HOUSE
Saturday, April 25 10-4
Sunday, April 26 12-4
SUBLEASE 2 BH furnished apt 1 l 127 bath.
Near carpark.
Fees include 7 days free; 943-8298 or 841-7298.
SUBLEASE GREAT STUDIO Meadowbrook
Ultra clean tinted window. Available May
20th.
SUBLEASE NEW WASH 943-8298
- Fenced Pool Area
- On the KU Bus Ro
* Wired free cable TV
- Washer & Dryer Hook-ups
- Wired for cable TV
- Beautifully Landscaped
- June & July special: $200
- 10, 11, & 12 month leases
- Tanning Deck
- Completely Privacy Fenced
- Dishwasher, garbage disposal, & pantry
630 Michigan 749-7279
Office Hours: 2-6 weekdays
Other Appointments Available
SUMMER APSTUBLELEASE. SUNRISE PLACE 2.
bedroom. bath. pot. laundry facilities. 600 sq. ft.
HILLVIEW APTS.
1745 W. 24th 841-5797
SUMMER SCHOOL HCOOLT NO CAR2 b2dbm readm
SUMMER SCHOOL HCOOLT NO CAR2 b2dbm readm
touch HCOOLT NO CAR2 b2dmbi
touch HCOOLT NO CAR2 b2dmbi
touch HCOOLT NO CAR2 b2dmbi
NOW LEASING FOR FALL!
Starting at $260
- 1 & 2 BR units
- Laundry facility
SUMMER Female tenants wanted for spacious bedroom house w/ fenced in yard huested for PIMA plus microwave and dishwasher. Available right room and plus 4 / 14 activities. Call Earl evenings, 841-348-3000
- On bus route - near shopping
- Rental furniture available from Thompson-Crawley
SUMMER SUBLEASE 2 Bedroom Apt. New
Close to campus. Campus 749-2432
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Apple Able Studio, Nice,
quiet, Water, cable free. $235/month. Available
mid-May. Pay only June, July. Call 841-7802 after
6 m.
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Large 1 Bedroom Apartment at Hanover Place, 19th & Kentucky St. near the Riverfront in Burlington. SUMMER SUBLEASE. Large two bedroom apartment to close. Campus AC, DW, Balcony Cf.749-3621. SUMMER SUBLEASE modern and spacious 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths, central air washer and dryer.
SUMMER SUBLEASE Very nice, new 1. BR(hard studio apt 1318 & Ohio Furnished. Must be non-smoker, off street parking NEQTIBILITY Available May 14, 841-4906.
SUMMER SUBLASE two bedrooms and 1/12
bathroom apartment. Purchased with swimming
pool, 10 minutes to campus; and on bus route $300
postal. Call evenings at 749-1768.
SUMMER SURELEASE: 3 Bedroom, 1/2 bath,
pool, laundry facilities, close to KU. Available
mid-may. pay only June, July, and electric.
phone: 843-7300; rent. malls Ode Oldie English Apts.
843-7300
Location
Located among 70 acres of rolling hills and trees, you'll enjoy the convenience of being close to campus and area shopping.
Lifestyle
Meadowbrook offers a selection of spacious and comfortable studios, 1,2, or 3 bedroom apartments, and townhouses to fit your lifestyle
meadowbrook
RESERVE YOUR
UNIT NOW...
FOR SUMMER OR FALL!
15th & Crestline 842-4200
SUMMER SUBLEASE STUDIO. Utilities paid close to campus. Call 794-2415.
SUMMER SUSELLEE 2. bedroom Townhome,
furnished, private garage, close to campus and
playground.
SUMMER SUSELLEE 4. michigan 2. bbr 1.
1/2 bath basement. Perfect for 4 pool
included. Will negotiate on Rent-Call
789-2513
Sub-Lease for summer Sunrise Terrace 3
bedrooms Call for info 841-0487
Sublease for summer, studio at Hanover Place.
Call 794-5540
Sublease, 4 bedroom, spacious, excellent location
(next to Yelp Sub) Call 841-3987
Sublease 2 bdrm duplex. Available June 1st. Close to campus. $255. mail 601-844-2440 evening.
Shallow $1000; $2000; $3000. Fully furnished.
Camp and sun barn. Low utilities.
843-605-788
Sublease for summer: furnished two bedroom
apt. A/C Great location! Call 841-0607
Sublasee. Spacious 2 BR apt near campus for 2-3
people. Available summer option to extend lease
to 4BR. Free parking. Call (800) 516-9767.
Sublease for summer Furnished, 2 bedrooms, very nice apartment one block from campus. Call
Sublease Apartment: Low rent, includes 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths, tennis courts, basketball court, club house, on bus route 1 Month Free. 841-395-8143.
University Daily Kansan / Friday, April 24, 1987
15
Sabiace a two bier ap, 10 min from campus
Pool. Call食堂 Pascalo Roberti
789-7168
summer Sublease Immediately-Wanted House for nicrobus room, 2 story townhouse in the Bronx
Sublease Meadowbrook Studio Largest plan available with bedroom Water & cable paid.
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24th & Eddingham (next to Gammon
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- Swimming pool
* Fun Shows
- 10 or 12 month
- Free Showtim Satellite T.V
- On-Site Management
Open Daily 3:00-5:00
Saturday 9:00-12:00
841-5444
- Exercise Weightroom
- Laundry room
* Fire place
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Management, Inc
Sublet 2 BR Meadowbreak apartment, DW, FF, Cana poto, pool, tennis. Cana and water paid.
Summer Special, 3 bedroom apartment with washer and dryer, utilities paid $300; also room in spacious West Lawrence home, $150, washer/dryer, utilities paid 841-444.
Summer Sublease very nice three Rd lrch style house. Near Campus. $420 monthly. 843-305-306
source: Need one or two females for a bedroom apartment, completely furnished, $16 monthly to leave to camp. Call 749-2732. Summer Sublease with waiver for 2 d. AC, gas water bid. $225, $749-1853
Summer Submarine-Barward Square, 2 bedrooms,
spacious living for 3, all unified room, pool, close
to beach. $179,000.
Summer Sublease: Furnished Studio, close to campus and downtown. Rent negotiable. Call
Summer Sublease 2 Bedroom Apl. Very close to
camp. Rent Negotiable. Call Please call soon
MASTERCRAFT
Completely furnished
offers.
apartments--all near KU! Consider:
- Custom furnishings
- Energy efficient
- Affordable rates
- Variety of floorplans
- Designed for privacy
- Professional management
OPEN DAILY 1-5
HANOVER PLACE----14th & Mass
841-1212
CAMPUS PLACE—1145 Louisianna 841-1429
SUNDANCE—7th & Florida
841-5255
TANGLEWOOD—10th & Arkansas
749-2415
Summer sublease: 3 bedroom Apt. 2, bath. completely furnished, available starting May or June option through July. Low rent plus possible reductions. Close to Campus. Need 2 people. 843-4942
Summer sublet: 1 bedroom apt. furnished, AC. Completely furnished free. $219.00 no. cover. 749-4604 availm
Three blocks from Ivan, two bedrooms apt. for 2 adults, and a spacious kitchen; nest place $300.00 and low utilities.
Top of the hill location, studio summer sublease,
to rent to key; call 842-2501.
Two Bedroom Apartment: Summer Sublet with Fall Option. Five Minutes to Fraser. Low utilitarian apartment. $149,000.
FOR SALE
14 x 6 Mobil Home 2 bedroom, remodeled, nice carpet, fenced yard. Partial owner financing
1982 Honda CB 650, only 500 miles, crash crumbs,
only $1109 O.B. O. 749-1488. 862-6638
LEADING EDGE MODEL "D", 608, IBM Compile Complete with surge protect. Sharp color monitor. Panasonic XK-P1901 printer, word control. Thermal spreadsheet software. $140. Call 841-3931.
MAX'S COMICS. Comic Books, Playbies, Penhouse, etc. 811 New Hampshire.
MOPED 1981 Motobecane. Runs OK, but needs tune-up. Asking $150. Vince. 864-7050
*** MOTHIBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
30 p.m. on Tuesdays 10:2 p.m.
5:30, EI, 749-449-8678
Never Been Used. Fanatic 100 Sailboard 12" x 2'
8.6 m squared. North Sail 600 bwd at 80'
975 ft.
Telephone FE2 $29.00 x 35.16 lens with Micro $315.00
Telephone NI-8402. Kiad
NOTES now available for variety of classes.
Enhance learning and grades. Call 843-302
Jayhawk Study Services 'We're Here to Help'
PIANO for sale. Upright condition $400.
PIANO for sale. Upright good condition $400.
749-2227. Keep trying.
Realistic Micro Recorder 65.00, Minolta 16
Camera 65.00, Stereo silent upgraded plus mini
speakers 75.00, Rossi 22 Pump new 120.00,
841-4217
Rollaway fed. Only $25. In good shape. For more info call 749-2513.
Sailboot for Sale: 20th Olympic Class Flying Dutchman. Good Condition. Light Weight and Fast. Asking 900.00 or best offer. Call evenings: 749-305.
1966 Kawasaki NNMA 600 R Like new, only 200 miles. Call唤听. 841-8091
7000 to 8000 requiring 460 new, keyboard bike computer asking $250, call Steve. 864 5763.
2 BICKEN MAKERS, 1 Collector's 12 string it new 320, Serious Buyers, only John 841 5768 or 842 6210.
97 290x5, Dark red. Dark 3.5 pfd. Good contact.
Mint. Low mileage, no lightage. Call after 4:30
m.p. 842-7670, 842-1348
Accountant GUFTAR together with box in good condition sells under $100! $101 - 864-6527
Austro Daimler 10 speed bicycle. Like new, excellent condition. Call 749-5364 after 5 p.m.
dition sells under 1000 *Call* 864-6527
ADK Dairy puppy分配, prepared, 12 weeks old.
ADK Dairy puppy分配, prepared, 12 weeks old.
Barely redid. Great Bike, Good Price. 842-1824
Comm 64 with 1514 disk and bluechip model M120_10 matrix printer, modem file. $75 or make offer. 842-2804
Complete set McGregor Tourney Number 1 shaft irons. $100 negotiable. Call 842.5230.
For Sale. Music Man Sting Ray Bass with Hard Shell Case. $35 or best offer. Brendan at 843-3237. For sale 1972 BMW Motorcycle 6K05/ 20,000 original mirage. Excellent shape. Must sell. 195 lbs.
For sale, six piece stereo, 70 watts per channel,
good condition, exceptional sound, cable 749-2693
good condition, exceptional sound, call 749-2619.
Garage Sale 3 Family: Baby furniture, computer,
oak dog set, t.v. laser disk, many goods, Satur-
tary lunch, m. free coffee. 300 University Drive,
841-5398.
IMC PC/TX compatible, includes monochrome graphics, monochrome monitor, switchable Turbo motherboard w/ 512K. 1 Floppy disc drive $875. 6-month warranty included, 842-5495.
Rickenbacker bass black 4001 Excellent
Rickenbacker bass black 4001 Grating Board Professional
73.00 E/W Grating Board Professional
TUXEDOES! After Six formal wear TUXEDOES ALL SIZEST] Jackets with tails or plain, complete set with pants, vest, or cumberbun, tie-blow expensive to own on rent! Come to Everything But ice, 616 Vermont. Get yours early for that season! Ice will have you size hurry! Everything But ice
Tuxedo Liquidation: Last Week. Three piece
tuxes only 17. 8a, all Accessories 1.98 each. Open
noon tl 60: Closing forever April 30th! 900 New
Hampshire
WINDSURF never been used 12 ft. Comes Comp.
$600.00 be $00 per 843.187 Pete
AUTOSALES
1847 Volvo 142. Good condition. Very dependable.
1847 Volvo 142. May include Lambda. $1,000. Call
824-5646
1957 Ford Granada: New tires, exhaust, electric systems, 77,000 miles. $700,841-9493.
1977 Red Chevette, two door, good mirror, must sell.
$10,850 negotiable Amp at 842 360 even more.
Datasun 210 AM-FM. New Tires, Very Good
condition, 80 miles, $150. Call 813-6923.
1882 Silver Camara. Great school car, 4 New Tires. Stere cassette. Pop Up uproof. Great mileage, 4 cyl. Acul $5,000 but negotiable. 56,000 miles. Call to See. 749-2456, after 5 p.m.
D2odge Dart. Two door, reliable, chrysler slant six engine, runs good. $400. Call 749-2898.
74 Superbette, Sunroof, Pioneer Stereo, Clean,
$1200.00, Scott. 841-3961.
A 120 Fire Fighters, 350 MAM/FM; Caucasian, A. C. 120
A 120 Fire Fighters, 350 MAM/FM; Caucasian, A. C.
A 120 Fire Fighters, 350 MAM/FM; Caucasian, A. C.
For Sale 1977 Chrysler, Cordova. Fair Condition 400
engine. Call after 8:436-4956-4060
For Sale 75 Pacer. New: Brakes, shocks, springs,
starter, carb, w/pump, distributor. Great shank.
Made in China.
LOST-FOUND
Beautiful, young siamese found on campus
08-24-27 morning near Lippincott. Please call
(212) 536-7200.
Found on West campus : set of keys. Call 842-7760 to identify
LOST: 4/20/87 "Men's Citizen Watch, Guy's
Citizen Watch" AND MAIL ("Citizen Watch,
844-8813). Please keep trying.
LOST. Female puppy. Black Lab/German
Shipped with age 10 old. Collected 250,000
mare puppy Black Lab/German Shepard mix 14 weeks old. Calleen 749-1890
LOST: Five month old golden retriever in the vicinity & Ohio. Not wearing collar. Please contact her.
LOST on 4/11/87. Men's seiko watch, reward. Call Steve at 842-4780.
Lost! A set of keys, contain a Subaru key $10 reward. Call Jim at 844-2312.
Lost KUID and other ID in blue pass case. If found call Herman at 842-789. Keep try.
HELP WANTED
Are you good with children? Would you like to be paid to live with a California family and help with children? HELP P ARENTS 770 Mena Ave. 219, Mountain Park, CA 94035, (415) 425-321-816.
AIRLINES CRUSELINEWS TRIING' G Summer
Good Ceed Good TRIING' Hiring'
Guide-Crate
Delivery 944-444-1111 944-444-1111
Artist Needed for Next Semester. Graphic Design and Illustration. Please Call 842 3385 and ask for Jill Browning.
Artist Wanted! T-shirt design, Graphics and Illustration (cartoon characters etc) STUDENTS encouraged to apply Call for appointment 842-3338
Hall. Application priority date, p. 3; wednesday, April 29, 1987. Interested persons, submit letter of application, resume, and names of two references to Steve Kee, Assistant Director of McCullum Hall, Lawrence, Ks 6045. (913) 844-3000 AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
ASSISTANT MANAGER JAYHAWK TOWERS
The University of Kansas Housing Department is seeking three live-in, one-half time Assistant Managers for the Jayhawk Towers Apartment Building. Group work experience is required preferred. Group work experience is required and residential management experience is required.
quired and residential management experience is desirable. Apartment furnished plus stipend. Appointment starts July 1, 1987 and continues through June 30, 1987. Complete job description.
Need Friendly Office assistant who can work independently, Typing, Filing, Running Errands, Telephoneing, Assisting with Downtown Promotions 20-30 hours Per Week. Flexible Schedule
Bakery Subs/ Cleaning one position Monday
Thursday, 3 p.m. m.Blindfold, Friday, 8 p.m.t.Am-
mon, 7 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday, weeks
weeks paid vacation after 1 year. Interviews Mon
April, 27 p. 7 p.m. apply at Mukhery's Bakery.
Nanny Placement agency looking for nannies.
Great salaries and benefits. Positions available
nationally. Nanny Finders. P.O. Box 4033, Chapel
"Hill, NC 27514
Part time advertising sales representative nee
d in awaverity newspaper
newspaper. Mail resume, Call Traits, 340-695-8220.
NANNY POSITIONS AVAILABLE: Good salary
new families, Dallas, Texas Call 9:39 m (214)
455-867-7000
Rape Victim Support Service seeking volunteers.
Work with victims of sex assault and give com-
munication. Provide training provided. Must be over summer. Info needed. 7:30 p.m. 1199 Massachusetts at Headquarters.
Application at Headquarters & Emily Taylor
Office, 624 N. Washburn Blvd., N. Washington,
M.邮 to R.V.S.S. 1199 Maishaascottens, 60044
resume and names of three references to Fred McEhlenie, Director, Office of Residential Programs. 123 Strong Hall, University of Kansas. Application must be received by b. p. May 6, 1987. EOE AA
Program Coordinator, Hashinger Residence Hall. Half-time professional position. Responsibilities include: supervision and coordination of in Hail programming, specifically playing the theater,
programming, specifically involving thems,
theatre and performance. After a
Degree, exposure to the field of Fine Arts, and
experience in theater production and management
in theatre, attend the University of
Michigan. Appointment: August 1, 1987 thru May
2015.
COULD YOU BE A BOSTON NANNY? We have many majors to choose from. We also offer one year commitment, excellent school benefits, round trip transportation. Mrs. Pisch, Childcare Placement, service, 189 Buckminster Hall. Call (212) 534-0177.
DATA CLERK, 44/hour, 20 hrs/week, work processing, computer data entry, and office work. Must be KU enrolled for one hour, spring or summer Contact DR Lynne Embry to apply. 844-350-3601
Cooks, Dishwashers, and Line Personnel. Apply
to the Stockade. No phone calls please.
No calls to the Office.
Cocktail Waitress Needed Part-time weekends
Apply in person A Playhouse, W 24th
Floor, 106 West 59th Street, New York,
NY 10003.
DIRECTOR TEACHER, DAYCARE CENTER.
BA and CEE required, MA desirable. Experience,
familiarity with Lawrence child care highly
desirable Full time, approximately 60hrs per
week. Send resume and three references to: Search Committee, c/o
Lawrence Housing Authority, 1600 Haskell
Avenue, Lawrence, KS 60043. Resumes must be
available May 8. LHA is an EEO/AIA
Employer
FULL AND PART TIME HELP! National Firm preparation for Spring and Summer work. If accepted, you will earn 8.10 start. Some evening and weekend positions are available and some weekends are open. To qualify, corporate scholarships are awarded, internships are possible, and you may earn 2.34 credits/qr. or semester. During summer break you can also earn 9.14 (385-807) Mon-Fri between 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Donut person: cut/fry donuts, assist bakers.
Midnight a.m. 8 night, per week $4 hr to start,
raises commensurate with skill level. Apply Mum-
bera a.m. 12 noon, April 23, p. 8 or, tuesday
April 27, p. 8.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $164-640.290/jr. Now
Call 835-687-4000 E-Mail R98 for current
issuer info.
presentations; recruiting, organizing, evaluating volunteers; community outreach and development. Send resume, letter, and a reference to Stuart McKinney, 251 W. 8th Street, Boca Raton, Jacksonville, Lawrence. 64004, Deadline: May 2nd
tederalist. iest.
HALF-TIME DIRECTOR-DOUGLAS COUNTY
RAPE HIVE VICTIM SUPPORT $2500-4000/year
personnel with volunteers, good writing, speaking
skills, strong organizational skills, public
relations, self-motivated. Responsible for: grant
writing/management; bookkeeping; reports;
presentations; reunions evaluation.
KU Student Assistant. General Work in office in New York City. Send resume to KU, available time available to August 17, three-fourths time available to September 25.
Massachusetts Street Deli and Buffalo Bob's smokehouse now hiring food service and table service employees. Must have a least one year exp in the job, or a two-year experience starting pay 3.75 per hour plus profit sharing, table service 2.01 per hour plus apply. Friday - Sunday 8:45 to 719 Massachusetts above.
- "crestet" A skincare product proven successful in *Sesamnacia for Oily and Problem skin* will be available on the first day of the month near future. We are looking for dedicated persons to work with us and please send our Respond please call 1-686-2753 before April 30, 1987
Summer Job Opportunities available with the U.S. Marine Corps—No obligation to be a Mannel Earn between 6-8pm Saturday mornings & housing! **U.S. 913-841-1821** (coffee)
★★★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
Summer job: Part-time Nanny needed for 2 year old boy at your house. You must have transportable bedding, blankets, curtains, and a Monday through Friday, beginning May 11th. Will you call references? Pay $2.50 hour. Please
The Mathematics department is now accepting applications for the position of graduate teaching assistant, a post-bachelor's degree requirements for a bachelor's degree by August 15, 1987 and have a strong mathematical background. Foreign applicants will be required to submit a cover letter requesting to complete the application. Applicants should submit a letter indicating interest and background, a transcript, and two letters of recommendation to Charles H. Reilly, the Director of Mathematics.
The Student Housing Department has opening for student janitorial workers. Must be able to work from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., August 14. Residence hall room may be provided for same period. Experience helpful. Contact
YMCA Camp Gravios in beautiful Lake of the
mountains now hire summer staff. Desire for
excellence, but no experience necessary. Call
816) 324-9022 Keith Miller
deciding interest and background in a transcript,
deciding interest and background in a transcript,
Hammett College of Math, 217 Strong Hall,
Hammett College of Math, 217 Strong Hall
MISCELLANEOUS
PERSONAL
CENTER
October. Take a good look at my face. You'll see
TABULAR. You will love it. We look in.
We look in
TRAVEL
704 MASS.
842-4000
SPECIAL YOUTH FARE
(Age 12-25)
CHICAGO—BRUSSELS
$469 Round trip
Depart May 29 or June 11
Space is limited!
Call today for details.
Get Leased at the LEWIS LUAU! Friday; April 31
from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. @ $10 music Contents,
Prizes, and Funi! Fund!
CONGRATULATIONS ON YOUR PINNING BECKY AND KEVIN! WE HAD A BLAST LAST NIGHT!!
LOVE,
THE AMMA CHRIS
THE ALPHA CHI'S
SUSIE-Happy 21st BAY DAY Took long enough
to hear you have a great one LOVE-DANIEL G
Kirk Happy Anniversary. You are the greatest! I love you, Mary
Stillmester-Can't stop thinking about what You is poor guy to do to help you. DAP
Lisa. You're wonderful! Anticipating an awesome Chi Omega formal tionate. We'll have a spectacular time together. Prov 31:10-31. Your friend always, Bob
Peter: Adopted big bros are loved too!!!
Susan: That can make ice cubes! Love ya, Suan.
Rauney R. Voulez-Vous Coucher Avec Mai?
Bongoose Doy
SKIAN-Happy Anniversary! Wish I could be here tonight to celebrate, but we can make up for last time when I get back. I hope the next two years go by as fast as the past two months! Miss you
It looks better around your ears. T.J.
X-RAM to go you going to the tomato
tion? If you
The 2 girls in the Brat we saw on Kesaw, want
to again, from the girls who invited you to
the Good.
BUS.PERSONAL
Be creative in gift fitting. Fulfill all fantasies with beautiful Boudour Portraits for all occasions. Call 402-875-6980.
Z=no G. B sounds better than Lincoln? buh? Well I. W!
Looks a lot more friendly! Are they Goody? I find out different
areas. Are they Goody?
EUROPEAN
SUNTANING
HOT TUB & HALF CLUB
52 böl ↑ 81,623
www.european-suntanning.com
HEADACHE, BACKACHIE, ARM PAIN, LEG PAINT Student and most insurance accepted. For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark Johnson 843-3979
Barb's Vintage Rose
Flapper dresses, gangster hats, 50s
formals & accessories, Hawaiian
shirts, "Tom Jones" dresses.
GAY/LEISBIAN? For write for KS/MO/info PERSONALITY box 218, Dialy City CA Mailed page number
Enjoy smooth, creamy
Frozen Yogurt
that tastes like Ice Cream
but with 80% less fat!
--FREE SAMPLES-for the best prices and the lowest fares.
I Can't Believe It's YOGURT!
Frozen Yogurt Stores
OPEN: 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Daily
Noon-11 p.m. Sundays
Louisiana Purchase Shopping Center
Most reasonable rates in town for all your photo
services. Call Photo Plus, 789-7307
for portrait photos. Call Photo Plus, 789-7307
Don't Forget!
See Advisor
Soc. final on Thurs.
Plane Tickets Home
Check TODAY
Maupintour
KU Union/831 Mass
749-0700
808 W.23rd
WANTED: engineer student or professional to install, configure and maintain wave transmission, simulate garage door systems, install and test gate motors.
New Connection, 300 Elm, Elm, North Lawrence,
842-401-303; Tuesday, Thursday, 6 to 9 k. earnings by ap-
piration; Monday, April 7, and Friday, April
and May. $8 cuts and sets, $3 perms
Rare and Used Equipment, Bus. Sale, or Trade
Exchange.
Need music for your wedding? Call Jean, 843-7070
Gives piano and lessons over summer.
GREENS
Waddell & Reed, Inc.
1100 SW Wanamaker Rd.
Suite 103
Weekly Beer Specials
SERVICES OFFERED
AUTO TINTING: Best scratch resistant solar film. Lifetime warranty. PROT-TINT of solar film.
Heineken 12 pk. $6.99
Coors Light 12 pk. $5.37
Old Style 12 pk. $4.12
Busch 12pk. $3.98
Weidemann 12 pk. $3.49
Leading financial services company offers complete training for college graduates for the Topeka and Lawrence area. Confidently market mutual funds, retirement plans, life insurance, and more through our personalized financial planning program.
Heineken 12pk. $6.99
FINANCIAL PLANNING
Topeka, KS 66604
CRIMISON SUN PHOTO is looking for young women interested in developing a modeling portfoli 15% over direct cost. No set fee. Call 841-9689
DONALD G. STROLE
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwinter
Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749.
April 22-28
16 East 13th St. 842-1133
- **Fake I.D.'s & other criminal offenses**
- **Family Law & other legal problems**
John sings messages! $20, 841-1874 or 843-1209
MATH TUOR since 1976, M.A., $/hour (courses
above 199) 109, $/hour 843.9032
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES; *Excahrance*
processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W services.
PASSPORT $6.00 Art & Design Building,
Room 298, 84-7677
MIDI Music Audio Bt-Trk. P.A. and MIDI Music Audio Bt-Trk. Maximum Audio Wizardry.
Mobile Fake Audio. Maximum Audio Wizardry.
PRIVATE OFFICE Obj-Gyn and Abortion Services. Overland Park ... (913) 419-6878
- Pedicures
Manicures
- Sculptured nails
- Pedicures
Charme Hair Fashions
843-3580 1033½ MASS.
V
Seamatrices. All ladies dresses can be made here in custom sizes and styles from the latest fashion magazines, I will always be available.
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841 2316.
TYPING
Dependable, professional, experienced
TRANSCRIPTION also: standard tape. 944-8877
DISSERTATIONS. THESES LAW
but will return. KEEP WATCHING THIS AD.
1,100 pages. No job too small or too large.
Word processing,
842, 874, 894 or type number.
24-Hour Typing, 13th semester in Lawrence;
dissertations, dissertation papers. Close to campus.
Bachelor's degree required.
1-1-1 TRIO Word processing, Responsible
Conscientious,
Reliable. Call 842 3111 for service
A23-1 professional typing. Term papers, Theses.
A23-1 professional typing. IEM IBM
Ethernet typewriter 842-3436
A-Z Word processing Service. Quality resumes, papers, dissertations. Reasonable rates. File submission only.
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing.
Term papers, tables, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter quality
printing. spelled corrected. 842-7241.
AAA TYPING has low cost word processing document storage starting at $1.99 |PG call 842-1942 after 4 p.m. weekdays, any time weekends. Campus pickup available
Absolutely Fast Typing Dependable and easy
Work with Word Processing at 1891-264
1891-2699 a.m. and at 1891-2684 after 3 p.m.
Accurate Word Processing Meadowbrook loca-
tions experience | Call 749-1961
EVENINGS
Accurate affordable typing by former Harvard law school graduate. Call Ms. Mattia, 914-127-3800, -spotted phone. Call Mr. Mattia, 914-127-3800, -spotted phone.
Experienced Typist : Dissertation; bases, tesm papers, etc. ; Reasonable Call. Rate 82-3333
GOOD IMPRESSIONS Typing/Word Process
Good Impressions Typing/Word Process
Typeet Respelling corrected. 841-2697
Guaranteed Perfect typing done on a word processor. Located near Leward Hospital. Call (801) 273-9456.
KU SECRETARY. Typing and word processing
Affordable, fast, accurate. Spelling corrected,
letter quality. Pickup on campus. Monica 841-8246.
Evenings-weekends
TYPING Call 842-4868 before 10 p.m.
TYPING Call
Resume Service-laserwritten 10-copies ONLY
70-249-719 on 5 p.m.
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional work pro-
gramming. Includes letters, thesis,
quality printing, etc. #843-6062
ACT NOW, Papers 1.50/pg, Resumes 15.
WRIVER LIFELEINE 843-3469.
WANTED
TYPING PLUS assistance with competition, edgar, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes HAVE M.S. Degree. 841-6254
Typing: very reasonable rates, will also assist with spelling punctuation and form. Call 843-2629. Why pay for typing when you can have work properly done? Theses, resumes, legal. Since 1963 843-3147
Smart Word Processing includes editing and
solarized word processing. Foster, 79-2790
a.m. p. 10.
TABULAR, 79-2790 a.m. p. 10.
2 Female Roommates Wanted for summer. Own rooms, $125 rent. Pool close to campus, 842-740-6788
Donations of books and magazines need. Suppl
ing the library's collection, Library Brig
items to the Library, 709 Vermont
$ Summer Subleases, males, extremely close to campus, nice. $85-92/month plus utilities.
2 Housemates for 3 bmr house. $170 & $130 moi
plus 1/3 utilities. Convenient location. Ivy,
Graduate students preferred. Rooms available
fune 1 and May 1 respectively. 942-0038.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Policy
Needed: roommate for a very nice fully
furnished apartment. On bus route, pool,
and garage. Fully licensed.
I need a tutor for statistics (EPR 710, School of Ed.). Please call 749-2651.
Female roommate for summer, quiet 2 bbm
house, AC $100 plus 1/2 utilities, $863.47 after
1 year
commitee wanted to share large 2 BR apt.
Available June 1, 1867 for summer and school
年 16-38th BST location. Laundry facilities,
kitchen, Rent plus 1/2 deposit and
payment. 843-3657.
Roommates Wanted for Summer $10/month plus utilities between downtown and campus. 841-1733 Roommate $1520 Deposit. Negotiable. Summer only, or fall. Furnished. 841-1095
Still homeless for year? Roommates wanted for 2
apartment. Pay 1/3 rent and utilities.
$340 a month.
Roommate for very nice furnished house in nice,
quiet, neighborhood near campus & shopping
WD, AC. For summer and/or fall, $165/month
or $200/month or non-smoking grate
学生 or student, $399/day.
Summer Roommate luxury 2 bdm.
Room furnished, fully furnished, pool $100 m/m
alive: 843-980-8348
Summer roommate named for furnished apartment on bus route, $25/wo. plus 1/2 utility
Wanted: Good used computer with these features:
Modern Modem 84-5330, Leave Message,
Modern Modem 84-5330, Leave Message.
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words.
Woods. Must be neat, considerate Call 749-1883.
Wanted: Moisture to match 2 apartment 847-
886 school year. $1350 or negotiate. 842-2625.
wanted: Two bedroom furnished apartment
subleased Aug. Dec; Please Call Steve, 841-1783 or
843-2655.
WANTED: Female roommate to share expenses in house at 1015 Illinois for 1987-86 school year. If interested call (417) 677-9115 ask for Ann, Laura, or Nancy.
Words set in ALL CAPS as 2 words.
Classified Information Mail-In Form
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Make checks payable to:
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---
16
Friday, April 24, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
When mosasaur snout is surface too quickly, they may have guillote bends. A cross section of a vertebra of a mosasaur reveals a cavity where cells of the bone obviously had died.
Enlarged view of microscopic capillary
How the beast got the bends
When mosasaurs swam to the surface too quickly, they may have gotten the bends. A cross section of a vertebra of a mosasaur reveals a cavity where cells of the bone obviously had died.
Enlarged view of microscopic capillary
In the bends, microscopic capillaries and blood vessels that carry blood to the living bone cells are clogged by nitrogen bubbles. Affected areas of the bone marrow die from lack of blood and oxygen leaving a cavity like the one that was recently discovered in the mosasaur's bones by KU scientists.
Cross section of affected vertebra
The bends is a painful condition that usually occurs in divers. It is caused by ascending too rapidly from great depths to the surface where the pressure outside of the body lowers too rapidly. The nitrogen in the blood separates and forms into bubbles similar to the way bubbles of Mosasaurs were marine lizards that lived in the seas that covered Kansas and most of the western United States. 100 million feet long. Surprisingly, the Komodo dra
microscopic capillary
Story by John Buzbe
Graphic by Dave Eames
Bill Skeet
The bends is a painful condition that usually occurs in divers. It is caused by ascending too rapidly from great depths to the surface where the pressure outside of the body lowers too rapidly. The nitrogen in the blood separates and forms into bubbles similar to the way bubbles of air form when water is heated to a boil. The bubbles clog the tiny passages and prevent blood from flowing to the living tissues.
---
t wasn't always easy being a giant marine lizard in prehistoric Kansas.
Mosaursa, the lizards,
could eat almost anything in
the water, including 20-foot-
long giant souls. They could
dive 400 to 500 feet. But tiny nitrogen bubbles gave them a pain in the neck, two KU researchers discovered recently.
Two kinds of mosasaurus, which lived to dive and dived to live, got the bends. Scuba divers get the bends when they surface too quickly and nitrogen bubbles form in their blood. It hurts. It can kill people.
But people can stay out of the water. Mosaaurs lived in the ocean that covered most of Kansas and the rest of the world at that time.
Source: Museum of Natural History
"At very best, they could only wallow on the shore," said Larry Martin, professor of systematics and ecology and curator of vertebrate paleontology at the Museum of National History.
North America during the Cretaceous Period Shallow seas covered the central U.S. about 70 million years ago
Martin and Bruce Rothschild, research associate at the museum, published a report on mosasaurus in the April 3 issue of Science magazine.
Mosaurs weren't just any diving marine reptiles. Their habits were similar to today's sperm whales, which have developed protection against the bends. Mosaurs were predators that could grow as big as 40 feet long.
"I wouldn't want to swim with one." Martin said. They probably didn't get the bends routinely while chasing food.
"Sometimes they had emergency ascents, like when they met a bigger masosaur," he said. "It may have been special times when they had this sort of accident. I hope so, for their sake. It must have been a very painful lifestyle."
Evolution wasn't kind to the mosasaurus, but they may have learned to live with it. Martin said
Mosaasaurus lived from about 100 million years ago to about 64 million years ago. The bends weren't the death of the mosasaurus, Martin said.
'Whatever killed the dinosaurs may very well have killed the moaasaur.' he said.
Rothschild said research didn't reveal exactly how the bends hurt mosaasaur. It may have
"Did they have strokes? If they had, then it obviously would not have been particularly helpful to their long-term survival," he said.
But masasaurus were fairly stupid, so brain damage might not have left them much worse off, he said.
Rothschild said he wasn't sure why reptiles that lived in the water and dove for their food were unable to adapt to rapid aspersions. Similar traits are evidently are unable to adapt to sickle cell anemia.
But sickle cell anemia is a symptom of something that protects humans from malaria. The bends may have been a symptom of something that protected mosaasaurs from another environmental hazard, he said.
"I think this really scratches the surface and emphasizes how little we know about marine physiology." he said.
Martin and Rothschild studied more than 1,000 mosasaur vertebrae, mostly found near Hays. They found evidence of a bone disease that, as far as they know, could only be caused by radiation, metallic poisoning or the bends.
No evidence existed of poisoning or radiation, Martin said. They found the disease in every member of two kinds of mosaurs.
"It's a surprising thing to find," he said. "People have generally thought that diving marine reptiles wouldn't get the bends."
The study has caused a little stir among scientists after its publication. Martin said. Its conclusions run against conventional wisdom.
"I thought it was extremely unlikely that a diving reptile that is carrying air in it could get enough nitrogen to get the bends," he said.
OPEN HOUSE
Saturday, April 25, 1-5 p.m.
NOW is the time to reserve your COMPLETELY FURNISHED studio, 1,2,3, or 4 Bdrm. apartment for Next Semester!
COTTAGE CENTER
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas
- Studios, 1, 2, & 3 bdrm. apts.
- Adjacent to KU
- Completely furnished
- Laundry facilities
- Rentals from $280/mo.
- Energy efficient
CAMPUS PLACE APARTMENTS
749-2415
Sleep those extra
Sleep those extra few minutes—enjoy the luxury of Living adjacent to Campus!
1145 Louisianna
- 2-4 bdrm. apts.
- On Campus
- Decks
- Energy efficient
- Completely furnished
Summit House
- Rentals from $519/mo.
- Completely furnished 1 bdm., & 1
OREAD TOWNHOUSES
841-1429
- 916/919 Indiana - 922 Tennessee
1105 Louisiana
91019 Indiana 922 Kentucky
*1125 Tennessee 826 Kentucky
- 1345 Vermont - 1332 Vermont
- 1316 Tennessee - 1311 Tennessee
bdrm. w/ loft
- Kentucky Place (13th & Ky)
- 1700 Kentuckv
- 1317 Kentucky
- 9th & Emery
1318 Tennessee
1217 Kentucky
- Rentals from $290/mo.
- 1224 Ohio
- 1125 Tennessee * 826 Kentucky
* 1125 Tennessee * 826 Kentucky
326 Kentucky
* 1332 Vermont
- 1217 Kentucky
841-1429 • 749-2415
Rentals from $320/mo!
Berkshire Hathaway Home Services
Hanover Place
- Completely furnished Studios, 1 bdrm & 2 bdmm Apartments
Located Between 14th & 15th on
- Short walk to KU and Downtown
- Water paid
Located Between 14th & 15th on the West Side of Massachusetts Street 841-1212
dprm & 2 bdmr Apartments
- Laundry facilities
- Rentals from $280/mo.
- Luxury townhomes also available
Call or Stop by Today to Reserve your home for Next Semester
Coldwater Flats
413 W.14th Street
841-5255
- Laundry facilities
- Rentals from $300/mo.
- Completely furnished 1 br. &
749-2415
SUNDSANCE
NOW LEASING
- Rentals from $240/mo.
- Completely furnished Studios, 1
- Completely furnished G
bdrm and 1 bdrm w/loft
- Water paid
- Laundry facilities Conveniently Located at 7th & Florida Just West of the Sanctuary
- On KU Bus Line
- Laundry facilities
- Water paid
841-1212
HIGHLANDS
13th & Ohio
- Just 2 Short Blocks from the Student Union Library, at 0 Full Path; 3 Separate Levels.
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841-1212
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday
Details, page 2
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
April 27, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 141
(USPS 650-640)
All escape injury in fraternity house fire
Building is badly damaged
Firemen extinguish fire in a building.
Bv IOHN BUZBEE
Staff writer
About 35 Lawrence firefighters battled a blaze yesterday that extensively damaged the second floor of the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity house.
The house's occupants escaped uninjured. "That's the main thing," said fraternity president Ken Jones, Leawood junior. "We're grateful for that."
■ See related story p. 8.
Amy Hboad/KANSAH
Lawrence fire chief Jim McSwan said that the first fire engine arrived at the house, 1645 Tennessee St., at 1:18 p.m., two minutes after firefighters received the alarm. Fraternity members fought the fire themselves for 10 minutes before calling the department, he said.
But Pete Owens, Omaha, Neb., junior, said that fraternity members stopped the blaze with a fire extinguisher but that it flared up again during the time it took the fire department to respond to a 911 emergency call.
"It would have been under control if the fire department had been there," he said.
Sigma Phi Epsilon housemother Pat Dahl said she placed the emergency call after a house resident alerted her.
"It seemed like a hell of a long time (before the fire department responded), but that's because I was shaken up." she said.
Dahl's 911 call was taken by the Lawrence police. Lawrence police officer Pkryor said that it took a few minutes to take down the infron-
See FIRE, p. 8, col. 4
Students march in Washington to protest apartheid, contra aid
Staff writer
By PAUL SCHRAG
Thirty-five KU students voiced their opposition to U.S. foreign policy Saturday as part of a march in Washington that drew about 150,000 demonstrators.
"It it was something worth being a part of," said Kevin Pyle, Palatine, Ill., senior, after he returned to Lawrence last night. "It seemed like everybody there was bonded by a common purpose."
The protesters marched in rain and drizzle from the grassy Ellipse behind the White House to the Capitol, carrying banners and chanting slogans opposing apartheid in South Africa and U.S. aid to the contras in Central America.
The KU participants felt a similar unity, student participants said.
"I could sense a niguff of the people on the bus," said Peter Hynes, Barrington, Ill., senior. "No one seemed bothered by the
See related photos p. 5.
24-hour drive."
Chandra Patel, Wichita senior and president of the April 25th March Committee, described the event as exciting, intense and dramatic. The committee raised money so the KU group could travel to Washington by bus.
"I think it sent a really direct message to the administration about the moral bankruptcy of their policies and that they don't represent the views of the American people." he said.
Hynes said that the protest was worthwhile but that he wasn't sure how much effect it would have.
"Ronnie's pretty strong-headed in his views," he said. "I don't know how well it will get through to him."
President Reagan, the object of the protests, was 60 miles north of the city in his mountain retreat at Camp David, Md.
The Rev. Jesse Jackson and actor Ed Asner were among those who spoke to the crowd at the Capitol. Singer Jackson Browne presented a check for $2,000 to the African National Congress from a group he called Musicians United Against Aparteid. The ANC is the main rebel group fighting to overthrow South Africa's white minority government.
The Associated Press supplied some information for this story.
Hynes said the demonstration was well-organized and peaceful. It was divided into several sections, and the KU group marched with students from across the country.
The march began at noon Saturday, but the student section was toward the back of the line and didn't begin marching until 2:30 p.m. Hynes said the student section was more creative and direct in its chants.
Engineers play games to help charity
By TIM HAMILTON
Staff writer
Friday afternoon was one long recess for more than 200 engineering students and faculty who played games for three hours in front of Learned Hall.
The field day marked the end of two weeks of competition among the departments in the School of Engineering's second annual Engineering Olympics.
The electrical and computer engineers beat the civil engineers this year by a comfortable margin to repeat as champions.
The competition was sponsored by the KU chapter of the national engineering honors society, Tau Beta Phi, to raise money for Special Olympics
Special Olympics is a program designed to provide an opportunity for the handicapped to participate in sports.
Brian Falconer, University City, Mo., senior and coordinator of the event, said that about $600 was raised through T-shirt sales and an event in which teams bid for the right to wear their favorite color.
Falconer said. "It was really competitive this year."
Donna Mader, Garnett junior, said,
"We really talked it up this year.
Last year was the first year, and
we're trying to make it an annual
event."
This year's olympics were expanded to include more than 20 events.
"I hope the event will continue."
Volleyball, softball and basketball competitions took place between April 13 and Thursday
Friday's activities included traditional events, such as a pie-eating contest, gunny sack race, three-legged race and tug of war.
However, the competition's most popular events were a few events special to the Engineering Olympics: competition and nerd look-alike contest.
The egg-drop competition requires teams to design and construct a container that will keep an egg from falling into water. The egg is dropped, from the top of Learned.
Paul Racette, Wichita senior, won the egg-drop contest for electrical and computer engineers with his design, which consisted mainly of a plastic garbage bag. Racette said the
design took him about two hours.
Other designs varied from a plastic jar filled with popcorn to a complex design constructed of toothpicks.
One entry in the egg drop could have won the glider contest. When dropped off the roof, the entry floated on a slight gust of wind and hit a student's car about 45 feet away
Gary Guinn, Lawrence senior and winner of the glider contest, said he constructed his glider only minutes before the event out of a poster advertising the olympics.
Guinn, a civil engineering student,
said everyone enjoyed a break from
the books during the hectic end of the
semester.
"Going out and playing in the sun was a nice break." he said.
Ron Ostendorf, Kansas City, Kan. senior, said he pitched last year for the electrical and computer engineers' softball team but this year decided to help organize the event instead.
"I was a behind-the-scenes man," said Ostendorf, who organized an event in which teams guessed the number of transistors in a jar. "It's always competitive, but people do let their hair down."
KU tries to balance enrollment against budget
By CHRISTOPHER HINES
Staff writer
The University of Kansas was hit with a double whammy this year, as one KU administrator put it.
Keith Nitcher, KU director of business affairs, was referring to KU's dramatic increase in enrollment and a statewide 3.8 percent budget cut ordered by Gov. Mike Hayden, which cost KU $2.1 million in fiscal year 1987.
In addition, KU has been under pressure to raise faculty salaries to the level of its peer institutions. Board of Regents university faculty now have salaries 8 percent lower than faculty at the universities of Colorado, Iowa, North Carolina, Oklahoma and Oregon.
KU has had to make reductions in all areas of its budget and at the same time provide services for the 1,100 additional students who enrolled this year.
"Finding new, well-qualified professors is getting harder all the time," said Thomas Armstong, professor of astronomy and physics. "It's a very competitive job market
The two problems have raised questions among state lawmakers, Regents officials and KU administrators and faculty about ways to finance KU in the future to maintain high-quality education.
out there. The salaries we have to offer don't do much for us in attracting good faculty."
Stanley Koplik, Regents executive director, said, "It's clear that the former strategies aren't working. Maybe it is time to try a new approach."
State legislators and Regents officials have proposed several ways to help state universities find alternate financing.
"They did bring added focus to the problems facing the University of Kansas," said Chancellor Gene A. Budig. "We were able to underscore the problems."
The Kansas economy
The state has seen the amount of money it collects decline in recent years as the Kansas economy has not been able to sustain economic growth. Kansas personal income in
1985 and 1986 grew 3.8 percent, but nationwide, personal income grew by 5.3 percent.
"We have to be very conservative in our spending," said State Rep. Bill Bunten, R-Topeka, chairman of the House Appropriations Committee.
"The majority of our budget goes to financing education, but by holding the state in a sound financial situation, we're doong all Kansans a favor."
Darwin Daicoff, KU professor of economics, is one of three economists on a state committee that makes annual revenue projections for Kansas. He said the Kansas economy was hit hard by the decline of farm prices and the collapse of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, which brought down the price of Kansas oil and natural gas.
"What they do in Topeka is one thing, what happens in Washington and internationally is even more important," he said. "After all, we don't have a wall around Kansas, it's part of a nation and a world."
Overall, university financing in Kansas is 14 percent lower than that
of its peer institutions.
The universities now receive money from the state's general fund, tuition, private endowments, and state and federal grants. KU receives less than 20 percent of its financing from tuition. Most of the rest comes from the state's general fund.
Operating budgets and faculty and classified salaries are paid from the state's general fund and tuition. Money for research and capital improvements comes from the state and from federal grants and private endowments.
Thus, anything that affects the state's economy eventually influences KU's budget. Diaoff said.
"The United States and Japan are holding trade talks this week in an effort to lift recently imposed American import tariffs," he said. "If this results in opening Japan's agricultural markets, Kansas would be a prime beneficiary."
"Much of EU's greatness is contributable to private sources," Budig said. "They have contributed more
But some money does come from
private sources.
Koplik said private individuals would continue to give money to KU only if the state also provided strong financial support.
than $165 million over the past 10 years. That represents more in private sources than any other Big Eight university."
And Ward Zimmerman, KU's budget director, said. "Private sources do contribute to the University's operating budget. But it's usually for a one-time deal. I wouldn't count on it to compensate for recurring expenses."
Proposed changes
See FINANCE, p. 6, col. 2
Meanwhile, some state legislators have been trying to create buffers for state universities so they might better weather Kansas' economic ups and downs.
"We just don't see the state's revenue increasing in coming years," said State Sen. Norma Daniels, D-Wichita. "We have to provide the universities ways they can raise their own funds."
INSIDE
KU
Drought buster
The Kansas Jayhawk baseball team broke a nine-game losing streak yesterday by defeating the Iowa Hawkeys 9-8 at Quigley Field. See story page 9.
Sporting past
The Kansas Sports Bar and Grill will reopen tonight in the Eldridge Hotel The Bar and Grill, which houses KU sports memorabilia, closed with the hotel for renovation last summer. See story page 12.
2
Monday, April 27, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Around the World
Marxist rivals reunite with Arafat, but peace not likely to come soon
ALGIERS, Algeria — The Palestinians’ "parliament in exile" ended a stormy session yesterday with factions of the Palestine Liberation Organization reunited under Yasser Arafat but with a Middle East peace settlement looking more remote than ever.
For the first time since they split four years ago, Arafat, chairman of the PLO, and his leading Marxist rivals, Nayef Hawmathe and George Habash, appeared hand-in-hand and smiling as the 18th National Council. The National Council came to a close amid prolonged applauses.
Arafat once again survived efforts by Syria's President Hafez Assad and Syrian-led radicals to oust him, but he paid a heavy
price, bowing to demands that he abandon his relationship with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak.
Apparently with strong backing from Syria and Algeria, Hawatmeh and Habash said Saturday that if Arafat took leadership of the PLO's new-found unity, he would have to accept a Palestine National Council order to abandon his relationship with Egypt.
The final agreement was endorsed early yesterday by all the PLO's rival factions and confirmed Arafat as chairman.
Arafat's right-hand man, deputy PLO commander Khalil Wazir, told reporters that Arafat thought Palestinian unity took priority over relations with Egypt.
1st anniversary of Chernobyl stirs protests
LONDON — From Japan to Sweden, where scientists first alerted the world of Chernobyl, demonstrators rallied yesterday on the first anniversary of the Soviet nuclear disaster that sent radiation drifting around the world.
The biggest protests were in Europe, where soaring radiation levels followed the April 26, 1986, accident, stirring feelings of panic and prompting authorities to disband amounts of suspect food and rulks.
Violence broke out at a Dutch rally, where 39 people were injured, but the demonstrations overall were peaceful.
In the Communist East, Czechoslovak police arrested five Westerners who protested in Prague, including a West German, a Swede and an Austrian who draped a huge banner across the facade of the National Museum, witnesses said.
In the United States, small demonstrations and memorials were held in Chicago and Vermont.
Thirty-one Soviets were killed and hundreds were injured in the fire and explosion at the Chernobyl reactor. About 135,000 people were evacuated from areas near the plant in the Ukraine.
Israelis commemorate Holocaust victims
TEL AVIV, Israel — At 8 a.m., sirens sounded throughout the Jewish state for two minutes yesterday, and Israelis interrupted all activity to remember the 6 million Jews killed by the Nazis in the Holocaust.
Holocaust Day, officially called Martyrs and Heroes Remembrance Day, marks the anniversary of the Warsaw ghetto uprising of 1943 when Jews armed with homemade weapons battled German tanks in the Polish capital.
The siren blast opened a day marked with somber ceremonies, sad songs and tears.
Officials noted a greater interest in the World War II Holocaust than in previous years, especially among young Israeliis. They attributed it to the Nazi war crimes trial of Ukrainian-born John Demanjuk, a retired Ohio autoworker.
In Jerusalem, a handful of followers of right-wing legislator Meir Kahane gathered at the residence of President Chaim Herzog to protest Herzog's recent trip to West Germany. The group burned a West Germanflag, but there were no reports of arrests or violence.
Across the Country
Former CIA director in critical condition
Casey, who underwent surgery for brain cancer in December, was admitted about 2 p.m. Saturday to the intensive care unit at Glen Cove Community Hospital.
GLEN COVE, N.Y. — Formen CIA Director William J. Casey was in critical condition yesterday at a suburban New York hospital where he was admitted the day before for treatment of pneumonia, a spokeswoman said.
Hospital spokeswoman Joan Bass said she could not comment on the nature of his treatment but said he was conscious when he was admitted.
Casey's admitting diagnosis was aspiration pneumonia, caused by fluid in the lungs, she said. All patients in the intensive care unit are listed in critical condition, she said.
Search continues for victims of collapse
BRIDGEPORT, Conn. — A small community of workers spent a four day yesterday looking for missing friends in the wreckage of a collapsed apartment building while officials and counselors tried to help the searchers cope with exhaustion, anger and despair.
Mayor Thomas Bucci's office listed the death toll at 15, with 11 bodies pulled from the rubble of the L'Ambiance Plaza and four others spotted and presumed dead. Thirteen other workers were still unaccounted for yesterday.
From Kansan wires.
Weather
From the KANSAN Weather Service
LAWRENCE FORECAST
SUN AND CLOUDY
Skies will be partly cloudy today with a high near 82 degrees and winds from the northeast at 5-15 mph. Tonight, the skies will remain partly cloudy with a low near 54 degrees. Tomorrow, temperatures will drop into the low 70s with partly cloudy skies.
the low %s with party close
EXTENDED FORECAST:
Wednesday mostly sunny 80°
Thursday sunny 82°
Friday chance for showers 83°
Friday chance for showers 83°
DES MOINES
77 / 50
OMAHA
78 / 49
LINCOLN
79 / 50
CONCORDA
80 / 51
TOPEKA
82 / 56
KANSAS CITY
83 / 53
COLUMBIA
84 / 55
ST. LOUIS
83 / 54
SALINA
81 / 54
COLD FRONT
WICHITA
90 / 58
CHANUTE
89 / 56
SPRINGFIELD
90 / 57
TULSA
94 / 63
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 27, 1987
3
Local Briefs Police answer calls to 2 fires at McCollum
KU police answered calls to two weekend fires at McCollum Hall, a residence hall official said yesterday.
Police received a call about 10 p.m. Saturday that smoke was coming from a student's room in the hall, LJ. Jeanne Longnear said. An unknown object ignited in a trash can, Longnear said, and then collapsed on to properties, which collapsed on a bed and ignited a mattress.
KU police and staff put out the fire. No one was injured, but the fire caused between $300 and $400 damage.
KU police received another call at 4 a.m. yesterday that smoke was coming from a trash chute. Although the sprinkler system had been triggered, police and residence hall staff did not find any fire.
At 4:40 a.m. KU police received another call. They found a fire in the trash compactor in the hall's trash room. The cause of the fire is unknown.
The Lawrence Fire Department responded and put out the fire, which caused an unknown amount of damage.
Residents were evacuated during the room fire but not during the fire in the trash compactor.
3 fires near campus reported yesterday
Lawrence firefighters may wander whether the weekend ever really comes around after a busy three days.
Yesterday afternoon, as 35 hot and exhausted firefighters — half of Lawrence's entire force — worked and sweated at a fire that extensively damaged the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity house, 1645 Tennessee St., two other fires near campus also needed attention.
An electrical problem reportedly caused smoke to build up in the basement of a house on Westwood Drive, just north of 15th Street at Engel Road.
A short time later, a fire started in a dumpster near the West Hills Apartments, 1012 Emery Road.
Both fires were put out with no injuries.
Major Dan Morrow, of the Lawrence Fire Department, said, "Everybody seems to be okay. All units are in service."
New campus lights will be turned on
Most of the newly installed lights on campus will be switched on tonight for the first time.
Campus and Area
Almost all of the 24 new lights along Jayhawk Boulevard and Naimsmith Drive will be turned on at dusk tonight, according to Don Montgomery, electrical manager for Huxtable and Associates, 815 E. 12th St. Company workers have worked since March 9 installing the 400-watt lights.
Philippines lecture to be given tonight
Ecumenical Christian Ministries is sponsoring a lecture titled "The Philippines: 14 Months after Marcos" at 7 tonight at the center, 1204 Oread Ave.
The lecture will be given by Dorothy Friesen, founder and coordinator of Synapses, a Chicago organization that links domestic and international issues of economic justice.
From staff and wire reports.
Plan would help KU meet peer averages
By BENJAMIN HALL
Staff writer
The University Senate Executive Committee heard a three-year proposal Friday that would bring the University of Kansas and the other Board of Regents schools close to the financing level of their peers.
Tom Rawson, KU's campus director of business affairs, presented a $12.4 million plan that would bring KU's total financing up to 95 percent of its peer average by fiscal year 1991. Its main goals would be to improve the quality of existing programs and to improve salaries.
About half of that amount would be used to bring faculty salaries to 100 percent of the peer average by 1991, Rawson said.
Rawson, who worked in the Regents office before coming to KU this year, said, "We have had evidence for at least eight years that each of the Regents schools was underfunded."
The first part of the plan — the universities' budget requests for fiscal year 1989 — will be submitted to the Regents in June.
The Regents approved the plan's goals earlier this month.
Rawson said Regents studies in 1976, 1978, 1980, 1983 and 1985 all indicated that Regents schools trailed their peers.
KU has consistently trailed its peers by 15 to 17 percent, he said. And the Regents now receive a smaller share of the state's general fund than in the 1970s.
"In the face of that, the Regents institutions have enrolled more students," he said. "This plan develops a three-year plan with a target that I think is both defendable and attainable."
Rawson said the plan would have more effect at KU than at other Regents schools because the other schools already are closer to peer averages.
In 1985, KU was financed at 85.6 percent of the peer average. Salaries were at 92.2 percent of the peer average, and KU's other operating expense budget was at 66.1 percent of the peer average.
KU's peer schools are the universities of Oklahoma, Colorado, Iowa, North Carolina and Oregon.
SenEx member Sharon Brehm professor of psychology, said the plan might inflate faculty expectations.
"I think there's a psychological factor that has to be considered," she said. "I think the worst thing would be to create a set of expectations
But SenEx member Sharon Bass, associate professor of journalism, said the state might not be receptive to paying more for higher education. "The public perception is that you're just asking for more and more money," she said.
which would then be dashed."
Brehm said, "There are very objective indicators of what's been going on in the University." Crowded classrooms and an increase in the number of classes taught by graduate students are examples of the problem, she said.
SenEx member Thomas Mulinazzi, professor of civil engineering, said he knew of two KU professors who were offering offers from Big 10 universities.
"They don't want to leave Lawrence. They're settled here. But when somebody offers you a 20 percent increase in salary, it's hard to say no," he said.
Rawson said, "This is not a printing press. We are not going to go out and print money."
In other discussion Friday, chairman-elect Evelyn Swertz, professor of curriculum and instruction, said that next year's SenEx would make student advising changes a top priority.
Student representative Gordon Woods said, "We need to decide, are faculty responsible for advising, or are they not?"
Del Shankel, acting executive vice chancellor, said, "I think in the 28 years that I've been advised, I've seen six different advising systems, each of which was supposed to solve the problem.
Studying program planned Center to offer hints to prevent finals anxiety
By PEGGY O'BRIEN Staff writer
Don't freak out at the thought of next week. Finals aren't that bad.
Well, maybe they are. But the Wall 121 Strong Hall, says it can help.
The center offers the "Preparing For Finals" program two or three times a semester, but attendance usually is better in the fall because there are more people who have never taken college finals, Martin said.
Along with starting to study ahead of time, Martin recommends that students try brief, frequent study sessions to make finals less painful.
The study skills workshop is not remedial, she said. It is designed to help the average, well-prepared college student do better. She encourages students who have attended the program to tell her if and how it worked. If they who has attended previous workshops to refine their study skills.
The center is sponsoring a study skills workshop, "Preparing For Finals," from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. today in 300 Strong Hall. The workshop will cover time management, motivation and concentration, memory, review techniques and confidence boosters.
Martin also advises students to study the way they will be tested, developing possible test questions and seeing how they do.
Tonight's program, as well as others throughout the year, is designed to help students develop skills that will keep them in school.
Martin said she tried to get students to use confidence boosters to keep finals anxiety at bay. Confidence boosters include being well-prepared, aware of time, free from distractions and relaxed.
"It's not how long you study but how you study." Martin said.
"Our main goal is practicality," said Sara Martin, assistant director of the center, who will conduct tonight's free program.
The workshop will include techniques such as planning and scheduling for efficiency, mnemonic devices for help with memorization, test plans and health maintenance.
Now may only curse the lost mastery Those times taken me from you
Musical hands
Peggy Shortridge, Lawrence graduate teaching assistant; Lisa Stover, Perkinsville, Vt., graduate student; Lois Orth-Lopes, Lawrence graduate student; and Donna Clausen, Valley, Neb., graduate student, perform a
song in sign language. The four performed at "An Evening of Song, Sign, and Mime" Friday night. Students from a conversational sign language class performed songs, skits and poetry at the variety show.
KU officials plan for salary increases
Rv ROGFR CORFY
Staff writer
Administrators at the University of Kansas are in the process of adapting a set of salary increases into next year's operating budget. The increases were recommended last week by a state legislative committee.
The state House and Senate conference committee recommended a salary increase of 3 percent for faculty and 2 percent for classified employees, including civil service and office workers. The classified employees' raise would be in addition to regular annual salary increases. The committee also recommended a 2.5 percent salary and wage increase for students employed by state universities. The increases would go into effect Jan. 1, 1988, at all state universities.
But fiscal year 1988 begins July 1. Because the proposed salary increases would not begin until Jan. 1, they are considered only a six-month increase.
The proposed increases have not been approved by the full House and Senate, but both houses are expected to consider them May 1.
In the past, conference committee recommendations usually have been accepted, said Keith Nitcher. KU's director of business affairs. As a
result, KU officials are discussing how to incorporate the proposed salary increases into the University's fiscal 1988 budget.
The difficulty is that the salary increases begin in midyear.
"Simply, how are you going to represent department salaries?" Nitcher asked. "Do you make a salary July and then another for January?"
He said that a faculty member who made $2,000 a month from July through December would earn $2,060 and 1, because of the 3 percent increase.
"We also have to calculate social security and workers" compensation.
tion," Nitcher said. "There may also be faculty or staff positions in the budget that are vacant now, but will be filled."
Ward B. Zimmerman, director of the budget office, said the midyear salary increase would create additional work for his office, the personnel office, the payroll office and academic departments.
"We're talking about literally thousands of calculations," Zimmerman said.
New officers to devote summer to Senate
"My job is to think through the budget changes and come up with a working proposal," he said. "The other members of the budget committee will do the same."
Staff writer
Bv LISA A. MALONEY
This summer, while most students will be working on their tans or at summer jobs, some members of the Student Senate will be staking out legislators in Topeka and researching new programs.
"There's work to be done," Jason Krakow, the student body president, said last week "MOA."
"It's going to be business as usual," said Stephanie Quincy, the new student body vice president.
If any students wander into the Senate office between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. this summer, they probably will find more than Krakow and Quincy. At least one-third of the 52 senators also will work on Senate business this summer, Quincy said.
Quincy said she and Krakow would spend much of their summer in Topeka monitoring legislative interim committees, such as one that examines the governance of Kansas higher education.
Krakow said, "We've got a lot of excited people who want to get things done this summer.
that we've got people who are hard workers. We have people that started in the committee system and worked their way up."
Krakow said they also would continue to work with the Lawrence City Commission on a proposal to allow minors into taverns after 8 p.m. All three newly elected city commissioners have voiced support for such a proposal, he said.
"I think the nicest part of our administration is
Krakow said he was confident that the proposal would be accepted because many tavern owners thought the plan would help increase business after the drinking age was raised to 21 this summer.
"They want to maintain a stock in the entertainment business, and they want to entertain the 18-year-olds as well." Krakow said.
communication between the Senate and the University of Kansas, and to improve the Senate committee structure.
Quincy said she also would work to strengthen
Both Krakow and Quincy said they would like to see more student involvement in the Senate this
Krakow said, "The students aren't familiar enough with what we're doing."
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He said the percentage of students who voted in student government elections at universities across the country ranged from 5 percent to 20 percent. In the KU Senate elections earlier this month, about 14.5 percent of the student body voted.
3
He said he hoped to generate more student interest by establishing Senate office hours on Wescoe Beach and conducting town meetings. By researching most of their platform proposals this summer, Krakow said he and Quincy hoped to avoid some of the infighting and squabbling that he marked this semester's Senate.
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Monday, April 27, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Opinions
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Some jumpy over bypass
Opponents of the proposed 14.3-mile bypass in Lawrence need to reorganize their fight if they hope to salvage anything from their battle.
It is obvious that Lawrence is going to get a bypass in some form that will travel around the city's south borders, from Kansas Highway 10 on the city's east side to a new interchange on Interstate 70 on the city's west side. Congress' override of President Reagan's veto of the $88 billion highway bill made of that.
But instead of accepting that fact, environmentalists continue to look for ways to defeat the measure. They even have gone so far as to suggest that a referendum, similar to the one on the proposed mall, be put on the ballot.
Instead of being adamantly against the bypass, they should be thinking of ways to make the best of the situation.
Originally, the opponents focused their complaints almost exclusively on the
roadway's effects on the Baker Wetlands, which is the home of the endangered Northern Crawfish frog. All that came from those efforts was a little fame in the November election for a frog named Agnes T. The efforts did little to influence the outcome of the highway bill.
Now, opponents have enlarged the scope of their complaints to include Elkin's Meadow, a pasture northwest of Lawrence that would be bisected by the road. Environmentalists argue that the road would destroy large fields of rare Mead's milkwood and prairie whitefringed orchid.
It is admirable what environmentalists are fighting for, but instead of working against the proponents of the bypass, the two groups should be working together.
A bypass will benefit Lawrence, but the two groups need to work a plan so that the benefit is spread among as many people as possible.
Poor choice to cut
The University of Kansas better watch out, or it could be forced to watch some promising graduate students who have shown an interest in KU turn to other universities.
The University recently decided to eliminate its terminal master's fellowship program, which is one of the graduate fellowship programs.
Graduate students in master's programs that don't offer a doctoral degree are eligible for the $1,100 fellowship. Without the money, the professional schoolsa recruiting power would be strained severely, and the schools could find it difficult to attract the best students for their programs. Even the number of graduate students who want to attend KU may decline after they discover that money isn't available
For many graduate students, money may decide
which school they attend. The programs will suffer if KU loses quality students to other schools.
Although the terminal master's program benefitted the least number of students of all the University's scholarship programs, the program should not have been cut. Some of the professional schools already had admitted students into the school and nominated them for a fellowship.
The University of Kansas should be concerned about attracting the best students. Many students are attracted by money, especially graduate students who probably will support themselves.
Worthwhile programs should not be cut. KU needs to continue to recruit quality students who will enhance the University's programs.
Preserve the wildlife
It's going to be the battle between environmentalist groups and those who want to see continued economic independence and growth in the United States.
Although the idea of opening up this area has angered some environmentalists, Hodel said the wildlife there could coexist with the development.
The battle originated with a proposal made recently by the secretary of the interior, Donald P. Hodel. The proposal would open up 1.5 million acres of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska to oil and gas development. Hodel said the move could "significantly reduce U.S. dependence on foreign supplies."
The site was chosen because
a Department of Interior study showed that there was a 95 percent chance of getting 600 million barrels of oil and a 5 percent chance of getting 9.2 billion barrels.
The benefits certainly sound tempting, but Congress should think twice before enacting this proposal. We already have other sources of oil without this area. And, if worst came to worst, the United States could find alternative sources for oil.
The wildlife, however, are not in the same situation. The number of areas left for wildlife is decreasing, and the animals cannot live in just any climate. Members of Congress should bear this in mind when discussing the bill.
News staff
News staff
Frank Hansel Editor
Jennifer Benjamin Managing editor
Jul Warren News editor
Brian Kaberline Editorial editor
Sandra Engelland Campus editor
Mark Siebert Sports editor
Diane Daultmeier Photo editor
Bill Skeet Graphics editor
Tom Eblen General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Lisa Weems Business manager
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Kate Schenk Campus sales manager
Duncan Calhoun Marketing manager
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Jennifer Lumianski Production manager
David Nixon National sales manager
Jeanne Hines Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words and should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
Guest shots should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The
The Kansan reserves the right reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Staffer-Flint Hall
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, Kansas 181 Stauffer Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and on Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66045. Subscriptions by mail are $40 per year in Douglas County county. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student activity fee.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
U.S. official suffers from 'Red' fever
Elliott Abrams, assistant U.S. secretary of state for inter-American affairs, who spoke here Wednesday, is like a helpless, desperate alcoholic or drug addict who lies, steals and harms people for a fix ___
Christian Colbert
Columnist
Although his fix can't be swallowed, injected or snorted, it nevertheless distorts reality. His fix, or rather fixation, involves blaming communism for all of the evil in the world.
His inordinate fear of communism and his need to blame it for everything blind him of the consequences of our own military policies in Central America.
His scare tactics are an expedition way to garner support for the administration's military foreign policy. It's an old trick. Fabricate a threat, then use your own fabrication as a pretext for supporting dictators, starting wars and continuing the arms war.
Abrams is a sick man carrying out a sick policy. His sickness blinds him to the real problems in Central America, which are the lack of decent food, water, education and health care — not communism.
When he hears of atrocities committed against innocent children in Nicaragua by the contras, he matter of factly says the communists are far worse. Then, sadly, he praises the contras' effort by comparing them to our founding fathers.
If Nicaragua is such a grave threat to the United States, as Abrams says, then why do we rely on a bunch of small-time mercenaries to contain the Nicaraguans? If there actually was a Soviet threat, the Marines would have been sent long ago.
The people of Central America aren't concerned with political ideology. They want a better way of life. Without providing this first, talk of democracy and freedom is absurd.
What's more absurd, though, is the way Abrams preaches the gospel of democracy while working through secret and undemocratic foreign policy apparatus. How does he expect to
The answer is simple: Neither Elliott Abrams or the Reagan administration gives a damn about democracy in Central America; they don't even give a damn about democracy here! They lie about, exaggerate and distort the existence of a communist threat in Central America so they can trick anyone gullible enough to believe them into supporting their effort to crush any possibility of a successful Nicaraguan government.
promote democracy in Central America?
cy.
Fortunately, most U.S. citizens aren't that gullible. The majority of us don't believe the administration is a Soviet threat in Central America.
Unfortunately, no one in the administration is listening. The majority of people oppose sending tax dollars to former Somoza officials who rape and kill innocent people in Nicaragua, yet the administration responds by sending sick people like Abrams to denounce the well-informed people protesting our poli-
The real threat to democracy, here and in Central America, are the sick, fanatical people like Eliot Abrams and Daniel Kahneman who torture in the guise of democracy.
We must stop the lying, the killing,
the torture. We must stop sending
guns to Central America. Guns can's
feed the hungry children. Guns can's
make peace. But guns can kill the
hope for a better future.
I'm not proud of what my country is doing in Central America. I feel disgraced that people like Abrams are deciding the fate of the region. I am proud, however, of the courageous people who protested last Wednesday, and who will continue to oppose the Reagan administration's sick foreign policy.
Mailbox
Applaud the law
Monday's editorial referring to laws acknowledging the right of persons to defend themselves in their homes shows little editorial knowledge of these laws or the premise involved in formulating them. It also shows poor knowledge of films, as the movie thug surrendered to "Dirty Harry" after the utterance of "Make my day" and was not shot.
These laws serve to affirm citizens' right to use deadly force to defend themselves and their homes against same. Generically, they set forth definite guidelines for the use of such force. For example, a person may not pursue a fleeing intruder and kill him; nor may a person rig up a set gun or other remotely activated device for defense, as there is no bodily threat if they are not present. These laws are passed in response to assault suits filed, incredulously enough, by enterprising criminals wounded by their intended victim; while the victim is generally exonerated, innocent people lose much time and defense money to such legal crap. While defense against assault is generally delegated to police, a 1977 Supreme Court decision made it clear that police were not able to be omnipresent and that the responsibility for self defense ultimately rests with the individual.
Rather than authorizing citizens to be vigilantes, the laws serve only to formally recognize the individual's right to self defense. Rather than condemning them, you ought to applaud them, and pray you never need them!
George R. Pisani director of laboratories, biological sciences
Clarify remarks
I know of a KU faculty member who is a Ph.D., is widely published in the subject that he teaches and is an excellent teacher. The standard contract which he signed three years ago soon will expire and, per this contract, he will leave his $15,900-a-year job. He will be replaced by another Ph.D. for three other years and will not be eligible to be hired again by the University.
His salary, while it may be surprisingly low, is the standard one of experienced graduates who teach four classes each fall and three each spring semester at KU. The reason these teachers are replaced every three years is that new and inexperienced teachers command less money than experienced ones.
This all makes good financial sense for the University and, as it was explained to me by this teacher, education is expensive and the University hierarchy have decided that the faculty should be the ones to tighten their financial belts for the sake of the students' needs.
However, in the April 21 Kansan,
James Carothers, associate dean
of the College of Liberal Arts &
Sciences, is quoted as saying,
"Students are adjusting to the fact
that they have to be flexible" with
regard to class schedules. "Things
are going to be tight."
These statements seem to portray a disturbing arrogance and insensitivity to the students of this University. I implore Carothers to clarify himself since I do not believe that he intended his remarks to be inflammatory.
The University of Kansas has developed a reputation for underpaying its faculty. A reputation for dismissing students' needs would not complement KU's present one. In financial straits such as those through which the University presently is suffering, it is important that animosity not develop among students, faculty and University officials.
I am certain that KU gives its students top priority. I am also certain that the University respects its faculty. During times such as these, anger easily is fomented by misunderstandings. I hope that Carothers' remarks will not be given the chance to be misunderstood.
Appalled by litter
Patrick Kirby
Leawood freshman
Leaving campus Friday afternoon, I was appalled by the trash accumulated in front of Wesoo Beach, knowing the KU Relays would draw people up on campus. What an impression these visitors must have received of the KU
student body
Joanne Stoehr
Lawrence junior
One cannot help but notice the young student body and large greek population that gathers daily in front of Wescoe. Since serving humanity seems to be a function for which greks credit themselves, perhaps they could extend their activities to include keeping Wescoe clean. Their actions might then rub on on other groups and the whole student body would benefit.
More Bible quotes
Much has been said lately about homosexuality and how it relates to the Bible. Many people with good intentions have pointed out quotes from the Bible condemning homosexuality. Others with similarly good motivations have alluded to other passages emphasizing how Christ came "to seek and save the lost." (Luke 19:9)
As Joe Vusil pointed out,
"homosexual offenders . . . will not inherit the kingdom of God."
(1Cor 6:10) However, as Paul Ahlensi states, the same passage also includes sexually immoral persons, idolaters, prostitutes, thieves, greedy persons, drunkards, slandersers and swindlers.
I would like us to continue reading the next bit: "And that is what some of you were. But you were washed, you were sanctified, you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and by the Spirit of our God." (v11) So why are we harping on this one problem?
The point is that all have fallen short of God's standard and we are all in the same boat. I cannot high-mindedly condemn the next guy by being "holler than thou" because I, too, have fallen short of God's standard.
This is why, as Steven Predmore pointed out, we are told not to judge others (Mt 7:1). (Judging has two usages: one in the sense of condemnation and the other in the sense of evaluation; this usage is the former.) This is why all of us need to repent, as John the Baptist said some 2,000 years ago. This is why all of us need to make Christ our Lord. Then "there is neither Jew nor Gentile, nor free, male nor female, for you are all
one in Christ Jesus. If you belong to Christ, you are Abraham's seed, and heirs according to the promise." (Gal 3:28-29)
lan Chai Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, senior
Ian Cha
Need to listen
There I was, sitting next to an irate group of protesters. Why me? What did I do to deserve this? Each outcry from one of them brought all eyes of the audience toward me. I was "one of them."
I understand where these protesters of U.S. contra aid are coming from. I realize many civilians in countries such as Honduras and Nicaragua are being killed needlessly in the name of democracy. And that the United States plays a big part in the civil war within Nicaragua because of U.S. fear of the sread of communism.
But Elliott Abrams does have a point. Without U.S. support, the contras are powerless. The Sandinista party is a military regime whose power lies in military superiority in Central America. The Sandinistas have little control over countries as El Salvador and Honduras are afraid of Daniel Ortega's quest for power reaching outside of Nicaragua's borders.
The Contadora group seeks diplomatic settlement, for a "promise" from the Sandistas to contain power within Nicaraguan borders. Promises in international politics are just empty words, and one has to realize that the power of arms supersedes the power of dialogue.
The United States has reached a point that any decision is the wrong decision, and such occurrences as the recent resignation of contra leader Edgar Chamorro has not helped the United States' reputation in the international arena.
As I watched the protesters next to me chant, "Get out of Central America," I feel an emotional surge to join in. They are the conscience of America. But, the simplicity of their solution fails to touch the complexity of the situation. Mayber it is better to listen sometimes before we speak — then, maybe, we will be heard.
katz
Ann Bakkalapulo Tampa, Fla., senior
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 27, 1987
5
Celebrities join students to protest Reagan policies
KANSAS AGAINST CONTRADI
WASHINGTON — Above: Marie Kelly, left, Tulisa sophomore, and John Chappell, Overland Park senior, march down Pennsylvania Avenue, which passes in front of the White House. The two KU students participated in Saturday's National Mobilization for Peace and Justice in Central America and Southern Africa. Above right: Eleanor Smeal, president of the National Organization for Women; the Rev. Jesse Jackson, president of the National Rainbow Coalition; and Ed Asner, actor, lead the march down Pennsylvania Avenue. All three spoke Saturday during a rally on the west steps of the U.S. Capitol. Right: A peace rally participant wearing a gas mask expresses his opinion about President Reagan.
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Photos by Forrest MacDonald, Dale Fulkerson and Lisa Jones
A KU student's 1985 motorcycle valued at $2,700, was taken between 9:30 p.m. Thursday and 5 a.m. Friday from the 1300 block of Kentucky Street. Lawrence police said.
On the Record
block of Hanover Place, Lawrence police said.
A car stereo valued at $500 and sunglasses valued at $10 were taken between 5 p.m. Thursday and 8 a.m. Saturday from a KU student's locked car parked in the 1400 block of Kentucky Street, Lawrence police said.
An amplifier, stereo receiver,
tape deck, equalizer and speaker,
valued at $1,350, were taken between
9:30 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. Friday from
a KU student's apartment in the 200
A gold ring with a one-carat
diamond, valued at $1,900, was taken between April 18 and Tuesday from a KU student's residence in the 100 block of Pinecree Drive, Lawrence police said.
A person or persons kicked open the front door of a KU student's apartment in the 800 block of Michigan Street between 7:30 p.m. Thursday and 1 a.m. Friday.
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"I just ran 21 miles in 2 hours"
That's about how many miles of newsprint Otto Benson runs through the presses every morning in the process of printing the University Daily Kansan. The press starts running at 7 a.m. But by then the Kansan press operators have been at work for over an hour webbing and plating the press and getting ready to produce some 15,000 newspapers.
Once the presses have started rolling, their job has just begun. For two hours they continuously monitor quality, fine
SUNDAY SUNDAY
tuning the settings on the press so that the reproduction of type and art in your Kansan is clean, crisp and clear. When things are running smoothly, they have time to read the Kansan during the pressrun. When they aren't, they take it home.
Otto's job may seem like a lot of ink, paper and black hands to you, but it's a trade to him. He cares about his trade. He cares about the Kansan. And most of all, he cares about doing a good job for you.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Nobody else speaks your language.
6
Monday, April 27, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
1987 Universal Press Syndica
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NARRATIVE ARTIST
Daniels sponsored a bill that would allow the Regents to sell bonds for educational materials, such as computer hardware and software, books and laboratory equipment. A tuition increase at each university would repay the bonds, and the money collected would go to supplement the state's contribution for educational materials.
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KU continues the battle of the budget
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Other legislators have proposed changing state universities' tradition of open admissions. Another proposal would allow each institution to set differing rates of tuition to reduce the state's contribution to higher education.
"We just can't afford to have kids in college who aren't prepared and who don't belong there," said State Rep. Robert Vancrum, R-Overland Park. "The Kansas economy is just not that strong."
"Despite the state's declining economy, we have to make sure our students have the latest and best materials available if they're going to have a competitive edge in the job market." Daniels said.
"Roy, I'm glad this is over," State Sen. Gus Bogina, R-Lenesa, said two weeks ago, after four days of intense negotiations with House leaders over the state's fiscal 1988 budget.
ENTERTEL
The full Senate debates and approves the bill and then sends it to a joint conference committee, where they send their leaders work out their differences.
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approved there and then signed into law by Hayden.
The conference committee recommendations will go to the full Senate and House when legislators return from recess Wednesday. The recommendations probably will be
"It is important, and it should not be forgotten that students can play a very important role in helping the university achieve its goals," he said.
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Budig said student support for the 1987 fee release had helped KU receive 75 percent of the Regents recommended $1.2 million.
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Budig said that he was pleased with the KU budget recommendations made by a joint conference in 2014. That was optimistic about the future.
Whv is KU important?
But the House put off until next year decisions on open admissions and differing tuition increases.
"I believe the people of this state have a strong commitment to higher education, and it is reflected at the state Legislature," he said. "The city's policy is proof that parents support KU and want to send their children here."
The governor reviews the Regents recommendations and makes his own budget proposals for KU. A state House Appropriations Committee then has hearings on the proposals and creates a spending bill to be sent to the House floor, where it is debated and approved.
Part of KU's problem is convincing state legislators that a healthier University will, in turn, boost Kansas' economic future.
Budig said closing admissions would be harmful and was not the solution to the universities' financing problems.
It starts each year when KU proposes its budget to the Regents. The Regents study the proposals and then recommend their own version of KU's budget to the state Legislature.
After the bill is approved by the House, it is sent to the Senate Ways and Means Committee for more hearings and recommendations.
"It's important that we are in a position to make progress when things get better," Kopilik said. "We need to be more aggressive about needs of Kansas when we need to."
For the University to receive state money for its budget, it must wait for and watch the slow democratic process in Topeka.
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"Despite national trends, Kansas has had a record year in research," Budig said. "Research spending is up 10 percent at both campuses."
The other plan would change the present system of university financing, allowing Regents institutions to keep more of the money they collect from student fees. The universities would be better able to coordinate their financing over a three-year period instead of the present annual process.
"The purpose of this plan is to make Kansas institutions more competitive with other state universities," Koplik said. "If we don't do anything considering what has happened in the last few years, the situation is only going to get worse."
"The Regents and the universities are prepared to take a bigger load," Budig said. "What we are proposing is a well-balanced relationship with the state Legislature."
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The Regents have also searched for alternatives, proposing two ways that universities could take a firmer grip on their financing. The crux of both plans is to allow the universities to raise their tuitions and keep more of it.
One plan would raise student tuition, so that over a three-year period, university faculty in Kansas would receive salaries equivalent to faculty salaries at peer institutions.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 27, 1987
7
KU & LAWRENCE CAMPUS AREA ACTIVITIES
Monday
27
9 a.m. — "Introduction to Turbo Prolog," a microcomputer workshop at 204 Computer Center, Call 864-4291 for information
9:30 a.m. — “Methods in Demography” and “Social Organization and Reproduction in Sub-Saharan Africa,” a two-part graduate student anthropology seminar in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union,Same time tomorrow in the Centennial Room at the Kansas Union.
5:30 p.m. — KU Kempo and Karate Club meeting at 130 Robinson Center. Club meets Wednesday at same time.
6 p.m. — Hallmark Lecture by Rita Marshall, book designer, in the Spencer Museum of Art auditorium.
7 p.m. — "Preparing for Finals," a study skills workshop at 300 Strong Hall.
8 p.m. — Society for Fantasy and Science Fiction meeting in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union.
8 p.m. — Faculty recital with the Salmagundi Ensemble in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
7 p.m. — Amnesty International meeting in the East Gallery of the Kansas Union.
Tuesday
28
1:30 p.m. — Faculty and staff recognition ceremony in the Kansas Union ballroom.
3 p.m. — Baseball. KU vs. Friends University at Quigley Field.
3 p.m. — "Marketing Yourself:
Resume and Interviewing," a Women's Resource Center workshop in the Introductory Room at the Kansas Union.
3:30 p.m. — Study abroad informational meeting for scholarships and proposal writing in the Pine Room at the Kansas Union.
4 p.m. — "Proust et le Texte Interminale," a French colloquium in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union
5-15 p.m. — Classified Senate meeting in the Northeast Conference Room at the Burge Union.
6 p.m. — "SBA Loan Packaging."
"A" Small Business Development Center seminar at 413 Summerfield Hall.
6:30 p.m. — KU Hispanic-American Leadership Organization meeting in the International Room of the Kansas Union
7 p.m. — "God's Country," an SUA film in Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union. Also showing at 9:30 p.m. $2.
7 p.m. — "its Chinese a topic—Prominent Language?" a linguistics cologey at 207 Blake Hall.
7:30 p.m. — Expressions dance club meeting at 242 Robinson Center.
Club meeting at 242 Hipson Center.
8 p.m. - Student recital with David Cooper, trombone, in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
Wednesday
L
10 a.m. — Retirees Club coffee in Adam Lounge at Adams Alumni Center. Music at 11 a.m.
29
11:40 a.m. — "Street People:
Symbol of a Depening Poverty
Crisis," a University Forum at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204
Oroad Ave
3 p.m. — "The Humanities Perspective on Child Language Development," and "Toys and Culture: Properties of Tees as Reflections of Cultural Stereotypes," part of a Childhood/Youth Faculty Development Seminar in the Pine Room at the Kansas Union.
3:30 p.m. — "On The Record: Reporting on Cops and Crime," a panel discussion with Douglas County District Attorney Jim Flory and representatives of Lawrence fire and
police departments in 100 Stauffer- Flint Hall. Sponsored by Sigma Delta Chi.
3: 30 p. m. — "Class, State and
Capital Development: The Case of
Chile," a sociology lecture by
Maurice Jauguin in the Jayhawk Room
of the University of Hawaii.
6:30 p.m. — Campus Christians Fellowship meeting in the Northeast Conference Room at the Burge Union
7 p.m. — KU Dr. Who Appreciation Society meeting in the Walnut Room at the Kansas University
7 p.m. — "The Searchers," an SUA film in Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union. $2.
8 p.m. - Student recital with David Holmes, cello, in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
30
7 p.m. — "The American Past," with Calder Pickett, KANU EM-91.5
91-5.
7:30 p.m. — "Antigone," a play in Crafton-Preyer Theatre at Murphy Hall. Also being performed at 8 p.m. tomorrow and Saturday and at 2:30 p.m. Sunday. All seats reserved. Tickets on sale at Murphy Hall box office.
7 p.m. — "The Vulture," an SUA film in Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union. $2
8 p.m. — "Between Post-Modernism and the New Historicism," an International Association for Philosophy and Literature conference lecture by Gayatri Spivak in Aledson Auditorium at the Kansas Union.
3:30 p.m. — University Council meeting in the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union.
8 p.m. — Student recital with Joe Brashier, instrumental conducting, in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
Thursday
all day — Spring Fling on Watson Library, Stuart-Fluent-Fill Hall and Strong hall lawns. An alcohol awareness program is funded by the Student Assistance Center.
3:20 p.m. — "The World's Oldest Bird," a systematics and ecology lecture by Sankar Chatterjee in the Pine Room at the Kanaas Union.
6-30 p.m. m. — Association of Collegiate Entrepreneurs meeting in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union.
Friday
5:30 p.m. --- Study Abroad Club picnic at Potter Lake. For exchange students, returns and fall 1987 study abroad students;
all day — Social Work Day 1987 in the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union.
3:30 p.m. — "Peggy Sue Got Married," an SUA film in Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas University. Also showing at 7 and 9:30 p.m. Same time tomorrow. Afternoon showings $1, evening showings, $2
9 p.m. — Observatory Open House at 500 Lindley Hall (if sky is clear) call 841-366 for information.
8 p.m. -- Student recital with Elizabeth Hunter, voice, in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
7 p.m. — "Opera Is My Hobby" with James Seavean, KAU FM-91.5.
8 p.m. — KU International Folk Dance Club meeting at St. John's Elementary School gymnasium, 1233 Vermont St.
5 p.m. — ROTC tri-service review and awards program on the Allen Field House lawn.
6:30 p.m. — Journalism awards dinner and program at the Kansas
Union ballroom. Invitation only.
■ midnight — “Round Midnight,” an SUA film in Wooldruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union. Also showing at tomorrow and 2 p.m. Sunday, $2.
2
O
Saturday
9 a.m. — "The Vintage Jazz Show" with Michael Maher, KANU FM-91.5.
10 a.m. — "The Jazz Scene" with Dick Wright, KANU FM-91.5.
honors luncheon in the Kansas Room at the Kansas Union.
noon — Chemistry department
8 p.m. — Student recital with Cathy Fullenwider, organ, in Swarthout Rectal Hall at Murphy Hall.
Sunday
y
3
1 p.m. — MFA thesis show at the Art and Design Building gallery. Through May 8.
3 p.m. — Classics honors reception in the English Room at the Kansas Union
3 p.m. — "The KU Concerts" on
KANU FM-91.5.
6 p.m. -- "Die Physiker," a play in German at 100 Smith Hall.
8 p.m. - Student recital with Brian Williams, organ, in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
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Monday, April 27, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
ZE ZOE HS
Members and friends of the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity as firefighters battle a fire at their house, 1645 Tennessee St. The second floor of the house was damaged extensively by fire yesterday afternoon.
Fire
Continued from p. 1
mation and that the first engine would have arrived five to seven minutes after the call was made.
"You've got to know what's going on before you send your people," he said.
But Darin McAtee, Great Bend junior, said, "I don't think it originated there. I think it originated in the ceiling, and Room 3 got it first."
McSwain said the second floor of the house was severely damaged by smoke and fire. Heat from the blaze melted pipes in a bathroom. But some second-floor rooms with closed doors came out fair, he said. The first floor had water damage.
Some fraternity members speculated that an electrical fault started the blaze in Room 3, on the south side of the building. That has 20 individual rooms for members.
Tom Gray, a representative of the fraternity's alumni board, said the house was completely rewired in 1981.
McAtee said he discovered the fire when he went up to the second floor and saw smoke coming from the ceiling in the hall.
A neighbor who witnessed the fire, Mitchell Ghee, said the fire seemed to start on the south side and spread to the north and west.
He ran downstairs and told Dahl to call the fire department, he said. When he returned upstairs, the hall was full of smoke.
Owens said he and another fraternity member tried to stop the blaze in
"It was so hot in there, you could hardly breathe." he said.
Fraternity copes with finals, housing
By KJERSTI MOEN
Sheldon Moss watched as flames and smoke streamed from the window of his room yesterday afternoon at the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity.
"Everything I own is in that room," said Moss, Lawrence junior. "Every book I own is burned up. My term papers, my car keys, every piece of clothing I own is gone."
Staff writer
Worry over losses and despair about the future were predominant reactions among members of the fraternity, 1645 Tennessee St., which was extensively damaged by fire yesterday.
Fire department officials said that none of the house's 68 members were injured in the fire but that the 39-year-old house was severely damaged.
Unlike Moss, other members managed to rescue some of their belongings.
Jim McSwain, Lawrence fire chief, said, "The news isn't good. We've got extensive smoke and heat damage throughout the second floor."
Mike Driscoll, Omaha, Neb. senior, said, "We had enough time to go through the house as well as we could. A lot of guys grabbed their stuff."
He said fraternity members would go through the house this morning to determine their exact property losses.
Tom Wertz, Sigma Phi Epsilon chapter adviser,
said the fraternity's corporation board's insurance
policy covered the building and everything inside
it. The board said that it does not cover residents' belongings. Wertz said.
McSain said that second-floor rooms with open doors had extensive smoke damage but that rooms with closed doors had come out "fair." The heat in the basement and water heavily damaged the first floor, he said.
"We tell them in their contract they should seek
Sheldon Moss Lawrence junior
'Every book I own is burned up. My term papers, my car keys, every piece of clothing I own is gone.'
to cover their own belongings. But we'll do anything possible to help them out. This is a fraternal organization, after all." Wertz said.
Once members learned that nobody was injured in the fire, they worried about where they would stay last night and how they would finish the latter without their books, term papers and notes.
"That's the big question I have right now. I lost a term paper worth 20 hours," said John Reif, Tulsa, Okla, sophomore. "I don't know what to do. I hope somebody comes through for me."
Jef Softs, Omaha, Neb., junior, said that he,
too, had lost his books and notes in the fire.
"Nobody can study now," Syslo said. "We're just going to have to talk to our teachers and hope and pray. We'll have to start from scratch."
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said yesterday that the University of Kansas had no set policy for students' lost academic work in emergency situations and that students individually would have to make arrangements with their teachers.
But he did say that the office of student affairs
would verify for faculty which students were victimized by the fire.
"All we can do is ask that faculty members take that into account and act accordingly," Ambler
He said the University could provide temporary emergency housing and loans for fire victims.
The financial aid office offers emergency loans, but most of those funds are exhausted this late in the semester, he said.
"It's just one of those terrible tragedies that happens. The thing that they're all pleased about is the fact that you're going to have a long,
Sigma Phi Epsilon members will meet at 10 a.m. today to discuss their options for temporary living arrangements. Gray said members wanted to stay with whomver has room for 70 people
Tom Gray, a representative of the fraternity's alumni board, said yesterday that most members would spend the night either with parents, friends or at other fraternities.
Ken Stoner, director of housing, said that his office prepared rooms in McColm Hall and Jayhawker Towers to receive fire victims but that he made other living arrangements for last night.
"We would have taken care of all of them."
If members decide to use University housing, the financial aspects will be worked out later between the fraternity and University offices. Stoner said
in the nice city and university offices. Sister said,
"It's a tragedy. Our first concern is getting everybody taken care of." he said. "We'll worry about other things later."
Kansan reporter Paul Belden contributed information to this story.
Jef Sysso, Omaha, Neb., junior,
said he grabbed a trash can and filled
it with water from a shower near
Room 3 to stop the fire.
But he had to give up after one attempt, he said.
Ten people were in the house when the fire was discovered, fraternity president Jones said. Eight of the house's 68 members live in an annex behind the house, and others, including Jones, were at a football game.
Mike Driscoll, Omaha, Neb,
senior, said fraternity members
cleared out of the house quickly.
Residents checked on their room-
mates and checked the sleeping
dorm, which was empty, he said.
"You yell 'fire,' and everybody
he said. "It didn't take
at all."
Bryan Biehunko, Overland Park sophomore, said members built wood structures in their rooms and had a lot of posters and peg board.
Firefighters battled the blaze in shifts to avoid exhaustion, he said. At one point, the fire threatened to trap firefighters in the house.
McSain said bicycles and other obstacles in rooms hampered firefighters. Four engines responded to the call, he said.
"They had to protect themselves and get out, it was spreading so
quickly," McSwain said.
Yesterday's 90-degree heat made the firefighting even tougher, he said.
"It's like trying to play a basket-
ball with pounds of extra
weight on you," he said.
The fire was under control before 3:30 p.m. "The building will be secured." McSwain said. "There will be somebody there throughout the night."
Residents may be able to return to look for their possessions today, McSwain said. They will meet at 10 a.m. today at the annex behind the house.
Driscoll said said some fraternity members had enough time to go through the house and collect personal belongings. But others said they couldn't save anything from their rooms.
Investigators from the Lawrence fire and police departments, the Douglas County sheriff's department and KU police still must determine the cause of the fire and whether the house had any fire code violations, he said.
McSwain said sororites and fraternities often had fire code violations
"They don't believe us when we tell them to enforce the laws," he said.
Kansan reporter Paul Belden contributed information to this story.
SANTOS
Amv Rhoads/KANSAN
Sigma Phi Epsilon member Brian Driscoll, Omaha, Neb., senior, watches as firefighters extinguish the last of the flames. Driscoll said everything he owned was destroyed in the fire except what he was wearing.
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IMPORTANT NOTICE RESIDENCE HALL STUDENTS
If you are returning to the residence halls next year you will need a NEW KUID to be used with the computerized meal card system, starting in Fall Semester. You must have the computerized KUID to eat in the cafeterias.
BEAT THE FALL RUSH!!! Have your new KUID made before you leave for the summer. Staff from the enrollment center will be in the residence halls to make new IDs for those students with Student Housing contracts for Fall Semester. There will be NO CHARGE for this replacement ID. Your new KUID will be kept for you to simply pick up on your return next Fall. The IDs will be made in the cafeterias, 4:30 - 6:30 on the following dates.
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Monday, 4/27 JRP
Tuesday, 4/28 GSP/Corbin
Wednesday, 4/29 McColum
Thursday, 4/30 Elworth
Monday, 5/4- Hashinger
Tuesday, 5/5- Oliver
Wednesday, 5/6- Lewis
Thursday, 5/7- Templin
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 27, 1987
9
Walker helps 'Hawks to Big Eight tennis title
Bv ROB KNAPP
Staff writer
Kansas got a strong performance from its doubles teams and a boost from freshman Chris Walker yesterday on its way to its first Big Eight Conference men's tennis championship since 1965.
Walker
C
The victory
The Jayhawks finished with 95 points, two points, ahead of defending-champion Oklahoma State. Oklahoma finished in third place with 78 points.
resulted in an invitation to the NCAA tournament, the first such bid for a Kansas tennis team.
"I can't tell you how happy I am for all of these guys." Kansas men's and
women's tennis coach Scott Perelman said from Oklahoma City. The championship is the first for Perelman in his five seasons at Kansas.
The 'Hawks began the tournament, played at the Oklahoma City Tennis Center, by advancing all six of its singles entries to the finals and turning what had been a four-point deficit going into the weekend into a three-point lead.
But yesterday, the team began play with five straight losses in the singles finals.
Walker began the turnaround by beating Christian Schatz of Oklahoma State 6-3, 3-6, 7-5 in a controversial match for the No. 4 singles championship. The contest beame so heated that a linesman was called in to make calls.
hawks. They defeated Franz Kaiser and Deon Beoth of Oklahoma State 6-4, 6-3 in the fifth-place match in No. 2 doubles.
It was the last match of the day for the teams, and a Oklahoma State victory would have created a tie for the championship.
"I had to go with my guts, with my win to will." Walker said. "I knew I had to hustle, and I got a lot of points for hustling more than the other guy."
The individual and team championship topped off a tumultuous year for Walker, who at one point had lost 13 matches in a row. Perelman, though, said Walker's success in Oklahoma City was no surprise.
"He just played up to his potential this weekend." Perelman said.
Perelman also remembered an emotional impromptu speech by Walker after the April 17 match with
lowa State, during a period when the team was struggling.
"I don't claim to be a captain," Walker said. "I'm a freshman and I'm still learning. But I got up and I said straight from the heart that we
Kansas and Oklahoma State entered yesterday's doubles play tied for first place. Two of the Jayhawks earned eight titles. Eight titles that kept Kansas ahead.
Mike Wolf and Craig Wildey
I had to go with my guts,with my will to win. I knew I had to hustle,and I got a lot of points by just hustling more than the other guy.'
Chris Walker
Big Eight No. 4 singles champion
1. What is the significance of these chemical compounds in our lives?
were blowing the Big Eight champ
ionship and that that championship
meant more to me than anything
defeated Oklahoma State's Jack Salerno and Robin Scott 6-4, 6-1 in the No. 1 doubles final, giving Kansas a one-point lead.
"I told them they were the best, and I told them I loved them."
Wolf had earlier lost to Oklahoma's
Olivier Lorin 2-6, 6-3, 6-4 in the No.1 singles final. Lorin has beaten Wolf, the No.1 championship his sophomore year, in the finals each of the last two years.
In No. 3 doubles, Oklahoma State's duo won in the consolation round and tied the point total. The Kansas pair of Sven Groeneveld and Kevin Brady were scheduled to play in the championship match, but Brady had cramped up near the end of his 6-3, 2-6, 7-6 loss to Oklahoma State's Deon Botha.
Jim Secrest, the Jayhawks' seventh man, filled in for Brady. Secrest and Groeneveld beat Robin Walker and Roy Koch of Colorado, 6-4, 2- winning the title and pushing Kansas back up by one point in the team standings.
Walker and Pascal then won their match and finished off the Cowboys.
KJ
Stephen Wade/Special to the KANSAN
Rocky Helm, Kansas outfielder, dives back to first base on a pickoff at- nings to defeat the Iowa Hawkeyes 9-8 yesterday at Quigley Field and snap tempt. Helm was safe after the off-target throw. Kansas rallied in the late in- its nine-game losing streak.
Kansas ends nine-game losing streak
Staff writer
By DAVID BOYCE
Kansas finally took a one-run lead into the last inning and held on to win a game.
Yesterday, against the Iowa Hawkeyes at Quigley Field, the Jayhawks went into the ninth inning leading 9-8 and Brad Hinkle pitched a perfect last inning to gain the victory.
But on Saturday, Kansas entered the seventh and final inning with a one-run lead, only to lose the game 11-10 to the Hawkeyes in the second game of a doubleheader.
"My adrenaline was really going," Hinkle said. "This was about the first time I came in with a chance to either win or lose the game. Usually when I come in, we are down by 10 runs."
In the last three weeks, the Jayhawks have lost seven games in which they led going into the last
inning.
The victory yesterday snapped a nine-game losing streak and gave Kansas a 12-31-1 overall record, 11 in the Bie Eight Conference.
"Hallelujah," baseball coach Marty Pattin said.
"We've been in this situation 14 or 15 times, but have been creating ways to lose," he said.
"We have the ability and today we showed we can play. We have been hitting the ball all season long, we've just been making too many fielding errors."
Second baseman Steve Estes led the Jayhawk's hitting with a grand slam and a two-run home run for six RBI.
"I was just trying to hit the ball in the air," Estes said of his grand slam.
"I was ahead in the count and I hit the ball hard.
"After losing yesterday, we came back today and showed them
We have the ability and today we showed we can play. We have been hitting the ball all season long, we've just been making too many fielding errors.'
Marty Pattin Kansas baseball coach
that we can play with them." Iowa jumped to a 2-0 lead in the
top of the second behind a two-run home run by Hawkeye catcher Brian Butz.
Kansas tied the game in the bottom half of the inning on Estes' two-run home run.
The Hawkeyes took a 5-2 lead in the top of the fourth. Estes gave Kansas the lead for the first time in the slam in the bottom of the fourth.
By the bottom of the seventh, Kansas trailed 8-6. The Jawhays scored three runs in the bottom of the inning which gave them their first Sunday home victory of the season.
Center fielder Rocky Helm started the inning with a walk. Left fielder Hugh Stanfield and designated hitter John Byrn followed with singles. Byrn's single scored Helm, and Stanfield went home on a throwing error.
See BASEBALL. p. 10. col. 5
Redbirds beat Mets with makeshift lineup Reds, Cubs also victorious in National League action
Phillies 6. Pirates 4
The Cardinals, also missing ace pitcher John Tudor, are having fun in general, especially against the Mets. St. Louis won only six of 18 games against New York in 1986, but has beaten the defending World Series champions five out of six times this year.
PHILADELPHIA — Lance Parrish's grand slam home run capped a six-run first inning and Kent Tekulve got out of a bases-loaded, no-out threat in the seventh as the Philadelphia Phillies beat the Pittsburgh
Pirates 8-4 yesterday.
"Everybody is helps each other," said Quendon, playing in place of injured second baseman Tommy Herr. Quedono, a lifetime 234 hitter, raised his average to 423. "I'm just trying to have fun," Lake said after a pair of RBI singles Lake, replacing injured catcher Tony Pena, is a career .221 batter but is at 341 this season.
The Associated Press
NEW YORK - If the St. Louis Cardinals can beat the New York Mets with a patchwork lineup, imagine what will happen when the regulars return.
The Cardinals, again led by Jose Quando and Steve Lake, rapped a season-high 15 hits yesterday and defeated the Mets 7-4. Jack Clark, one of the regulars who is still healthy, added a home run and two singles.
The Cardinals scored single runs in the first three innings against Ron Darling, 2-1, who three wild pitches and balked once. Clark's fifth home run led off a four-run fifth and knocked out Darling.
Vince Coleman stole his major league-leading 16th base in the game, making him 22 for 22 in career steals against the Mets.
The two teams started yesterday's game tied for the National League East lead, and there was some happy hooting and hollering in the Cardinal clubhouse after the triumph.
"That was a breathtaking adventure, wasn't it?" Manager Whitey Herzog joked as St. Louis left New York having won twice in the three-game series.
National League
MONTREAL — Andre Dawson hit two home runs and continued his assault on his former team and Leon Durham hit his third home run in three days as the Chicago Cubs beat the Montreal Expos 7-1 yesterday and swept the three-game series.
Bruce Ruffin, 1-1, allowed three runs and seven hits over $5_{1/2}$ innings while striking out six and walking four before being relieved by Mike Jackson. Dan Schatzeder and Tekulve.
Steve Trout, 1-1, allowed seven hits, struck out three and did not walk a batter, losing his shutout on the ninth as his home run leading off the ninth.
Cubs 7. Expos 1
Reds 11. Astros 3
HOUSTON — Dave Parker hit two home runs and drove in five runs and Mario Soto won his first game since
last August as the Cincinnati Reds beat the Houston Astros 11-3 and swept the three-game series.
Parker had a two-run home run in
one first, then capped his day with a three-run shot in the ninth. Dave Concepion had four hits and Eric Davis had three hits and scored three times in Cincinnati's 19 hit attack.
Giants 6. Braves 4
ATLANTA — Jeffrey Leonard had a home run and an RBI single and the San Francisco Giants set a three-game major-league record for double plays as they beat the Atlanta Braves 6-4 yesterday.
It was the seventh loss in eight games for the Braves, who hit into four double plays in the game.
Padres 4. Dodgers 0
LOS ANGELES — Eric Show threw a three-hit shutout and Mark Parent capped a four-run third with two-run single as the San Diego Padres defeated the Los Angeles Dodgers 4-0 yesterday and ended a 'gourn Dodgers winning streak.
Show, 1-1, surrendered a first-inning single by Pedro Guerrero, then retired 18 in a row before Franklin Stubbs's seventh-inning double. The only other hit was Ken Laundreaux' single in the ninth.
KC stops Detroit; Saberhagen 4-0
The Associated Press
DETROIT — Kansas City's Bret Saberhagen brought his "Home Sweet Home" sign to Tiger Stadium again yesterday and pitched as if he were in his own backyard.
Saberhagen improved his career record at Tiger Stadium to 7-0 by throwing a seven-hitter in the Royals' 6-1 victory over Detroit.
Helped by Frank White's two-run home run, Sahbergain gained his fourth straight victory without a loss and lowered his earned run average to 1.32. He struck out seven and walked three.
"I said in spring training that it," stayed healthy, I would win some ball games. I used Saberhagen, whose season was marred by shoulder problems.
"The guys have been scoring a lot of runs for me. They got me an early lead today and that helps."
"He's much better than he ever was before." Anderson said. "If nothing happens to him, you can put down for 20 (wins) or more. If he loses six or seven, that will be a lot."
Tigers Manager Sparky Anderson said Sabhagen is pitching better now than in 1985 when he won the American League's Cy Young Award by going 20-6 and led the Kansas City Royals to victory in the World Series.
Tigers starter Walt Terrell, 13,
went six innings and faced two bat
ters in the seventh before being relieved by Nate Snell. Ternel allowed 10 hits and six runs, struck out three and walked three.
Kansas City increased its lead to 5-0 in the sixth inning.
The Royals added an unearned run in the second when Juan Benizque walked with one out, moved to second on Angel Salazar's single and scored when Larry Owen's grounder to shortstop went through Alan Trammell's legs for an error.
The loss was the Tigers' sixth in their last seven games.
White's second home run of the season gave Kansas City a 2-0 lead in the first inning. He hit Terrell's 1-0 pitch deep to left scoring Kevin Seitzer, who had singled. Last season the Royals were 19-2 in games that White hit home runs.
"We still feel confident — we're not giving up," said Alan Tramell, whose second-inning error helped Kansas City take a 3-10 lead. "We need to win and get back to .500."
Jackson scored from second when catcher Matt Nokes attempted a pickoff and his throw sailed into center field. Jackson was credited with a steal of third on the play.
Danny Tartabull singled with one out and moved to third on Bo Jackson's double. Beniquez was walked intentionally to load the bases and Tartabull scored on Salazar's sacrifice fly to left field.
The Associated Press
American League
Yankees rout Tribe; Brewers still rolling
John, who struck out four and walked one, allowed only an infield single to Julio Franco with two outs in the third. Franco's high bouncer was fielded deep in the hole by shortstop Wayne Tolleson, who didn't have time to make a play.
CLEVELAND — Tommy John pitched a one-hitter over seven innings and Dave Winfield had three hits and drove in four runs as the New York Yankees routed the Cleveland Indians 14-2 yesterday.
Brewers 5. Orioles 3
Rickey Henderson led off the game with a home run and sparked a five-run first inning for New York.
MILWAUKEE — Juan Castillo hit his first major-league home run and the Milwaukee Brewers improved their record to 16-1 by completing a three-game sweep of ths Baltimore Orioles with a 5-3 victory yesterday.
The Brewers took a 2-10 lead in the third on singles by Bill Schroeder and Castillo and Robin Yount's triple. Milwaukee went ahead 3-0 in the fourth when Rob Deer tripped and scored on Cecil Cooper's groundout.
Twins 10. Angels 5
Twins 10, Angels 5
MINNEAPOLIS - Steve Lombar-
Blue Jays 5. White Sox 2
dozzi broke a seventh-inning tie with a home run and Roy Smallley hit two doubles and drove in three runs, helping the Twins beat the California Angels 10-5 yesterday.
CHICAGO — George Bell drove in three runs with two home runs and Jesse Barfield hit a solo home run yesterday, leading the Toronto Blue Jays and pitcher Jimmy Key to a 5-2 victory over the Chicago White Sox.
Oakland's Reggie Jackson cut a three-run Seattle lead to 6-5 by hitting his second home run of the season and the 550th of his career, a two-run drive in the sixth.
Mariners 8. Athletics 5
Rangers 5. Red Sox 3
ARLINGTON, Texas — Pete O'Brien hit a two-run home run with no outs in the bottom of the 13th inning and lifted the Texas Rangers to a 3-3 victory over the Boston Red Sox yesterday.
OAKLAND, Calif. — Harold Reynolds drove in the go-ahead run with a triple in the fourth inning as the Oakland Athletics defeated the Oakland Athletics 8-5 yesterday.
Calvin Schiraldi, 0-2, came in and started the 13th. He gave up a single to Scott Fletcher before O'Brien hit his second home run of the season, giving Texas the sweep of the weekend series.
KU loses four in Big 8
By a Kansan reporter
The KU women's softball team dropped four Big Eight Conference games this weekend, two each against Nebraska and Iowa State in Ames, Iowa.
saturday, the Jayhawks lost to Nebraska 3-2 in ten innings, with pitcher Reenie Powell taking the loss. Kelly Downs went 2-for-3 with a homerun in the game, and Gayla Luedeke went 3-for-5.
Kansas led 2-1 going into the bottom of the eighth in Saturday's second game, but Iowa State com
tered with two doubles and a single as the Cyclones rallied for a 3-2 victory. Powell was the loser in relief of Roanna Brazier.
In action yesterday, Kansas lost to Iowa State 4-1 and to Nebraska 3-0.
The losses dropped Kansas to 23-23,3-7 in the Big Eight.
The Jayhawks face Friends in a 3 p.m. doubleheader at Jayhawk Field. It will be the final home game for KU seniors Lauren Cramer, Sheila Connolly, Jill Williams, Kelly Downs and Sherri Mach.
4
10
Monday, April 27, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
*Monday Sports Extra*
Tables turn for track squad at Drake
By DIANE FILIPOWSKI
Staff writer
The tables have turned for the Kansas men's track team.
The team, which competed without its best athletes during the indoor season because of injuries and could only manage a fourth-place finish at Eight Conference Indoor championships, seems to be making a comeback.
Kansas won three events and placed second in another Friday and Saturday for one of its best showings in recent years at the Drake Relays in Des Moines, Iowa.
Rick Attick, assistant men's coach,
said the Jayhawks had an individual
win an event at the Drake Relays for
the first time in about five years.
Kansas' David Bond found a crowd of 18,000, sunny skies and 80 degree weather to be the perfect conditions for a victory in the triple jump. Bond, who jumped 53.8, also qualified for the NCAA championships.
Bond is the sixth Jayhawk to qualify for the national championships June 3-6 in Baton Rouge, La.
"I should have qualified a long time ago," it said. "It's a relief to know that I amgnit."
Bond was not able to jump most of the indoor season because of a heel injury, which he said no longer bothered him.
Scott Huffman also added a victory for Kansas with a vault of 17-53% in the pole vault. Teammate Chris Bohan finished third with a vault
Both vaulted higher than 18 feet at the Kansas Relays last weekend.
of 17-1.
Kansas had an equally impressive showing in the javelin. Rohm Bahm was Kansas' other winner with a throw of 221- 21. Freshman Vince Labsohy followed in third-place with a throw of 213- 7.
Kansas' second-place finish came in the 440-meter shotle hurdles relay. Craig Branstrom, Mike Muller, and Kevin Johnson finished with a time of 59.5 seconds.
Three other Jayhawks recorded fifth-place finishes. They included Mike Rich, with a jump of 24-5 in the long jump; Hawkins, with a 14-24 time in the 110-meter high hurdles; and Johnny Brackins, with a 50-1
finish in the triple jump.
Suggs also set a meet record in the discus with a throw of 194-1. Buchanan was fourth with a throw of 156-1.
Denise Buchanan recorded the highest showing for Kansas' women's team with a second-place finish in the shot put with a throw of $ 50 - 9^{1/2}. $ Kansas State's Pinkie Suggs won the event with a throw of $ 55 - 6^{1/2}. $ a new meet record.
Two other Jayhawks placed, including Cynthea Rhodes, who was fourth in the triple jump with a leap of 39.8, and Ann O'Connor, who was third in the high jump at 5-10.
Carla Coffey, women's coach, said "Oconor did well considering the need for change."
JETSING
Amy Rhoads/KANSAN
Wet ride
Drew Elisius, Northbrook, Ill., junior, spins his jet-ski around and heads toward the beach at Clinton Lake. Elisius took advantage of the sunny
skies and about 90-degree temperatures and skied yesterday afternoon at Clinton.
Collegians should get money, Stewart says
The Associated Press
"I think we should do more finacily for them," Stewart said. "And we would do that in proper fashion."
LAKE OZARK, Mo. — Missouri basketball Coach Norm Stewart said Saturday that he would like to see athletes in revenue-producing sports receive $50 to $100 a month in spending money.
Stewart. The Associated Press' 1887 Big Eight Coach of the Year, made his remarks in response to questions at the spring meeting of the Missouri Associated Press Managing Editors. He was elaborating on a question about the size of the 64 team NCAA Division I basketball tournament.
He said that the tournament was
making a significant income and that some of that money should be given to the athletes. Schools received more than $1 million each for reaching the 1987 Final Four.
Under current NCAA rules, athletes can receive room and board, tuition and books, but no incidental fees.
"No. 1, I think they should take some of the money off the top and ensure the kids that played in the tournament get a degree," Stewart said. "Maybe it would be a fifth or sixth year for some to graduate, or maybe it would be some money for them to go back and get their master's degree."
"I would like to see some of the money used for the players. I hope
'I would like to see some of the money used for the players. I hope they do something about that, instead of taking away two scholarships.'
Stewart was referring to an NCAA decision to cut Division I basketball scholarships from 15 to 13. The cutbacks, which were passed at the 1987 NCA convention, will become effective in the fall of 1988 unless changed by further legislation.
- Norm Stewart
Missouri basketball coach
Stewart also was asked if the success of basketball programs at St. Louis University and Southwest Missouri last season affected the Missouri program. St. Louis University went to the National Invitation Tournament and Southwest Missouri plowed in the NCAA tournament.
"This state doesn't offer large numbers of Division I athletes who can step in and compete at the national level," Stewart said.
they do something about that, instead of taking away two scholarships."
Kansas Crew team 2nd in medal count at Wisconsin meet
By DIANE FILIPOWSKI Staff writer
The Kansas Crew team returned to Lawrence yesterday to celebrate its second-place finish over the weekend at the Midwestern Rowing Championships in Madison, Wis., before Coach Cliff Elliott was able to.
But Elliott said yesterday from a truck stop in Eagleville, Mo., that he was happy with the team's performance, even though his truck, which was pulling the team's boats back home, had broken down.
Wisconsin, the defending national champion, again dominated the 31-team field winning 14 medals, eight gold, four silver and two bronze. Kansas finished second in the medal count with four medals, three gold and one silver.
Purdue finished third with four medals. one silver and three bronze.
the Jayhawks, the men's lightweight eight-man boat and the men's novice lightweight eight man boat. All three women won the women's owen single race.
The varsity women's eight-man boat recorded the Jayhawks only second-place finish.
"The competition was much better this year, and we still managed to come in second," Elliott said. "I'm really pleased with our first-place finishes."
Elliott said the novice men's lightweight and heavyweight and the women's open and varsity boats would compete on Friday and Saturday at the Dad Vail Regatta in Philadelhia.
Elliott said he thought the novice men's and women's four-man boats could have had better finishes.
He said high waters on the Kansas River last week prevented the team from getting adequate practice time.
The women's novice four-man and eight-man boats and men's novice four-man boat all finished fourth this weekend.
Other Kansas boats that placed included the men's varsity eight-man, sixth, and the men's novice eight-man, seventh.
In the consolation heats, KU's women's novice eight-man finished fourth, the men's novice eight-man finished second and the varsity women's eight-man finished third.
Baseball
Continued from D. 9
With one out, catcher Joe Pfister hit a double that scored Byrn.
In the top of the seventh, Hinkle entered the game and did not allow a hit.
Mike McLeod started the game and went the first five innings before being replaced by Steve Renko in the sixth.
"he pitched well for five innings," pn said, "but he was tiring in the sixth." sxhK
"He had thrown a lot of pitches on Wednesday in the Wichita State game."
The only blemish for the Jayhawks yesterday was three errors committed by the usually sure-handed Scott Seratte.
"Late in the game I had to make some defensive changes because of the errors," Pattin said. "I don't like to do it, especially in close games because I like the kids to play in that situation."
On Saturday, Iowa beat Kansas 15-2 in the first game and 11-10 in the second game.
Pattin defensive changes occured in the eight when he put Tom Bilyeu at shortstop in place of Seratte and in the first half when A. C. Smith at second instead of Estes.
Bilyeu in the eighth helped turn the Jayhawks only double play of the game and ended a potential rally by Iowa.
In both games, the Hawkeyes pounded out 20 hits while Kansas managed a total of 21 hits in the two games combined.
Kansas will play a doubleheader
tomorrow in Emporia against Emporia State. Emporia State has been ranked in the NAIA top 10 all season.
But Pattin said, "We don't take a back seat to no one. When we put it altogether, we can beat anyone."
He said the team's goal was just to go out and win some games.
With 12 games remaining and 31 defeats, the team is in danger of losing more than 40 games for the Mets with 96-year history of Kansas baseball.
KANSAS 9. IOWA 8
Iowa 022 102 100—8 12 2
Kansas 020 400 30x—9 11 3
020 400 300 ~9 ~11 3
Boland, Griffith (7) and Luecke; McLeod,
Renko (6), Hinke (7) and Pister (8).
2-(1)-Lobel, 2-Bs-low, Heinz, Kuester,
Kansas,萨斯; Plester, Pister 2, 3-Bs-low,
Ramrez, HR-bus, Buz, Kansas, Estes 2.
Saturday's games
Iowa 010 670 1=15 203
Kansas 010 001 0=2 6
Rath and Luedek, Murrie, Stoppel (4)
Andress (5) and Pister, Wochen-W Rath (4-4)
L-Murree (1-5) 2Bs-laue, Luedek,
Eliens, Givens, Heinz, Kauer, Kansas,
Karlin, Pattin, Byn. HRs-Kansas, Pister (2).
IOWA 11, KANSAS 10 (2nd game)
lowa 131 220 2-1 11 20
Kansas 020 341 10-1 15 3
Dankinger, McConnell (3), B and Zubt
Taylor, Biyuee (3), Morse (7) and Plaster W. McConnell (1-1), L-Lilieve (3), B2-lowa
Kuester, Guesin, Heinz, Frakas, Kansas
Estes, Matthews, B3-Kansa, Helm, Byrn
Estes, HR-Kansa, Matthaws (4)
KU tennis team 4th at Big 8 meet
The Associated Press
OKLAHOMA CITY — Kansas' Tracy Treps lost to Renata Baranski of Oklahoma State 6-3, 5-7, 6-4, for the singles title at the Big Eight women's tennis championship.
Baranski, top seeded in the tournament, took the first set but dropped the second one after leading 4-1. She won the third set after breaking
Treps' serve in the final game
In the top doubles match, Kesa Price and Jan Wood of Oklahoma State won the title with a 5-7, 6-2, 6-2 and Karen Myers of Colorado and Karen Myers of Colorado.
Treps, seeded No. 2, was the defending champion.
Oklahoma State won the team title with 133 points followed by Oklahoma and Colorado tied at 100. Kansas was fourth with 90 points followed by Nebraska with 49, Kansas State with 46, Iowa State with 45 and Missouri with 13.
over Susan Campbell and Anne Gibbons of Oklahoma. 7-5, 7-5.
Baranski teamed with Lorna Browne to win the No. 2 doubles title
Men's track team competes at OU
By a Kansan reporter
While some members of the Kansas track teams competed at the Drake Relays this weekend, 18 members of the men's team traveled to Norman on Saturday to compete at the Oklahoma Invitational.
No team scores were kept
Steve Kueffer, assistant men's coach, said the Jayhawks competed against fifteen teams that were mainly from Texas and Oka-lan.
Kueffer said the meet allowed the coaches to start making decisions of who would be on the Big Eight Conference team.
No Jayhawk won first place, but the team made a showing in almost every event. Kueffer said many Jayhawks recorded their best times of the season.
Steve Heffernan recorded one of Kansas' two second-place finishes in the 1.500-meter run with a time of 3 minutes, 57.11 seconds.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 27, 1987
11
Celtics hold off Jordan, take 2-0 lead
The Associated Press
Danny Ainge led Boston on a fourth-quarter rally, and the Celtics overcame a 42-point performance by Michael Jordan and beat the Chicago Bulls 105-96 yesterday, taking a 2-0 lead in their NBA first-round playoff series.
"We're just trying to scratch it out
in a storm by Jordan,
Boston Coach K. C."
The Celtics could wrap up their best-of-5 series in Game 3 Tuesday night at Chicago.
In other NBA playoff games, Philadelphia beat Milwaukee 125-122 in overtime o square that series at one game apiece, and Portland tied its series with Houston by beating the Rockets 111-98.
In games last night, Detroit crushed Washington 128-85 and Atlanta edged Indiana 94-93. Both
winners now lead 2-0.
Trailing 87-85, Boston outscored Chicago 10-2 during a stretch that included three baskets by Ainge. The only Bulls points during the rally came on a basket by Jordan.
Larry Bird had 29 points, and Kevin McHale added 20. Ainge and Dennis Johnson had 18 apiece.
Pistons 128 Bullets 85
Detroit, behind the shooting of Adrian Dantley and a body-slamming defense, rolled to an NBA playoff record 40-point halftime lead and coasted to victory over the Washington Bullets.
The Pistons, with Isiah Thomas sinking a shot at the buzer from just inside the halfcourt line, opened the largest halftime lead in NBA playoff history, 76-36. The previous record was 36 points on March 10, 1970, when
Hawks 94, Pacers 93
Milwaukee led Philadelphia 77-41.
Dominique Wilkins scored 43 points and Kevin Willis connected on a short hook shot with 58 seconds remaining as the Atlanta Hawks held off the Indiana Pacers in the closing seconds of their contest.
76ers 125. Bucks 122 OT
Chuck Person, who led the Pacers with 24 points, hit a pair of free throws with 42 seconds left, cutting Atlanta's lead to 94-93.
The Pacers' John Long, who scored 12 of his 14 points in the final period, missed a 15-foot jumper from the foul line with two seconds left that could have given Indiana the victory.
Charles Barkley scored eight points in overtime, including the goahead basket with 11 seconds left, and led the 76ers past the Milwaukee
Bucks. Philadelphia will host the next two games of the best-of-5 series. The next game will be played Wednesday night.
Trail Blazers 111. Rockets 98
Sidney Moncrief gave the Bucks a 122-121 lead with 29 seconds to go on a driving basket, but Barkley's six-foot shot from the left baseline, which bounced on the rim several times before falling through, made it 123-122.
Trail Blazers 111, Rockets 98
Clyde Drexler scored 32 points and Houston hurt itself with 25 turnovers as the Trail Blazers defeated the Rockets. Terry Porter added 18 points and tied a Blazers playoff record with 15 assists.
Game 3 of the best-of-5 series will be Tuesday night at Houston.
Sports Briefs
Soccer club loses to Texas Tech in quarterfinals of tournament
The Kansas Men's Soccer Club advanced to the quarterfinals of the Laszlo Stumpfhauser Invitational Tournament yesterday at Wichita State University before being eliminated by Texas Tech, 4-0.
Kansas won two of three games Saturday to advance in the 14-team tournament.
The team opened with a loss to
Kansas Newman, 3-1, and then defeated Central College of McPherson, 3-1, and Kansas State, 2-1, on penalty kicks. Dave Riddle had two goals during the weekend games to lead KU.
The Jayhawks, now 5-5-2, will play their final game of the season against K-State at 2 p.m. Saturday at Shenk Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets.
Hass wins Houston Open on playoff hole
THE WOODLANDS, Texas — Jay Haas ran in a 60-foot bunk pile forcing a playoff, then sank a two-foot par pall on the first playoff hole and denied Buddy Gardner his first PGA Tour victory in the $600,000 Houston Open yesterday.
Gardner, who got his four runner-up finish, chipped out of a bunker to within three feet of the cup on the par-3, 177 yard first playoff hole at No. 16.
Gardner missed his short put put. Gardner was within four holes of his first tour victory until Haas' miracle shot on No. 18, which covered 60 feet before dropping in for a tie.
"Someone sneezed just as I drew back," Haas said. "I did hit it a little hard."
Haas, winning his sixth tour event and earning $103,000, chipped off the fringe on his second shot, then sank a two-footer after
University of Texas hearing is postponed
The two players finished regulation play with 12-under-par 276 totals. Haas started the day three strokes off the pace and finished with a five-inward par 67 while Gardner closed out with a 70.
occurred "because of new information developed late Saturday."
AUSTIN, Texas — The NCAA Infractions Committee, looking into as many as 63 possible rule violations at the University of Texas, has postponed a hearing with school officials to look at some new evidence, a university official said yesterday.
University President William H. Cunningham said in a prepared statement that the postponement
School officials were to have appeared yesterday before the NCAA committee at Hillon Head Island, S.C.
Cunningham said officials expected a new hearing to be held at the committee's next regularly scheduled meeting. June 3-5 in Kansas City, Mo.
From staff and wire reports.
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There were 12 other Pro Bowlers chosen in the second round, eight in the third, five in the fourth, four in the fifth, two in the sixth, three in the seventh, four in the eighth and one in the 12th, linebacker Karl Mecklenburg of the Broncos. Three more were undrafted players signed out of the United States Football League.
Seattle Seahawks Coach Chuck Knox said, "You know what 10 free agents in the Pro Bowl tells us? It tells us we make a lot of mistakes."
CONGRATULATIONS ALPHA CHI INITIATES WE LOVE YOU!
NEW YORK — Marty Schotte-
heimer raises his voice in mild protest when someone suggests the talent is thin in this year's NFL. Draft
George Young, General Manager of the Giants, said, "There's far too much emphasis on the first round. It's the media. It's all these draftnicks. They put out the books and they talk about the first round."
"People always say it's a good year or a bad year," Schottenheimer, the Cleveland Brown's coach, said. "That's an overstatement. The players are always out there, you just have to find them."
Coaches prepare for Tuesday's NFL draft
The Associated Press
Then, after the Super Bowl champion New York Giants make the 28th choice, many spectators will head home or click off their television sets, convinced that the draft is over. In reality, it's just beginning, because the lower rounds are where championships are won and lost.
The NFL's annual lottery of college players will take place tomorrow at the Marriott Marquis Hotel with attention centered on the first round.
Moreover, of the 99 players chosen for the last Pro Bowl, 38 were firstround choices, but 10 were free agents, players who were either undrafted out of college or cut loose by an NFL team.
The Tampa Bay Bucs will choose the already signed Vinny Testaverde with the first pick, and the other 27 will follow in inverse order of 1986 success, quickly snatching All-Americans or names made famous by pre-draft speculation.
the field in Pasadena in the most recent Super Bowl, only three of their 22 starters were players drafted in the first round. The Denver Broncos had five first-rounders among their starters.
When the Giants, for example, took
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ATTENTION
There will be a meeting for freshman, sophomore and junior students interested in participating in the Kansas University Football Host and Hostess Program for the 1987-88 school year. Please report to room 135 in the Parrott Athletic Center on WEDNESDAY, APRIL 29 at 5:00 p.m. the program will be explained and appointments made for interviews at that time.
(Parrott Athletic Center is the building adjoining the northwest side of Allen Field House.)
ANTIGONE
ANTIGONE
The University of Kansas Theatre presents • ANTIGONE
By Jean Anouilh • In new translation by Robert Anderson
7:30 p.m. April 30, 1987 • 8:00 p.m. May 1, 2, 1987
2:30 p.m. May 3, 1987 • Crafton-Preyer Theater, Murphy Hall
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved • For reservations call: (913) 864-3982
VISA/MasterCard accepted for phone reservations
Partially funded by the KU Student Activity Fee
Half price for students
FALL RUSH 1987
All students planning to go through formal sorority rush in August:
Please come to the Panhellenic Office (in the Burge Union) from Monday. April 27 to Friday, May 1, to pick up a RUSH booklet containing registration forms.
12
Monday, April 27, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Kansas Bar and Grill restores KU heritage in Eldridge basement
By LAURA BOSTROM
Staff writer
A part of KU's athletic heritage has been restored in the basement of the Eldridge Hotel.
The Big Six Room was a banquet room at the Eldridge, 701 Massachusetts St., in the '30s and '40s. The Big Six was the predecessor for the Big Eight Conference before Oklahoma State University and the University of Colorado joined.
Now, it is the new home of the Kansas Sports Bar and Grill.
The Bar and Grill, originally on the first floor of the hotel, closed with the hotel for renovation in the summer. It reopens tonight.
The Big Six Room was built in 1928 and primarily catered to KU athletic team banquets, said restaurant manager and co-owner Jerry Neverlee.
At that time, Haskell Indian Junior College was part of the KU football schedule, and Phog Allen coached the basketball team.
Reminders of Big Six sports and KU's opponents linger inside the room.
More than 100 diamond-shaped plaster sculptures of mascots from the Big Six schools and from Haskell are on the room's walls.
Judy Bauer stood on a chair yesterday hand-painting details onto each square, then been painting the squares, which required an hour to complete, off and on for
Bauer, Detroit senior, said the mascot details took the most time. The Nebraska Cornhusker wears a bandanna and glasses, and the Iowa State Cyclone sweeps up a couple of houses.
about two months.
"I paid a couple bucks for those wooden skis," he said, pointing to skis and poles mounted near the ceiling.
Forty old-style KU Jayhawks, which Bauer already has painted, are set in the room's walls and around its brick pillars.
Old golf clubs, numerous pennants,
red boxing gloves and an ancient football uniform and pads hang on the walls.
Nervever, who owns Eldridge restaurants and food services with Chuck Barnett, saw the room a couple of years ago. It had been several different bars before the hotel renovation began.
Old sports paraphernalia also is placed around the room. Nerverve finds the items at junk stores and in basements.
Plastic footballs advertising liquor brands sit on the original marble bar. On the terrazzo floor, which previously was covered by carpeting, is a picture of the "Big 6" and its member school's emptiness.
CONGRATULATIONS UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS GRADUATES
"It was really showing its age," he said.
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FOR RENT
GEYBOARDIST Needed for Established Rock land.
Paul at 841.962
1 BLOCK FROM KANSAS UNION, for rent to serious graduate. Upper Class Student or KU employee. 1 Bedroom furnished, no pets. ref. lease required. $196 msr. 841-3826 after 4 p.m.
1 Bedroom Apt for summer sublease. Furnished and lory nice Adjacent to campus. Rent negotiable. Call 841-8076 and ask for Trina or Kristen.
1- bedroom luxury apartments now leasing for summer and next fall. 2/1/2 blocks from campus. Call Jeff at 842-7200 (before 6:00) and at 542-3513 (after 6:00).
2 Idfm Townhouse for summer special rate, laundry facilities, swimming, tennis, U-Basketball, and more.
Female Roommate Needs: Share 2 bedroom
house $800 rent and 1/2 utilities. Must like cats
1 BLOCK FROM THE KANASAS UNION For Rent August 1 to serious graduate or upperclass students or KU employees only 1 BR suitable for 2 Furnished本驴 Pet. retraining. Deposit and payment to us.
3 Bedroom Apartment, Summer Sublease. 2
Bedroom with staircase, spacious. Close to campus.
Campus St. Francis.
2 Bedroom, 2 Bath for Siblance with Fall option,
1 Bedroom, 1 Bath for Siblance with basketball court. Tired of reading ads? Call 312-490-5822.
Female Nommate needed to share beautiful renovated home. Very close to campus. Summer school.
2 bedroom furnished apartment for summer base 1 block from campan, 1/2 bath, A.C. Bathroom, 1 bedroom
2 Bedroom, 1 bath apartment in 4-plex. Great location near campus $300/month plus utilities. Available around 6/1/87 Call evenings, weeks: 842-9614
Fine location on bedroom basement studio
phone: 212-698-4530; Available June 1, $75 at 1800 Mississippi Call
4-Bdrm, 2 full bath, large kitchen, living room,
Brand new furnished apartment. Sublease
summer. Mastercraft Campus Place, Next to Yello
Sub. Black) 841-3176
4 Bedroom house, fully furnished. Available June and July. Family preferred. Call for information.
FOR SUMMER BUILDLESS Two bedroom apt
on campus. Very nice suite for microwave. Close to
campus, very nice 90' apartment.
Female Roommate needed for Summer and/or Fall. Tri-town level house, partially solar powered, 2 blocks from campus. Low rent and space. Spiral staircase, DW, microwave. Call 847-675.
Accepting deposits for summer or fall at Park Plaza South. Summer-1 bedroom $100/2 bedroom $300. Fall (10 month lease) 1 bedroom $25/2 bedroom $255. Water paid, gas heated. Furnished bedroom on KU on kili. Office open 1.5, Monday-Friday. 1912 W. 8th. 44hr. 36hr. Weekends. 843-4776
8 Bedrooms, 3 Bathrooms. Adjacent to campus
No pets. Call 842-8971
- Lowest utility bills
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY NOW LEASING FOR FAIL
- Short term leases
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- Gas heat, CA, DW
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- accepted
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For more info, call between
4 Edrm Apartment near campus, Meadowbrook area. 2 baths, dishwasher, refrigerator, garage. Summer sublease with option to pick up lease in August. Rent negotiation 841-3913.
Apartments for summer and fall at University Terrace Apartments, 1607 W. King I. 1 Bedroom for summer, June and July only $190 unfurnished, furnished bedroom, June and July only $340 unfurnished, furnished $200, plus all utilities. 1 Bedroom for fall, 10 month leave, August-1 June 1; furnished bedroom, November-April 1; furnished Bedroom for fall, August-1 June 1; $110 furnished, $290 unfurnished, plus all utilities. Central air, on bus route, large rooms, gas heat. Come see at University Terrace, W. or 841-3230. If no answer call 943-1433.
Experience Student Cooperative Living at
Sunflower House 1406 Tenn.
Private rooms with shared housework and meals
749-0871
App for Sublease Water, Gas, Cable paid, Across
Area, to campaons in camps furnished. Rent
Negotiate Pal or fee on request.
adt to Subleave: new, immaculate, furnished 1bpt adm tp w/ refrigerator, dishwasher, disposal 1 block from campus. Regular price $230-for summer $250 Available May 15 Call 781-6953 ME YOU ATTENDING SUMMER SCHOOL? You're starting at $210盘 Durable Plastic Kit.
Inquire Now For Summer and Fall Spaces
--bus route
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Room number: 749-1288 on Saturday
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Available May 15-Furnished 1 bedroom Apartm
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Classic, Wood Floor. Apt in house with backpack, 1 back from KU. Avail for Summa students. 1 back from KU. Avail for Summa students.
Best Location on Campus. Summer Sublease. HRI pt, abweig Jawahra Bookstore. Furnished room.
Brand new Colony Woods Apt. available for sublease mid-May through December, $185/m. Dishwasher, microwave, own bedroom. bathroom. Females Call 841-2617.
Enjoy cooperative living at Sunflower House in Palm Beach, Florida, where it is open for summer and housework. Spaces open for summer and fall.
southridge
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Excellent location; 2 bedroom apartments in four-plex. Carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, and low utilities. Available June 1. Summer rentals at 814-118 Tennessee and 1341 Ohio. Btu 842-4242
Faluion Studios. Available June 1, 1987. Fully furnished, utilities paid, A/C separate, off street parking. Easy walk to KU. downtown $30 mo. furnished. Work in dorm, mature, and respite. 44-3567; afternoon.
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HEY LOOK AT THIS! Brand new 1 Bdm. App,
for summer use! Close to campus D / W A/C
and free parking.
Looking for for 2 female KU students to share lovey
thoughts with them. We will camp in
campbell month also visit 64812 or 64813
Berkely FLATS
843-2116
11th & Mississippi
LEASING NOW & FOR FALL
- Over 40 New Units
Great location walk anywhere
walk anywhere
- Furnished Units
- Laundry facilities
- Available
- On KU Bus Route
SHORT LEASES AVAILABLE
1123 Indiana Furnished by Thompson-Crawley
Meadowbook summer Sublease 3 Mdn Twrnr only 175 mz. Don't wait. Call 843-1886.
NO NEED TO READ ANY FURTHER! Summer Sublease: 3 bedroom- 3 bedroom, townhouse, available mid-May Completely furnished, 2 full baths, dishwasher. Ideal location 9th & Eimery St., New York, NY 10024
Most Sublease for summer. Available mid-May
and early-January. Suite, Bath,
Bath and Living room. Partially furnished.
Room is a two-bedroom suite with separate
baths.
ON CAMPUS APARTMENT for summer.
484 7905, low utilities. 483-472-805
749 6005.
Broad basement apartment available in August.
Walking distance campus/downtown, private enclosed,
100'x75'.
PENTHOUGE) Summer Sublease. 2 bedroom,
furnished.欲求 软房 to 强房. Rent
non-smoking. Not smoking.
Reserve your apartment now! Just 2 short blocks from university, 1. 2, and 4 bedroom apartments. Furnished with some utilities and off street parking. No pets. 841-5500
PINECREST
Under New Ownership & Management
Several 2 BR's
COME TAKE A LOOK!
Several 2 BR's
All new carpeting, cabinets,
and windows
Laundry facilities
Gas heat, very energy efficient
Leaving new and for fall
Pinecrest
2563 Redbud Lane block E. of Iowa on 26th furniture by Thompson Crawler
749-2022
Reserve your room now! For summer and/or fall Furnished with most utilities paid. Shared cooking and bath facilities just 2 short blocks from the garage with off street parking. No pets. 841-555
Roommate wanted: Beautiful Qual Creep Akks
$140.00/month. Own room, pool, tennis cable
Summer Roommate. Female to live in with 2 others and male to stay at location 1258. Roommates are required to declare, please call, ask for Jennifer, or leave message. Hent may be negotiable, must find a roommate.
Rooms available for summer and the 1987-88 academic year in the Christian living community "Kononaa" at Ecumenical Church Ministries. Information come to 1294/ead or Call 843-953.
Spacious. Peepertee 2BR 2 bath Pool/Cubbies Tennis Bus B1 Sublease for
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B683, B684, B685, B686, B687, B688, B689, B690, B691, B692, B693, B694, B695, B696, B697, B698, B699, B700, B701, B702, B703, B704, B705, B706, B707, B708, B709, B710, B711, B712, B713, B714, B715, B716, B717, B718, B719, B720, B721, B722, B723, B724, B725, B726, B727, B728, B729, B730, B731, B732, B733, B734, B735, B736, B737, B738, B739, B740, B741, B742, B743, B744, B745, B746, B747, B748, B749, B750, B751, B752, B753, B754, B755, B756, B757, B758, B759, B760, B761, B762, B763, B764, B765, B766, B767, B768, B769, B770, B771, B772, B773, B774, B775, B776, B777, B778, B779, B780, B781, B782, B783, B784, B785, B786, B787, B788, B789, B790, B791, B792, B793, B794, B795, B796, B797, B798, B799, B800, B801, B802, B803, B804, B805, B806, B807, B808, B809, B810, B811, B812, B813, B814, B815, B816, B817, B818, B819, B820, B821, B822, B823, B824, B825, B826, B827, B828, B829, B830, B831, B832, B833, B834, B835, B836, B837, B838, B839, B840, B841, B842, B843, B844, B845, B846, B847, B848, 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B1013, B1014, B1015, B1016, B1017, B1018, B1019, B1020, B1021, B1022, B1023, B1024, B1025, B1026, B1027, B1028, B1029, B1030, B1031, B1032, B1033, B1034, B1035, B1036, B1037, B1038, B1039, B1040, B1041, B1042, B1043, B1044, B1045, B1046, B1047, B1048, B1049, B1050, B1051, B1052, B1053, B1054, B1055, B1056, B1057, B1058, B1059, B1060, B1061, B1062, B1063, B1064, B1065, B1066, B1067, B1068, B1069, B1070, B1071, B1072, B1073, B1074, B1075, B1076, B1077, B1078, B1079, B1080, B1081, B1082, B1083, B1084, B1085, B1086, B1087, B1088, B1089, B1090, B1091, B1092, B1093, B1094, B1095, B1096, B1097, B1098, B1099, B1100, B1101, B1102, B1103, B1104, B1105, B1106, B1107, B1108, B1109, B1110, B1111, B1112, B1113, B1114, B1115, B1116, B1117, B1118, B1119, B1120, B1121, B1122, B1123, B1124, B1125, B1126, B1127, B1128, B1129, B1130, B1131, B1132, B1133, B1134, B1135, B1136, B1137, B1138, B1139, B1140, B1141, B1142, B1143, B1144, B1145, B1146, B1147, B1148, B1149, B1150, B1151, B1152, B1153, B1154, B1155, B1156, B1157, B1158, B1159, B1160, B1161, B1162, B1163, B1164, B1165, B1166, B1167, B1168, B1169, B1170, B1171, B1172, B1173, B1174, B1175, B1176, B1177, B1178, B1179, B1180, B1181, B1182, B1183, B1184, B1185, B1186, B1187, B1188, B1189, B1190, B1191, B1192, B1193, B1194, B1195, B1196, B1197, B1198, B1199, B1200, B1201, B1202, B1203, B1204, B1205, B1206, B1207, B1208, B1209, B1210, B1211, B1212, B1213, B1214, B1215, B1216, B1217, B1218, B1219, B1220, B1221, B1222, B1223, B1224, B1225, B1226, B1227, B1228, B1229, B1230, B1231, B1232, B1233, B1234, B1235, B1236, B1237, B1238, B1239, B1240, B1241, B1242, B1243, B1244, B1245, B1246, B1247, B1248, B1249, B1250, B1251, B1252, B1253, B1254, B1255, B1256, B1257, B1258, B1259, B1260, B1261, B1262, B1263, B1264, B1265, B1266, B1267, B1268, B1269, B1270, B1271, B1272, B1273, B1274, B1275, B1276, B1277, B1278, B1279, B1280, B1281, B1282, B1283, B1284, B1285, B1286, B1287, B1288, B1289, B1290, B1291, B1292, B1293, B1294, B1295, B1296, B1297, B1298, B1299, B1300, B1301, B1302, B1303, B1304, B1305, B1306, B1307, B1308, B1309, B1310, B1311, B1312, B1313, B1314, B1315, B1316, B1317, B1318, B1319, B1320, B1321, B1322, B1323, B1324, B1325, B1326, B1327, B1328, B1329, B1330, B1331, B333, B334, B335, B336, B337, B338, B339, B340, B341, B342, B343, B344, B345, B346, B347, B348, B349, B350, B351, B352, B353, B354, B355, B356, B357, B358, B359, B360, B361, B362, B363, B364, B365, B366, B367, B368, B369, B370, B371, B372, B373, B374, B375, B376, B377, B378, B379, B380, B381, B382, B383, B384, B385, B386, B387, B388, B389, B390, B391, B392, B393, B394, B395, B396, B397, B398, B399, B400, B401, B402, B403, B404, B405, B406, B407, B408, B409, B410, B411, B412, B413, B414, B415, B416, B417, B418, B419, B420, B421, B422, B423, B424, B425, B426, B427, B428, B429, B430, B431, B432, B433, B434, B435, B436, B437, B438, B439, B440, B441, B442, B443, B444, B445, B446, B447, B448, B449, B450, B451, B452, B453, B454, B455, B456, B457, B458, B459, B460, B461, B462, B463, B464, B465, B466, B467, B468, B469, B470, B471, B472, B473, B474, B475, B476, B477, B478, B479, B480, B481, B482, B483, B484, B485, B486, B487, B488, B489, B490, B491, B492, B493, B494, B495, B496, B497, B498, B499, B500, B501, B502, B503, B504, B505, B506, B507, B508, B509, B510, B511, B512, B513, B514, B515, B516, B517, B518, B519, B520, B521, B522, B523, B524, B525, B526, B527, B528, B529, B530, B531, B532, B533, B534, B535, B536, B537, B538, B539, B540, B541, B542, B543, B544, B545, B546, B547, B548, B549, B550, B551, B552, B553, B554, B555, B556, B557, B558, B559, B560, B561, B562, B563, B564, B565, B566, B567, B568, B569, B570, B571, B572, B573, B574, B575, B576, B577, B578, B579, B580, B581, B582, B583, B584, B585, B586, B587, B588, B589, B590, B591, B592, B593, B594, B595, B596, B597, B598, B599, B600, B601, B602, B603, B604, B605, B606, B607, B608, B609, B610, B611, B612, B613, B614, B615, B616, B617, B618, B619, B620, B621, B622, B623, B624, B625, B626, B627, B628, B629, B630, B631, B632, B633, B634, B635, B636, B637, B638, B639, B640, B641, B642, B643, B644, B645, B646, B647, B648, B649, B650, B651, B652, B653, B654, B655, B656, B657, B658, B659, B660, B661, B662, B663, B664, B665, B666, B667, B668, B669, B670, B671, B672, B673, B674, B675, B676, B677, B678, B679, B680, B681, B682, B683, B684, B685, B686, B687, B688, B689, B690, B691, B692, B693, B694, B695, B696, B697, B698, B699, B700, B701, B702, B703, B704, B705, B706, B707, B708, B709, B710, B711, B712, B713, B714, B715, B716, B717, B718, B719, B720, B721, B722, B723, B724, B725, B726, B727, B728, B729, B730, B731, B732, B733, B734, B735, B736, B737, B738, B739, B740, B741, B742, B743, B744, B745, B746, B747, B748, B749, B750, B751, B752, B753, B754, B755, B756, B757, B758, B759, B760, B761, B762, B763, B764, B765, B766, B767, B768, B769, B770, B771, B772, B773, B774, B775, B776, B777, B778, B779, B780, B781, B782, B783, B784, B785, B786, B787, B788, B789, B790, B791, B792, B793, B794, B795, B796, B797, B798, B799, B800, B801, B802, B803, B804, B805, B806, B807, B808, B809, B810, B811, B812, B813, B814, B815, B816, B817, B818, B819, B820, B821, B822, B823, B824, B825, B826, B827, B828, B829, B830, B831, B832, B833, B834, B835, B836, B837, B838, B839, B840, B841, B842, B843, B844, B845, B846, B847, B848, B849, B850, B851, B852, B853, B854, B855, B856, B857, B858, B859, B860, B861, B862, B863, B864, B865, B866, B867, B868, B869, B870, B871, B872, B873, B874, B875, B876, B877, B878, B879, B880, B881, B882, B883, B884, B885, B886, B887, B888, B889, B890, B891, B892, B893, B894, B895, B896, B897, B898, B899, B900, B901, B902, B903, B904, B905, B906, B907, B908, B909, B910, B911, B912, B913, B914, B915, B916, B917, B918, B919, B920, B921, B922, B923, B924, B925, B926, B927, B928, B929, B930, B931, B932, B933, B934, B935, B936, B937, B938, B939, B940, B941, B942, B943, B944, B945, B946, B947, B948, B949, B950, B951, B952, B953, B954, B955, B956, B957, B958, B959, B960, B961, B962, B963, B964, B965, B966, B967, B968, B969, B970, B971, B972, B973, B974, B975, B976, B977, B978, B979, B980, B981, B982, B983, B984, B985, B986, B987, B988, B989, B990, B991, B992, B993, B994, B995, B996, B997, B998, B999, B1000, B1001, B1002, B1003, B1004, B1005, B1006, B1007, B1008, B1009, B1010, B1011, B1012, B1013, B1014, B1015, B1016, B1017, B1018, B1019, B1020, B1021, B1022, B1023, B1024, B1025, B1026, B1027, B1028, B1029, B1030, B1031, B1032, B1033, B1034, B1035, B1036, B1037, B1038, B1039, B1040, B1041, B1042, B1043, B1044, B1045, B1046, B1047, B1048, B1049, B1050, B1051, B1052, B1053, B1054, B1055, B1056, B1057, B1058, B1059, B1060, B1061, B1062, B1063, B1064, B1065, B1066, B1067, B1068, B1069, B1070, B1071, B1072, B1073, B1074, B1075, B1076, B1077, B1078, B1079, B1080, B1081, B1082, B1083, B1084, B1085, B1086, B1087, B1088, B1089, B1090, B1091, B1092, B1093, B1094, B1095, B1096, B1097, B1098, B1099, B1100, B1101, B1102, B1103, B1104, B1105, B1106, B1107, B1108, B1109, B1110, B1111, B1112, B1113, B1114, B1115, B1116, B1117, B1118, B1119, B1120, B1121, B1122, B1123, B1124, B1125, B1126, B1127, B1128, B1129, B1130, B1131, B1132, B1133, B1134, B1135, B1136, B1137, B1138, B1139, B1140, B1141, B1142, B1143, B1144, B1145, B1146, B1147, B1148, B1149, B1150, B1151, B1152, B1153, B1154, B1155, B1156, B1157, B1158, B1159, B1160, B1161, B1162, B1163, B1164, B1165, B1166, B1167, B1168, B1169, B1170, B1171, B1172, B1173, B1174, B1175, B1176, B1177, B1178, B1179, B1180, B1181, B1182, B1183, B1184, B1185, B1186, B1187, B1188, B1189, B1190, B1191, B1192, B1193, B1194, B1195, B1196, B1197, B1198, B1199, B1200, B1201, B1202, B1203, B1204, B1205, B1206, B1207, B1208, B1209, B1210, B1211, B1212, B1213, B1214, B1215, B1216, B1217, B1218, B1219, B1220, B1221, B1222, B1223, B1224, B1225, B1226, B1227, B1228, B1229, B1230, B1231, B1232, B1233, B1234, B1235, B1236, B1237, B1238, B1239, B1240, B1241, B1242, B1243, B1244, B1245, B1246, B1247, B1248, B1249, B1250, B1251, B1252, B1253, B1254, B1255, B1256, B1257, B1258, B1259, B1260, B1261, B1262, B1263, B1264, B1265, B1266, B1267, B1268, B1269, B1270, B1271, B1272, B1273, B1274, B1275, B1276, B1277, B1278, B1279, B1280, B1281, B1282, B1283, B1284, B1285, B1286, B1287, B1288, B1289, B1290, B1291, B1292, B1293, B1294, B1295, B1296, B1297, B1298, B1299, B1300, B1301, B1302, B1303, B1304, B1305, B1306, B1307, B1308, B1309, B1310, B1311, B1312, B1313, B1314, B1315, B1316, B1317, B1318, B1319, B1320, B1321, B1322, B1323, B1324, B1325, B1326, B1327, B1328, B1329, B1330, B1331, B1332, B1333, B1334, B1335, B1336, B1337, B1338, B1339, B1340,
STOP YOUR APARTMENT SEARCH! One bed subsuite, excellent location one block from campus. Excellent for summer student. Rent 283, but negotiable. Call 841 3741.
Study available for summer in super api. com.
Available for summer in super api. com.
laundry available. I will assume part of expenses
in this course.
SUBLEASE Two bedroom Village Square Apart
Unit Low utilities. Availabd May $130
Mid utilities. Availabd May $180
Location
Located among 70 acres of rolling hills and trees, you'll enjoy the convenience of being close to campus and area shopping.
Lifestyle
Meadowbrook offers a selection of spacious and comfortable studios, 1, 2, or 3 bedroom apartments, and townhouses to fit your lifestyle
RESERVE YOUR
UNIT NOW
FOR SUMMER OR FALL!
15th & Crestline 842-4200
meadowbrook
SUBLEASE: 2 BR (urnished apt. 1/2, bath C
near campus. $300/month plus utilities. Available
May 15. First 15 days free. 843-7806 or 841-5797
SUBLEASE GREAT STUDIO-Meadowbreak
Ultr clean-tufted furnished. Available May
31st.
SUMMER APT SUBLEASE SUNRISE PLACE 2
morgans per month; facility fees $40,
per month per month: 798-7111
IF YOU LIKE SPACE & QUIET WE HAVE IT AND YOU CAN STILL WALK TO CAMPUS
Spacious 2 bedroom
Laundry facilities
Waterbed fine
Swimming pool
10-12 month leases
VILLAGE SQUARE
842-3040
SUMMER Female tenants wanted for spacious 4 bedroom house w/ fenced in back yard. Furnished plus microwave and dishwasher. Available right now. Two plus 14 utilities. Call Erie, evenings, 8:30 a.m.
SUMMER SURLEASE 2 jednomie Apt. New
close to campus. Call 749 2432
SUMMER SHIPLEASE. Apple Lane Studio, Nice.
quater, Water, cable free $25/month. Available
mid May. Pay only June. July Call 841-7802 after
6 p.m.
SUMMER SCHOOL 2. NO CARF 2 biferm on roommates need on campaing Rent nengo
roommates
SUMMER SUBLASE two bedrooms and 1-1/2 bathroom apartment. Furnished with swimming pool, 10 minutes to campus, and on bus line. $90 notifiable. Call evenings at 749-1768.
AMENITIES
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Very nice. new 1 BR/ studioapt 130 & Ohio Furnished. Must be non-smoker, off street parking. NEGOTIABLE Available May 14, 841-406.
SUMMER BASELEASE Large bedroom Apart
room, large bedroom 1470. Negotiable Call Gatl 8417 Keeping
SUMMER BASELEASE Large two bedroom apt
close to campus AC, DW, Halcony Call 749-3621.
SUMMER BASELEASE modern and spacious 2
bedrooms all baths, central air weather
and dryer 749-2823.
Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the amenities of Naismith Hall. Applications for fall semester are now being accepted while space remains.
NAISMITH HALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
913-843-8559
SUMMER BULLETASE STUDIO Utilities paid.
close to campus. Call 749-2415
SUMMER SHIRELEASE: 3 Bedroom, 1/2 bath,
laundry facility, close to KU. Available
mature day pay only June, 1 and electric.
mature day pay Malls Ode English Acps
B42 730-730
SUMMER SUBLAGELE 2 bedroom Townhome furnished, private garage close to campus and parking lot. SUMMER SUBLAGELE 2 bedroom furnished apartment, close to campus-Tangwood Call
SUMMER SUBLEASE 2 Bdrm, pool, A/C
Available May 15 BEST OF Call: 841-2600
SUMMER SUBLEASE 2 Bdrm, pool, A/C
Available May 15 BEST OF Call: 841-2600
Sublease for summer, studio at Hanover Place.
Call 749-5440
- 1 & 2 bedroom
SUMMER SUBLASE Townhouses 3 Bdrm. 2.18F,
Broadway, Jacksonville, FL. A. Available May 18.
Cable 799-690-2800.
SUNRISE PLACE TOWNHOUSE AVAIL FOR
1/2 bath, finished basement. Perfect for 4,
pool table included. Will negotiate on Rent Cai-
tle. Sublease for summer, studio at Haven PN
Avalon
- Gas and water paid
- Laundry facilities
- Close to KU & Hillcrest
- Shopping Center
- On KU bus route
- Future services
- Extra storage space
- Rental furniture available
- Rental furniture available from Thompson-Crawley 9th & Auction Row. 814
Sublease. 4-bedroom, spacious, excellent location
next to Yelio Subl. Call 841-3891
Sublease 2 firm duplex. Available j1st. Close to campus. **825** mo./call 841-244 evenings.
Sublease for summer: furnished two bedroom
apt. A/C Great location! Call 841-0807
Sublease. Spacious 2 BH rpt. near campus for 2-3 weeks and can extend to least 1411733, 1 a p.m., or 8:30 a.m.
Sublease for summer Furnished, 2 bedrooms,
and apartment one block from campus. Call
1-800-749-5700.
Sublease Apartment: Low rent, includes 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths, tennis courts, basketball court, club house, on bus route 1 Month Free. 841-3195
Sublease nice 2 bdm apt .10 from campus,
on bus route. Pool. Call食堂 Poelo or Roberto
Sublease Midwestbrook Studio Largest plan available with bedroom Water & cable paired
WEST HILLS APARTMENTS 1012 EMERY RD. 841-3800
Now taking reservations
Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apartments furnished & unfurnished Great location
Great location near campus
DISPLAY APARTMENTS
Monday-Wednesday-Thursday
1:00-4:00
No appointment needed Stop by office located in middle of complex by pool
4
University Daily Kansan / Monday, April 27, 1987
13
MASTERCRAFT
Completely furnished
apartments--all near KU! Consider:
- Professional management
- Many great locations
CAMPUS PLACE—1145 Louisiana
841-1429
Summer Sublueau Immediately Wanted Room for mates for Luxurious 3 bedroom 2 story housewife
TANGLEWOOD - 10th & Arkansas
749-2415
OPEN DAY 1, 15
OPEN DAILY 1-5
Subner 28 Meadowbrook apartment, DW, FP, CAC, patio, pool, tennis. Cuisine and water pallet.
Summer Special, 3 bedroom apartment with洗衣 and dryer, utilities paid $300; also room in spacious West Lawrence home, $150, washing/dryer utilities, $84 - 414.44
SUNDANCE—7th & Florida
841-5255
HILLVIEW APTS.
1745 W. 24th 841-5797
NOW LEASING FOR FALL!
Starting at $260
- Laundry facilities
- On bus route - near shopping
- Ample off-street parking
- Rental furniture available from Thompson-Crawley
Summer Sublease: Need one or two females for a bedroom apartment, comfortably furnished, $185 each, 1/3 utilizes, close to campus. Call 749-2723. Summer Sublease will option for Fall: 2 bd. AC
Summer Sublease. Furnished Studio, close to
campus and downtown. Negotiable Sale.
Summer Submarine Harvard Square. 2 bedrooms, spacious living room, paid pool, close access to beach. monthly rate: $799.
Summer Sub Campus 2 Bedroom Apl. Very close to campus. Rent Negotiable. Please call soon.
Summer Sublease. Male roommate wanted to
share 2 bedroom apartment. Close to campus,
on bus route Swimming Furniture. Please call
841-5583 7 o n. m.
Summer Sublease: nice 2 hr fully furnished apartment
$250/month. Close to Campus, Tanglewood
lake. Call 817-694-3732.
GEORGETOWN
- June & July special: $200
- On the KU Bus Route
- *Wind for cable TV
- Fenced Pool Area
- Dishwasher, garbage disposal, & pantry
- Other Appointments Available
- Tanning Deck
- Completely Privacy Fenced
- Beautifully Landscaped
- Washer & Dryer hook-ups
Summer Sublease or longer 2 *ndrm*, AC, pool in edding In Caddage Call. Bq412-0111
Summer Sublease to female: 2 bdmr furnished
1/2 bits 1/2 weeks from Campus: 841-5704
Summer Sublime Loxum Studio Summer Turtle
Studio plus duration. Next to Camper Call after
month
Summer Sublease. Need two males to sublease 3
bedroom housewife. Furnished. Rented.
Summer Sublease. Nice room 3 BR duplex, AC,
good location on bus route, $900. Low utility
rate. 2 Bathrooms. 4 Bedrooms. $1,400-$1,750.
Summer Sublease 3 BH furnished townhouse near campus, bus. Negotiable 841-360, after 6.
Summer sublet. 1 bedroom apt furnished.
2 bedrooms. unlimited free $19/mo. no fire
lights. 740-496-3000. call 811-654-1500.
Sunrise Village apartment for rent this summer
May 19 through July 31. Reasonable rent, pool
tournisces than one year old. Rooms 4
comfortably. Call Staci, Jill; or Liares. 841-0665
THIS IS IT. We subleasing our four bedroom two bathroom apartment. It's right off campus. 12th & Louisiana. We'll give you our microwave, to keep as well and to negotiate a price.
save blocks from Union, two bedroom apt. for June and July, ac, dishwasher, backyard, patio, basement, neat place $350.00 and low utilities 749-764.
Top of the hill location, studio summer sublease,
to rent to rent; call 842-2501
Two Bedroom Apartment: Minutes Suit with Fail Option. Five minutes to Flower. Low utilization. Excellent design.
FOR SALE
14. 6 & 8 Mobile Home, 2 bedrooms, remodeled, nice carpet, leased room, Partial financial financing
**purchaser:** CAGNOS-Great first bike. Cafe style with warm leather 4000 B.O. 814-1545.
182 Honda CB4 650, 3000 miles. Header, crush
bars, only 1100 B.O. B. 749-888. B. 626-638
1804 Honda Nightjack 4D includes Ferring, Sandags bag, Luggage rock, Crusie. Excellent condition.
984 Moped Horda Spree. Good condition. $250
call. Call 842-8097 after 7 p.m.
1986 Kawasaki NINJA 650 Rike Low, only 200 miles. Call elevations, 841-8091.
79 250% red. dark red, low mileage, 5.5 good condition for only $400 callout, call return at 30 day
22 "C65B-FU, good qoW 800," computer, ask owner $900, call Steve. 844-5765.
23 **NINJACHERS**, *C*12 "collector" 12 string 399. *Sediment Buyers only*, John 841-5768 or
842-6210.
Comm 64 with 1541 disk and bluebimble model M. matix graphics program, modle file or make 640 disk
Accountant GUITAR together with box in good condition, sells under $800, Call 864-6632.
Brand New Mountain Bike Black Fuji Bivd IXC
Bare reilden, Big ride. Good, Price 842.182
FOR SLEEPS 1980 KAWASKI ZK50 1 in 1 KERKOR
for SLEES, new tire/battery, 4 T KERKORs.
Double overboard camshaft, race tie handle
for SLEES, insulated helmet, very quick.
Call evenings, 749.3755
Austro Daimler 10 speed bicycle. Like new, excellent condition. Call 749-5364 after 5 p.m.
ACD Kalmation puppy, purebred, 12 weeks old.
Must sell. More info. Call John 453-8803.
For Sale. Music Man Sting-Ray Bass with Hard Shell Case. $350 or best offer. Brendan at 843-5237. For sale 1972 BMW Motorcycle R65/ 20.190 origin original environment shape. Must sell. Must be 1972.
GHETTO BLASTER. Renew new New, still in Box, Auto Reverse, Equalizer, and Detachable Speakers. Only $75. Perfect for Summer. Call Brian at 842-9286.
Guitar: Alvarez Electric/Electric Stereo
Guitar: Alvarez Electric/Electric Stereo
$20.00 you need to buy six months. Must sell 664-283-2192.
IBM PC/XT compatible, includes monochrome
graphics, monochrome monitor, switchable Turbo
motherboard w / 512K. 1 Flippy drive. $875.
6-month warranty included, 842-5495.
LEADING EDGE MODEL "D"; "B", 168, IBM Compi-
plete. Compile with guard protector, Sharp color
monitor, Panasonic KX-P1001 printer, word
display, Ampeg APC-4000 audio player, $490;叫
8041-3913 831.
MAX'S COMICS. Comic Books, Playboys, Penhouse, etc. 811 New Hampshire.
MOPED. 1981 Motobanee. Runs OK, but needs tune-up. Asking $150. Vincer. 84-7050.
*** MOTHALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
*****
8th 96h 749-696
8th 96h 749-696
NAD 1355 integrated amp 2500 .000 advert last week, buyer had to back out of call. Call Mark.
Brian.
Moving back to Europe must part with my Honda
in great condition. $600 Call 891-242-
Wont!
Never Been Used Fanatic 100 Sailboard 12 x
Rigged and Squareed North Sail $00.00 or less
for 749-3485
Nikon FE2 $29.00 x 35-10 lens with Micro $315.00
Telephone 841-6495, Nid
*
NOTES now available for variety of classes
Enhance learning and grades, Call 843-3102
**DVDs**
DVDs available. Call 843-3102
PLANO for Upright good condition $400.
749-2227. Keep tryng.
Realistic Microsoft Recorder 65.00, Minolta 164
speakers 75.00, Rissi 22 Iphone 120 new,
speakers 75.00, Rissi 22 Iphone 120 new,
Rollaway Bed. Only $25. In good shape. For more info call 749-2513.
Sailbott for Sale: 2012 Olympic Class Flying Dutchman. Good Condition, Light Weight and Fast. Asking 900.00 or best offer. Call evenings, 749-3905.
SUZUKI 684501 Good campus transportation better than a moped 350 negot. BN4 814-6449
SYNTHEIZER RoloUND Johan 106 61 key full key
analog synthesizer 128 programmable sounds,
full MKI1 less than one year old. $625 negotiable
749-3559
TUXEDOS: After Six formal wear TUXEDOS ALL SIZEES! Jacket with tails or plain, complete set with pants, vest, or cumberbur, bow tie-ess expensive to own than to rent! Come to Everything Expensive! We are ready for that special spring fling! TUXEDOS. Have you size but hurry! Everything But Ice.
Tuxedo Liquidation: Last Week Three piece tusks only 17.4 ea. All accessories 1.9 each. Open noon til 6:00. Closing forever April 30th! 900 New Hampton
WINDSURF never been used 12 ft. Comes Compa-
wins $600 or best price 843,187 Petit
AUTO SALES
1974 Volvo 142 Good condition. Very dependable.
120.000 ml. Available from July 1, 1991. Call
1974 Volvo 142 Good condition. Very dependable.
120.000 ml. Available from July 1, 1991. Call
1987 Marda GLC. Good condition, Economic,
72300 114. Four door, radiator, $148; Call
(612) 542-7100.
1981 Datsun 210 AM-FM. New Tires, Very Good
80,000 miles, 9,100 calls. $543-6923.
carrier for the car.
Tire. Stereo jack. Pop up millegale, 4.0. Ask $5,000 but repal-
tible $6,000
iPhone. iPad. MacBook.
72 Dodge Dart. Two door, reliable, chrysler slant six engine, runs good. $400. Call 749-2898.
74 Superbettec, Sunroof, Pioneer Stereo, Clean.
$120.00. Scott. 841-3661
1969 Firebill, 356. AM/FM, Cassette, A.C.
after 1949 to 77/42/1949. Bauerstein,
864. 1959 to 77/42/1949.
For Sale 75 Facer N. New Brakes, shocks, springs,
startcars, b pump, distractor, Green shade,
backseat cover
Must Sell A Class! Due to graduation I'm paring with my 1967 Ford Mustang. In super shape, it looks like a mini truck.
LOST-FOUND
Beautiful young siamese fond on campus
Please call Lippincott, 749-3285, ask for CKI.
Found on West campus : set of keys. Call 842-7760 to identify.
Found. Watch behind Robinson tennis courts call to identify. 849.3810.
LOST: Female puppy, Black Lab/German
Sheepard mix 14 weeks old. Call Lena; 749-180.
LOST on 4/11/17, Men's Seiko watch, reward Call
Steve at 842-4780.
Lost: A set of keys, contain a Subaru key, $10 reward. Call Jim at 846-2312
LOST 42/87/8 Men's Citizen watch, Guy 'B' Calld, William 84/81/34 They keep saying
Bakery Subs / Cleaning one position Monday,
thursday, 8 p.m. m-pm; Friday, 9 p.m. a-tm;
Saturday, 10 a-m. p.m.; Sunday, 11 a-
weeks paid vacation after 1 year; Interviewed
day, April 27. 9 p.m. apply at Mucker's bakery.
Artist Wanted! T-shirt design, Graphics and Illustration (cartoon characters etc) STUDENTS encouraged to apply. Call for appointment. 842-3338
HELP WANTED
Are you好 with children? Would you like to be paid to live with a California family and help with children? HELP P ARENTS 770 Mena Ave. 219, Montana Park, CA 94053 (415) 322-3816.
Last KUID and other ID in blue pass case. If found call Hernan at 842-7809. Keep trying.
Artist Needed for Next Semester: Graphic Design and Illustration. Call Please 843-3330 and ask for resume.
Boston family looking for mothers help, start July/August. min 1 yr commitment, room & board play salary, children aged 8 & w/ tutelay brittella, 7 Overlook Pk Newton, Mass. 02159
ARLINES CRUISELINES HIRING! Summer
Camp Game Travel Pay Travel Call For Guide
Workshops
Lost: Set of keys on two key chains. Please return to Tajkawers Halt or call 841-5446.
DIRECTOR-TEACHER, DAYCARE, CENTER
BA and ECE required, MA desirable Experience,
familiarity with Lawrence child care highly
required. Resume to: JUNE 18, 1967
Salary 12,000 plus hourly pay three re-
ferences to: Search Committee, c/o
Lawrence Housing Authority, 1600 Kaskell
Avenue, Lawrence, KS 60043. Resumes must be
ready by May 8 & May 14 is an EEO/AU
Employer.
Cocktail Waitresses Need Part-time weeks
Apply in person. Just A Playhouse 8 W 24h
(516) 376-9025
Cooks, Diswashers, and Line Personnel. Apply
to the position offered. Stockade, No.
No phone calls please.
DATA CLERK* 44-hour, 20 hrs/week, work processing, computer data entry, and office work. Must be KU enrolled for one hour, spring or summer. Must also apply to apply. 846-3060 Application deadline. May 11.
FULL AND PART TIME HELP!!" National Firm preparing for Spring and Summer work. If accepted, you will earn 8.01 start. Some evening and weekend positions are available and may be required. If you quality, corporate scholarships are awarded, internships are possible, and you may earn 2.34 credits/qr or semester. During summer break you must complete Call (931) 365-8975 Mon fri to 9 a.m. p.m.
Dount, person; cut/fry donuts, assist baker.
Midnight 8 - m. nights per week $4 / hr to start,
raises commensurate with skill level. Apply Mam-
ter's Baker. Thursday, April 23, 9 p. or Tues-
day, April 25, 9 p.
EARN $$$ PART TIME! Established manufacturer seeking Aggressive Students to promote Your School Shoes. GOOD INFORMATION AND EASY JOB, JAVELIN, 925 Lackman LENXA, 180 XENA
HALF-TIME DIRECTOR-DOULAS COUNTY
depending on experience. Qualifications:
experience with volunteers, good writing, speaking
and teaching; experience in building self-
motivated, responsible for: grant
writing/management, bookkeeping; reports;
presentations, recruiting, organizing and
development. Send resume, letter, and 3 references to:
Douglas County Clerk, Chasstahs
Lawrence, 6044. Deadline May 2nd
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16,640-$20,250.yr. New-
tailment B-38 600-600 Ex. R-1978 for current
employees.
CALIFORNIA DREAMIN?
NANNIES - Needed on west coast. Established midwist firm with excellent reputation arranges your placement. We screen families in their homes. Licenced, No Fee, Minumum stay 1 year. Call or Write:
JKHK-FM needs staff personnel for summer and fall Applications available at Black Acad. Must be a Master's Degree in Computer Science or related field.
ARCHER DAWSON AGENCY
OMAHA, NEBRASKA 68104
(402) 554-1103
NANNY POSITIONS AVAILABLE: Good salary.
Nanny positions Dallas, Texas. Call 9:39 m. (214)
485-2507
Nanny Placement agency looking for nannies
Great salaries and benefits. Positions available
nationally Nanny Finders, P.O. Box 4033, Chapel
NC 27514
Summer Job Opportunities available with the U.S. Marine Corps—No obligation to be a Marine Bain earn between $18,000 and $25,000 or housing* Call 913-841-1821 (collect)
Massachusetts Street new Deli and Buffalo Bob's Smokhouse need food service and table service employee. Must have a least one year exp in food service or another job that service starting pay 3.75 per hour plus profit sharing, table service 2.01 per hour plus tips. Apply to Buffalo Bob's Smokhouse above Buffalo Bob's Smokhouse.
Freshmen & Sophomores:
***************************
Need Friendly Office assistant who can work in independently Typing, Filging, Running Errands. Req. Master's Degree and 20-30 hours Per Week. Flexible Schedule Call 842-3883. Downtown Lawrence Association Part time advertising sales representative need Job Title: Sales Representative Make your own hours. Call Traci. 841-9643.
Program Coordinator, Hashinger Residence Hall Half time professional position. Responsibilities include, supervision and coordination of in-Hall activities, training of students in Arts, and academics. Requirements: Bachelor's Degree, exposure to the field of Fine Arts, and 6 years of experience as a student at Salary: $625-$676/month, depending on n-
Rape Victim Support Service seeking volunteers
Work with victims of sex assault and give community programs. Training provided. Must be 18 years old or older. 7:30 p.m. on 1419 Massachusetts at Headquarters. Application at headquarters & Emily Taylor R.V.S.S. 1419 Massachusetts, 66044
Salary: $625-$653/month, depending in "experience. Appointment: August 1, 1987 t 10 a.m.; May 30, 1987 t 4 p.m.; resume and names of three references to Fred McElheneil, Director, Office of Residential Program, 123 Strong Hall, University of Kansas. Expansion may be received by b 5 p.m., May 6, 1987 EOE-AA
SUMMER JOBIS IN NORTH JOHSON COUNTY
Temporary and permanent positions available.
Work 20 to 35 hours per week. Flexible schedule.
Office space at 11-040-9001-4634; Ask for Mr. Jeffries.
SUMMER WINE COOLER MERCHANDISEERS
Learn marketing at its most basic level! Students
needed merchandise leading line of wine coolers.
must be 21 years old, have reliable car and live in
the Kansas City area. Send resume to Merchandi-
seers, Inc., 404 Avenue A, Kansas City, MO. 64116.
REWARDING SUMMER for sophomore and older college men in Colorado mountains working with children. Backpacking, horseback riding, skiing and snowboarding now; include program interests and goals. SABORN WESTERN CAMPS. Florissant, CO 80165. Secretary-receptionist open immediate location. Req. Bachelor's degree in wpm, wpm, and filing. Word processing experience helpful. Approximately 30 hours per week June and July and 20 hours per week August and 8-78 school year. Available in Massachusetts, abs.
Would you like a career with WESTERN AIRLINES, UNITED STATES TWA, PIONEMOND CONTINENTAL, PIONEMOND AIRLINES? These are just a few of the 109 airlines you might be interviewing with if you were an International Air Acadamay graduate! More than 5,000 international Air Acadamay graduates are already enjoying the job.
Needed: Line cook, 3 years experience necessary
Apply in person between 2:00 and 5:00 on tuesdays and Wednesdays Alvamar Country Club, 1899 Crossgate Drive
AIRLINE TRAINING INTERVIEWS
Hardees
Summer job: Part-time Nanny needed for 2 year old boy at my house. You must have transportation to work Monday through Friday, beginning May 11th. You will call your references $2.50/hour. Please
You could be joining them after just 12 weeks of International Air Academy training! Find out how! Attend the special two hour
The Mathematics department is now accepting applications for the position of graduate teaching assistant, and will require a Bachelor's degree by August 15, 1977 and have a strong mathematical background. Applicants must pass an oral exam demonstrating English competency. Applicants should submit a letter in response to the announcement and two letters of recommendation to Charles Hill, Dept. of Math., 217强高 Hall Michigan Avenue.
Wednesday, April 15
HOLIDAY INN
530 RICHARDS DRIVE
MONTEREY, CA 93120
7:00 p.m.
Hardees of Lawrence on the Kansas Turnpike is currently hiring for all shifts.
- Flexible Scheduling
- 3. 75 per hour.
- Meal Discounts and
We are also taking applications and hiring people who are interested in employment starting in late May or early June.
- Opportunity for advancement
- Start at 3.50 to 3.75 per hour
- Free uniforms
Call 843-8203 Today
The Student Housing Department has opening for student janitorial staff. Must be able to work with children. August 14. Residence hall room may be provided for same period. Experience helpful. Contact
MISCELLANEOUS
ACE
SUNFLOWER
TRAVEL
THE ASSOCIATION OF COLLEGIATE ENTRE-PRENEURS IS HOLDING AN INFORMATIONAL MEETING ON APRIL 30 AT 6:30 P.M. IN THE WALNUT ROOM IN THE KANSAS UNION.
Depart May 29 or June 11
Space is limited!
Call today for details.
Bison Hunters
MUSEUM SHOP
Museum of Natural History
SIDEWALK SALE April 22
Next to the Ks. Union 864-4450
PERSONAL
Lori. You're not the only one who knows how to use the system. Thanks for coming on Thursday! She's in our office. Hello, Hi! MP3 for tired, sore eyes. Hope to see you Friday! IAT 120 Where to learn? Chris C
Leaving from my life you took away my joy. After the pain has finally gone you will have forgotten me and there will be nothing to hold in my arms. Mark G. Always remember me and the Karate master.
Peter. Adopted big bro are loved, too!!!
(especially ones that can make ice cubes!) Love
Scott H. I'm glad you did so well in the relays you think are the best. Your Secret Admirer
The family of Patrick Dooley express their deep gratitude to all the friends, classmates. He shows us how such kindness and sympathy at this time of great tragedy. We will certainly miss him.
Want to dance and get naked for a group of fun? Jennifer Wilson has danced at The Wilmington Walmart. It looks better ground your t. J.
BUS. PERSONAL
Be creative in gift giving. Fulfill fantasies with a beautiful Beautiful Portrait for all occasions (Call us 718-535-6900).
BHEADACIRE BACKACCIRE ARM MFN LEGG EKG
BHEADACIRE BACKACCIRE ARM MFN LEGG EKG
complete quality healthcare care drill Dr Mark
drmark.com
**GLEASIANSHIW** *For wks K/MO/info* PER-ER
**GLEASIANSHIW** *For wks K/MO/info* PER-ER
**94016-9218** *Mailed discreetly confidentially*
Most reasonable rates in town for all your photo
pictures. Call Photo 718-543-2690
for portrait calls. Photo 718-543-2690
Enjoy smooth, creamy
Frozen Yogurt
that tastes like Ice Cream
but with 80% less fat!
--FREE SAMPLES-new Kconnection, 300 Elm, North Lawrence,
482-413-7024. Tuesday to Saturday at 6, eighteen by ap-
ply from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Through April and May 18 cuts and sets, $0 perm
Rare and Used Records. Buy, Sell, or ...
Need music for your wedding? Call Jean, 843.3794.
Give nissen and voice lessons over summer
OPEN: 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Daily
Noon-11 p.m. Sundays
autumn Purchase Shopping Centre
I Can't Believe It's YOGURT! Frozen Yogurt Stores
RIM80MU SUN PHOTO is looking for young
photographers who are 15% over the
15% allowance set for free call
fee.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided 841-7749
SUMMER IN EUROPE $299 Lowest Scheduled
Fairs to all Europe from St. Louis 5144
(3144) 800-6050
REPAIR SPECIALISTS MIDWEST
John sings messages $20. 841, 1874 or 843-1209
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES. Ekchrome processing within 24 hours. Comfortable A/W warmer. Art & Design Building. Room 206. 844-4707
ATHI TUTOR since 1976, M.A. $/hour; courses
bove 199, HSE /hour) = 843-9023
WE'RE YOUR AUTHORIZED
commodore
SERVICES OFFERED
EMPLOYMENT SERVICE
Metcalf South Mall
95th & Metcalf, O.P. Ks.
(913) 341-6688
- D.W.I.'s & Traffic
* Fake I.D.'s & other criminal offences
* Family Law & other legal problems
16 East 13t St. 842-1133
WANTED: engineer student or professional to design idea for patient. Must have knowledge of wave transmission, similar to garage door openers. Call George, 749-0489 Quickly!
DONALD G. STROLE
AUTO-TINTING: Best scratch resistant solar
availability. Lifetime warranty. PRINT-OF
tint is included.
PRIVATE OFFICE Park... (913)491-8078
Services.
Overland Park Obj.
MUSIC ... MUSIC ... MUSIC
Red House Audio 8-track studio. P.A. and Lights,
Mobile Party Music. Maximum Audio Wizardry
Call Brant 749 123 726
Saintmess, All indies' dresses can be made here in town. You choose your favorite designs or styles from the latest fashion magazines, I will make them for you. Call Sue, Cul. 814.349
Do you have problems?
5:30- 6:00 p.m.
Talk live on the air to a trained Headquarters worker
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your
complete completion. Transportation provided
TYPING
1+1 TRIO Word processing. Responsible. Conscientious. Reliable. Call 842-3111 for service.
24 Hour Typing, 13th semester in Lawrence
campus. Best quality and fast service 841-700-
6605.
Dependable, professional experienced.
TRANSCRIPTION also: standard tape 843-9877
TRANSCRIPTION
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accepts typed and wordprocessing, 842-787-6300.
A1 professional typing. Term papers, Theses.
IBM Electronic Typewriter 842-326
Electronic Typewriter 842-326
A-Z Word processing Service. Quality resume, papers, dissertations. Reasonable rates. File management.
AAA TYPING has low cost word processing/
document storage starting at $19.1p.
@8412.942 after 4 p.m. weekdays, any time
weekends. Campus pick available.
Dependable, professional, experienced.
JEANETTE SHAFFER Typeing Service.
TRANSICRON also, standard tape 843-6877
MOMMY'S DOWNLOADS
WA PAPEIS. Mommy's typing is in Australia but will return. KEEP WATCHING THIS AD.
Dumma's Digital Training
...utely Fast Typing. Dependable and experienced with reasonable rates. Call Katie at 714-352-8000 or www.accuratewordprocessing.com Accurate Word Processing. Meadowbrook location years of experience. Call 749-1961 EVENINGS
Accurate affordable typing by former Harvard secretary. Three mid-level students at $15 per hour.
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, theses, dissertation letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter
quality printing, spelled correct. 842-7247
Experienced typet 12pt; dissertations, term papers M42103 after 6:15 p.m. M/F or S/Sat in New York.
Experienced Typeist: Dissertations, theses, term papers, etc. Reasonable Call: Bates 823.393
GOOD IMPRESSIONS Typing / Word Process
Typing - Spelling corrected 841-420
Spelling corrected. 841-420
Guaranteed Perfect typing done on a word pro-
gram located near Lawrence Hospital Call 849-7247
Smart Word Processing includes editing and spell checking. Verifying reasonable rate, Folder 749, #485.
KU SECRETARY. Typing and word processing.
Affordable, fast, accurate. Spelling corrected,
letter quality. Pickup on campus. Monica 841 8246.
Evenings-weekends
Quality typing, excellent editing, grammar,
spelling, punctuation skills. Fast, reliable.
BUSINESS MANAGEMENT
Resume Service-laser-written 10 copies ONLY
$80-$749 -2193 after 5 p.m.
ACT NOW, Papers $1.50/pg, Resumes 15.
Writing LIFELINE 941-3469.
WANTED
Why pay for tying when you can have work pro-
grams? In the 1960s, Theses. resumes, beige
bases. Since 1983, 843-341-34
TYPING +LUS assistance with composition,
editing, graphic design, research, thesis,
dissertations, papers, letters, applications.
Resumes. HAVE M.S. Degree. 841-6254
ROOMMATE (for a brand in a new market, well located)
ROOMMATE 749/850 - fully furnished 166 mm
4'仗 utilizes 749/850
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing, manuscript resumes, theses, letter writing.
2 Housemates for 3 birmn house & $170/mo plus 1/3 utilities. Convenient Location. Quit; Graduate students preferred. Rooms available June 1 and May 1 respectively. #82-0088
Donations of books and magazines needed. Supplying a library, including Brining items to the Library, 709 Vermont
3 Summer Subleases, males, extremely close to campus, nice. &$85/92/month plus utilities
Female roommate for summer, quiet 2 bdrm
house, AC $100 plus 1/2 utilities, 8362-467 after
payment.
I need a tutor for statistics (EPR 710, School of Ed.). Please call 749-2651.
Mellow Female Roommate Request: May through July, Clean, Please 2 b apartment! Call 841-881-7595
Needed: Summary roommate for a very fully furnished apartment. Has the robe, pools, and furnished kitchen.
Roommate for very nice furnished house in mice; quiet,邻居难 near campus & shopping. W/D, AC. For summer and/or fall $165/month. Roommate to host grading student or senior student. 843-091. Dan
Roommate wanted to share large 2 BR apt.
Available June 1st, 1987 for summer and school
year 87-88 st. church location, Laundry facilities
and kitchen. Rent plus 1/2 deposit and
utilities. 834-3675.
SUMMER ROOMMATE NEEDED Brand new
townhouse. Owner. Room available Mid-May. Free
rent.
Roommate $157 00 Deposit. Negotiable. Cheap
Summer only or into fall. Infill Furniture 841-1095
Still homeless for next year? Roommate wanted
to move in. Payment. 1/2 rent and
utilities. Call 664 8389
Summer Roommate: luxury 2 bdm, Sunrise Place townhouse fully furnished, pool $100 m²
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Summer roommate wanted for furnished apart
room bus route. $12/mo plus 1/2 usl fees.
648-7475
Policy
Wanted: Good used computer with these features.
IBM compatible, minimum 256K, MSD 520 B
Modern Option? 843-3534. Leave Message.
Wanted: Male user in Office 2007.
WANTED: Female roommate to share expenses in house at 1015 Michigan for 1987-86 school year. If interested call (417) 667-9115 ask for Ann, Laura, or Nancy.
Aanted: Male roommate to share ap at Colton Woods. Must be neat, considerate. Call 749-1893.
Wanted: Roommate to share 3 bedroom Apt for 87-88 school dress. $13.00 or no negotiable. 842-9252.
Words set in ALL CAPS as 2 words.
Classified Information Mail-In Form
Words set in Bold Face count as 3 words.
words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words.
Classified rates are based on consecutive day insertions only
No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect
insertion of any advertisement.
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising
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14
Monday, April 27, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
GOOD NEWS!
Macintosh
512K
The Macintosh Family of fine computer products is now available at the Burge Union.
Take advantage of special sales and pricing available exclusively to K.U.
Macintosh Plus
faculty, staff and students only at the K.U. Bookstore in the Burge Union.
Macintosh
SE
Come in and see how a Macintosh computer can help you work faster, better and smarter.
苹果®
Apple and the Apple logo are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc.
Macintosh is a trademark of Apple Computer, Inc.
1
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
METER = 33 37 INCHES OR 3 26 83 FEEL OR 1 09 4 VOX 1 INCH OR 3 CENTIMETERS
Tons of sun
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUNSHINE
Details, page 2
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Tuesday
April 28, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 142
(USPS 650-640)
Electrical short caused fraternity fire, officials say
By IOHN BUZBFF
Uncertainties still remain for homeless fraternity members
Staff writer
An electrical short in a second-floor study room caused the fire. Sunday that seriously damaged part of the building, the home house, investigators said yesterday.
See related story p. 3
Fire Chief Jim McSain, speaking before the investigation results were released, said the fire started on the second floor after fraternity members reset a breaker switch in the basement that was overloading.
"They kept clicking the break er at the breaker box." he said.
The fire quickly spread through the house, McSwain said, in part because of flammable ceiling material.
By JOHN BUZBEE Staff writer
McSwain said that the ceiling material would be illegal in new buildings but that it was allowed in the fraternity house, 1645 Tennessee St., because it was built in 1948. Oombustible material in the rooms
damage on its first from a blaze that swept through the upstairs. An electrical short caused the fire, investigators said.
Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity members may have a bite to eat and a place to stay tonight, but many still are without the notes and books to get them through finals after a fire seriously damaged their house Sunday afternoon.
The members, who are sleeping in different locations across campus, attended class yesterday, said Daniel Umiko. Overland Park soonbomore.
The house, 1645 Tennessee St. had severe smoke and fire damage on its second floor and water
"Everybody's going to class," he said. "They've got to talk to their teachers and see what's going on."
Fraternity president Ken Jones,
Leawood junior, said some members were having a little trouble with the teachers of the fraternity's plight.
"Some of them have been less than cooperative so far, but they don't know the whole story," he said.
Some members were hoping they could take their current grades as final grades in their classes.
"For those guys who lost everything, " Jones said, "I think that's certainly fair."
Jarret Rubis, Leawood sophomore, said, "I'm going to bring them all to my room and say, there's no books. There's no notes."
On February 8, inspectors found five fire code violations in the house. McSwan said. A follow-up investigation did that they had not been corrected.
also contributed to the fire's rapid spread through the second floor, he said.
Other members, such as Don Bowden, Overland Park sophomore, were having better luck. He
One violation was a plate that
See REACT. d. 9. col. 1
needed to be repaired covering a second-floor fuse box in the library. It is unclear whether that was the room in which the fire started.
The house also was found to have violations in its basement boiler room, improperly used extension cord wires wrapped around bed frames.
Fraternity president Ken Jones, Leawood junior, said the house was working to correct the violations at the time of the fire.
McSwain said traternity members tried to extinguish the fire before they called the fire department.
But Jones said that members called the fire department immediately and that they fought the fire until the department arrived.
"If there's any lag time, it wasn't on our side." Jones said.
Police tape show that the first fire engine arrived at the house four minutes after the first 911 emergency call from Room 3, on the house's second
floor.
"God, there is smoke everywhere," the caller said. "Tell them to hurry up." About seven emergency calls a day have begun on Monday beginning at 1:14 p.m. Sunday.
All the building's occupants escaped uninjured, but five firefighters were hurt slightly while battling the blaze. McSwain said.
Four firefighters suffered minor burns, and a piece of ceiling fell on another. They all returned to battle the fire.
"They took quite a bit of punishment trying to take the fire on an interior attack," he said.
The fire caused extensive smoke and fire damage to the brick building's second floor and water damage below that.
PARKS AEROSPACE
"If this would have happened at night, I would say we would have had me of the major disasters to occur in the last century," she raternity members live in the house.
David Wayne/Special to the KANSAN
MIAMI COUNTY AIRPORT — Using a special helmet-mounted camera, David Wayne takes a picture of some of his fellow skydivers as they complete a point formation.
SKY
MIAMI COUNTY AIRPORT — Skydivers from the Greene County Parachute Sports Center, near Paola, start a freefall after jumping out of a plane at an altitude of 9,000 feet.
David Wayne/Special to the KANSAN
Skydivers parachute from roofs and planes for stimulating thrills
By CHRISTOPHER HINES
Staff writer
MIAMI COUNTY AIRPORT — At an altitude of 3,500 feet, the pilot turns the nose of the plane upwind and throttles down the engine. The door of the plane swings open, and the plane flies backward and wondering. It's time to jump.
"When that door opened, I freaked out," said Scott Smith of Olathe, who skydived for the first time Saturday. "I was nervous all day, but when the plane left the ground, everything was cool."
With a steady rush of air coming from the plane's propeller, the next step is to put one foot out on the wing struts. The other foot is followed by the other one, and grab onto the wing struts. A smiley face painted on the wing provides
a point of concentration and some reassurance.
"I remember waiting for the word go from the instructor and then saw the plane go in the opposite direction with the smiley face getting smaller and smaller." The senior, who decided against the wishes of his mother to do his first parachute jump Saturday.
"You look down, and you see the highways, the lakes, everything. All the forests look like little green strips, and where you're supposed to land is just a little brown square."
"Count 1,000, count 2,000, count 3,000. I felt my chute pop before I reached my 10th count, and it felt lurched me back." Wilson said.
day at the Miami County Airport near Paola to spend the day parachuting. The group included members, cammers, mechanics and bartenders.
Some people may say that sky divers are crazy, have a death wish or are just stupid, but the jumpers at Greene County Sport Parachute Center in Poaula say the sport alludes have given the sport a bum rap.
"The only time you ever hear about skydiving in the media is when someone has an accident or gets killed," said Gene Riddle, who jumped into Royal's Stadium two years ago as part of baseball's opening day festivities but broke his foot.
About 25 people met early Satur-
"It was like jumping into a big
KU officials plan for midyear salary increases
See SKYDIVE, p. 6, col. 3
By ROGER COREY
Staff writer
Administrators from the University of Kansas and the University of Kansas Medical Center met yesterday to discuss ways of handling next year's scheduled midyear salary increase.
KU faculty are scheduled to receive a pay increase during the next fiscal year but only for the last six months of the year. Classified office workers, civil service and office workers, also will receive a midyear pay increase.
The pay increase was recommended by the state House and Senate conference committee April
The committee also recommended a 2.5 percent salary and wage increase for students employed by state universities. The fiscal year begins July 1 and increases would go up at all state universities January 1.
17. The committee recommended a salary increase of 3 percent for faculty and 2 percent for classified employees. The classified employees' raise would be in addition to regular annual salary increases.
The proposed increases have not been approved by the full House and Senate, but both houses are expected to meet after their recess ends tomorrow.
"We will have a budget that lists employee salaries at one rate for the first six months and at another rate for the second six months," said Theresa Klinkenberg, assistant director of business affairs.
She said a professor who made $40,000 a year for the first six months would get $41,200 for the second six months.
"The average amount paid to the professor for the whole year would be $40,600," she said. "That is called a hybrid salary."
She said KU faculty actually were getting a 1.5 percent pay increase. The advantage of the midyear 3 percent increase was that it would be
used as the basis for salary increases in 1989.
"The professor would get his 1989 pay increase based on the $41,200 amount." she said.
She said that the academic affairs office handled faculty salary increases and that the budget and personnel offices dealt with classified employee pay increases. The Med Center produces its own budget.
Keith Nitcher, director of business affairs, said faculty salaries in next year's operating budget would be listed in two columns, one column for the first six months and one for the second six months.
"We have to be careful not to give
Ward Bian Zimmerman, director of the KU budget office, said the administration would have to decide soon whether to develop two separate programs for different periods, or one larger budget period, that would incorporate the pay increase
Zimmerman said he favored a single budget because it would reduce the amount of administrative costs. But he said that when dealing with a $200 million yearly budget, a $2,000 worth of paper was not significant.
people the impression they're getting more money than they are," Nitcher said.
Editor's note: This is the first in a two-part series on how some KU Soviet and East European studies professors view U.S. Soviet relations. Tomorrow, we discuss a teacher Mikhail Gorbachev's reforms.
KU profs disagree on USSR
Staff writer
By PAUL SCHRAG Staff writer
"Every scholar in Soviet studies is grinding his own ax", said Roy Laird, who also is a professor of Russian literature. "I just grinding it harder than others."
In international politics, the relationship between the United States and the Soviet Union stands alone.
No other clash of ideologies and weapons carries with it the potential to destroy life on earth.
Beyond that, their opinions diverge sharply.
"If you don't understand the Soviet Union, you are an idiot. You can't cope with contemporary life, even in Kansas," said William Fletcher, chairman of the KU department of Soviet and East European studies.
Whether the United States should deal with the Soviet Union as an evil empire, a trustworthy equal, or something in between is endlessly debated. Even such experts as the professors in the KU Soviet studies department have widely varied answers.
They agree that their program is one of the best in the nation. They agree that KU's department of Slavic languages and literatures is the leading center in the United States for the study of contemporary Soviet literature.
Fletcher has a theory that is unique, as far as he knows, among scholars who study the Soviet Union and therefore the theory of terminal incompetence.
Fletcher said, "All of us, without exception, are people who have a continuing love for the Russian people."
"The Soviet Union has gone so far into incompetence that it cannot recover," he said. "It will continue to be a vast threat because of its misguided warfare, leading army, but as the years go by, it will become less and less relevant."
See SOVIET, D. 9, col. 1
INSIDE
Waiting game
Former KU standout Greg Dreel has had a difficult time making the transition to the National Basketball Association. He has spent most of his rookie season on the bench. See story page 11.
Special delivery
Protection Express is a phone-incondom delivery service started by four Kansas State University hospitals to promote safe sex. See story page 3.
2
Tuesday, April 28, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Around the World
S. African police fire at students at predominantly white school
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Police fired birdshot and tear gas and used whips yesterday in running battles with hundreds of student protesters, both black and at the University of Cape Town.
It was believed to be the first clash in which police fired guns to control rioting at a predominantly white school, and it was one of the most violent campus disturbances since a national state of emergency was declared in June 1986.
The violence followed a midday rally by anti-apartheid student groups protesting a South African
army commando raid Saturday on alleged guerrilla targets in Zambia. After the rally, students singing freedom songs marched through the campus at the foot of Cape Town's Table Mountain.
The government said that some students were arrested, but it did not give numbers.
Journalists who were at the campus said that at least five students were hit by birdshot, including one student who was wounded in the face. A free-lance photographer and several students reportedly were hurt by whips.
Across the Country
550 arrested in protest at CIA headquarters
MCLLEAN, Va. — Peace demonstrators protesting Reagan administration policies blocked roadways at CIA headquarters yesterday, causing rush-hour chaos in this serene suburban community and inconveniencing hundreds of commuters. There were more than 550 arrests.
There were no incidents of violence in the protest, which culminated three days of demonstrations against U.S. policies in Central America and South Africa.
It was a day that evoked memories of the anti-war protests of the 1960s, complete with slogan shouting, singing, pamphlet-passing, placard-waving and speech-making by a cross section of people representing all regions, ages and races.
CIA spokesman Kathy Pherson said that, as far as she knew, it was the first large-scale protest at the agency since the headquarters, about six miles from Washington, opened 25 years ago.
Waldheim barred from entering the U.S.
WASHINGTON — Austrian President Kurt Waldheim has been barred from entering the United States because he aided in the deportation and execution of thousands of Jews and others as a German Army officer in World War II, the Justice Department announced yesterday.
Waldheim, United Nations secretary general from 1972 to 1982, thus becomes the first head of state ever placed on an immigration watchlist of 40,000 people as undesirable aliens.
Attorney General Edwin Meese III made the decision that found that "a case of excludability exists
with respect to Kurt Waldheim as an individual," the Justice Department said in a statement. It said Waldheim knew of and aided persecutions of Jews, other civilians and partisans.
In Vienna, Austrian Foreign Minister Alois Mack said the decision produced "great dismay" and the government recalled Ambassador Thomas Klestil from Washington for consultations. Mock said it was unclear whether Chancellor Franz Waniakky would proceed with a visit to the United States planned for later this month.
Reagan threatens more Japan sanctions
trade disputes.
WASHINGTON — President Reagan said yesterday that it was time to stop "hemming and hawing" about trade problems between the United States and Japan and warned that he had not ruled out imposing additional sanctions agist. Tokyo to resolve
While saying he hoped to be able to lift sanctions against Japan soon, Reagan said, "We will do what is necessary to see that other nations live up to their obligations and trading agreements with us."
BRIDGEPORT, Conn. — A review of about 3,000 pages of documents on file at City Hall, by a structural engineer retained by The Associated Press, shows no indication of discrepancies in construction of the ill-fated L'Ambiance Plaza that collapsed Thursday, but it did raise several questions.
fications, traffic patterns and planning board reports.
The documents covered various aspects of the building's construction and included blueprints, speci-
One questionable area is the site of the 13-story building, said Frank Zamecnik, a partner in Spiegel and Zamecnik, a New Haven and Washington. D.C., engineering firm. The surface originally sloped sharply about 34 feet, and filling of the slope may have provided a weaker base than necessary for the foundation, he said.
From Kansan wires.
Weather
From the KANSAN Weather Service
LAWRENCE FORECAST
Today will be warm with sunny skies and a high nea
79 degrees. Tonight, the temperature will drop to 54
degrees with cloudless skies. Tomorrow, the
temperature will rise to the mid-80s with clear skies
SUN
WEATHER FACT: March and April mark the beginning of the severe weather season. However, only one severe weather alert has been issued this year in the four-state region.
H
DES MONES
74 / 49
OMAHA
77 / 50
LINCOLN
78 / 52
CONCORDIA
80 / 54
TOPEKA
80 / 55
KANSAS CITY
78 / 53
COLUMBIA
76 / 51
ST. LOUIS
76 / 50
SALINA
83 / 53
WICHITA
86 / 55
CHANUTE
85 / 54
SPRINGFIELD
81 / 53
TULSA
89 / 57
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Campus and Area
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 28, 1987
3
Local Briefs
Searchers looking for a missing man yesterday found the boat that carried him and another man over a rock Dam on the Kansas River.
Searchers find boat but man still is missing
There has been no sign of Elmer F. Wolfard, who has been missing since the April 17 boating accident. Ricky Gilligan would swim to shore after the accident.
A Lawrence Fire Department spokesman said that the boat was in "pretty bad shape" and that it had "said if it had been submerged
A KU student has won a scholarship worth up to $6,000 toward graduate school, a spokeswoman for the central counsel's office said yesterday.
The student, Phillip N. Smith, Independence senior, won a national Phi Kappa Phi Fellowship for the academic year 1987-88. Smith is studying aerospace engineering.
The boat was found on a sandbail in Mud Creek about a half mile south of the Bowersock Dam about 11 a.m.
The Lawrence Daily Journal- World reported yesterday that the boat was not the one that Wolford had fallen from. But John Hackenhorn, owner of the boat, has confirmed that the boat was his, the fire department spokesman said. The two men had borrowed Hackenhorn's boat the day they went over the dam.
Aerospace student wins scholarship
The KU chapter of Phi Kappa Phi nominated Smith for the fellowship, said Vickie Thomas, general counsel. Vickie was one of fewer than 50 winners of national Phi Kappa Phi fellowships.
The KU chapter also recently awarded its James Blakiston Memorial Fellowship to Smith.
Driver runs over police officer's foot
A Lawrence man was issued a citation for inattentive driving after he drove over a Lawrence his foot on Saturday morning.
The officer, Robert Fox, was treated Saturday for unspecified injuries at Lawrence Memorial Hospital and went home for the day. A Lawrence police spokesman said that he didn't know what injuries Fox sustained but that Fox returned to work Sunday.
The incident occurred at 7:45 a.m. on North Third Street. Fox was standing next to his parked patrol car talking to two pedestrians, who were on the sidewalk, when the man, Michael Jones, drove by, brushing Fox and running over his foot.
Because of an editor's error, Brian Driscoll's class was incorrectly identified in a cutline in the Kansas. Driscoll is an ambidextrous.
Jones told police he misjudged the distance between his car and Fox.
Corrections
Because of a reporter's error, Mitchell Gage's name was misspelled in yesterday's Kansel.
From staff and wire reports.
Fraternity fire worst since 1967
By PAUL SCHRAG
Staff writer
Sunday's fire at the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity, 1645 Tennessee St., was the worst blaze at a residence for KU students since 1967.
Members of the Sigma Phi Epion fraternity, 1645 Tennessee St., stit through the remains of their belongings after Sunday's fire. Fraternity
The $450,000 damage caused by an early-morning fire at the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, 1540 Louisiana St., on May 17, 1967, was the largest monetary loss in a student residence fire.
Alan Hagman/KANSAN
Serious fires at Greek houses and KU residence halls have been documented since 1934, when a fire destroyed the Kappa Sigma fraternity house, 1537 Tennessee St. Described then as the biggest blaze in the history of the University of Kansas, it caused a loss of $65,000.
No serious injuries were reported in the newspaper accounts of any of the fires. All Greek residence fires that caused more than $10,000 damage occurred at fraternity houses, including to University Archives records.
The most recent serious greek residence fire occurred April 6, 1984, when a blaze caused about $100,000 worth of damage at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, 1301 West Campus Road.
Repairs were completed by fall 1984. Gacek said.
Kevin Gacek, Omaha, Neb., senior,
lived across the hall from the room in
which the 1984 fire started and was
the last fraternity member to leave
the house. Several rooms on the north
wing of the third floor were destroy-
ed by fire. A fire saved because steel fire doors had
been installed about a week earlier.
Since the destruction of the Kappa Sigma house in 1934, serious fraternity fires have occurred in every decade. In 1941, the Beta Theta Pi fraternity, 1425 Tennessee St., was severely damaged during Christmas break, but newspaper accounts did
not record the monetary loss.
In 1952, the Acacia fraternity house, 1147 Tennessee St., was destroyed by fire, with a loss of $75.000.
The Kappa Sigma fraternity suffered its second serious fire April 13, 1970, when the house at 1045 Emery Road was extensively damaged. The loss was set at $200,000. The roof and third floor were rebuilt, and the house was redeclared in March 1971.
members were allowed to enter their house yesterday afternoon to retrieve articles left after the blaze.
The 1970 Kappa Sigma blaze occurred one week before a fire that caused $2 million damage to the
Kansas Union.
The Delta Upsition fraternity, 1025
Emery Road, sustained a $200,000
fire loss on Jan. 20, 1978.
Other student residence buildings have had serious fires in recent years. In November 1981, a fire that began in an elevator caused $80,000 damage to Naismith Hall. Also that month, fire caused $50,000 damage to an elevator shaft in Jayhawker Towers.
In the last 10 years, KU residence halls have had three serious fires. The student housing office classifies a fire as serious if the office files an
insurance claim for the damage, said Ken Stoner, director of student housing.
In January 1982, a fire in the lounge of Templin Hall caused $14,000 damage. A fire in the lounge of McCollum Hall in March 1973 caused $25,000 damage, and in November 1977, a room fire at McCollum caused a $10,000 loss.
In a typical year, two or three minor fires are reported in residence hall student rooms, and several more occur in trash chutes. Stoner said.
said fraternities and sororites were inspected once a year to determine whether they conformed to fire code regulations. Inspectors find some fire code violations each year, he said.
Common violations include alarm systems not turned on, propped-open fire doors, blocked exits and excessive use of extension cords.
"Most houses work real hard to at least make the minimum standard of the code," McSwain said. "Some have repeat problems because of a low emphasis on fire safety."
Jim McSwain, Lawrence fire chief.
Four K-State students start condom deliveries
Staff writer
By LAURA BOSTROM
A new Manhattan business delivers sexual protection to its patrons' homes in a plain brown bag.
The business, which is modeled after one at the University of Florida, began last weekend, said Troy Smith, president and a Protection Express partner.
Protection Express, a new enterprise started by four Kansas State University students, is a phone-in condom delivery business.
Smith considers the enterprise to be a business and a community service. The business isn't promoting sex but rather safe sex, he said.
"We are hoping that people coming
home from a night out, realizing that they have no protection, will utilize our service," said Bob Thayer, another veterinary student and business founder.
The students answer the business phones from 7 p.m. to 3 a.m. Friday and Saturday, Smith said. Once a call is received, Protection Express takes the patron's name and address, checks for verification and then delivers the condoms. They hope to complete the delivery 15 to 30 minutes after the order is taken.
Protection Express sells three types of condoms. The condoms are sold in packages of three and cost $4 to $5.
Smith said that an instruction sheet
'We are hoping that people coming home from a night out, realizing that they have no protection, will utilize our service.'
— Bob Thayer business founder
business founder
ted diseases also were included in the brown-bag delivery.
explaining proper usage and a pamphlet explaining sexually transmit
STDs are quite prevalent on college camps, causing a need for a contraception delivery service. Smith said.
Lymn Heller, coordinator of health education at Watkins Hospital, said that she did not know whether STD rates were higher on a college campus than the national average but that a college population often was known for being highly experimental in its sexual practices.
"Across the country, STDs are at epidemic proportions," she said.
Heller said condoms had been advocated as a way to reduce the risk of STDs.
And if a condom business can be used as an avenue to heighten STD awareness, Heller said, "It's probably not a bad idea."
The students have a serious attitude about their business. "We're discreet and prompt." Smith said.
Although Protection Express did receive a few orders last weekend, Smith said that the first weekend's business was slow. He received a crank call during his shift.
University of Florida condom sellers warned the K-State students that the business would start out and the people realized it was not a joke.
The Associated Press supplied some information for this story.
Guides escort prospective students around campus
Staff writer
By IOHN BUZBEE
Campus tour guide Dan Liao stood at the point of a phalanx of giddy high school girls and pointed to Wescoe cafeteria.
"The food's all right," he said during a tour Friday. "Not too bad there."
Where's McDonald's?
basketball players if we happen to pass them?" asked Wichita Southeast High School student Dawna Washington.
Liao, Kansas City, Mo., senior and other student tour guides answer questions about food, classes, buildings and basketball as they escort prospective students and their parents around the hill.
When you see them, Liao said,
you'll know. Most of the questions he gets are serious, he said, and the
offbeat ones aren't any problem.
"They're just having fun, and you have fun with them," he said. "You just want to talk."
From there, groups head behind Wescoe to Staufer-Flint Hall and back to Jayhawk Boulevard. They end at the Kansas Union after about ar- hour of walking. It's good exercise. Liao said.
The office of admissions offers the tours. They start at Strong Hall, head down Jayhawk Boulevard to Snow Hall, cross the street and then go behind the Art and Design Building for a panoramic view.
"It's not that bad," said Debbie Foster from Wichita Southeast.
"Could you please point out all the
"It is too," replied Southeast student, the pleaeman. "They should give me a res."
Wescoe catereria is a good place, said tour guide Shelley Hansel, Wellington freshman.
"It is a great place to mingle, to leisurely hang out to do lunch, that kind of thing."
Friday.
The Jayhawks once played basketball in Hoch Auditorium, she said, and Potter Lake was built to provide water for fighting fires. Malott Hall is where they keep cadavers.
Liao said he liked guiding campus tours because he enjoyed speaking in front of people.
"KU's been really good to me, and I feel very strongly about KU," he said. "It's just one way of donating time to KU."
Most of the student tour guides are KU Ambassadors, said Bruce Lindvall, director of admissions. KU Ambassadors return to their high
Most students come for a campus tour with at least one parent, he said.
schools to promote the University of Kansas.
tour with at least one parent, he said. "It gives a visiting family an opportunity to learn about the camp us from the perspective of a student," he said.
Carrie Soderstrom, a St. Louis high school senior who toured KU on Friday afternoon, said, "When I came here, I didn't think I'd know where everything is, but it all fits together."
Her mother, Marilyn Soderstrom,
said, "It's a bigger campus than I thought."
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FALL RUSH 1987
All students planning to go through formal sorority rush in August:
Please come to the Panhellenic Office (in the Burge Union) from Monday April 27 to Friday, May 1, to pick up a RUSH booklet containing registration forms.
4
Tuesday, April 28, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Join the club
Many students probably never set foot into the posh building next to Smith Hall on Jayhawk Boulevard during their years at the University.
But the University of Kansas Alumni Association, 1266 Oread Ave., has begun to change that. The Alumni Association started the Student Alumni Association this year to introduce students to its operation. Students on the Senior Executive Advisory Council and the Executive Council lead the group. Any KU student can join.
The Alumni Association plays an important role to help the University, and students probably don't know as much about it as they should. Through the student alumni program, students can learn about the Alumni Associia-
tion's mission and how it helps students and alumni.
KU students eventually will come in contact with the association after graduation. The Alumni Association helps students stay in touch with KU. Many of these students also will help support the University in the future.
The Alumni Association is trying to increase student participation. Students should take advantage of the opportunity to become more active and learn more about their University.
But the Alumni Association should not be foreign to the students while they attend the University. Students should become familiar with the Alumni Association. Now they can do this through the Student Alumni Association.
A deadly decision
Capital punishment as population control?
The Supreme Court in its latest decision may have uncovered a silly solution to this human problem.
On a 5-4 vote, the court expanded the grounds for capital punishment, ruling that a person who participates in a crime leading to murder can be put to death even if he didn't intend for the victim to be killed. This means that states can now fry or gas not only severely malign and malicious people, but also those who are unwitting accomplices.
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor wrote for the court that participation in a felony coupled with "a reckless indifference to human life" is sufficient grounds for sentencing a person to death.
It's ironic that the justices have given themselves the
right to decide who is recklessly indifferent. By legalizing the death penalty for individuals who are not irreparably destructive, are they themselves not guilty of reckless indifference to human life?
What about people who recognize President Augusto Pinochet's vicious regime in Chile? Or people who do nothing while thousands die of starvation in Africa? Or the people who overlook the human rights abuses of the contras? Should they get the death penalty?
With so many recklessly indifferent people around, it is unfortunate that the Supreme Court justices did not relate their decision to the more altruistic cause of population control. Then again, it's not surprising that they would be somewhat indifferent on the matter.
Executing a fair trial
Nazi war crimes committed during World War II are a tragic event in world history. Even today, survivors and families of victims still are looking for some sort of justice.
Linnas, 67, faces execution on charges that he supervised the killings of 12,000 prisoners at a Nazi death camp. He was convicted of the charges in the Soviet Union after being tried in absentee in 1962.
Many feel that the deportation of Karl Linnas to the Soviet Union last week was a form of justice. But if justice is to be served, Linnas will not be sent directly to his death without a new trial.
Linnas entered the United States in 1951. He settled in Greenlaw, N.Y., and became a U.S. citizen. Linnas fought an eight-year battle to retain his citizenship and stay in the United States. After appeals to the Supreme Court and the
Linnas charges that the Soviets may have falsified evidence they provided in his deportation trial. The Soviets report that Linnas supervised the killing of 12,000 people as head of a death camp in Tartu in the Soviet Republic of Estonia. Witnesses at hearings in the United States said the number was about 2,000.
If there is such a discrepancy in a deportation trial, there is a possibility that there also were discrepancies in the trial.
This is not saying that Linas should be set free or that supervising the murders of 2,000 instead of 12,000 is any less of crime, but Linas does deserve a new trial. Then if he is convicted, he should pay the consequences.
News staff
News staff
Frank Hansel ... Editor
Jennifer Benjamin ... Managing editor
Juli Warren ... News editor
Brian Kebelline ... Editors editor
Sandra Engelland ... Campus editor
Mark Siebert ... Sports editor
Diane Dullmeier ... Photo editor
Bill Skeet ... Graphics editor
Tom Ebien ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Lisa Weems ... Business manager
Bonnie Hardy ... Ad director
Denise Stephens ..Retail sales manager
Kelly Scherer ... Campus sales manager
Marcus Coulson ... Marketing manager
Lori Coplee ... Classified manager
Jennifer Lumianski ... Production manager
David Nixon ... National sales manager
Jeanne Hines ... Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words and should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. Guest shots should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The
The Kansan reserves the right reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom. 111 Stauffer-Fint Hall.
When will be photographed.
The Kansas reserves the right reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, *118 Stairwater Flint Hall*, Kansas, Kan. 60445, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and on Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage paid in Lawrence, Kan. 60444 Subscriptions by mail are $40 per year in Douglas County by county. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student activity fee.
Opinions
POSTMASTER Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118
Stauffer-Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kan 66045
As we are all prone to error and change, I consider my own past an error, and the reputation I gained from it has made my change all the more difficult. I was a right-wing ideologue for a year and a half, writing columns for the Kansan and working as campus editor for the KU
Change in politics brings change in life
Evan Walter
Guest Shot
Stalwart. As I am retreating from this ideology, I would like to apologize to all those I closed my mind to because of their opposing views and to all those who consider me a fellow patriot for their cause.
I entered the political scene in search of pride and dignity. I now leave it, pulled out by my own pride and dignity. I was a child in the candy store, overcome by an upset stomach. I entered the political scene where I found myself. I would have been better with a bourbon and soda with a lemon twist.
The ideologue's task is to preach these dogmas and apply life situations to them. Instead of basing their beliefs about life matters on life, they base how they look at life on their beliefs.
I entered the right-wing party because I abhored the bleeding-heart liberalism that was so prevalent on this campus. My solution to knee-jerk leftism was knee-jerk rightism. My a “jerk” I think
After a year and a half of believing I had transcended common matters of life (ideology worship does that to people), that I knew the answers and that all else was frivolous. I have taken a new view of things, appreciating the common things of life as never before, in a non-political war
Ideologues group together and spew the opium that bonds them. These dogmas work as rationalizing forces. They are big things, often looked upon as inherent to character.
Ideologies help the ideologues in the social setting. Human nature is expert at stereotyping and even better at believing these stereotypes. Creating these dogmas gives the members that synthetic, "national" pride. The worship, however, is for those bonding dogmas, not the individuals, yet it was individuals who created them.
Ideologues all claim to be forwardlooking, but their ideologies are based on ideals of the past. They do not contain powerful insight but only powerful boldness in phrasing. Furthermore, theirboldness comes not from strength but from there not being any urgent need for strength.
To judge people on conservative or liberal scales creates false values as measures of individual virtue and worth and denies the ideologues whatever they might gain if they were not so closed-off from other views.
Progressive ideologues have changed things in the past, but they usually are not of the right-wing type.
have been.
The college ideologues preter words and tend to be cowards when it comes to action.
Not only do they look from within, they debate within closed doors, and their subject matter remains outside. An ideology is used as a frame from which the ideologues can posit how the world should be run. They fail to watch how the world is run and how to improve the way it does. Of course, ideology is an easier way of study.
Ideologues from Karl Marx to Ronald Reagan all have one common characteristic: They all claim to see the future with a clear light of vision. Anyone who sees clear lights toward the future, however, must be ignorant of the fact that the future can at best be glanced at with foggy estimates.
That a person can gain promotion and respect by reiterating ideas fabricated more than 30 years ago — as demonstrated by the careers of William F. Buckley, Noam Chomsky and James Reston — only shows the decadence of the political structure and the naive primitivism of those who support it. The topics have changed — then Cuba, now Nicaragua; then segregation, now public domestic spending — but the ideals are the same.
Liberalism and conservatism are political stereotypes based on the pro and con sides of certain issues: free market capitalism, communism, war, peace, freedom, racism, equality. Neither expresses any practical theory or philosophy about how one could logically reason while evaluating life. These ideologies are rarely pragmatic and only slightly empirical.
I once pulled a rope and felt a sense of superiority over my fellow man because so few others did. Yet this sense could accompany many hobbies, and political ideology is nothing but a hobby. I left the political scene because I was not a professional and not an expert but a bobbyist with concern. I once acted as an expert and now I don't, which gives me a sense of release few could imagine.
Mailbox
Get facts, not opinion
Once again, the Kansan editorials have sunk to a new low. Freedom of the press is an important right in this country. It is also the right of private citizens to be free from the persecution of an inaccurate and fallacious press.
The Elections Review Board was faced with many difficult decisions concerning the past Student Senate election. I agree that the rules and regs are often indecipherable. I also agree that the allegations of violations were extremely serious.
What the Kansan is trying to say is that the board should have pulled Bottom Line's seats but didn't because of ties to the board. If the Kansan took the time to at least read its own reporter's article, it would realize that the facts did not show an intent to receive an unfair advantage. Absent such an intent, it would be rather presumptuous to nullify an election, clearly won by Bottom Line simply because they thought any discounts available to students would be allowable under the rules.
None of the candidates objected to the composition of the board prior to the review. They had the right to file a complaint, but they didn't. The decisions of the board were based on facts, not friendships. Perhaps the Editorial Board should take the time to grace us with its presence before it makes libelous comments. The board found that a discount had been received by the Bottom Line coalition. It also found that said discount should be included in their audit.
The Kansan is making a gross generalization that the board reached an unethical result. Not only do you defame several students who were trying to do the best job possible representing the student body, you also include an associate dean. Keep your personal opinions out of the paper and stick to the facts. It would be refreshing.
Sue Glatter
chairman,
Elections Review Board
Sue Glatter chairman
Commending effort
After reading the article "Legislators negotiate KU's budget package," it came to my attention that the efforts of the Associated Students of Kansas, and specifically the efforts of Martie Aaron, KU campus director, were overlooked.
Aaron has spent a substantial portion of her semester organizing support for fee release and lobbying in the Legislature. The part she played in bringing about fee release cannot be overstated.
This semester, Aaron took KU student opinion on this issue directly to the Statehouse. We owe her at least public acknowledgment for this.
Stephanie Quincy student body vice president
LHLLG
TELUS
UHUG University Daily Korean
MAX. HEADROOM MIN. HEADROOM
A trip to the moon on jolted wings
Mike Ryko is on vacation for two weeks. While he is gone, we are reprinting some of his favorite columns. This first appeared on Feb. 10, 1971.
The commuter stood at the bar in the railroad station, his eyes fixed on the TV set. The space capsule was coming down slowly.
Mike Royko Columnist
In a few moments, it splashed into the Pacific. The space voyage was over. Now there would be the hero's welcome in many cities, the visit to the White House and a place for the three men in the history books.
"It it just amazes me that men could have traveled such an enormous distance," the communal saver said. "It's not as much, but it is more than
"Arlington Heights. I'm catching the next train."
"Boy," he said, "and here the rest of us sit while they have done something like that. Almost half a million miles. That's fantastic."
Round-trip it is more than 460,000 miles. I used the commuter.
How far is that from downtown Chicago?
It's really not much, I told him.
"I're really not much, I don't
"not much?" Friend, that is a
long way to go on one tank of gas "
I put it together he lived."
Do you ride the train every day?
"Yep. Same train, same car."
"About 30 miles."
Yep. Same train, same car.
How long have you been doing it?
"Well, unless I drop dead. I'll retire from the company in about 20 years."
I did some fast calculating on a bar napkin and showed him the figures.
He looked at it. "You've made a mistake," he said.
No mistake. Simple arithmetic.
He looked again. "Are you sure?"
I'm sure. Thirty miles each way,
60 miles a day, five days a week.
By the time you retire, you will have traveled about 450,000 miles on the commuter train. Almost the round-trip distance for a moon flight.
'Bartender,' he said, pointing at his glass. 'Blast off, blast off.'
"Give me another drink." he told the bartender, not looking well
He looked at the TV screen. The helicopter was descending to the ship's deck.
"I've never been on a ship in my life," the commuter said.
Then you can figure it this way. I said, At the end of the 30 years, you will have traveled back and forth on that train a distance that would take you on a ship around the Earth 18 times.
"Give me another drink," he told the bartender, looking morose.
I did some more calculating. Look, the commuter travel will be equal to about 50 round trips between Chicago and Europe.
"I've never even been to Europe once," he said, staring into his drink.
I left him to his own thoughts for a while and did some morecalculating. Then I showed the napkin toward him.
"I don't want to look," he said. It 's interesting.
He sighed. "All right, what does it mean?"
One year and five months, I said.
That's the time you will spend on
the train during the 30 years.
"Bartender," he shouted, "do we have to that TV on? How much of that space stuff do I have to bring back for the tables. One year and five months."
He sat shaking his head. Then he said, "Does that include the time I spend on the bus between the station and my house?"
No, that's extra, but I can figure it out in a jiffy.
"Don't," he said. "I'd rather not know."
Of course, I said, it could be more than a year and five months if the train isn't on schedule.
He looked at his watch, picked up his briefcase and stood up. Then he glared at the TV set and sat down again.
"Bartender," he said, pointing at his glass. "Blast off, blast off."
I left. It would be a long time until splashdown.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 28, 1987
5
Conference to draw regional managers
By PEGGY O'BRIEN
Staff writer
More than 150 local government officials from the Midwest will gather in Lawrence tomorrow through Friday for the 40th annual City Managers Conference.
The conference is sponsored by the Institute for Public Policy and Business Research and the Edwin O. Stene Graduate Program in Public Relations will be held at the Holiday Inn McDonalds, 420 W. Sixth St, the Park Inn, 2222 W. Sixth St.
The conference will be led by John Nalbandian, chairman of KU's department of public administration
The International City Managers Association also will meet this week in Lawrence. the members of ICMA, representing regions across the country, also will participate in the KU conference, said Marion Sheppard, administrative director of the Stene graduate program.
Buford M. Watson, Lawrence city manager, is president of the 7,000-member association.
The city management profession originated with the beginning of the local government reform movement about 75 years ago, and the University of Kansas has educated city managers for 40 years. Shepard said.
Two former KU professors, Edwin O. Stene and Ethan Allen, began the city managers conference in 1947. The two recognized the lack of professional training available for city managers and started the KU city
management program.
Stene, who is retired and living in Arkansas with his wife, will attend a banquet along with about 150 alumni of the program, Sheppard said.
Sheppard said that since the inception of the program, most city managers get a master's degree in city planning as part of their professional training.
Thursday, a panel at the conference will interview Bob Kipp, former Kansas City, Mo., city manager and current president of Crown Center Redevelopment Corporation and vice president of Hallmark Cards, Inc.
As part of the week's activities, the graduate program in public administration will hold its graduation banquet tonight, welcoming back students who have been completing the internship phase of the program during the last year.
George Frederickson, Edwin O. Stine distinguished professor of public administration, will speak Friday on a public side of public administration
With the city managers conference, the ICMA meeting, the 75th anniversary of professionalism in local government, the graduation of the program's interns and the special guests expected, Sheppard said that this was a special week.
Graduates of the Edwin O. Stene Graduate Program in Public Administration now serve as city managers in Dallas, Washington, Wichita and San Antonio, Texas.
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Jewelry store owner accidentally sets fire
1527 W. 6th
By a Kansan reporter
The owner of a 100-year-old downtown Lawrence building accidentally started a fire yesterday afternoon that caused an estimated $500 damage.
The owner, Peter Zacharias,
who is renovating the two-story
building at 723 Massachusetts St.,
was using a propane blow torch to
remove paint from the building's
ceiling. The heat imitated dust in the rafters.
Jim McSwain, Lawrence fire chief, said that because the fire was between floors, the firefighters had to cut two holes, about 40 square feet in total area, through the floor to reach the flames.
"It was a pretty small fire but hard to get to." he said.
"We had to go through two layers of hardwood floors," McSainw said.
Zacharias said the fire, which started about 11 a.m., was doused in 10 minutes by Lawrence firefighters. Five fire trucks were called to the scene, closing off a pit in the block for about an hour.
Other than the floor, the building sustained little smoke damage, McSwan said. However, the fire could have caused massive damage had it not been controlled quickly, he said.
The building was being renovated to house Zacharias' jewelry store, Goldmakers, now at 9 E. Eighth St., on the first floor, and apartments on the second floor.
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Tuesday, April 28, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON
4.28
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© 1987 Universal Press Syndicate
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Continued from p. 1
megaphone, with everyone cheering," said Riddle, who is in his 40s. "It was great up to the point where I broke my foot in front of 40,000 people."
The owner of the parachute center, William Gibson, said the odds of being killed while jumping were 70,000-1.
"The safety factor in skydiving is greater than in many other sports," said Gibson, who is a certified jumpmaster with the United States Parachute Association. "We have top of the line equipment and instruction." The safety factor is getting better all the time."
from beginning students to a Green Beret who has done night jumps at 26,000 feet for the U.S. Army's special forces.
The skydivers jump every weekend, including the winter, weather permitting. They have different levels of experience.
"The only thread of common interest running between these people is skydiving," said Greg Benbow, of Overland Park.
David Wayne, also of Overland Park, said the sport could be compared to scuba diving.
"You put yourself in a foreign environment and suspend yourself in it," he said. "You notice the people here aren't acting like kids, and there's no music. There's no need for extra stimuli."
However, some skydivers find that jumping out of a plane is not stimuli enough and have taken to jumping off television aerials.
"It goes back to being a little
"I was cussing the tower all the way to the top," he said. "But it's not like jumping out of a plane. Ground comes at you a lot faster."
Tucker is working on receiving his BASE jump badge, which requires that someone jump from a building, an antenna, a span, or bridge, and the earth, such as a cliff.
kid," said Andy Tucker, a mechanic from Olathe. "The remember when you were sitting in a treehouse or on top of a building or on a bridge, peeking down wondering what it would be like to jump?"
"Nobody is to let you jump unless we think you're ready, and we have confidence that you know what's happening," said Gibson, who has jumped more than 1,200 times. "I'm not going to lose any students."
Tucker, along with another member of the club, spent three hours climbing a television aerial to jump to 1,700 feet from its 109.
Gibson said safety was the most important factor in the sport and invited people to discover a new experience. The cost of instruction, equipment and the first jump is $100. All jumps after that are $25, including equipment.
People who just want to learn how to jump from a plane, can take a course and jump for the first time all in the same day.
"I can't tell you which building because it's illegal," said Tucker, who so far has only jumped from an antenna.
On Campus
A faculty and staff recognition ceremony is scheduled for 1:30 p.m. today in the Kansas Union ballroom. The KU baseball team is scheduled to play Friends University at 3 p.m. today at Quigley Field. "Marketing Yourself: Resume and Interviewing," a Women's Resource Center workshop, is scheduled for 3 p.m. today in the International Room at the Kansas Union.
A study abroad informational meeting for proposal writing and scholarships is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. today in the Pine Room at the Kansas Union.
■ "Proust et le TeXte Intermable," a French colloquium, is scheduled for 3 p.m. today in the International Room at the Kansas Union.
A study abroad informational meeting for proposal writing and scholarships is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. today in the Pine Room at the Kansas Union.
duled for 4 p.m. today in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union.
The Classified Senate is scheduled to meet at 5:15 p.m. today in the Northeast Conference Room at the Burge Union.
- The KU Hispanic-American Leadership Organization is scheduled to meet at 6:30 p.m. today in the International Room at the Kansas Union
"Is Chinese a Topic-Prominent language?" a linguistics colloquy, is used for 7 p.m. at 207 Blake Hall
A student trombone recital with David Cooper is scheduled for 8 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 28, 1987
7
Speaker to discuss Philippine turmoil
By TIM HAMILTON
Staff writer
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The founder and coordinator of Synapses, a Chicago organization that draws attention to domestic and international issues of economic justice, is scheduled to give a speech at 7tonight at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
Friesen returned in March from her last trip, during which she said she talked with Filipinos, ranging from Gen. Fidel Ramos to peasants, about the past year under the leadership of President Corazon Aquino.
"Congress is in the process of voting the Philippines more money than they ever have. This will give the people the chance to make up their minds about what they want their government to be involved in."
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Wendell Wiebe-Powell, coordinator of the event, said that founder Dorothy Friesen's speech would concentrate on the state of affairs in the Philippines and specifically the U.S. military in that nation's political turmoil. The speech is titled "The Philippines: 14 Months after Marcos."
"She has traveled extensively in the Philippines and has talked with diverse groups of people." Wiebe-Powell said.
Wiebe-Powell added that Friesen
had made documentaries on the Philippines that were widely used in the United States and Southeast Asia.
Friesen has returned to the Philippines many times since she worked there for the Mennonite Central Committee from 1977 to 1979. She has taught international economics and justice courses at the University of Waterloo in Ontario, Canada, and at the Urban Life Center in Chicago.
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While Friesen lived in the Philippines, she researched Filipino agriculture and documented human experiences of the Ferdinand Marcos regime.
Friesen said she was concerned with the increase in armed civilian vigilante groups and with the contrast between the two administra-
Since 1979, she has returned six times to talk with Filipinos and to observe the changes that had occurred during the transition between governments.
She said she was concerned with the role of the U.S. military in the increasing militarization of the civilians.
"Part of the times I've gone, I was more of a journalist." Friesen said.
"In some of the major provincial cities, there seems to be a plan to arm civilians to fight the national communist insurgency," she said.
Friesen said she organized Synapses because of the role the United States played in the affairs of foreign countries.
"There's enough evidence to warrant having a congressional hearing into the role that the U.S. is playing in what is going on now," she said.
"The reason we created it was because our experiences in the Philippines and Southeast Asia showed us that a lot of problems there stemmed from the U.S." Friesen said. "We decided that our best contribution was to deal with the problems from this country. Certainly, there are a lot of problems which the Filipinos made and will take Filipino solutions."
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GradEx, associate dean meet discuss constitution overhaul
By TIM HAMILTON
Staff writer
The Graduate Executive Committee met last night with George Woodyard, associate dean of the graduate school, to discuss the proposed overhaul of the Graduate Student Council constitution.
Woodyard told GradEx that he had no problems with the constitution or the creation of a Graduate Representative Assembly.
But Woodyard expressed concern about the relationship between GradEx and the graduate school under the revamped校庭
He said the constitution paid a conspicuous lack of attention to the relationship between GradEx and the school.
John Richards, GradEx executive co-coordinator, said GradEx had no intention of changing its relationship with the school. Richards said that no mention was given the issue in the overhaul because GradEx wanted to continue traditional relations with the school.
David Hardy, GradEx member,
said the problems GradEx had
experienced this year with its former
coordinator indicated that some
changes needed to be made regarding
the coordinator's position.
In other action, Michael Foubert, GradEx executive co-coordinator, said the comprotiler's office would refund in GTAs' May paychecks money withheld from their March paychecks as taxes on GTA fee
remissions.
Hardy suggested that GradEx send a letter to the University condemning the recent decision to charge students to maintain a transcript beginning next fall.
"There are only two things you get when you leave the University: a piece of paper saying you were here and a piece of paper saying what you did here." Hardy said. "To charge students for that is ridiculous."
GradEx also approved the budgets for 18 graduate student organizations, which totaled $16,908.
GradEx will meet next week with Frances Horowitz, of the graduate school, to discuss issues including overhaul of the current constitution.
Posters protesting aid to the contras covered sidewalks on campus yesterday morning.
Posters protest draft, contra aid
A large number of yellow and white posters were adhered with strong poster glue to sidewalks and walkways off Jayhawk Boulevard, probably after midnight yesterday. Most of the posters said, "Nicaragua Vietnam. Get the facts or get drafted."
By a Kansan reporter
Bob Porter, director of physical plant maintenance, said a facilities planning employee spent several hours yesterday trying to remove the posters.
KU police Sgt. John Brothers said that nobody had complained about the incident as of yesterday after arresting KU police were not investigating it.
Brothers said that gluing posters to sidewalks would be classified as a
handbill violation under the Lawrence anti-litter ordinance act Such a violation is punishable by up to six months imprisonment and a $500 fine.
Kate Barron, president of the Latin American Solidarity, said her organization had nothing to do with the posters, although her group opposed aid to the contras.
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Commissioners to be advised on how to break mall contract
By TODD COHEN
Staff writer
Lawrence City Commission watchers may experience deja vu at tonight's commission meeting.
Four years after dumping its first contracted downtown mall developer, the commission is to hear a report tonight from the city attorney on how to break its contract with a second developer.
Such an action would take downtown mall developers back to square one, although city commissioners said repeatedly last week that they would move quickly to settle on a new development plan.
The meeting starts at 7 p.m. in City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets.
The commission action comes almost a month after city elections, in which voters overwhelmingly rejected a downtown mall proposal being developed by Jacobs, Visconsi
&
Jacobs of Cleveland
JVJ and its local mall partner, Town Center Venture Corp., in 1984 signed a contract, called a developer-of-record contract, to develop a mall for the city. JVJ has proposed a 365,000-square-foot mall in the 600 block of downtown.
In 1983, the commission rejected, on a 3-2 vote, a mall plan put forth by the first developer, Sizer Realty, a New Orleans developer, and TCVC. Sizer, which had been the city's developer-of-record for two years, had proposed a mall in the 700 and 800 blocks of Massachusetts and New Hampshire streets.
At last week's meeting, commissioners postponed a decision on the future of the Urban Renewal Agency until after tonight's contract report. The URA was created by the commission to solicit public input on the 600-block mall plan.
Questions arose at last week's meeting as to whether the URA's charter forbade it to work on any other development project. URA chairman Joel Jacobs had requested that the URA be allowed to expand its authority to include all downtown development.
At tonight's meeting, commissioners also will consider:
The five-member URA and its three subcommittees suspended all meetings after the April 7 election.
- Appointments to the Mayor's Committee on Drug Abuse, which last week issued its first report on drug abuse in Lawrence. Representatives from 13 Lawrence groups will be selected.
A staff report on an ordinance that assesses sidewalk repair costs. Jan O'Neil, Lawrence resident, recently protested to the commission that the city overcharged her for repairs to her sidewalk.
On the Record
An amprobe electric tester, meg-ohm electric tester, an electric tester, a digital truck scale, a laboratory scale and a hot plate, valued at $2,910, were taken Saturday or Sunday from the office of a business in the 900 block of east Eighth Street, Lawrence police said.
A two-way radio valued at $2,500 was taken Friday from a telephone company truck that was parked in front of Spooner Hall, KU police said.
Two video cassette recorders, a VHS video camera and a portable tape deck, valued at $1,858, were
taken sometime Saturday or Sunday from a building in the 200 block of Ninth Street, Lawrence police said. ■ A video cassette recorder, a pink 12-inch color TV, an AM-FM cassette stereo and speakers, two snow tires and white rims, valued at $1,450, were taken Saturday or Sunday from a residence in the 1600 block of east 19th Street, Lawrence police said. Property damage was estimated at $75.
A bicycle valued at $700 was taken Sunday from the hallway of an apartment complex in the 1300 block of
Kentucky Street, Lawrence police said.
Forty cassette tapes and a case, valued at $200, were taken Saturday or Sunday from a KU student's car parked in an apartment complex at 15th Street and Crestline Drive, Lawrence police said.
- Cassette tapes, a checkbook and various credit and L.D. cards, valued at $125, were taken Sunday from a KU student's locked car parked in an apartment complex at 15th Street and Crestline Drive, Lawrence police said.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 28, 198/
9
Soviet
Continued from p. 1
"Your children will think about the Soviet Union a lot less than you do. Your grandchildren will view the Soviet Union as we view Brazil. That's assuming we don't blow up the world first."
Fletcher compares the Soviet Union to the Ottoman Empire in the 19th century. The empire, based in Turkey, was known as the sick man of Europe because it obviously was only a matter of time before it fell. But it won't be the U.S. military that defeats the Soviet Union, Fletcher said.
"The they are dead wrong to fear American military force," he said. "We don't go around invading places a lot.
"They are right to fear our lifestyle. That's what's going to destroy the Soviet state. Our lifestyle of affluence has proven totally irresistible. They're going to fall so far behind that eventually people will say, 'Nuts to it all, I'll do anything for a McDonald's.'"
Laird said his crystal ball was less clear.
"I am persuaded that the Soviet Union has peaked," he said. "In spite of all their resources, unless we in the
Western free world do some awfully stupid things, they will never achieve their goal of becoming the superior power in the world.
"Change is the greatest of all universals. I no longer rule out the use of this strategy, particularly the Soviet system, as modeled by Lenin and Stalin, will crumble."
Laird decries what he calls the neo-Munich way of thinking by the ultra-left in the United States.
That refers to events of 1938, when European nations conceded territory. It is also known as the Holocaust.
"They're so wishing to rid the world of the horrors of the nuclear threat that they have blinded themselves to the reality of Soviet expansionism," Laird said. "They let their wishes blind them."
Some may characterize the Soviet Union as the sick man of Europe, but Gerald Mikkelson, who also is a professor of Slavic languages and literatures, detects an illness in the United States.
"A disease of anti-Sovietism per meates the mentality of America," he said. "It is the pervading ideology a negative ideology.
'We have so many wonderful ideals that we could lean on in our culture, so many authentic heroes whose consciousness were not dominated by hatred for some other country. But instead, we have altogether too much xenophobia and ethnocentricity.
"There are people in our society who don't want us to get along better with the Soviet Union any better than we do — for reasons that are incomprehensible to me."
Soviet military aggression is greatly exaggerated, Mikkelson said. The United States also is guilty of expansionism, and its economic ties to extend its economic influence
For example, the Sandimista government in Nicaragua does not present a Soviet threat, he said. Rather, U.S. involvement in Central America is an attempt to dictate the kind of government those nations should have.
Harry Shaffer, who also is a professor of economics, said U.S. intervention in Nicaragua was less justifiable for Soviet intervention in Afghanistan.
In Nicaragua, the United States supports the worst terrorists in the world, the contras, against a demo-
critically elected government, he said. In Afghanistan, the Soviets are supporting a legal government.
"The Soviet Union would like to see a communist world. We would like to see a capitalist world," he said. "But the idea that they would march into Paris if they could be ridiculous. It's more likely that we would march into Mexico City."
The United States expects too much, too soon, from the Soviet Union, Shaffer said.
"Here's a nation that in 1913 was a nation of illiterate peasants," he said. "In a very short period of time, they have become the second-most powerful and most forget that the development of freedom and democracy takes a long time."
The Anglo-American democratic tradition began about 500 years ago, when the British parliament competed with the monarchy for power, Shaffer said. But the United States didn't abolish slavery until the 1860s, and women could not vote until 1920.
"We expect them to do in 70 years what we did in 500," he said. "We expect a miracle."
VODKA
VODKA
React
Continued from p. 1
said he and seven other fraternity members were exempt from an English quiz today. Bowden also is getting a break on one final.
Bowden is lucky in another way. Although his books were destroyed and the fish in his fish tank boiled for an hour, his clothes are safe.
"I just took my laundry home on that day." he said.
The associate director of the Student Assistance Center, Robert Turvey, spoke to Sigma Phi Epsilon members yesterday morning about how to handle their academics.
"Faculty need to have some way of evaluating," he said later, "and
for some of these students, what needs to be evaluated doesn't exist."
But he doesn't expect any problems, he said, because faculty members have been understanding in the past.
He said the assistance center gave the fraternity members a letter explaining their situation and asked them to work with their instructors individually.
If the students are having trouble explaining their problems to their instructors, the center may help, he said.
The University of Kansas and many of the greek houses on
campus offered to house and feed the Sigma Phi Epsilon members immediately after the fire. Academic help is also on the way.
The Kansas Union Bookstores will lend used books to the members to study for finals, and some greek houses are offering access to their class note files.
The fraternity's campus adviser, Tom Wertz, said. "The University officials have been tremendous, exceptionally helpful, as have the other living groups."
Wertz said that the cost of the fire's damage would be known later in the week and that any estimate now only would be a
rough guess.
The building and chapter property are insured, he said, and insurance may pay for members' meals and lodging while repairs are being made. Regardless, the company will pay for expenses the temporary expenses, he said.
Jones said most members' insurance covered their personal losses.
But, he said, "I know of several who lost substantial amounts and are not covered."
The fraternity will meet with its alumni board tomorrow to begin planning repairs to the building, he said.
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Tuesday, April 28, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
FORT MYERS
Fred Sadowski/KANSAN
Tim Farha and Chris Farha, Wichita seniors, paint The Wagon Wheel Cafe, 507 W. 14th St. The Farhas and their friend, Trey Kouri, Wichita senior, wanted to pay back the owner of The Wheel, John Wooden, for the four years of service he has given them.
Regulars paint cafe
Three KU students say they have patronized the Wagon Wheel Cafe, 507 W. 14th St., so often that they are donating their time to paint it.
By a Kansan reporter
"We spent more time here than anywhere else." Chris Farba said.
Tim Farah, Chris Farha and Trey Kouri, all Wichita seniors, share paint at the north wall of their red building. They plan to paint more tomorrow.
And Kouri said he had eaten lunch at the Wheel every day this semester.
Chris Farha said the restaurant had not been painted in eight years.
"We thought it was an eyesore," Chris Farha said.
"If this is a Top 20 sports bar, it's got to look like it," Kouri said.
John Wooden, cafe owner, was golfing yesterday and unavailable for comment.
"He told us 'just put a coat of paint on it,' " Chris Farha said.
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Lawrence junior high school students discuss recognition of suicide signs
By TODD COHEN
Staff writer
"If you keep a secret, you may lose a friend."
That's a message many Lawrence junior high school students now hear in their health classes. The message is that kids need to fight, but to prevent youth suicide.
Lawrence junior high schools now are making a two-day workshop on suicide part of their required health classes. The workshop teaches students how to recognize suicide's warning signs and get help.
The workshop idea was supported by local service groups that expressed concern about suicide among young people, a problem that was in headlines earlier this year after a string of teen-age suicides in Chicago.
Marcia Epstein, director of Headquarters Inc., a crisis-counseling center; Martha Skeet, director of school nurses for Unified School District 497; and Bob Franz, a social worker for USD 497, designed the workshop in 1986.
Epstein said yesterday that the workshop was needed because students usually were afraid to talk with adults or contact social service agencies or the school counselor if they had problems or were concerned about a friend.
"We don't talk about whether suicide is right or wrong, and we don't try to train eight graders to be peer counselors," Epstein said. "The goal is to get kids to talk to people who can help them."
"Susicide is a major issue. The rate of suicide among people under 24 has increased disproportionately. It has tripled."
Between 1980 and 1985, Douglas County has averaged one suicide a year among 15 to 24-year-olds, Epstein said. And there have been suicide attempts in Lawrence junior high schools, she said.
"Nationally, by the age of 19, one in
many cases made a suicide
attempt. Ernest Smith was
Also, Headquarters received a record number of suicide calls, 263, in 1986, and that number is expected to increase this year, she said.
The goal is to get kids to talk to people who can help them.'
'T
— Marcia Epstein director of Headquarters Inc.
Barbara Maxwell, a Lawrence junior high school counselor, said the workshop was excellent. Students, and the general public, need to better understand suicide, she said.
The workshop comprises a student questionnaire, a group discussion, a film about recognizing symptoms of suicidal thoughts in friends and a music video of pop singer Billy Joel's song, "You're Only Human."
"We show how pressures can really build up," Epstein said.
about suicide and ways to kill themselves, giving away personal items and saying goodbye to friends.
"Some things put an adolescent in a position where they can feel vulnerable," Franz said. "When you get to feeling that way, things can snowball.
The students discuss a list of warning signs, such as people talking
"It's something that has to always be taken seriously."
Mary Ann Scott, health instructor at South Junior High School, 2734 Louisiana St., said, "I think it's invaluable. With the stresses young people face today, it's important to be able to recognize warning signs."
Scott said the workshop should be used in elementary school classes as well.
"There are lot of grade school kids who have older brothers and sisters who may be going through hard times," she said.
Epstein said she would like to expand the program to include the University of Kansas. However, she has received little encouragement, she said.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 28, 1987
11
Dreiling striving for starting role in NBA
BILLI
KANSAN file photo
Greg Dreiling is learning to adjust to his new role as back-up center for the Indiana Pacers. Dreiling, who plays behind starting center Steve Stipanovich, says his primary role is to step in if a teammate is in foul trouble or is hurt.
Pacers' position frustrates ex-'Hawk
By JOHN BUZBEE
Staff writer
Greg Dreiling has been sitting on the Indiana Pacers' bench much of the season, and he's hot to get off of it.
"It's intensified the fires in me," he said from Atlanta on Friday. "I'm working harder than ever."
The Pacers headed into the first round of the NBA playoffs led by 6-foot-8 rookie forward Chuck Person. They've lost their first two games in a best of five series with Atlanta. Dreiling, the 7-1 center who helped propel the Jayhawks into the Final Four last year, has been lost in the shadows.
"It's a big change," he said. "The media attention dies down immediately."
Dreiling was in the spotlight last spring. The Jayhawks were one of the best teams in the country, and he towered above his teammates. The media couldn't get enough of Dreiling, sophomore Danny Manning and seniors Calvin Thompson and Ron Kellog.
"I wished, at times, when I had all those interviews I could toss a few the other way," he said.
He doesn't have many interviews any more, except for stories about what it's like to sit on the bench. So what's it like to sit on the bench?
He tries to encourage his teammates who are playing. He tells them ways to improve their games from the coach. He makes plans.
"In a way, it's not bad," he said.
"It gives me some time to do some thinking."
Dreiling is thinking about being one of the best centers in the country. He's thinking about practicing this summer, about working on his lateral movement. He's going to do whatever he has to.
"I want to be regarded as one of the best centers," he said, "and that's something that's going to be driving me in the off-season."
Dreiling didn't always show that drive during his early years at Kansas. He also didn't sit on the bench much. This season, he only played in about a fourth of the Pacers games.
"I'm going to use it to my advantage," he said. "Every minute I sit on the bench the desire to work hard increases."
His longest playing time this
season was 15 minutes against Chicago. He scored a career-high eight points against Detroit. His primary role is to step in if a teammate is in foul trouble or is hurt, he said.
"You're getting paid to do your job," he said, "and whether you're playing or not, you have to stay
ready."
Dreiling plays behind starting center Steve Stipanovich, who starred on the championship Missouri teams of the early '80s. The Pacers have another Big Eight Conference stand-out, former Oklahoma Sooner Wayman Tisdale.
"When you put on the same uniform," Dreiling said, "you realize it's all in the past."
That past included bitter confrontations between Kansas and Oklahoma as the up-and-coming Jayhawks challenged the champ.
See DREILING, p. 12, col. 1
Astros end skid beat Mets by 10
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Jim Deshaies pitched a four-hitter for seven innings and drove in two runs, and Glenn Davis and Billy Hatcher hit a home run as the Houston Astros routed the New York Mets 11-1 last night.
National League
Houston ended a three-game losing streak and sent the Mets to their third straight loss in the first meeting this season between last year's National League division winners.
The Astros rattled Dive Cone, 0-2, who was making his first major-league start. Cone gave up 10 runs in five innings, allowing seven hits, walking six and throwing two wild pitches in the third, and Mets Manager Davey Johnson was ejected for arguing the first call.
Deshiesa, 20, allowed only a first-inning home run to Keith Hernandez and went on to strike out seven and walk five. Aurelio Lopez and Julio Solano each worked a scoreless inning to finish the game.
Expos 6. Phillies 4
PHILADELPHIA — Neal Heaton allowed five hits in eight innings and Andres Galarravar drove in three
runs as the Montreal Expos defeated the Philadelphia Phillies 6-4 last night, snapping a three-game losing streak.
Tim Burke relieved Heaton, 3-1,
who struck out six and walked one,
when he was hit on the right leg by a
line drive hit by leadoff batter Juan
Samuel in the ninth. Milt Thompson
followed with a single and Mike
touched in a three-run homer with
one out, getting the Philies within
two runs.
After Lance Parrish singled, Randy St. Clair relieved Burke and got the last two outs for his third save.
Giants 7. Braves 3
ATLANTA — Pitcher Kelly Downs singled in the tie-breaking run in the seventh inning and Chili Davis hit a two-run single and a homer as the San Francisco Giants downed the Atlanta Braves 7-3 yesterday.
Downs, in his second season, collected the first game-winning RBI of his career when he scored Matt Williams from second and baked a 11-tie.
Williams started the two-out rally with a single and Robby Thompson followed with a walk before Down's hit. After Will Clark walked to the bases, Davis delivered his two run single, ousting Rick Mahler, 2-2.
Kansas signs guard from Midland Juco
Staff writer
Bv ROB KNAPP
The Kansas Jayhawks, weathering what has so far been a slow signing period, have signed junior college guard Lincoln Minor to a national letter of intent, Kansas coach Larry Brown announced yesterday.
Minor, a 6-foot-3, 170 pound guard from Midland Junior College in Midland, Texas, should be one of the top candidates to fill the point guard position left open by the departure of Cedric Hunter.
"We're thrilled to have him," Brown said. "He has great quickness and is a product of a tremendously successful program at Midland."
Minor averaged 16.1 points and 4.1 rebounds a game last season as Midland finished 32-4 and came within a game of winning the National Junior College Athletic Association championship.
The year before, Minor was a starter when Midland went 33-1 and
This year, he hit 51.8 percent of his field goal attempts and 76.8 percent
of his free throws and was named to his all-conference and all-region teams.
Minor did not play point guard in Midland's three-guard offense, but his 140 assists and 97 steals in 35 games this year attest to his ballhandling skills.
Minor considered Ohio State. Auburn and the University of Miami, Fla., before signing with the Jay-hawks.
Minor's teammate, Daron "Mookie" Blaylock, is among the recruits who have visited Kansas but are still undecided. Blaylock, who led Midland with a 19-6 point scoring average, visited KU last weekend and has also made a recruiting visit to Oklahoma.
He is the second player Kansas has signed this spring. Joe Young, a 6-foot 7 forward from Dodge City Compton, moved to the Jayhawks two weeks ago.
The current signing period ends May 15.
Kings name Russell as new head coach
The Associated Press
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Bill Russell, five times the NBA's most valuable player and a player-coach of the world champion Boston Celtics during the 1960s, was named head coach yesterday of the Sacramento Kings.
Kings managing general partner Gregg Lukenbill and president Joe Axelson said Russell signed a seventy-year contract to serve an unspecified number of years and eventually succeed him as general manager and president.
Jerry Reynolds, who succeeded Phil Johnson as interim head coach after Johnson was dismissed during the all-star break, will return to his previous post as assistant coach next year under Russell.
Russell, 53, who in 1980 was selected as the greatest player in the history of the NBA by the Professional Basketball Writers' Association of America, has not coached left the Seattle SuperSonics in 1977.
He said he was attracted to the post because the Kings offered a long-term contract that would give him the time needed to build a championship team, and because it was just 90
miles from the San Francisco Bay area, where he played high school and college ball, and where his father still lives.
"I've been offered some jobs before, but they were always on the East Coast," said Russell, whose current home is Seattle.
Russell, who has been a television commentator for the past decade, said he decided about two years ago that he wanted to return to coaching, but only under the right circumstances.
An Olympic gold medal winner and a member of the All-American team at the University of San Francisco, Russell played for the Celtics from 1956-65, then served as player-coach from 1966 to 1969. He played on 11 world championship Celtic teams, including two as player-coach.
Although Russell said he expected it would take several years to build the Kings, 29-53 this past season, into champions, he predicted that "without too much of a change, ought to be able to get close to .500."
He said he thought the Kings have five players "that are really good" on their roster, but that their greatest star was defense — Russell's specialty.
Track team worries about loss of 6 seniors
Seattle, Oakland win
KANSAS
SEATTLE — John Christensen drove home Phil Bradley with the winning run in the bottom of the
American League
With one out in the eighth, Bradley walked, stole his league-leading 10th base of the season, and scored on Christensen's single to center and broke a 2 tie.
The Associated Press
eighth inning as the Seattle Mariners defeated the Detroit Tigers 5-2 last night.
Following an intentional walk to Alvin Davis, Christensen scored on a single by John Moses. Davis came home on a bloop single over the head of Tiger first baseman Darrell Evans.
Denise Buchanan, an All-American in the shot put, is one of six seniors leaving the women's track team this year. Buchanan has led the Jawahres in total points earned in a season for the past four years.
OAKLAND, Calif. — Curt Young pitched a six-hitter and Jose Canseco had four hits last night, leading the Oakland Athletics to a 5-2 victory over the Boston Red Sox
Boston's hits included the 2,000th of Don Baylor's career, a single in the seventh inning.
Athletics 5, Boston 2
By DIANE FILIPOWSKI
How do you replace a group of six seniors who have been team leaders and scored more than half of their team's points in four years?
Cliff Rovello, assistant women's track coach, had to think about the question for a moment.
"I don't think you ever replace people like that, he said."
The Kansas women's track team will try to replace this group of seniors that has been a mainstay in the program as it nears the end of this year's track season.
Kansas will lose Denise Buchanan,
weights; Julie Hall, multi-event;
Jaci Metzger, multi-event and
jumps; Charla Rosenberry, sprints
and hurdles; Rosie Wadman, multi-event and jumps; and Mia Wickliffe,
sprints.
'They were not just talented athletes that you hoped would come through They were athletes that you knew would come through everytime.'
— Cliff Rovelto
Carla Coffey, women's track coach, said she didn't like to think of this year's recruits as replacing these seniors, but said she had to continue building the foundation of the team.
Assistant women's track coach
"It will be different," Coffey said, "but we have to find quality athletes that will rebuild the program and are losing 75 percent of our strength."
Coffey, who came to Kansas in 1960, said this group was her first
recruiting class at KU. The arrival of these athetles also marked a turn around in the program.
"The year before they came",
Coffey said, "we had slipped to fifth
in the outdoor conference meet. Since
we have never fallen below the top half."
The Jayhawks finished third at this year's Big Eight Indoor Conference Championships.
But, Rovelto said, without the six athletes. Kansas probably would have been consistently seventh or eighth at the conference championships.
But team members and the coaches said they would not miss the points.
Denise Buchanan, an All-American in the shot put who has had the team's top individual point totals for four years, said she knew that she could probably be replaced.
"They can always find someone to score the points." Buchanan said.
"They were not just talented athletes that you hoped would come through," Rovello said. "They were athletes that you knew would come through everytime."
people "
Rovello said he would not only remember the records this group set or the points it scored, but how it worked toward these accomplishments.
"I will remember overcoming the obstacles and the work that was involved," Rovertel said. "I'll remember the disappointing times we had and when we had to work together to overcome them."
Ann O'Connor, a junior and the team's only returning All-American,
See SENIORS. n. 12. col. 3
12
Tuesday, April 28, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Rugby team takes 3rd in championship
20
By DAVID BOYCE Staff writer
The KU rugby team did not win the Western Union Rugby Championship in Dallas, but Coach Bill Mills said finishing third was a big accomplishment.
DALLAS — Paul King, St Louis senior fullback, tries to evade a defender during the Western Rugby Championships. The KU rugby team finished third out of the eight teams in the tournament this week.
Scott Stites/Special to the KANSAN
More than 250 rugby teams, including Kansas, participate in the Western Rugby Union. Eight teams from division competition over the weekend will play as the Western Rugby Union representative in the rugby final four.
"We were able to do well because we kept constant pressure against everybody," Mills said.
"We did very well," Mills said.
"This is the best we've done in six years, and our third place finish puts us in the top 12 in the nation.
Kansas won its first game 28-7 against San Antonio, Texas on Friday.
"We beat the first team pretty convincingly and was able to use some people who usually don't start," "kicker and forward Paul King said.
He said resting some of the starters on Friday helped the team for the Saturday and Sunday games.
The Jayhawks, though, lost their second game against the eventual Western Union Champion, Dallas Harlequins, 22-10 on Saturday, then rebounded and won the consolation game against Albequerque 15-14 on Sunday.
"Dallas pretty much outsized us and wore us down," King said. "Some of our players were disappointed, but we came in seeded third and finished third.
"Dallas is one of the best teams in
the nation "
Before Kansas left for Dallas on Thursday, the team's last practice was in 60-degree weather. Kansas and its first game in 90-degree heat.
"It was very hot and very intense."
Mills said. "We had to use everyone
because of the heat."
Mills said that he had planned to use all 25 players that went to Dallas regardless of the weather.
"I had confidence in every player that went to Dallas," he said.
team
"The heat just took it out of us," he said.
Even though he used all the play
ers, he said the heat affected the
The Kansas rugby team will be going to the Boulder Area Rugby Festival on May 16. Kansas is the winning champion at the tournament.
Dreiling said he was sitting in the Pacers' locker room when he saw Tisdale for the first time since their Big Eight days. Tisdale and his team exchanged sten tenses for a second. Then they started laughing.
"He has the ability to play," Manning said. "He's just got to wait his turn." And Dreiling's
"It's such a highly emotional game." Dreiling said, "You can't hold a grudge or a feeling of ill-will."
Dreiling has been keeping up with the Jayhawks as much as possible this season, although it's difficult when he's far from the madding crowds of Allen Field House.
"I was with them all the way," he said. "I was really proud of the job they did, considering the young people they had."
Kansas men's assistant coach Ed Manning said the four new teams entering the NBA will open up the league for players such as Dreling. The NBA Board of Governors last week accepted Charlotte, N.C. Minneapolis, Miami, and Orlando, Fla., into the league. The teams will be added between 1988 and 1990.
attitude will help him play when his time comes.
ion Sooners in 1984 and 1985
"He's been able to keep himself motivated and keep his head up," Manning said.
Dreiling
Continued from n. 11
"I'ts so hard for a big guy," he said. "It takes longer to keep in shape than it would a little guy."
"Within the next year or two," he said, "Greg will be able to play no matter he's at."
Dreiling is a bright guy who has a lot going for him. Manning said
Dreiling isn't sure whether he'll be staying in Indiana over the summer. It depends on what the coaches have in mind for him, he said. But he'll at least come back home to visit.
Dreiling wants to take a few classes. He wants to see his family. And he wants to play ball with the guys.
"At first, we were a little homeschick and we still are," he said. "We're really looking forward to coming back in the off-season."
Dreiling said that he, his wife, Kelly, and 4-year-old daughter, Jill, are settling into Indianapolis. Staying in the Midwest made the transition easier.
Seniors
He started his charge with three birdies in the first four backside holes.
After his long-range birdie on 18, Gardner had to two-putt from 100 feet just to force the playoff.
Continued from p. 11
Haas was happy for himself, but sympathetic toward Gardner, who still must wear the "hard-juck" tag after 10 winless years on the tour.
"It's not like a death," he joked.
"It's not the end of the world."
Haas was three shots off the pace set by Gardner and Dan Forsman, who were tied for the lead at 10 under-par into the final round.
Gardner said the loss was hard to take but he anticipated a quick recovery.
Rovelto said the group of seniors also excelled in the classroom, which he said also attracted high quality athletes and made the program stonger.
It was Gardner's second runner-up finish in the Houston open in four years.
THE WOODLANDS, Texas — 3y Haas broke a two-year-old promis to himself last week, and yesterday e had the Houston Open title and $108,000 to show for it.
"I remember saying to myself I don't need this." Haas said of his 1985 withdrawal from the Houston Open after 28 holes. "I didn't even say anything to my caddy. I just started walking back to the clubhouse and left him standing there."
Haas walked off the Tournament Players Course at The Woodlands two years ago in disgust with his game and vowed never to return.
"It has kept me here." Roveto said "If there were not those kind of people here. I would not be here."
Jaci Metzger, who will leave with the third longest long jump in KU history, said the team would not suffer next year.
Rovello told the seniors had also been helpful in recruiting. He said many of the team's freshmen said they were from Kansas because they adored the players.
said she would miss the group that she thought provided leadership for the whole team.
"It was nice to have someone there telling you not to worry about how you were competing." O'Connor said, "because they had been through the same thing before."
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"I had goose bumps on my face when it went in." Haas said
All six seniors will graduate in May, and Buchanan and Wadman were named to last semester's all-academic Big Eight Conference track team. Metzger was named to the honorable mention list.
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He may now be less inclined to write off a golf course.
"I'm sorry," Haas said, consoling Gardner after the excitement had died down Sunday. "You played a great tournament."
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"While I have been here, the freshman that come in are better and
But Haas came back and Sunday he sank a two-foot putt on the first hole of a sudden-dead playoff to beat Buddy Gardner after the two had tied in regulation play with 12-under-par 276 totals.
better each year," Metzger said."
But more than anything else, Buchanan said she would miss the friendships she had made during her four years on the track team.
- Levelor Blinds
Haas' last tour victory was the 1982 Texas Open.
ond-place finishes in his career,
responded "Don't be. I just missed it.
I played the best golf I could play."
All of Haas' bad memories of the course faded when he made a 60-foot birdie putt on the final hole to force a playoff.
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University Dailv Kansan / Tuesday. April 28. 1987
13
Testaverde sure to go first; rest of NFL draft not yet set
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — The only sure thing in the first round of today's NFL draft is the first pick. The Tampa Bay Bucs will take Vinny Testaverde, the Miami quarterback and Heisman Trophy winner.
The consensus is that there are perhaps 10 players available who can have an immediate impact on a team. That leaves the good teams to play in, and the bad ones to excess players and multiple draft picks in return for that one blue-chipier.
Testaverde has already been signed to a $8.2 million, six-year contract by the Bucs, who were burned last year when they took Bo Jackson with the first pick and he opted for baseball over football.
The draft begins at 8 a.m. EDT at New York's Marriott Marquis Hotel, an hour that forces West Coast teams to play games on the field, and there there's a lot of trade talk.
Then come the Indianapolis Colts, who until Saturday night, were also a sure thing. The Colts were going to take Alabama linebacker Cornelius Bennett, who is advertised as the second coming of Lawrence Taylor.
The Colts are still likely to take Bennett, but when Randy McMillan was hit by a car in Maryland on Saturday night and suffered a broken leg, it left the Colts without its principal running back.
That left an opening for the San Diego Chargers, who pick fifth, to exchange choices with Indianapolis, take Bennett, and leave the Colts to choose one of two running backs, Brent Fullwood of Auburn or Alonzo Highsmith of Miami.
The third pick belongs to the Buffalo Bills, who would love to have Shane Conlan, the Penn State linebacker who comes from nearby Frewsburg, N.Y. Conlan is likely to be available lower in the draft. The Bills might trade with Houston, who picks eight, giving them an additional pick.
Then on to the other blue-chippers: defensive back Rod Woodson of Purdue; defensive linemen Reggie Rogers of Washington and Jerome Brown of Miami, and running backs Highsmith, Fullwood and D.J. Dozier of Penn State.
"Are we willing to trade the pick?" asks Buffalo Coach Marv Levy. "The answer is yes, if the trade is right. We have to feel unequivocally that we've helped ourselves."
Behind them come such potential first rounders as quarterbacks Kelly Stouffer of Colorado State and Chris Miller of Oregon; linebacker Mike Junkin of Duke; defensive linemen Shawn Knight and Jason Buck of Brigham Young, Danny Noonan of Nebraska. John Bosa of Boston College and Tony Woods of Pitt; offensive linemen Harris Barton of North Carolina and John Clay of Missouri and wide receivers Haywood Jeffries of North Carolina State, Mark Ingram of Michigan State and Ricky Nattiel of Florida; running backs Paul Palmer of Temple, Roger Vick of Texas A&M and Kenny Flowers of Clemson; and tight end Rod Bernstine of Texas A&M.
Many of those players are trade targets.
San Francisco, for example, still has two first picks, even after trading
for quarterback Steve Young from Tampa Bay. They could parlay those two picks for a higher position that could get them Dozier or perhaps Conlan or Junkin.
One of those San Francisco picks is from Washington, who would love a big linebacker.
The hot name is Alex Gordon, a 240-pounder from the University of Cincinnati, who a month ago was projected as a third-rounder but has worked his way into the first round. At this point, he's unlikely to get past the New York Jets, who nick 21st.
St. Louis, for example, has offered quarterback Neil Lomax to the quarterback-desperate Los Angeles Raiders. The Cards wants a first-round pick.
There are other possible last minute deals in the works.
And the Super Bowl champion Giants, who draft 28th and last, could trade either way: up to get a blue-chipper, although that's unlikely, or down to get an extra second- or third-round if they feel the quality in those rounds is roughly comparable to that of the end of the first round.
After Buffalo, the draft order is Green Bay, San Diego, St. Louis, Detroit, Houston, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, New Orleans, Dallas, Atlanta, Miami, Los Angeles Raiders, Minnesota, Cincinnati, Seattle, Kansas City, Houston (from the Los Angeles Rams), the New York Jets, San Francisco, New England, Cleveland, San Francisco (from Washington), Chicago, Denver and the Giants.
The Rams and Redskins are the only teams without first-round picks.
Chiefs search for running back in opening round of NFL draft
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Kansas City Chiefs, barring a trade, were hoping to find a running back or linebacker with the 19th choice in today's National Football League draft.
As the draft approached, General Manager Jim Schaaf was exploring all possibilities for moving up in the draft order.
"We're not making any secret of the fact that we're looking for running backs and linebackers. That's pretty well understood. But that doesn't mean that without any question we'll definitely take a running back the first round.
"There could be a trade. Jim is handling all those discussions," said Les Miller, director of scouting. "But we're checking every possibility. If it happens, so be it. But we're not going to tear everything down just to move up. Jim's staying on top of that on a minute-to-minute basis with all the other clubs. It could happen.
"That simply means if any of a
number of guys we think are capable of being selected in the first round ad have that kind of ability, if they're there, the chances are we'll take a running back. But if something should happen, if the guys we'd like to take at that point are gone, then we can go another direction."
As a result of the 10-6 record last season that produced a long-awaited playoff breakthrough, the Chiefs are not going to enoy — bring a trade
They will alternate between the 17th and 21st pick in every round with the other four 10-6 teams of 1986. They have no choice in the sixth round and an extra pick in round eight.
— their customary high position in the picking order.
Schaaf, given complete control of all draft-day decisions for the first time, knows the perils of making a deal.
"They feel we have depth in those areas, but we're not entertaining to trade any of our defensive people. As a general rule, we'd better disconnect that doesn't exclude the fact that we would trade a player as well."
"The price depends on how far you move up," he said. "We want to make sure the price is commensurate with what we'd be getting.
Teams would like to have some of our defensive people, obviously.
The Chiefs' best bet may be Paul Palmer, the smallish running back from Temple who finished second to Miami quarterback Vinnie Testaverde in the Heisman Trophy balloting. Another possibility was Terrence Flagler, a running back from Clemson.
"We're not going to take a running back on the 19th pick just to take him." Miller said. "We're going to feel very solidly about a guy before he takes it out. You don't like pretty well but we probably wouldn't take them in the first round.
"If those other guys are gone, we'll go in another direction and get a player who can best help this team improve.
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KU women's golf team must make up ground
The Kansas women's golf team today will have to make up the ground that it lost last year if it wants to finish in the top half at the Big Eight Conference championships in Oklahoma City.
After 22 holes, Kansas shot a 501 and is in seventh place but is only eight strokes out of fourth place.
Seventh-ranked Oklahoma State, which shot a 450,
has taken a demanding lead in the tournament.
Oklahoma is second with a 472 total and Missouri,
which shot a 482, is third.
Leading the Jayhawks is Susan Pekar with a 123 total. Tina Gnewch and Donna Jo Looven both shot a 125 and Sherri Atchison finished the day with a 128. Marilee Scheil rounded out the field for the Jayhawks with a 136 total.
Two to compete in table tennis
Kansas will add one more sport to its list of national competitions this year. It's not basketball or track, but table tennis.
Anne Wong, Penang, Malaysia, sophmore, and Udom Suksdurpasrent, Bangkok, Thailand, graduate student, will compete May 1 and 2 in the National Collegiate Table Tennis Championships at the Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs, Colo.
Both Jayhawks qualified for the meet Feb. 21 and 22 at the regional recreation tournament in Lawrence.
The event was sponsored by the Association of College Unions.
Kansas won the 14-team field competition, which included teams from Missouri, Nebraska and Oklahoma.
Wong and Suksudprasert are members of the KU table tennis team and are making their first appearances in a U.S. national competition.
Wong and Suksuprasert will compete against 16 men and women, who won singles championships in the other 13 regional tournaments across the nation. One male and one female participant was selected random-
Suksudprasert was a member of Thailand's national table tennis team and competed on the national level inIndonesia when he was in high school.
KC Chiefs sign 3 free agents
The Chiefs also signed Vincent Stroth, who has tried out for USFSL teams the last three years, and John Trahyan, who tried out for the Denver Broncos last year but did not make the team.
Rourke, 6-foot-5 and 267 pounds, played for the Chiefs from 1980-84. He played for the New Orleans Saints in 1985 and returned to play the last four games of the season for the Chiefs last year.
KANSAS CITY, Mo — The Kansas City Chiefs announced the signing of three free agents yesterday, including veteran offensive lineman Jim Rourke.
From staff and wire reports.
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Comfortable Tongue with Vennilation Holes
Soft Cotton Linings for Moisture Absorption
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Soft Glove Leathers for Comfort and Durability
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Lawrence
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Come and visit us. Preview OUR whole new line of top quality leather footwear:
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Copyright 1989, 1994, 2001 BMCS Lackman Rd., Langue, KA, 66219
708 313-2570
14
Tuesday, April 28, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Moscow's trendy new mall hides crumbling walls, rats
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — Rat-infested apartments with crumbling walls and collapsing ceilings are hidden behind the pretty pastel facades of the city's first pedestrian mall, a Soviet news magazine says.
The slum-like conditions along trendy Arbat Street include ruptured pipes and a frequent lack of hot water in crowded apartments shared by several families, the weekly Ogonyok said in its April 24 edition.
The fronts of the buildings along Arbat Street, the city's old cultural center, were restored in 1984-85 during construction of the mall, which stretches about a half-mile.
Ogonyon reporters visited the street after receiving letters from residents there complaining about living conditions.
"Thousands are coming here to enjoy smartly painted houses in this street. It doesn't occur to anybody to look behind the shell, to see what is
happening inside," one resident, L. Telesova, wrote.
"We keep telling everybody that Arbat is a 'Potemkin Village' with painted facades and rotten innards," the magazine quoted her as saying later in an interview.
Potemkin Village" is an expression referring to a tactic attributed to Grigory Potemkin, one of Catherine the Great's ministers. Potemkin is said to have built brightly painted village fronts along routes traveled by the empress to create an illusion of prosperity.
Arbat Street is the heart of a 600-year-old district just west of the Kremlin. Traditionally known as Moscow's cultural center, its charm is recalled in Russian poetry and songs.
in the 18th and 19th centuries, the area was a fashionable aristocratic town and the home of many celebrated artists, including poet Alexander Pushkin.
During construction of the pedestrian mall, workers repainted the building facades in pastel blues, pinks and yellows and added fancy decorations to some storefronts. Streets were paved with bricks, street lamps were erected, and planters and wooden benches were brought in.
The project cost about $6 million.
The street's only movie theater
with a video rental shop
plus a plush dog.
The project cost about $5 million. Ogonyok said two of its reporters visited the site and found apartments with ceiling plaster falling down, walls crumbling, burst pipes and no hot water.
When residents complain to the city, Ogonyok said, they are told “it is no concern of ours. We create the walking zone for the whole capital’s benefit. Your problems must concern your district authorities.”
Florida man may plead insanity in shopping center shootings
The Associated Press
PALM BAY, Fla. — The lawyer for a man charged with six murders in last week's shopping center rampage weighed several defenses yesterday, including an insanity plea, while the first funeral service for a victim was in progress.
"At this particular point, we're looking at all possible defenses and certainly we're looking at a psychiatric defense," Russo said yesterday.
Brevard County Public Defender James Russo met with William B. Crusie on Sunday in his isolation jail in the intimation for Cruse's May 15 arraignment.
Cruse is accused of a shooting spree Thursday in which, besides the six deaths, 14 people were injured, 10 by gunshot wounds. Six people remained hospitalized yesterday.
A private funeral took place yesterday for Lester Watson, a 51-year-old father of four who was shot after leaving the Winn-Dixie supermarket. The gunman holed up for several hours in the store late Thursday and early Friday, at one point holding three hostages.
Richard Miller, director of the Florida Memorial Funeral Home, said that Watson's family requested details of the service be made public.
About 200 people had paid their respects to Watson on Sunday, including Palm Bay neighbor Jim Smith.
"The question is why here? And we want the neighbor and not me?" Smith said.
Palm Bay police continued to gather evidence in the case and prepared for funerals Tuesday for
two officers. Top state officials and about 1,000 law enforcement officers were expected to attend the services for Ronald Grogan and Gerald Johnson.
Separate services were scheduled Tuesday for Ruth Green, and the bodies of the other two shooting victims, identified by Palm Bay police as Nobil Al-Hamrell and Eadam Malik. The bodies were flown back to their mairie Kuwait.
Russo said an investigator from his office met with Cruse on Friday, and that Russo talked to him Sunday. Cruse was cooperative but in a sedate mood, Russo said. He declined to give details of their conversation
Cruse has been charged with six counts of first-degree murder, 10 counts of attempted murder and other charges, including kidnapping.
Leaders don't want Bakker back
The Associated Press
COLUMBIA, S.C. — Two members of the new board of the PTL ministry empire said yesterday that its founder, the Rev. Jim Bakker, should not be allowed to return in spite of his threat of a "holy war" to regain it.
Smith, a Baptist evangelist from Oklahoma, said his and Falwell's ministries had been hurt financially because of their connection with the scandal-ridden PTL ministry.
And the Rev. Bailey E. Smith said the board's chairman, the Rev. Jerry Falwell, was considering resigning at today's board meeting in Fort Mill and that if he did, the rest of the board also might step down.
Smith said he couldn't say exactly how much donations had decreased because of the PTL scandal and his connection to it, but Falwell has said that he had lost $2 million.
Falwell, in an interview yesterday on "The 700 Club" on the Christian Broadcasting Network, said Baker wrote him last week asking to return to the ministry from which he and turned over to Falwell after admitting for a sexual encounter with a church secretary seven years ago.
"I received a wire, a Telex, from him this past week. In it, he implied that I made some kind of deal with him, which I did not, to give it back to
him, and implying that if I don't there'll be a holy war. "Falwell said."
Falwell and Smith said that Bakker should not be allowed to return and both predicted PTL would fold unless its credibility was restored.
The new board meets today at PTL's Heritage USA, the evangelical empire that showed a $129 million profit last year with its cable television network, amusement park, shopping center and hotels.
Falwell did not comment on whether he planned to step down. Smith said that all he knew was that Falwell was considering resigning.
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IS MASSAGE BETTER THEN PIZZA? Find out try steam & massage from Lawrence Message Therapy and R-E-L-A-X. Student rates, Gift Certificates too! Call 841-6626 and hold
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**STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS!** Register now for the 1987-88 academic year to be included in the StudentFaculty/Situation Request or request university accreditation. Request a request by contacting Student Senate deadline is May 1, 1987. Stop by Organization and Activity Center: 105 S. 34th Street, Philadelphia, PA 19102. Hours are 8 a.m. p. Monday through Friday.
Tired of uninsured cover hands and metrocore J.D.'s? Get into the groove with Metropolis Mobile Sound Professional club and radio J.D.'s. Enhance your lightning, hot Spots for all areas. 841-703-8.
ENTERTAINMENT
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At Your Requests Lawrence's Best and Most Ace!
D J Lounge and Lights for Any Occasion
Sale ends Mav 8
Want to live and work on the East Coast? We will host a presentation on campus for Nanny份ies in the NYC area at 3 p.m. April 29 at Gallery East in the Kansas Union. Midwest Nanny, Inc.
WEIGHT LOSS PROGRAM Lose 10-20 lbs in 10 weeks by making accepted C.O.D. Mail order. Call Gail(866) 577-4880.
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Private parties for all
occasions, for more information call
843-0510
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COMPUTER
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KEYBOARDIST Needed for Established Rock Band
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On Draught
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Dozens of Beer Signs and other Beer Label items will be given away throughout the evening!
It Could Only Happen at...
FOR RENT
THE HAWK 1340 OHIO
1 bedroom bauxite apartments two leasing for
each room. Call 827-2420 (before 6:00) and at 542-3511
(after 6:00).
1-Idbm. Apt for Summer Sublease. Nice apartment, dishwasher, close to campus. Hert open 6am-7pm. $139/month.
Sunrise Village apartment for rent this summer
May 19 through July 31. Reasonable rent, pool,
tennis courts less than one year old. Rooms 4
comfortably. Call Staci, Slii, or Liau 649-8166.
4 Bedroom house, fully furnished. Available June and July. Family preference. Call for information.
2 Bedroom, 2 Bath for Sublease with Fall option. Balcony overlays courtyard with swimming pool and basketball court. Tired of reading ads? Call and stop by for a book! 834-4906
2 Bidm Townhouse for summer special rate,
350 square feet, summing to $189,000.
U. Bushell Call 843-675-0087 between
8:30 AM and 4:00 PM.
IS THIS IT. We be sublucent our four bedroom two bathroom apartment. It is right off campus. 12th & Louisiana. We will give you our microwave, to keep as well as negotiate a price
2 Bedroom, 1-bath apartment in 4plex. Great location near campus $300/month plus utilities. Available around 6/1/87. Call evenings, weekends. #BK-9614
3 Bedroom Apartment, Summer Suitebase 2 campus apartment, spacious Close to campus 149-8850.
2 bedroom furnished apartment for summer block 1 camp from campus 1/2/2 bath, A.C
2 BR, 1 Bathroom, Pool Launched Facility. Bus. Rent. Rem. Heatproof Ae. Call 844-795-3901
4-Bdrm, 2 full bath, large kitchen, living room
Brand new装新 apartment. Sublease sun-
mastercraft Campus Place, Next to Yelp
South Cheap] 841-3176
4 Bfrm Apartment near campus, Meadowbrook area. 2 baths, dishwasher, refrigerator, garage. Summer sublease with option to pick up lease in August. Rent negotiable. 841-3913
Apartments for summer and fall at University Terrace Apartment, 1607 W. 6th I bedroom for summer. June and July only! 2 bedrooms. $280 for summer. June and July only, $240 unfurnished, furnished $860, plus all utilities. I bedroom for fall, to be completed by the end of September. Furnished $235, plus all utilities 2
Bedroom for fall; August 1- June 1, $110 furnished,
$290 furnished, plus all utilities. Central air, on bus route, large rooms, gas heat. Come see at 9th Floor, W 9th or B4122. If no answer call 843-1433.
Accepting deposits for summer or fall at Park Plaza South. Summer 1 bedroom $100/2 bedroom $200. Fall (10 month lease) 1 bedroom $225/2 bedroom $255. Water gas, paid gas. Furnished available for $2 additional. ON kU business Office Room. Cancel by 9:30am, 1912 W. 82nd St. 434-816. Weekends: 843-4776
Enjoy cooperative living at Sunflower House. You'll have your own room while sharing meals and housework. Spaces open for summer and fall. Ask for Andi, 749-0871.
Excellent location 2 bedroom apartments in four-plex, carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, and low utilities. Available June 1. Summer Rate 84. Address 104 Tromsø Avenue and 1341 Call: 84-424-492.
Summer Sublease. Need two males to sublease a bedroom浴房 lease. Furnished. Rent negotiable.
Summer Sublease or longer 2 bdrm, AC pool,
edinburgh in Eddingham Place. Call 842 0111
table in Eminence Place, Call
Summer Suite12. Nice. roomy 3 BR duplex, AC.
good location on bus route $300. Low utilities.
Last/1 of May free. 749-2533 (call late).
Summer Sublease 3 BR furnished townhouse near campus, bus. Negotiable. 841.360, after 6
1 Heedroom Apt for summer sublease. Furnished
cabin. Call 841-967-5030 or ask for Trina or
Marie
HEATHWOOD VALLEY NOW LEASING FOR FALL
- Short term leases
- accepted
- Lowest utility bills
- in town
- FF refrig. Disposal
- Quiet location
- Quiet location
For more info. call between 9-6, Mon.-Fri., 843-4754
--for summer. Next to campus, 842-608.
Best Location on Campus. Summer Sublease.
B1 apt., above Jayhawk Bookstore. Furnished
and very cheap. 841-1065.
Apt to Sublabee: New, immaculate, furnished 1
apt to Sublabee w/ refrigerator, dishwasher, disposal
1 block from campus. Regular price $20-For
summer $250 Available May 15 Call 749-1365.
ARE YOU ATTENDING SUMMER SCHOOL?
Special summer rates starting at $20 discount
Aspen West now leasing for Summer. Energy effi-
cent, 1 and 2 bedrooms. 3 Blocks west of Iowa on
18th Private patio/decks, ceiling fans, no pets.
Room size: 749 x 1948. Open house Saturday,
11 p.m.
Available May 15-Furnished 1 bedroom Apartment for summer. Next to campus. 843,698.
Brand new Colony Woods Apt. available for sublease mid May through December, $185/mo. Diswasher, microwave, own bedroom, bathroom. Females Call 841-2617.
Classic, Wood Floor Apt in house with backpacker, I back from KL. Available for Summer rentals.
IF YOU LIKE SPACE & QUIET WE HAVE IT AND YOU CAN STILL WALK TO CAMPUS
Spacious 2 bedroom
Laundry facilities
Waterbed fine
Swimming pool
10-12 month leases
VILLAGE SQUARE
9th & Avalon
842-3040
Fabulous Studio. Available June 1, 2013. Fully furnished, utilities paid, A/C separate, off street parking. Easy walk to KU, downtown. $300 mo. Parking fee, mature, and response. 480 sq. ft., afterwards.
Female Roommate Needed Share 2 bedroom
Roommate needed to be like a cam-
puter (old student preferred) 442/84368
Female Roommate need to share beautiful renovated home. Very close to campus. Summer internship opportunity.
Female Roommate needed for Summer and/or Fall. Tri-level townhouse, partially solar powered. 2 blocks from campus. Low rent and spare spiral staircase. DW, microwave. Call 814-6735.
Fine location on bedroom basement studio
house. Free delivery in the U.S.
Available June 1, $75 at 100 Maupin, Calif.
(809) 324-1300
FOR SUMMER SUBLEASE Two bedroom apt.
Close to City, Very nice. Pair 729-2768
GREAT SUMMER RATE Special incentives,吵 about our Military and ROTC Specials!
Great Deal! Summer Sublease Furnished
Kitchen, living room at Harbor for only $280;
kitchen, living room at Harbor for only $280;
HEY LOOK AT THIS! Brand new 1 Bdmr. Adm.
for summer camp! Come to campus W.D. A/C
www.yellowbells.org
Meadowbouch Summer Sublease 3 bdrm Twelfm
only $75. Don’t wait! Call 843-1886
Must Sublease for summer. Available mid May
(May 1st or June 1st) for Bedroom, Bath,
and Living Room. Partially furnished
with custom tile flooring.
NO NEED TO READ ANY FURTHER' Summer Sublease 3 bedroom. 3 bedroom. level townhouse, available mid May Complete furnished, 2 full baths, dishwasher. ideal location 9th & Emery
ON CAMPUS APAHMTMENT for summer
Negotiable rent, low utility
B4 8432728
One male graduate student for attractive, quiet formatted apartment. Utilities paid $260/month.
Oread basement apartment available in August.
Wildway distance campus downtown, private entrance, furnished $225, includes utilities. 842-698
Reserve your room now! Just 2 short blocks from university i, 3 and 4 bedroom apartments
from university i, 3 and 4 bedroom apartments paid and off street parking. No pets. 841-5500
Reserve your room now! For summer and/or fall,
Furnished with most utilities paid. Shared cooking
and bath facilities. Just 2 short blocks from
University with off street parking. No pets.
Roommate wanted Beautiful Quail Creek Apts
$140.00 room, own room, tennille, cable
Summer Roommate. Female to live in with 2 others in a barn townhouse, great location, $125/month; please, please, call, ask for Jennifer, or leave message. Rent may be negotiable, must find
Rooms available for summer and the 1987-88 academic year in the Christian living community "Kronona" at Ecumenical Christian Ministries. Information come to 1204 Oread or call 823-421-0217.
STOP YOUR APARTMENT SEARCH! SEE
from campus. Excellent for summer student
students.
Studio available for summer in super apl. tech,
great maintenance, recreation facilities and
launchable inventory. I will assume part of expenses.
Call 842 9859 after 6:30 p.m.
Spaulace Peppertree 2BR, 2 bath:
numbers 402-598-3601 Bus RI Sublease for
numbers 402-598-3601
NURBLEASE Two bedroom Village Square Apart
房, Low utilities. Available mid May $150
Low utilities. Available mid May $150
SUBLEASE 2 BR furnished apt. 1/1 2/bath.
Near campus $300 month plus fee. Available
at 10am and 7pm. Call for details.
SUBLEASE. GREAT STUDIO Meadowbrook
Ultralight. Tailored. Tailored. Available May
4th, 2016 at www.davidsbox.com
SUMMER APP SUPBLEASE, SUNISE PLACE 2,
facilities facilities facilities $600 per month
per plateau, 789-7411
SUMMER tenants want for spacious 4 bedroom house w/ fence in back yard Furnished plus microwave and dishwasher. Available right after kitchen with 4 / 4 utilities. Call Eric, emails: 814-341-801
SUMMER SCHOOL 7. NO CAR? 2诫 bemil request
the car, if necessary. Nemo pago;
tres哎, aval. M44; 849,769 Jane
Lake.
SUMMER SUSLEASE: Large 1 Bedroom Apart
Room. Coffee & Breakfast available.
Vegan Potato Vegetable at 844-7307. Keep
trying.
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Large two bedroom apt.
Close to Campus AC, DCW, Balcony 749-6211
SUMMER SUBLEASE modern and spacious &
bedroom full baths, central air washer and
dryer, 749-4233
SUMMER SUBLEASE Very nice new
mountain snooker or street parking. NEGOTIABLE
parking space.
SUMMER SUBLEASE two bedroom and 1.1/2
bathroom apartment. Furnished with swimming
pool, 10 minutes to campus, and on bus route $300
notifiable. Call elevator at 79-178.
SUMMER SUBLEASE STUDIO. Utilities paid, close to campus. CALL 749-2415
SUMMER BULLEASE. 2 bedroom Townhouse furnished, private garage close to campus and parking lot. SUMMER BULLEASE. 2 bedroom furnished apartment close to campus-Tangwalle Game
SUMMER SUBLEASE. 3 Bedroom, 1/2 bath,
pool, laundry facilities, close to KU, Available
mid-may pay, only June, and electric.
mid-may pay, rentals. Mall Ode English Ap-
hone #48 7209-763
SUMMER SUBLEASE 2 Hdrm. pool A/C
JUNE 15 BEST OFFER Call 841-2690
Amen Travn
SUMMER SUBLEASE Malps. Ails. 2 Bedroom May-Aug-17 Money Paid 842-4517
AMENITIES
SUMMER SUISELE TOWNhouses 3 Bemr. 2 Bath;
Bath Garage Poolside. A/C Available May 16.
Cabin
Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the amenities of Naismith Hall. Applications for fall semester are now being accepted while space remains
NAISMITHHALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
913-843-8559
Sublease for summer: furnished two bedrooms a/c / G.C. location | Call 841-0807
SUMMER SUBLEASE May 15 Aug 15 Two Bedroom Bedroom Heatherdew Duplex Rent Negotiated
to campus $25 mo. Call 841 844 2400;
Suslease for furniture furnished two bedroom
Sublease 28 duplex ltup. Available June 1st. Close to campus. $255. mcall. Mq 244-1400 evening
Sublease 4 bedroom, spacious excellent location (next to Yelso Sub) Call 841-387-387
Sublease Spaciosu 2 BR apt. near campus for 2-3
years and will lend lease.
Call 7531 at 7 a.m. on Mondays.
Sublease for summer, studio at Hanover Place.
Call 749-5440
Sublease Apartment Low rent, includes 2 bedrooms. 2 full baths. tennis court, basketball court, club house, on bus route 1 Month Free. 941-3195
Sublease for summer Furnished, 2 bedrooms, very nice apartment one black from campus. Call
HILLVIEW APTS.
1745 W. 24th 841-5797
NOW LEASING FOR FALL!
Starting at $260
- 1 & 2 BR units
- Laundry facility
- On bus route - near shopping
- Ample on-street parking
from Thompson-Crawley
Subbase use 2 bitem ap-t. 10 min from campa,
on bar route. Pool (Call evening Paolo or Roberle
Sublease Meadowbrook Studio Largest plan available with bedroom Water & cable paid
Summer Subluec Immediately Wanted Roam at Luxor 3 bedroom 2 story townhouse
**Sublease:** Nice 2 bbmr. duplex. Avail. soon.
Close to campus. Pens Allow. rented $44, 841 3880
Sublet 2 BR Meadowbrook apartment. DW, FF, CATio. patio, pool. tents. Calc. water and paid water
Summer Special, 3 bedroom apartment with washer and dryer, utilities paid $800; also room in spacious. West Lawrence home, $150. washer and dryer, utilities paid 844-414.
Summer Sublease. Furnished Studio. close to campus and downtown. Negotiate Call.
Summer Suburbia Harvard Square, 2 bedrooms,
spacious living for 1 all utilities pool, close
to campus.
- June & July special: $200
- On the KU Bus Route
- Wired for cable TV
- Enclosed Pool Area
- Fenced Pool Area
- Tanning Deck
- Completely Privacy Fenced
- Beautifully Landscaped
- Washer & Dryer Hook-ups
- 10, 11, & 12 month leases
- 10, 11, & 12 month leases
- Dishwasher, garbage disposal, & pantry
630 Michigan 749-7279
Office Hours: 2-6 weekdays
Other Appointments Available
I
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, April 28, 1987
15
MASTERCRAFT
offers..
apartments--all near KU!
- Custom furnishings
- Energy efficient
- Affordable rates
- Variety of floorplans
- Designed for privacy
- Many great locations
- Professional management
CAMPUS PLACE-1145 Louisiana
841-1429
HANOVER PLACE-14th & Mass.
841.1212
OPEN DAILY 1-5
SUNDANCE—7th & Florida 0145255
Summer Salixece 2 Bedroom Apt. Very close to
rentm. Rent Negotiable. Call soon
TANGLEWOOD-10th & Arkansas
749-2415
Summer Stubbacue Male teammate wanted to
work with a team on a summer swim.
S swimming Pool. Furnished. Please call
800-555-1234.
Avalon
- On KU bus route
- Extra storage space
- Rental furniture available from Thompson-Crawley
Summer Sublease, Luxurious Studio, Sunrise Tiernice Apt. Furnished, laundry facility, $200.00 per month plus utilities. Next to campus. Call after 10:00 p.m. 749-7180
Location
Lifestyle
Located among 70 acres of rolling hills and trees, you'll enjoy the convenience of being close to campus and area shopping.
Meadowbrook offers a selection of spacious and comfortable studios, 1,2, or 3 bedroom apartments, and townhouses to fit your lifestyle
RESERVE YOUR
UNIT NOW...
FOR SUMMER OR FALL
15th & Crestline 842-4200
meadowbrook
Three blocks from Union, two bedroom apt. for June and July, ac dishwasher, backyard patio, basement, neat place $300.00 and low utilities 749-7604
Wanted: Summer Sublease. One Formal Room to share with 2 w/ others in 2 Bedrooms furnished upstairs. $300 per month.
Two Rooms Available for Summer at 120 Loulia siam.
Call 794-6510 and ask for info.
Two Bedroom Apartment: Minutes to Fashion Row
Fall Tipton BD * 18' minutes to Forest Row unlit
Lakeview BD * 7' 6' minutes to Lakeview
Top of the hill location, studio sublease, option to rent to you; call 842 2501
FOR SALE
181 Suzuki GS450D Great first bike. Cafe-style with racing glove. $800.0 O/L. 911-7545
1825 Honda Nightjacket 450 includes霜灯, Ferdinand
Knightjack, Cruise, Excellent condition.
$790.00 or 812.94 1904
1982 Honda BCD 650, 4000 miles Leader, crush
bars, only 18" O B O B O - 7148, 842-668
2953
1984 Mopol Honda Spree. Good condition $250 asking.
Call 642 8097 after 7 p.m.
1806 Kawasaki NNJA 600 R Lake new, only 200 miles
Call. evenings. 841-8091
Club Fup. Club for biking for racecar. New
bike computer, ask $200 call Steve. 864-5765
2 RICKENBACKAEKS | Collector's 12 string 1
Serious Busy others! John. 841-5768 or
842-6210
Austin Durot 10 speed bicycle. Like new, excellent condition. Call 749-5384 after 5 p.m.
brand New Mountain Bank Black Flick Blvd BZ4
Barred railed Great Bank Good Price 842-182
Comm 64 with 1541 disk and bluechip model
M10 matrina printer, modem file $73 or make
PL.Y TO JALMANCA A Morocco Juney 2-One way
ticket $75 usable 462-185 Ask for Mark
PHOTOSEA 1998 KAWASAKI k2350 i T KERFER headers, new tire battery, 4 T KARBURERS, new tire battery, 4 case coating handle bars, full face Porche design, very quick Call evens. 749 3755
For Sale: 1978 Mahlbau Classic $1,000. Call
321-5168. Leave message will get back to you.
Foil sale 1972 BMW Motorcycle R60/ 2.00
original miles. Excellent shape. Maintains 1450.06
GHIETTO BLASTER *new new new*, still in Box, Auto Reverse, Equalizer, and Detachable Speakers. Only 87% Perfect for Summer Call. Uhuru at 642-9386
suitar. Alvarez Electric/Electric Sterre
spadible Retail Value $400. Asking $250 per unit
IBM PC/XT compatible, includes monochrome
monochrome, monochrome monitor, switchable Tu-
m母board w/ 512K, 1 Floppy disc drive
5475. 6-month warranty included, 842-5495.
LEADING EDGE MODEL, "D", 640k, IBM Compatible. Complete with support for SCSI, SMR or computer. Pamusic KR F102 printer, writer and spreadsheet adapteur for 440k. Calibration 841-391-3.
MAX'S COMICS. Comic Books, Playbys, Per
house, etc. 811 New Hampshire
** * ** MOTHALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
* ** Friday 5:30 p.m. Saturday 10:30 p.m.
* ** WEDNESDAY 8:30 a.m. THURSDAY 9:30 a.m.
Moving back to Europe, must part with my Hondz.
Moving out to Great Britain, must Caldon Call 802 (Yout!)
(Yout!)
MOPED 1981 Motobecane Runs OK, but need
Ask169 Asking $150) Vince 864-7050
Used Heran Used. Fanatic 100 Islander 12 x '
in squared. North Sail 600 or best.
for 749.
NAD 3155 integrated amp 250.00 Advertised last year, buyer had to back out of sale Call Mark
Nikon FE2 $29.00 x 35-105 lens with Micro $315.00
Telephone #814-6268, Riad
Nikon NF-104/AF-S Nikkor
Nikon FF, black body with 35-70 Micro zoom
PIANO for sale. Upright good condition $400.
749-228. Keep哭.
Rollaway Bed. Only $25. In good shape. For more info call 749-2513.
Sailbott for Sale: 2019 Olympic Class Flying Dutchman. Good Condition. Light Weight and Fast. Asking 900.00 or best offer. Call evenings, 749-395.
SUZUKI 614548. Good campus transportation to
moved from. $300 mgmt. 841-649-6449.
SYNTHESIZER Roland Juno 106 614 key full size analog synthesizer. 128 programmable sounds; full MIKI less than $625 negotiable 749 3559.
TUXEDOS! After Six formal wear TUXEDOS all SIZE3! Jacket with tails or plain, complete set with pants, vests, or cumberbun, tie-bieves expensive to own, than to rent! Come to Everything expo in New York early for that special spring fling! TUXEDOS! Have your size but hurry! Everything But Ice
Tuxedo Liquidation. Last Week Three piece
tuxes only 17 at 8 a.m. All accessories 19 at
each open noon tilt 6:00. Closing forever April 30th! 900 New Hampshire
WINTERSIDE never been used 12 ft. Comes Comp.
$600.00 best offer 843.1871 Pete
1974 Volvo 142 Good condition. Very dependable
120,000 ml Available from July 1, 2001; $Call
800-355-8260
**7978** Maze GLC. Good condition, Economic,
Four door, radio heater, $1400; Call
142 566.
1981 Datam 210 AM-FM New Tires, Very Good
condition, 80,000 miles. $150 Call 643-6923
Silver Carriage Caterers. Pop up ramp, Great
Trees. Ice Cream. Pop up ramp, Great
money! Avg. $4500 asking $65,000. 900-722-8122.
www.silverscarriagecaterers.com
72 Dodge Dodge Two door, reliable, chrysler slant six engine, runs good, $400. Call 749-2898.
A 1969 Firebelt, 350, AM/FM, Cassette. A.C.
B 1970 Firebelt and interior in exterior. 864/920
C 1971 Firebelt. 864/920
For Sale 75 Pacer New. Brakes, shocks, springs,
For Sale cark, wrap,分配, distribution, shape
and design.
Must Self Select A Classify? Due to graduation I’m par-
sonalized. 79-4987. Keep in mind. In super shape,
these are 79-4987. Keep in mind.
LOST-FOUND
Beautiful, young siamese on campus at 04:23:47 morning near Lippincott. Please call
Found on West campus : set of keys. Call 842 7760 to identify
Found: Watch behind Robinson tennis courts call to identify. 842.3810.
4/20/07 Men's Citizen watch, GU!
baby, Matt Rivers '18; Call D.
@david.64311; Please keep tryin
LOST. Lost puppy Black Lab/German
Sheepard mix 14 weeks old. Calf/Leanne 749.1800
Carry Care Location: 494-608
LAST on 4/11/17 Mets' Steve watch, reward Call 824-4780
K lost KUID and other ID in blue case. If found call Herman at 842 789-6. Keep try.
Men's Soko watch, reward Call
Steve at 842-4700.
Lost KU FIDRU to Nintendo. If found
Lost: Set of keys on two key chains. Please return to Jayhawk Towers or call 841-5446.
HELP WANTED
AIBLINES CHRIUBELINES HIGH! Summer!
AIBLINES CHRIUBELINES HIGH! Summer!
Cassette, Newswire! 918) 644-4444 Ext. 131
Cassette, Newswire! 918) 644-4444 Ext. 131
The Student Housing Department has openings for student janitorial workers. Must be able to do laundry, clean rooms, and attend August 14. Residence hall room may be provided for same period. Experience helpful. Contact: (800) 762-3950.
Artist Wanted! Tshirt design, Graphics and Illustration (cartoon characters etc) STUDENTS encouraged to apply. Call for appointment. 842.3338
The Mathematics department is now accepting applications for the position of graduate teaching assistant. Applications must include requirements for a bachelor's degree by August 15, 2016, and an official background. Foreign applicants will be assessed on an oral exam demonstrating English competency. Applicants should submit a letter in writing to the Mathematics Department, and two letters of recommendation to Charles Humphrey Japet, of Math. 217强Hall Halle.
**************************
Summer Job Opportunities available with the U.S. Marine Corps—No obligation to be a Marine! Earn between $15,000 and $24,000 housing *Call 913-814-1211 (collect).*
Large size 1, 2, 3 bedroom apts, on bus route. All have gas heat, appliances, carpet and draps. Extra storage, carpets are option to choose from room for your dollar, then come see us a 2166 W, 26th or call 843-6446.
BEST VALUE!
Artist Needed for Next Semester: Graphic Design and Illustrations. Please Call 642 3358 and ask for Jill Rivers.
Are you good with children? Would you like to be paid to live with a California family and hold children? **HELP 4 PARENTS-770 Menu Ave. 219, Mountain Park, CA 94653** (4125) 322 3816
Gatehouse
Cocktail Waitresses Needed Part-time weekends
Apply in person. Just A Playhouse W 80th B 40th
N 60th A 50th
DATA CLERK 44 hour, 20 hrs/week work, process computing, computer data entry, and office work. Must be KU enrolled for one hour, spring or summer classes. Must have a license # 866-3060 Application deadline: May 1
Bakery Subs/ Cleaning a position Monday Thursday, 8 p.m. mIDnight, Friday, 9 p.m. a1m. Sunday, 9 p.m. mIDnight weeks paid vacation after 1 year interview Monday, April 27, 7 p.m. apply at Macher's Bakery Boston family looking for mothers help, start July/August, min 1 yr commitment, room & kitchen, 4 yrs of experience & 7 w/作品 collect: 619-739-391 C. Birthellia, 70 Overland PK, Newton Mass, 02119
Cooks, Dishwashers, and Line Personnel Apply between 2 and 5 a.m. at Stainton Stockade, 180 West 34th Street, New York, NY 10017.
Camp Counselors Camp Wiedemann Hiring for summer Camp 316-684-5411
DIRECTOR/TEACHER DAYCAME CENTER BA and CECE required, MA desirable Experience, familiarity with Lawrence child care highly desirable Full time approximately 1 June 1987, Bachelor's Degree in Law or three references to Search Committee, c/o Lawrence Housing Authority, 6604 Kaskell Avenue Lawrence, KS 66044 Resumes must be submitted by May 8th is an EEO/AO Employer
EARN $$$ PART-TIME! Established manufacturer EARN $$$ PART-TIME! Established manufacturer to promote Your School Success. GOOD INSPIRATION AND EASY MANUFACTURE. VAILMEN, 925 Lakem RD, LENDAX, KS 66219
Donate person. cut/fry donuts, assist bakers.
Midnight 8 a.m. 3 nights per week $4 hr to start,
raises commensurate with skill level. Apply Mun-
ney $10 for daylight. April 23, 6 p.m. or p. tuesday.
April 28, 7 p.m.
FULL AND PART TIME HELP!! National Firm preparing for Spring and Summer work. If accepted you will earn 8.1 startup. Some evening and weekend positions are available and some evening and weekend positions are awarded, quality, corporate scholarships are awarded, internships are possible, and you may earn 2.3 credit/sr or semester. During summer break you can attend a Call (913) 465-7656 Mon-Fri be 9 a.m., 5 p.m.
Get the best of both worlds! Part time summer workable for women and men. Must have flexible hours and live in Greater Kansas City. Send resume to WORK ON ITS AVAILABLE. No experience necessary will train Applications taken at Alameda Junction, 8130 Fulton, Lenexa, KS. Saturday, May 2nd at 8:30-10:30 a.m. GOVERNMENT JOB$; $16,450-459,250 yr. Now GOVERNMENT JOB$; $16,450-459,250 yr. For federal listen
Massachusetts Street Deli and Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse now hire food service and table service employees. Must have a least one year exp in the food service industry or service starting pay a 7.5 per hour plus profit sharing, table service 2 of per hour plus tips. Apply to Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse. Massachusetts above Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse.
HALF-TIME DIRECTOR-DOUGLAS COUNTY 600-490-8400, year depending on experience. Qualified for experience with volunteers, good writing, speaking skills; strong organizational skills, public relations and management; writing/management; bookkeeping; reports; presentations; recruiting, organizing, evaluating programs; mentoring students; Send resume, letter, and 3 references to Lawrence College, 215 W. 47th St., Chestnuthurst, Lawrence, 6044 Deadline: May 22nd
KJHK-FM needs staff persons for summer and fall. Applications available at Blake Aiken. Must be online by April 15th.
NANNY POSITIONS AVAILABLE: Good salary.
Nice Familles. Dallas, Texas. Call 831-598-2144.
(214) 831-598-2144
Wells Fargo Guard Service is seeking security officers for full & part time employment. We will provide you to make "you" a success in our field.
Security Officers
Security Officers
JOIN
KANSAS CITY'S
LARGEST
YOUR BENEFITS:
REOUIREMENTS
- Best Pay in CY*
* Life Insurance*
* Free Uniforms*
* Holiday Pay*
* Paid Vacation*
* Weekly Paychex
Be where the action is. Join the Wells Fargo team. Apply in person Monday through Friday. Interviews from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
- 16 years of age
* Valid driver's license
* Phone in home
- Clean police record
Wells Fargo Guard Service
3245 Broadway
K.C. Mo.
EOF M/F
Nanny Placement agency looking for nannies.
Great salaries and benefits. Positions available
nationally. Nanny Finders, P.O. Box 4033, Chapel
NC 27314
needed: Linc cook, 3 years experience necessary
apply in person between 2:00 and 5:00 on
tuesdays and Wednesdays Alvamar Country
Jub. 1809 Crossgate Drive
Need Friendly Office assistant who can work in independently Typing, Filming, Running Errands, Telephoning, Assisting with downtown Promotions. Job Number 842-3835. Downtown Lawrence Association #842-3835. Downtown Lawrence Association
PARTIME DIVERHUOSEPARENT ASSISTANT Need mature individual willing to make a 1 year commitment at a local Christian Boy Ranch. 6 m. F. M and 9 w. 3 three沙滩's per day. Al at 842 458 for application. O'Connell Youth Club, P. Box 308. Lawrence KS 6602 842 956
Rape Victim Support Service seeking volunteers.
Work with victims of sex assault and give com-
munities训战 team. Proactively provide over
the summer. Meet me at 6:11 and 7:30 p.m.
1:19, 1419 Massachusetts to Headquarters.
Application at headquarters & Emily Taylor
and Laura D. Curran. Mail to M. Pailto
R V S. U., 1419 Massachusetts 60044
Part time advertising sales representative neede-
t to assist with ad campaigns for your own hours. Call Travis, 841-9643.
Port-time position with interior design and retail
design. Transform. Make 1201 . 80 Wettrite.
Lawrence, KS.
Hardees
We are also taking applications and hiring people who are interested in employment starting in late May or early June.
Call 843-8203 Today
- Meal Discounts and
* Free meals
- Flexible Scheduling
AIRLINE TRAINING INTERVIEWS
- Start at 3.50 to
you out like a career war.
WESTERN AIRLINES, TWA, PEDIMON,
CONTINENTAL, or MIDWAY
AIRLINES? These are just a few of the 109 airlines you might be interviewing with if you were an international Air Academy graduate
International Air Acadmary graduates are already enjoying the excitement of the airline industry
3. 75 per hour.
- Opportunity for adjustment
Hardees of Lawrence on the Kansas Turnpike is currently hiring for all shifts.
SUMMER JOB IS IN NORTH JOINNISON COUNTY
Temporary and permanent positions available.
Work 20 to 35 hours per week. Flexible schedule.
Phone: (415) 619-8900; (415) 619-8908; Auck.
Mr for Jeffries.
advancement * Meal Discounts
You could be joining them after just 12 weeks of International Air Academy training! Find out how! Attend the special two hour course.
Secretary Receptionist position open immediately.
Duties include: general clerical typing, 40 wpm, and filling Word processing experience
through the month of July. Weekly use June and July and 20 hours per week August and 17-38 school year. Apply at 719 Mississippi Ave., behind Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse.
SUMMER WINE COOler MERCHANDIERS
Learn marketing at its most basic level! Students
needed merchandise leading line of wine coolers.
Must be 21 years old, have reliable car and live in
the Kansas City area. Send result to Merchand-
ing at (800) 554-9999, @ 400 Allan Ave,
Akron, Kansas City M, 64116.
Summer job: Part-time Nanny needed for 2 year old boy at my house. You must have transportation to work. Please arrive Monday through Friday, beginning May 11th. You will call your references. Pay $2.50/hour. Please
- Free uniforms
REWARDING SUMMER for sophomore and older college men in Colorado mountains working with children, veterans, and other crafts, wildlife, many outdoor programs. Write now; include program interests and goals SAN DIEGO SUMMER, JUNE 1-4, 2015.
Wednesday, April 15
HOLIDAY INN
530 RD DRIVE
MANHATTAN, KS
7:00 p.m.
MISCELLANEOUS
INTERNATIONAL AIR ACADEMY
Vancouver St. Louis Ontario
Washington Missouri California
Waterfront Staff Camp, Weddemann Now hiring
WSA and Lifeguards Call 316 684-6531
♠
PERSONAL
THE ASSOCIATION OF COLLEGIATE ENTR-PRENEURS IS HOLDING AN INFORMATIONAL MEETING ON APRIL 30 AT 6:30 P.M. IN THE WALNUT ROOM IN THE KANSAS UNION.
Bath Burine Jon Erin Than the Best Year.
We've done it all-blake Label, dorm drunks. Big H,
H boyfriends, Lovers (HA), Food! Ugh Fat, We Love You. I D i
Congrats to the award winning Kansan Staff! Enjoy
the treat, you deserve it!
ITAL 120 Where are you looking? Chris C.
Leaving from my life to take away my joy. After
Leaving from my life you took away my joy. After the pain has finally gone you will have forgotten me and there will be nothing to hold in my arms. Lock your doors! Ladies! TJ back
Mark G. Always remember me and the Karate
Kid. I will never stop you. K.M.
HOOKOOK Nappy 2ndy you big stallion! Your boss.
Sohnnokerns
The family of Patrick Dooley express their deepest gratitude to all of the friends, classmates, and teachers he is shown, such kindness and sympathy at this time of great tragedy. We will certainly miss him.
You're nice, but why you come talk to me? The girl in the blue and black.
Want to dance and get naked for a group of fun
WILMA, IT LOOKS BETTER AROUND YOUR EARS, T.J.
BUS. PERSONAL
Be creative in girl gifting. Fantastic gifts with beautiful Boudoir photos. Contact Calls on Phone Plus. Photo Plus.
HEADACHE, BACKACH, ARM PAIN, LEG PAIN
PAIN! Student and most insurance accepted.
For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark Johnson 841-3979
Enjoy smooth, creamy Frozen Yogurt that tastes like Ice Cream but with 80% less fat!
--FREE SAMPLES-rates to Europe.
**GAY/LEISSON!** Write for KS/MO info per **PEIR**
9010-8218, Mailied discreetly (confidentially)
Most reasonable rates in town for all your photos
and portfolio portraits. Call Photo Fans, 499-7378
or http://www.bleisson.com/
I Can't Believe it's YOGURT!
Frozen Yogurt Stores
Louisiana Purchase Shopping Center
Need music for your wedding ? Call Jean. 843-752-7044
Gives piano and voice lessons over summer
New Connection, 300 Elm, North Lawrence
Takes on various appointments by appointment
Hair styles done your way through
April and May. $8 cuts and sets, $0 perms
Rare and Used Records. Buy, Sell, or Trade
SUMMER TRAVEL?
Travel Bag
- D-WIL's & Traffic
* Fake ID's & other criminal offenses
* Family Law & other legal problems
**16 East 13th St.** 842-1133
Maupintour travel service
740 9799
See us TODAY!
DONALD G. STROLE
Make Plans Now!
Make Plan Air force
- Lowest air fares to get you home.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 844 7746
- Lowest possible rates to Europe
SERVICES OFFERED
KHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ekchapter
processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W services.
PASSOUNT $6.00 Art & Design Building,
Room 206, 864-4767
749-0700
CRISIMON SUN PHOTO is looking for young women interested in developing a modeling portfolio. 15% over direct cost. No set fee. Call 841-9629
MATH TUORIST FOR 1976, M.A., $/hour (ceurs
above 109) $/hour : 843.9032
- Eurail, Britrail passes.
On campus location in the Kansas Union and 831 Mass
**MUSIC**
Red House Audio 10: MUSIC
Black House Audio 10: MUSIC
Golden House Audio 9: Maximum Audio Wizardry
Silver House Audio 8: Maximum Audio Wizardry
Believable Grad Assist wants to house sit for sum.
refer. avail Call 749-495 (Scott).
- World wide travel information.
Seamstress. All ladies' dresses can be made here in town. You choose the desired designs or styles from the latest fashion collections. I will make them for you. Call Us, 841-3434. IAM
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your
transportation complete. Transportation provided.
Transportation provided.
TYPING
Experienced typist (theses, dissertations, term paper) 842-2109 at 6:15 p.m. M or F/Sun/Su Mon Th F Sa Su Mo Tu W T W S S
1-1-1 TRIO Word processing. Responsible Conscientious Reliable. Bake 842-3111 for service
13,000 pages No job too small or too large
Accepts 10% of the total word processing,
829-7454 or e-mail.
24-Hour Typing, 13th semester in Lawrence
Resumes, Handwritten papers, paper close to campus
address.
A-3 professional typing. Term papers, Thesis
Discussions, Resumes, etc. Reasonable IBM
Instructions.
AAA TYPING has low flow word processor
instructions. AAA TYPING 1892
1892 after 1 p.m. wow days; any time
1892 after 1 p.m. wow days; any time
Experienced Ttypist. Dissertations, theses, term papers, etc. Reasonable Call. Rates 82-3230. For professional typing/writing process, call 809-4880. Spring special $12, pg2 page, double space, pica.
Absolutely Fast Typing. Dependable and experienced with typing requirments. Call Kathy at 841 2460 a 9 m. p. and at 749-2842 by 5 p.m. AUT NOW 599. $1.50/page. Resumes $15.
Accurate Word Processing Meadowsbrook loca-
tions experience. Call 749-1561
EVENINGS
Accurate affordable typing by former Harvard secretary. Three miles east of campus $1.25 per minute. No restrictions.
Dependable, professional, experienced.
Dependent on customer for transcription.
TRANSCRIPTION ABLE; standard tape 843-8887.
DISSERTATIONS THESEN LAW
IS INFOLIO. No prior experience but still return. KEEP WATCHING TITUS AD
Dorna's *Quality* Typing and Word Processing.
Dorna's *Quality* Typing and Word Processing,
applications mailing lists, Letter qualification
questions.
GOOD IMPRESSIONS Typing/Word Process
TypeSet Repair Spelling Corrected 841-297
Recovery Spelling Corrected 841-297
Guaranteed Perfect tying done on a word surface. Located near Lawrence Hospital Call 718-624-3100
KU SECRETARY* Typing and word processing.
Affordable, fast, accurate. Spelling corrected,
letter quality. Pickup on campus. Monica 841-8246.
Evenings-weekends.
Quality typing; excellent editing, grammar.
Quality printing; high quality, reliable.
Pickup, delivery available 843-0247
Smart Word Processing includes editing and spelling
rules, reasonable rates. Foster, 1924-720
10 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Resume Service-lawwritten 10 copies ONLY
829-749-2193 2 p.m.
TYPING-Call 842-4868 before 10 p.m.
2 Female Roommates want for summer. Own rooms, $125 rent. Pool. Close to campus. 802-4708
WANTED
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing; manuscript, resumes, letters, thesis
of a research paper.
Why pay for tying when you can have word processing? The WORDOCIETS, Resumes, resumes, and so on.
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition,
editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses,
dissertations, papers, letters, applications.
Resumes HAVE M.S. Degree 814-6254
I need a tutor for statistics (EPR 710. School of Ed.) Please call 749-2651
Donations of books and magazine needed. Support Friends of the Lawrenceville Library, Jr. (416) 270-5800.
3 Summer Subleases, males, extremely close to campus, nice. $85/92/month plus utilities.
Melissa Female Roommate Wanted May through
Chennai, quiet 2 bd apartment. 844-816-816.
www.melissafemale.com
Needed: One or two roommates for summer. New
roommate is a 2-bedroom, 2-bathroom home and downtown
and downstairs $195 negotiable 814-6000.
Check online for availability.
Nested: Roommate for a very nice room,
also $180/mo plus 1/2 lce. 749-697. More
information: http://www.mirroor.com
ROGMATE MNEEDED FOR SUMMER MON-
THS. 8:00AM - 12:00PM. Semi-
murray City, CA 841-397-6170
Non-smoking Male Roommate wanted to share 2
bathrooms in a renovated 1500+ plus/meal
utilities. Call Scott, 822-7333.
ROGMATE for Fall in a brand new, well located
building. An extra furnished 160 mm
plat with 4 utilities: 749-803.
Roommate for very nice furnished house in nice,
quiet, neighborhood near campus & shopping.
W/D: AC. For summer and fall $168/month
or $295/week. Dan, smitten-grading
college student or senior. 843-2091. Dan
STOP! One roommate Needed. Summer w/ Fall.
Spring option Duplex. Upsize the garage. Lapee
for your outdoor furniture.
Summer Roommate: luxury 2 bdrm, Sunrise
Place townhouse fully furnished, pool $100/mm
$250/mm
Roommate $15.00 Deposit, Negotiable Cheap)
Summer only or into Fall Furniture 841-1096.
Roommate Malls Apt. summer/option to renew.
Call Cheap 841-1096. No deposit, furnished
Still homeless for next year? Roommate wanted
to pay for rent. Department. Pay 1 / rent and
utilities. Call 894-6835.
SUMMER ROOMMATE NEEDED Brand new
house built. Available Mid May. Free
rent. 844-940, Anthony
Summer roommate wanted for furnished apartment on bus route. $125/min plus 12 utilities.
WANTED: Female roommate to share expenses in house at 1015 Illinois for 1987-86 school year. If interested call (417) 667-9115 ask for Ann, Laura, or Nancy.
WANTED Roommates to share a nice large size
room. Must have computer, internet and
wanted. Good computer with these features:
Wanted: Good used computer with these features
IBM Compaq used computer with MSDOS 2.01
IBM Compaq IBM RCS-55L, IBM RCS-65L
Policy
*erem Modern Option?* 843-5334. *Loews*
Wanted. Male roommate to apiece at apt at Colony
212-670-2099.
Wanted. Roommate to share 3 bedroom. Apter for
87-88 school year. $1350 or no bargain. 942-6265.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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| Words | 1 Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | 2 Weeks | 3 Weeks | 1 Month |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 0-15 | 2.70 | 4.00 | 5.70 | 9.50 | 14.25 | 18.00 |
| 16-20 | 3.20 | 4.75 | 6.70 | 10.75 | 15.75 | 19.75 |
| 21-25 | 3.70 | 5.50 | 7.70 | 12.00 | 17.25 | 21.50 |
| 26-30 | 4.20 | 6.25 | 8.70 | 13.25 | 18.75 | 23.25 |
| 31-35 | 4.70 | 7.00 | 9.70 | 14.50 | 20.25 | 25.00 |
Classified Rates
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700 personal
710 bus personal
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Please print your ad one word per box:
ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Date ad begins ___ ___
Total payable to paper ___ ___
Amount paid ___ 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
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---
Tuesday, April 28, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
O
UPON
C
S
--with all chemical services!
Sub&Stuff Sandwich Shop
FREE MEDIUM SOFT DRINK with the purchase of any sub 1618 W. 23rd St.
Full Service Salon and Tanning Center
Full Service Salon
Silver Clipper
Hair styling & Tanning Center
for Men & Women
$3 OFF
Haircut/Blowdry
2201 P.W.25 Business World
$7 OFF-
Permanent Wave
or Highlighting
WATERBED
CONDITIONER
2 bottles for 96¢
$7.00 value
Limit 4 per coupon
842-1822
MASSAGE SYSTEM
MASSAGE SYSTEM
"The Bed Bug"
retail $39.95
$16.00
Expires May 31,1987
MARIAN'S HAIR PLACE
Facials and Pedicures will be half price
Waterbed Works
710 W. 6th Street • 842-1411
Luncheon Special Hot Slice $2 for $2
Exp. 5-15-87
$1.00 VALUE
2 for $2
with this coupon
Mon.-Fri. 11:30-1:30
Dine-in or Carryout Only
Not valid with other promotional offers.
Expres 5-8-87
Offer good in Lawrence only.
$1.00 off Evening Buffet (Sun—Thurs)
749-4244
FREE DELIVERY
GOOD OWERS
HOT SUICE
PIZZA
PIZZA LASAGNA SALADS
SPAGHETTI MANICOTTI
Valentino's
Pistorian
--all Lps, Cassettes and CD's w/coupon only
*excludes special sale tagged merchandise
Bare a new body with
FACTOR-E AEROBICS
Show your K.U.I.D.
and get a discount
on our monthly price.
Tuesday April 28
Two Hours Only
3-5 pm
25% off*
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER expires 5/31/87 842-1983
At kief's 25th and Iowa
PIZZA Shoppe
---
PIZZA Shoppe
1 LB SPAGHETTI plus SALAD
Garlic Toast
and 32 oz. Pepsi
$5.95
DELIVERED 842-0600
Plus tax Expires 6-30-A7
1 LB SPAGHETTI plus S
812.0690
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST - FREE DELIVERY
$2.00 OFF
Any 3 or more pizzas
842-1212
THE GUARD MAN
50¢ OFF
ANY SANDWICH
ADDRESS
DATE
(one offer per coupon)
PIZZA Shoppe KING SIZE PIZZA $7.95
Expires 6/3/87
Exp. Dec. 19, 1987
Single topping DELIVERED!
32 oz. Pepsi-
842-0600
Extra toppings only 90*
Express 6-30-87
704 Mass.
$100 OFF
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
Buy One No.1 Texas Burrito and get the second one for 50c
STAR WARS
842-1212
MEXICAN CROSSROADS
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
CHECKERS
BORDER
BANDIDO
Foot
842-8861
CHECKERS
PIZZA
Large Deluxe Pizza and 2 Pops
$7.99 + tax
Expres S03087
2214 YALE RD
841-8010
Large Deluxe Pizza and 2 Pops
$7.99 + tax
Express 5/30/87
2214 YALE RD
841-8010
1528 W. 23rd
---
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST - FREE DELIVERY
$100 OFF
Any Pizza Ordered
Any Pizza Ordered 11 a.m-4 p.m
842-1212
Pendragon
25% off any poster
with this coupon
9th & Mass. Exp. 5/2
843-6533
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
CHECKERS
PIZZA
CHECKERS
PIZZA
16'' Two Topping Pizza & 2 Pops
$6.99 + tax
Expires 5/30/87
2214 YALE RD.
841-8010
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
50¢ OFF
Any 1 pizza
842-1212
Masc Linger
Entire group of summer
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
Expires 6/20/97
andals 15% off!
Weavers
expires 5/15/87
CHECKERS
PIZZA
2—12" Two Topping Pizzas & 2 Pops
$7.99 + tax
Expires 5/30/87
2214 YALE RD.
841-8010
Expires 6/3/87
---
---
1/2 PRICE MOVIE RENTAL
Expires 5-14-87
not to be used with any other promotion
VIDEO BIZ
832 Iowa Street
Lawrence, KS 66044
(913) 749-3507
VIDEO BIZ
VIDEO BIZ
832 Iowa Street
Lawrence, KS 66044
(913) 749-3507
TWO TOPPING or TWO TOPPING
PIZZA
Coupon good
$5.99
PIZZA
thru
Dine in • Carry out • Delivery
May 15, 1987
---
WE KNOW HOW BURGERS SHOULD BE.
LAWRENCE IS A BURGER KING TOWN.
FREE WHOPPER Sandwich
Minsky's Pizza
NOW YOU CAN
CHARGE FOR DELIVERY!
2228 IOWA
842-0154
1234
Minsky's
FITZZA
---
With the purchase of a Whopper Sandwich, Regular Soft Drink and Large Fries
Expires May 15, 1987
BURGER KING
Please Present This Coupon Before Ordering Limit One Coupon Per Checkout Bag Be Returned With Other Coupons Or Offers Valid
1107 W. 6th St.
1901 W. 23rd St.
That's half off our regular price!
2700 IOWA
Expires May 17, 1987
25¢ BOWLING
This coupon
entitles bearer
to one 25¢ game
during open bowling
65¢
RUNZA
TIME TEMP
RESTAURANT
1/4 Pound Runza HAMBURGER
Let It Roll!
On The Jumpers
---
Coupon Bockys Coupon
Level 1
Call 864-3545
THE KANSAS UNION
JAYBOWI
2 PEANUT PARFAITS $1.99! 842-2930 2120 W. 9th offer good through Sunday, May 3
---
THE BUM STEER
BAR-B-O
Lawrence's only Blue Ribbon BBQ
$1 Turkey Beef or Ham Sandwich
We deliver 2554 Iowa
$5 minimum 841-SMOKE exp. May 15, 1987
REFLECTIONS
MANE TAMERS
$5.00 off
Shampoo/Haircut/Blowdry
Perm
Highlight
Ear Piercing
841-5499 842-1253
2338 Alabama 1031 Vermont
841-5999
2323 Ridge Ct.
10 VISITS $25.00
exp. 5/10/87
25th & Iowa • 841-6232
EUROPEAN SUNTANNING
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
---
The heat goes on
sunny day
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday
Details, page 2
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
April 29, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 143
(USPS 650-640)
21 summer classes added;new enrollment Friday
By ROGER COREY
Staff writer
KU students who found summer session classes filled during early enrollment may have another chance.
University officials decided over the weekend to add 21 courses to 1987 summer session class offerings.
Students now enrolled at the University of Kansas will have a daily extra enrollment session Friday at 111 Strong Hall to sign up for the additional summer courses. New students or returning students who did not participate in early summer session enrollment will have a chance to enroll June 8
"We've added courses in 10 departments." Brower Burchill, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, said yesterday.
The additions will provide places for 499 students in the 14 freshman-philosophy philose
phy, communication studies, English, history, mathematics, political science and Spanish courses. It also will add 238 spaces in seven junior-senior classes in Western civilization, mathematics, psychology, communication studies, political science and sociology.
"Essential freshmen and sophomore courses have been added that were filled for summer and fall," said Del Shankel, acting executive vice chancellor.
He said that several courses required for graduation also had been added.
"This gives us 737 spaces for students in the summer term," Shankel said. "It will bring us to 80 percent of the originally planned summer session."
The additional courses have been added using money from the fee release recommended by a conference committee of the
'Essential freshmen and sophomore courses have been added that were filled for summer and fall.'
- Del Shankel acting executive vice chancellor
of the Board of Regents recommended fee release. The Legislisat is expected to take final action on the committee's recommendation later this week.
Kansas Legislature. The committee had recommended 75 percent, or about $935,000.
Gary Thompson, director of student records, said the additional classes were targeted for current students who needed courses. He said the extra enrollment day Friday was planned so students would know they had courses before going home on break.
"Some students didn't have full schedules for summer or fall, even with alternative courses," Thompson said. "We wanted to give them a chance to get full schedules without going through add/drop later."
He said that completion enrollment day took place Friday for students who did not have full schedules for the summer or fall, but that enrollment had been by special
invitation
"This extra enrollment day on May 10 consistent with that goal," he said. "We wanted to give all students a chance to enroll in courses for the summer or fall."
Thompson said many students had decided not to enroll in the summer session because they could not get the courses they needed
"We hope this information will reach them early enough that they can still go to summer school if they want to," he said.
In a prepared statement, Chancellor Gene A. Budig said the new courses were good news for many students who needed the offerings to meet degree requirements. He said that adding the 21 courses would give the University more flexibility in the fall.
Professors discuss glasnost
Guidelines for enrollment, listing class information and hours, will be published in advertisements in the Kansan today and tomorrow.
Editor's note: This is the second in a two-part series on how some KU Soviet and East European studies professors view U.S.-Soviet relations.
By PAUL SCHRAG
staff write
The Soviet Union is trying to build a new image.
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev "glassmost," or openness, has some Kremlin watchers talking of a failure to resist the nature of U.S.-Soviet relations.
Gorbachev has called for multicandidate elections for regional party posts and public debate on vital issues. Most censorship of art and literature reportedly has disappeared, and a newly vibrant press now covers riots and disasters and criticizes government policies.
Is it the first step toward democracy, or a false front for a political system that can't be reformed?
KU professors of Soviet and East European studies, whose program has been ranked as one of the best in Europe, have opinions that span a diverse range.
"It's a great step, a marvellous step."莎萨 said. "Gorbachev is a man whom we should support with all our hearts. He is the greatest hope we have for a peaceful, liberalized SOVET 7.21.1
"It is hard to be objective about the Soviet Union," said Harry Shaffer, professor of Soviet and East European studies who specializes in economics. "Whenever a new thing happens, we know who will take what position."
Those positions are being debated as ardently as ever because some perceive glassnost as the biggest thing happened in the Soviet Union in decades.
See SOVIET, p. 7, col. 1
Querland Park Municipal School Staff
Students who attended classes in Wescoc Hall have been burning up because the air conditioning system has been broken since Friday. See story page 3.
Sweating it out
The Kansas softball team ended its regular season at 25-23 with a 13-0 no-hit win against University of Wichita. See story page 11
The Rating Game
Danny Ray/KANSAN
Richard Eason, Peoria, Ill., junior, and Ken Kirklin, Leawood junior, rate campus fashions with upon color coordination, creativity and the personality of pedestrians. Kirklin he hoped their self-made rating system. Scores ranged from 10s to upside-down twos and were based that no one took their ratings seriously. The two students rated students yesterday.
FOLLOWING THE RULES
INSIDE
Ending in style
By TODD COHEN
Student to form tenants association
and PEGGY O'BRIEN Staff writers
Staff writers
After talking last week with local legislators and student leaders, Greg Stauffer, Lawrence graduate student, said that he was convinced there was strong interest in such a group.
Angered by an unannounced increase in a friend's rent, a KU graduate student says that he is forming a Lawrence tenants association for students and others.
"The main thing I hear is that people feel they're helpless in dealing with landlords," he said last week. He's wrong with tenants having a say."
"I think there is a tremendous amount of misunderstanding. We're talking about economics, not about being mean to anyone," he said.
James Dunn, president of Lawrence Landlords, Inc., said that he had talked with Stauffer and supported his idea. He said the group could help smooth relations between tenants and landlords.
State Rep, Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, who talked with Stauffer, said that landlords had a lobbying group at the Kansas Legislature but
Stauffer said that besides rent increases, his planned tenant organization could address such things as the availability of 10-month leases
Cynthia Harris, consumer affairs specialist with the Lawrence Consumer Affairs Association, said, "Landlords say laws are all for tenants, and tenants say the laws are all for landlords."
"I think slumlord" is a common term in Lawrence," he said. "That must mean something. Whether we buses going on now, I don't know."
tenants didn't. Such an organization could give tenants a voice that landlords already have, she said.
Harris said yesterday that tenant/ landlord disputes did occur in Lawrence and increased in May.
Harris said that her office averaged five calls a day regarding tenant/landlord inquiries and complaints, and August, the numbers are higher.
Unreturned security deposits are the most frequent complaint, she said. Students can ask Consumer Affairs to mediate through a formal complaint procedure.
Cynthia Woelke, director of Legal Aid for Students, said that proper written notice about intent to move from the renter was important. That
and maintenance disputes.
Woelke also said that mostleases required renters to give 60 days notice before they moved out. She advises renters to get a copy of their leases as soon as possible. Some renters only require 30 days written notice.
information usually is in leases.
She said that she had a theory that sometimes landlords didn't refund deposits to renters on purpose. The chances that the student renter would never come back to claim the money are much greater than the chances that the student will sue.
Student renters should give their landlords forwarding addresses so a refund check can be mailed. Woolke said that taking these steps now could prevent a conflict or prepare a takeover by another landlord to take legal action against a landlord.
City terminates contract with mall developer
By TODD COHEN
Almost a month after Lawrence voters overwhelmingly rejected a proposed 600-block downtown mall, Lawrence City Commission last night voted to end the project and start over.
Staff writer
Few people were at City Hall to watch the commissioners vote to terminate the city's contract with the mall's developer, Jacobs, Visconsi & Jacobs of Cleveland and its local partner, Town Center Venture Corp.
Lawrence Mayor Mike Amyx said,
"Being one of those who said I would
be bound by the results, I think this is
a necessary step to fulfill that obligation.
"We no longer can continue with this agreement."
The commissioners' action brings JVJ's contract to a close eight before it was to expire. It also leaves the city without a downtown mall plan.
Allen's report said the city only had to notify the three groups to terminate the contract. A clause permitted the public to vote if they rejected the public financing proposal.
The commissioners voted after receiving a report from Milton Allen
Sr., city attorney, on how the city could break its developer-of-record contract with JVJ, TCVC and a company that was to work on the mail.
Commissioner Sandra Praeger, a mall supplier, argued briefly that the city not break the contract and JVJ explore new possible downtown
"All we've done is to put an end to this project. Now we need to assess what the people want," he said.
"Eventually we'll have to name another developer-of-record," she said. "It seemed to me that would keep other options open."
development. But Praeger found no support for her proposal and later made the vote unanimous.
But Commissioner Dennis Constance, a mall opponent, said that the city would not necessarily name another developer-of-record
Crossing may get signals
A train crossing where four KU students were killed last month probably will receive flashing lights and gates, a member of a review team that studied the crossing said yesterday.
Bv PAUL BELDFN
The team member, Ed Brady, of the Kansas Department of Transportation design department, said, "Right now, we have recommended signals with gates for the crossing. Also, the railroad talked about raising the tracks on the east side six inches and leveling it off."
Staff writer
The blacktop at the crossing now is folded and buckled so much that a person trying to drive a car across the street would be nearly to nearby a crawl or be loisted hard.
The review team studied the crossing, located about a mile north of Interstate 70, and 50 yards west of road 1900N, late yesterday morning.
The team consisted of representatives from the state Department of Transportation, Union Pacific railroad and the Douglas County Public Works Department.
Stan Whitley, a transportation department official who was at the crossing for the review but did not
See TRAIN, p. 8, col. 1
---
2
Wednesday, April 29, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Around the World
Waldheim calls U.S. ban wrong says he has clear conscience
VIENNA. Austria — President Kurt Waldheim said yesterday that he did nothing wrong as a German army officer during World War II and that the U.S. decision to bar him on grounds of involvement in Nazi atrocities was inconprehensible.
"I have a clear conscience ... You can trust me," Waldheim said in a five-minute speech on Austrian radio and television.
On Monday, the United States
put the former U.N. secretary-general on its watchlist of undesirable aliens barred from entering the country, citing evidence that he helped deport and execute thousands of Jews and others.
Investigators found evidence that Waldheim "participated in persecutions for reasons of race or religion under the Nazi regime." Attorney General Edwin Meese III said yesterday in Brussels.
18 students arrested in Cape Town protest
JOHANNESBURG. South Africa
JOHN NESBIGRG, South Africa Police whipped student protesters and the government said 18 students were arrested during a second day of violence at the predominantly white University of Cape Town.
The confrontation in Cape Town prompted police to close a highway near the campus for more than two hours yesterday afternoon. Police said the highway would be closed during peak hours each day until the unrest ceased
The Bureau for Information said that police used whips after a group of 400 students refused to obey an order to disperse. The bureau said 15 men and three women were arrested.
The violence started after a meeting of an estimated 3,000 students who voted to boycott classes through today to protest police use of firearms, tear gas and whips during campus clashes Monday.
Across the Country
Officials say Japan may be changing ways
WASHINGTON — The Reagan administration said yesterday that Japan had shown signs of modifying its dumping of underpressed computer chips in overseas markets but that hard evidence, needed to lift U.S. retaliatory tariffs, was still lacking.
The administration comments came as the House started debating sweeping trade legislation. The
bill is advancing despite hints that it may be vetoed if it reaches the White House.
President Reagan two weeks ago imposed 100 percent tariffs on imported electronic goods from Japan on grounds that Tokyo had failed to keep an agreement to halt dumping of computer chips at prices below those in its home market.
Court upholds Reagan's propaganda label
WASHINGTON — The Reagan administration is not suppressing free speech by labeling as "political propaganda" three Canadian films on acid rain and nuclear war, the Supreme Court ruled yesterday.
the 5-3 court decision.
The use of the label to describe some foreign-produced material is "neutral and evenhanded" and "has no pejorative connotation." Justice John Paul Stevens said for
and usor jobs.
Civil rights groups said they would turn to Congress for help in removing the propaganda designation from the Canadian films and other, similar material.
Ground solid for building, developer says
A structural engineer said such blasting may have gone too deep.
BRIDGEPORT, Conn. — The developer of an apartment complex that collapsed during construction, burying 28 workers, said yesterday that the ground at the site was solid enough to support the building and that rock had to be blasted out.
"We dynamited for 30 days in rock to prepare the site." said William F. Lone, executive vice president of Delwood Development of Davie, Fla., developer of
L'Ambiance Plaza.
"They had to drill through rock just to get dynamite into the ground." he said.
Lone's comments came in response to a review of building records on file at Bridgeport City Hall. Those records included structural design drawings for the 13-story building that called for the main foundation, called bottom footings, to be built on "undisturbed rock with a minimum bearing capacity of 14,000 pounds per square foot."
From Kansan wires.
LAWRENCE FORECAST
Weather From the KANSAN Weather Service
Weather
Sunny day
Today skies will be partly sunny and warm with southwest winds from 10-20 mph. The high today will reach 86 degrees before dropping to the low of 53 degrees tonight under mostly clear skies. Tomorrow, skies will remain clear and sunny; the high will be near 80. WEATHER FACT: The last two Sundays have recorded record breaking high temperatures.
OMAHA 80 / 51
UNCOLUNTY 86 / 53
CONCORDIA 87 / 56
SAUMA 88 / 58
TOPEKA 87 / 55
KANSAS CITY 85 / 52
COLUMBIA 83 / 51
ST. LOUIS 82 / 52
WICHITA 90 / 60
CHANUTE 89 / 58
SPRINGFIELD 84 / 54
TULSA 93 / 64
DES MOINES 79 / 49
the Color of Mon
SPECIAL
IN THE HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER
the Color of Money
MON — THURS
VCR and 2 MOVIES
FOR ONLY
499
With This Coupon
Expiration Date: May 30, 1987
COMING...
Across From The Hillcrest Theatres 842-0526
SPECIAL ADVENTURE LAND WEB
Across From The Finchrest Theatres 842-0326
PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST N FREE DELIVERY
842-1212
1601 W.23rd Southern Hills Center
EVERYDAY TWO FERS
2-10” pizzas with 2 Toppings & 2 Cokes
$8.00
$ 9.50 Value for only
Delivered Free No Coupon necessary
HOURS
Mon - Thurs - 11 a.m - 2 a.m
Fri - Satur - 10 a.m - 11 a.m
Fri. & Sat. - 11a.m.-3a.m.
Sunday - 11a.m.-1a.m.
We Delive During Lunch
Cinco De Mayo
Chili Rellenos (ray-en-nos)
Chili Kellenos (ray-en-nos)
...three zesty green chiles stuffed with monterey jack cheese and rolled with a delicate
Chili Rellenos
egg covering, served with rice, beans, guacamole, and our tangy ranchera sauce. Authentic and delicious.
celebration
Gutierrez Restaurant & Club
Fine Mexican Dining
2600 Iowa Street
842-1414
Autiérrez
Restaurant & Club
May 1st & 2nd
Steve Story Band
Autiérrez
Restaurant & Club
May 1st & 2nd
Steve Story Band
Steve Story Band
ADDITIONAL SUMMER CLASS OFFERINGS
EXTRA ENROLLMENT OPPORTUNITY OFFERED TO CURRENTLY ENROLLED STUDENTS
DATE: Friday, May 1, 1987
HOURS: Seniors...8-12, 1-5
Juniors...10-12, 1-5
Sophomores...1-5
Freshmen...1-5
Non-Degree...3-5
PLACE: Enrollment Center Room 111 Strong
TRANSACTIONS ACCEPTED:
1. Simply ADDING or ENROLLING in one or more of the classes listed below:
Procedure: Present an approved* ADD card for each desired class.
2. ADDING one or more of the classes listed below AND changing other Summer classes to accommodate the added class(es): Procedure: Present approved* ADD and DROP cards to obtain the desired outcome.
3. ADDING one of the classes listed below if you are already early enrolled in the same class for Fall Semester: Procedure. (a) Present an approved* ADD card to add the Summer class; (b) Present an approved* DROP card to drop the Fall Class; and (c) optional; also present an approved* ADD card for another Fall class in order to make your Fall class schedule complete again. (Take care to obtain a Special Permission/Approval card if required by the Timetable to add the Fall class.)
*APPROVALS NEEDED:
Unless you are an undergraduate in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, you MUST obtain your Dean's Stamp on each Add and Drop card. (Note: Some schools may require you to obtain your Adviser's approval first.) You may request your Dean's Stamp at your Dean's office between 1:00 and 5:00 p.m. Thursday and between 8:00 a.m. and 12:00 noon Friday.
CLASS INFORMATION
COMS 130 FUNDAMENTALS OF SPEECH:
CORALIS PERSONAL COMMUNICATION, 3 shirts
20228 9:10-10:10 MTWF400 Wescose, Staff. 28 spaces
CDMIS 102
SPEAKER-AUDIENCE COMMUNICATION, 3 credits
2015, #41 AU-30/MPURE, Spectra Medical, Inc.
20215 11:30-12:30 MTWRF, 4076 Wesco, Staff, 26 spaces
COMS 150 PERSONAL COMMUNICATION, 3 credits
COMS 534 SPEECH AND PERSONAL RELATIONS, 3 credits
20380 10:20-12:20 MTWRF, July 6-July 31, 2 Fraser,
Conboy, Willam 30 spaces
ENGL 102 COMPOSITION AND LITERATURE, 3 credits
8928 WATERCITY BLVD, NEW YORK
26868 9-10-TO-10-MWH-TW4H-WD4E Wescow, Staff, 25 spaces
ENGL 201 INTRODUCTION TO FICTION, 3 credits
26730 10:20-11:20 MTWFR, 4041 Wescoe, Staff, 35 space-
HIST 115 EUROPE 1789 TO THE PRESENT, 3 credits
34407 9:10-10:10 MTWRF, 124 Fraser, Clark, Vincent 35 spaces
HIST 128 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES THROUGH
THE CIVIL WAR, 3 credits
34419 10:20-11:20 MTWRF, 108 Blake, Bass, Patrick 35 spaces
MATH 115 CALCULUS I. 3 credits
43085 8:00-9:00 MTWRF, 1072 Malot, Staff, 35 spaces
MATH 122 CALCULUS I, 5 credits
43165 7.000 MTVWRF, 2007 Malot, Staff, 40 spaces
MATH 526 APPLIED MATHEMATICAL STATISTICS 1 3 cre
MATH 526 APPLIED MATHEMATICAL STATISTICS I, 3 credits
43240 9:10-10:10 MTWRF, 1072 Malott, Staff, 35 spaces
148 INTRODUCTION TO LOGIC, 3 credits
45302 9:10-10 10 MTWRF, 2 Fraser, Morse, Warner, 40 spaces
45308 12-40-1 10 MTWRF, 106 Fraser, Staff, 40 spaces
POLS'100 POLTS'00 TOU USO'S POLTICS'3 credits
27205 10:40 AM 00 MTM June 9, 17 78 Blake, Paddock,
JD 50 spaces
POLS 652 POLITICS IN WESTERN EUROPE, 3 credits
32810 11:30-12:30 MTWRF, 109 Blake, Francisco, Ronald
50 spaces
PSYC 300 STATISTICS IN PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH, 4 credits
48130 11:30-12:30 MTWRF, 210 Blake, Martin, Edward 40 spaces
SOC 620 SOCIAL ORGANIZATION, 3 credits
52175 11:30-12:30 MTWFR, 106 Frazer, Weller, Jack 40 spaces
SPAN 108 ELEMENTARY SPANISH 11, 5 credits
53415 8:00-10:00 MTWRF, 4044 Wescoe, Staff, 25 spaces
SPAN 21 INTERMEDIATE SPAINI I, 3 credits
54325 11:30-12:30 MWHR, 4040 Wescoe, Staff, 25 space
W C 105 WESTERN CIVILIZATION
READING-DISCUSSION PROGRAM II, 3 credits
54185 10:20-11:20 MR, 4027 Wescoe, Staff, 10 spaces
54193 11:30-12:30 MR, 4027 Wescoe, Staff, 10 spaces
54193 11:30-12:30 MR, 4029 Wescoe, Staff, 10 spaces
CLASS INFORMATION
(Regents Center, Overland Park, Kansas)
Enrollment in the following course will not be open until the Regents Center enrollment session on June 2. (See page 9 of Summer Timetable for details.)
COMS 549 HUMAN RELATIONS IN ORGANIZATIONS, 3 credits
80890 5:00-10:00 p.m. W, 104 Regents Center, Downs, Cal 40 spaces
1
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 29, 1987
3
Local Briefs
The Interfraternity Council last week adopted a resolution banning the serving of alcohol at all formal rush events.
Council vote will nix alcohol at rush events
The resolution was introduced as a bylaw to the council's constitution, said Tom Sheehan, vice president for membership. It was adopted unanimously at a general assembly meeting April 22.
Under the new law, fraternities that serve alcohol at formal rush parties would be subject to a fine of $500 or 10 percent of their rush budget, whichever is less. They also might have their voting privileges suspended and be banned from participating in any formal rush event.
Sheehan said the rule would take effect Aug.1.
Rock Chalk Revue donates $12,000
The 1986 Rock Chalk Revue raised a record $12,000 for the United Way of Douglas County. Todd Schulman, executive director of the Rock Chalk Revue, presented the donation April 15 at the quarterly meeting of the United Wav's board of directors.
Rock Chalk Revue is an annual student variety show that has been performed at KU since 1950. It is sponsored by the Board of Class Officers and the Rock Chalk Revue advisory board. Half of the money raised goes to the United Way.
Officials to speak on crime reporting
Douglas County District Attorney Jim Flory, Lawrence Fire Chief Jim McSwain and Maj. Ron Olin, assistant chief of Lawrence police, will participate today in a question and answer forum on the press' coverage of crime.
The forum, sponsored by the KU chapter of Society of Professional Journalists/Sigma Delta Chi, is scheduled at 3:30 p.m. in 100 Stauffer-Flint Hall. It is open to the public.
Campus and Area
Meeting to be held for Fulbright grants
A meeting for graduate students who want to apply for a Fulbright grant will be at 3:30 p.m. today in the Pine Room at the Kansas Union. Study abroad is sponsoring the meeting. Advice will be given about how to write the grant proposals, which are due September 25.
The Fulbright grants are awarded by countries around the world and are allotted for overseas research and study in a particular field that interests the applicant.
From staff and wire reports
KU issues letter of endorsement for trafficway
By TODD COHEN
Without fanfare or notice, the University of Kansas last week officially endorsed a controversial proposed south Lawrence traffic law.
Staff writer
The endorsement came in the form of a letter written by Frances Horowitz, vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service. It was read by a University official at a public hearing April 20.
public hearing April 19. "The letter was drafted by Vice Chancellor Horwitz to reflect the University's position," said the official, Robert Zerwekh, associate vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service.
"Her statement pretty well speaks for itself."
Chancellor Gene A. Budig approved the letter. Zerwek said. Horowitz on a trip this
week and was unavailable for comment.
The April 20 hearing was called to solicit public comment on an environmental impact statement for the 14.3 mile trafficway, which is being led by Douglas County and the Lawrence
Zerwekh said yesterday that the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce had asked KU to make a statement at the hearing. But the chamber did not ask KU to take a specific position, he said.
zerekh said that he didn't know if KU had taken positions on other public projects but that the endorsement was appropriate.
"The University, after all, is part of the community and serves the community. It's appropriate in that context," he said.
to alleviate traffic congestion on streets such as 23rd and Iowa streets and to prepare for growth in Lawrence. Horowitz also said the trafficway would improve traffic safety.
in the two-page letter on official KU stationery. Horowitz concentrated on the city's need
"The University is an integral part of this community. As the fortunes of the University impact on the community, so, too, do the universities in the University impact the University." Horowitz wrote.
"Should the trafficway fail to be realized, I believe that all of us who care about the safe and orderly growth of this community will be regretful.
"The traffic problems on 23rd Street, on Iowa and elsewhere will continue to grow. They will not go away. The proposed trafficway is an attempt to help solve some of those problems."
In formulating KU's position, Zerwekk said Horowitz didn't contact trafficway supporters
or environmentalists opposed to the trafficway. Opponents have charged that the trafficway would harm the Baker Wetlands and two rare plant species that in the roadway's path.
Horowitz touched briefly on environmental concerns, writing, "It is important to give due consideration and have concern for the preservation of the environment, and that in construction of the trafficway, care must be taken to preserve those natural environment aspects which are important to our future.
"Assuming that the natural environment protection issues are taken into account, I urge you to proceed with the trafficway plans."
Chris McKenzie, county administrator, said the county had not sought KU's endorsement. He also said he had not been contacted by any KU official about the trafficway.
Students, faculty in Wescoe hot over out-of-order air conditioner
Staff writer
Outside, the sun warmed the afternoon to a sultry 85 degrees.
But inside Wescoe Hall yesterday, where the air conditioning system has been broken since Friday, the temperature felt as if if were in the high 90s, students who attended classes there said.
"It felt like a sauna," said Kristy Regier, Newton junior. "Everybody that came into class said, 'Can't we go outside?' The teacher only agreed to let us out a few minutes earlier. But it seemed like forever in there."
Leslie Lanning, Independence sophomore, said her French 120 instructor decided it was far wiser to take her class outdoors and tolerate noise and distractions than to stay indoors and sweat it out.
"It was a lot nicer outside." Lanning said. "You can't open the windows at Wescoe, so it was sweltering in there."
tor of facilities operations for physical plant maintenance.
Wescoe's air conditioning was shut off last Friday when a water pipe that feeds a cooling system burst, said Robert Porter, associate direc-
Such breakdowns have occurred only two or three times in the last 10 years. he said.
The pipe was more than 15 years old and probably had not been repaired since it was installed, Porter said.
Facilities operations workers today will try to install a concrete patch to repair the pipe. But the patch may not hold, and if it doesn't, a 20-foot pipe will have to be ordered called in place of the damaged section.
"From the looks of it, it seems like it's been in the making for some time," he said.
That, however, might not happen until late next week. Porter said.
Some students and staff wince at that prospect
"It itches every year. As soon as the temperature hits 90 degrees, the air conditioner breaks down," said Travis Patton, a graduate teaching assistant who teaches a sociology class in Wescoe.
we don't need it."
Sue Schumock, a secretary at the Advising Support Center in 4017 Wescoe, said, "It's been 95 degrees in here since the air conditioning broke down. There's no fresh air in here, and there's no way to get fresh air in here.
"We've started bringing our own fans to the office. The University doesn't provide us with that."
Regier said, "I'm just glad I'm going to be out of here by next week."
"And it'll be fixed just at the time
Patton said that apart from the physical discomfort caused by the lack of air conditioning, students also found it hard to concentrate because the heat made them sleepy.
"The problem you run into when rooms are hot is that students fall asleep. So you see more people nodding off," he said.
Porter said his office had received complaints about the air conditioning and had been trying to fix it since Friday.
"There are always individuals who think it can be fixed faster than it's possible to fix it," he said. "But we just do our job as well as we can."
Hayden OKs taxing of illegal drugs
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Gov. Mike Hayden signed into law yesterday a bill that gets tougher on drug dealers in Kansas. The law will add significant penalties to the dealers if they don't buy state tax stamps and attach them to illegal drugs when they sell them
law is defensible in court.
The measure, which the Legislature approved unanimously, is seen by some as potentially leading to violations of the 5th Amendment protection against self incrimination, but supporters said it was written so that the violation shouldn't happen.
Hayden told reporters at a brief signing ceremony that his legal counsel, John Petersen, thinks the
The bill, which becomes law July 1,
imposes an excise tax on marijuana
and illegal drugs, requires dealers to affix state tax stamps to the drugs
when they sell them.
The tax stamps will have to be used within three months, to insure that dealers don't keep a supply of old stamps and put them on bags of marijuana or drugs when they get caught making sales.
The tax rate will be $3.50 for each gram of marijuana and $200 for each gram of a controlled substance. Penalty for violations would be double the taxes due on the drugs, plus a fine of up to $10,000 and a maximum five years in prison.
Dealers would have to be caught
with at least 28 grams of marijuana or one gram of a controlled substance to be legally classified as dope sellers. Lesser amounts could be interpreted as having the drugs only for personal use.
Hayden confirmed that the real purpose of the law is to increase the penalties that can be imposed on drug dealers, beyond what already exists for dealing in illegal drugs.
"We want to send a clear message that we want to make Kansas the worst market for drugs in the country," the governor said. "This bill sends a message that we intend to be tough in this regard.
*This taxes it (the illegal drug) in addition to the other things we do.*
MATTHEW DAVIS
Gareth Waltrip/KANSAN
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Jim Mendenhall, Lawrence resident, holds out one of his ducklings for Caitlin Kennedy, 3, to pet, while her mother, Christy Kennedy of Lawrence, looks on. Mendenhall let his ducks swim in the Chi Omega fountain Monday, until a facilities operations worker told him the fountain water contained a defoaming agent that could harm the ducks.
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Wednesday, April 29, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Opinions
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
What would compel 35 KU students to organize, raise funds, charter a bus and travel 48 hours for a weekend of walking around the streets of Washington. D.C.?
A moving experience
Not even a rare collection at the National Gallery or Art or a Beach Boys concert on the Fourth of July is likely to produce such an effort. These students were moved by something more compelling – independent ideas, the desire to make themselves heard and the thoughtful recognition of political maneuvering.
They traveled to participate in a march, which drew about 150.000 demonstrators from a wide range of organizations and interest groups from across the country. Their unified goal was clear: to voice opposition to U.S. foreign policy. They disagree with the Reagan Administration's "morally bankrupt" policy, particularly in Central America and South Africa, and they refuse to hop on the everything's fine-in-America bandwagon by ignoring their own dissention.
This weekend's protest signifies an even greater commitment to their cause because of Reagan's hard-line foreign policy stance. They recognize that their voices have only a slim chance of effecting change in the final two years of this conservative president's term.
The marchers also recognize that in our political system, money may do a lot of the talking but there remains some power in numbers. Perhaps the large array of disenticing voices present at the demonstration will point out to the candidates in the 1988 elections the widespread dissatisfaction among voters.
Last week, the federal government took a swipe at the head of a hideous beast that had been growing steadily in strength in this country. And although the blow was severe, it will not prove fatal.
The 35 KU students who took part in the march can feel satisfied with having contributed to the political viability of these critical foreign issues by placing them in the forefront of public awareness.
The battle's just begun
The government's attack came in the form of indictments against 14 leaders and members of white supremacist groups. The leaders were charged with transporting stolen money, seditious conspiracy, and plotting to kill a federal judge and an agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Another indictment charged four people with plotting to kill liberal talk-show host Alan Berg in 1984.
The indictments were the result of a three-year investigation into the activities of white supremacist and neo-Nazi groups in the United States.
Groups such as the Ku Klux Klan, the Order and the Aryan Nations have been growing in
number and in outspokenness the past few years. And even more disturbing, the groups have left the lynchings and secret associations of the past for guerrilla military training financed by bank robbery and counterfeiting.
The indictments may slow the activities of these groups for a while, but they certainly will not stop them. If the government hopes to battle these groups, it must enlist the help of the public. The government must counter the groups' arguments that they represent the majority, by pointing out that they are really a small minority in their hatred and stupidity.
Members of white supremacist groups need to be treated not like the Christians they claim to be, but as the terrorists they are. Hate groups must not be tolerated, regardless of whether the members belong to the majority or the minority.
The U.S. government has evidence of what most citizens have suspected all along — that money from the Iran arms sale was diverted to the contras.
The tip of the iceberg
For months after the initial story broke, it had been suspected that money from the sale of arms to Iran had been filtered to the contrasts to help in their battle with the Nicaraguan government.
Congressional investigators used Swiss bank records and other material provided by businessman Albert Hakim to confirm the diversion of more than $1 million.
This is quite a discovery, but the investigation is not over. On Nov. 29, Attorney General Edwin Meese III said the
diversion of money was in the range of $10 million to $30 million. That leaves leaves a lot of unaccounted for money.
Now that some of the money has been found, the government should not take this as a victory, but step up its investigation and completely solve the Iran-contra affair.
Government officials voted to give limited immunity from prosecution to two witnesses in order to compel their testimony. It's unfortunate, but it seems that this decision will have to be repeated to get a look at the entire picture of the Iran-contra affair.
Let's hope that this discovery will lead officials to the rest of the answers so that the entire ugly mess can be cleared up.
News staff
News staff
Frank Hansel ... Editor
Jennifer Benjamin ... Managing editor
Jul Warmerdin ... News editor
Brian Kabelline ... Editorial editor
Sandra Engelland ... Campus editor
Mark Siebert ... Sports editor
Diane Dulmeitner ... Photo editor
Bill Skeet ... Graphics editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Lisa Weems ... Business manager
Bonnie Hardy ... Ad director
Denise Stephens ... Retail sales manager
Katie Scheneh ... Campus sales manager
Duncan Calhoun ... Marketing manager
Lori Copple ... Classified manager
Jennifer Lumianski ... Production manager
David Nixon ... National sales manager
Jeanne Hines ... Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words and should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position Guest shots should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The
The Kansan reserves the right reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom. 111 Staffer-Flint Hall
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer Fint-Hall Law, Kansei, Kan 6045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and on Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage paid in Lawrence, Kan 6044. Subscriptions by mail are $40 per year in Douglas County. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student activity fee.
POSTMASTER. Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kanon 66045.
Latin American democracies still at risk
The latest crisis between Argentina's military and its civilian government has raised doubts about the strength of new democracies throughout Latin America.
I am very grateful to you.
Carlos
Chuquin
Columnist
Where was Abrams?
I was disappointed to have missed the presentation of Elliott Abrams, assistant secretary of state for inter-American affairs, at the University of Kansas last week. After having read the published accounts of his speech, however, I was struck by how familiar it all sounded. It was frighteningly similar to the speeches that my generation heard just before the war in Vietnam got hot and out of control.
Although there have been no military troops in the region since 1979, Brazil, Ecuador and Peru recently have experienced incidents with their armed forces and the possibility that they can become real at any moment.
Early this month, jet fighters buzzed the National Palace in Lima, Peru, after President Alan Garcia fired his air force commander. In January, Ecuador's president, Leon Febres Cordero, was kidnapped for several hours by dissident air force commandos.
Mailbox
But the main reason I am sorry I missed his speech is a question put to Abrams from the audience and his response. When asked if he'd be willing to fight if the United States invaded Nicaragua, he responded. "If called upon I would be happy to serve." It is reported that he was smiling as he said, "It's a silly question to ask somebody who's 39 years old. I'm a little bit past service age."
It's not a silly question to ask a person who is advocating a policy that could require a generation who is old enough to serve, to fight and die in a place that many U.S. citizens don't believe is justified, especially considering Abrams' past "happiness" to serve.
I wish I could have been there to participate in that exchange, because I'm the same age as Abrams and I'm a disabled Vietnam veteran. Where was Abrams' willingness to fight during his generation's crusade to stop communist expansion? While more than 7 million U.S. citizens were serving our country, 3 million of them in Indochina, Abrams managed to stay in school throughout the war. I know that we could have used his help in my under-strength infantry unit.
If Abrams is so concerned about the evil that communists do, why doesn't he use his considerable talents to free U.S. prisoners of war, members of his own generation, who are still being held after our last crusade. . .
You know, the one he avoided serving in when he was old enough.
John Musgrave Baldwin City resident
Take a better look
If those people looked deeper into the issues and qualifications a coalition is offering, they might vote instead of being swayed by mudsling. Voting is important, for it is student input that elects a Senate that best represents the student. The election is over, and it's time to end the soap opera.
I find it hard to believe the victory of Bottom Line was due to a discount on poster printing. People who have taken the time to look only at the charges and the name calling are those who have created the "soap opera" atmosphere.
I am writing in response to the article and letter on the opinion page of Friday's Kansas addressing the Student Senate elections.
In Brazil, the country that in 1964 initiated the dictatorial trend in Latin America that lasted through the 1970s, speculation about the intentions of the armed forces also has increased in recent weeks. New economic troubles have led to mistrust, frustrations and unhappiness with the two-year-old government of President Jose Sarney.
Dawn Abrahamson Highland Park, Ill., sophomore
Despite the rumors and incidents about the rise of a new military rule era, Latin America's civilian presidents have created a so-called "demonocratic bloc" of nations as a way of displaying unity in the face of military actions.
This coalition reiterates once more that the Latin America people no longer are accepting a military dictatorship as an alternative. With this, the idea of a "democratic bloo" is to have a "democratic bloo" throughout Latin America that other nations in the bloo will not hesitate to intervene in coup attempts.
Recently, Argentinian army major
Ernesto Barriere, who had refused to
appear in court to answer charges of human rights violations was supported by fellow officers. Barriero, during the military dictatorship, was the chief interrogator of a notorious detention center known as La Perla. 440 miles north of Buenos Aires. Later, he surrendered.
Chile, under Gen. Augusto Pinochet, and Paraguay, under Alfredo Stroessner, remained under military dictatorship.
Although tensions between Argentina and Uruguay and their armed forces have centered on the issue of past repression by the military, it is believed the incidents also prove the broader difficulties experienced by the democracies in consolidating civilian rule and in keeping their military from interfering in politics.
The trend back to democratic governments in the region began in 1979 in Ecuador in the wake of the Carter administration's human rights campaign. With the Reagan administration also encouraging the end of an authoritarian rule, Peru, Bolivia, El Salvador, Panama, Honduras, Argentina, Uruguay, Brazil and Guatemala all returned to civilian government.
Only in Argentina have former junta members been brought to trial and imprisoned for their role in the so-called dirty war against leftists and other opposition groups in the 1970s. With this notion, elsewhere in Latin America armed forces have determined not to allow themselves to be humiliated by civilians. They have remained on alert both to defend their own economic privileges and political interests and to intervene in cases of civil unrest.
A military takeover is far from reality. The civilian governments in Latin America are trying to solve their economic problems, and an interference by the military could hurt the total restoration of the civilian power. As Argentina's President Raul Alfonsin said, "Never again, will the military rule." A fact that still holds at this moment in Latin America.
4HLUG University Daily Karsan
PARDON!!
PARDON
PARDON ME.
Supreme Court
Early enthusiasm for the Islamic system of government has been dissipating rapidly since Ayatollah Ruhula Khomeini assumed power in February 1979. Islam's character as a holy religion has been objectively transformed into an
Support for Islamic government fades like optimism of Iranians
Mansour Mojadad
Guest Shot
instrument of government. It is an inseparable part of a totalitarian state, and for this reason it has lost much of its authority. The change in the perception of Islam has significant implications for the internal affairs of Iran as well as international politics.
The Islamic regime drew its early popular support from a strong tradition of Islamic values and lack of alternatives. People believed that the slogan "freedom and independence" could be realized in the Islamic Republic. However, that only proved to be an illusion. The new regime espoused a fanatic version of Islamic fundamentalism that directed state policies. Islam became a doctrine of how the economy, politics, education and even personal practices should be conducted. This clearly ran contrary to the notion of freedom and required a great deal of coercion.
The incarceration of hundreds of thousands of political prisoners and the legal classification of women as second-class citizens are prominent symbols of Islamic repression. Political prisoners are no new story as far as Iran is concerned. However, the large
While this trend of disillusionment continued, the regime took advantage of the Iran-Iraq war in September 1980 and rallied support behind its policies. But the war gradually became the Achilles' heel of the Islamic Republic. The prolongation of the war and its extension to Iraqi soil revealed that what appeared to be a small defensive war was actually an excuse for repression at home.
number and variety of political convictions that the prisoners hold is a new phenomenon. This is an indication of the utterly undemocratic and sectarian nature of the Islamic regime. Women are forced to stay at home and take on historically outmoded roles. Morality squads in the streets decide for women how they should dress and behave. These policies disillusioned even some of the naive supporters of the Islamic government.
A convolution of various factors such as the Iran-Iraq war, a sharp drop in the price of oil, and huge increases in military spending are driving the country's state budget) has drained economic resources and led to crisis.
The regime has tried to deal with this crisis through tight state control of production and distribution. Goods are rationed and control of distribution has been turned over to a vast network of mosques. Coupons for basic commodities such as gasoline, flour and sugar are issued through the mosques. In addition, the mosques assume the role of information gathering, propaganda and secret services. In short, the mosques represent totalitarianism at its extreme.
This has led to an erosion of Islamic values. Mosques that once
were traditionally a place for praying, now are transformed into government bureaucracies. Now most of the praying is done not in mosques, but on college campuses!
Islamic demoralization of the Iranian masses is most obvious in suburban areas. Because the state-controlled media mainly broadcasts religious programs, people are no longer sensitive to the issues raised in the programs.
The dissatisfaction with the general state of affairs has led people to think of a creative variety of jokes made about important religious and governmental figures, including Khomeini. This is a form of negative resistance to clerical rule. For example, the designated successor of Khomeini, Ayatollah Montazary, is commonly known as the "male cat," referring to the Tom and Jerry cartoon show.
The revelations of the Iran-confraction scandal and the secret dealing of the Shite's "Imam," Ayatollah Khomeini, with the "Great Satan," the United States, will make Iranian masses further religious. As the people become more alienated from the Islamic Republic and Khomeini, they will have a stronger memory of the nations that supported the Khomeini regime.
Now is the worst time to help the Islamic Republic, because the popularity of Islam is at a minimum. There is a future for a democratic Iran, where religion is separated from the affairs of the state; but there is no future for the Islamic Republic.
Mansour Mojadad is a graduate student from Ahvaz, Iran, studying electrical engineering.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 29, 1987
Summer aerospace courses available at KU
5
By TIM HAMILTON
Staff writer
Aerospace engineers from all over the world will travel to the University of Kansas this summer to attend an aerospace summer school offered by the aerospace department and the division of continuing education.
Courses offered in the internationally acclaimed program last from two to five days and are on subjects like aeronautics, airplanes to their promulsion systems.
Jan Barton, program manager for engineering, architecture and business continuing education programs, has organized the short courses every year except 1977, the program's first year.
"The preparation that goes into one of these courses is just incredible," she said. "The professors work hard on making sure their material is current and update their courses every year."
Barron said that enrollment in the 13 courses offered this summer already was more than 140, last year's total. She said that none of the courses had enrollment limits except one with limited computer capacity.
A two-day course costs $495 compared to the $1,095 tuition for a five-day course. Courses are offered beginning in mid-May and end in the fall.
Participants earn credit called continuing education units. A unit is a nationally recognized standard used as proof of participation in approved continuing education activities.
Barron said part of the reason courses were offered at different times was to allow participants to enroll in more than one course.
"We have had people from Taiwan and Brazil stay for three weeks," she said.
Jan Roskam, Deane E. Ackers distinguished professor of aerospace engineering, taught the first short course in 1977. He said KU's short course program was one of the biggest in the country behind the universities of Michigan, Tennessee and the University of California at Los Angeles.
"A lot of universities are in the short course business," Roskam said. "Most of them are theoretically oriented."
Roskam said the KU program differed from most because it combined practical and theoretical aspects of design and development of aircraft.
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Wednesday, April 29, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
4-29
© 1987 Universal Press Syndicate
"Well, if I'm lucky, I should be able to get off this thing in about six more weeks."
Speaker says U.S. aid blocks progress
U. S. military aid to the Philippines blocks democratic progress and ignores the economic roots of the nation's civil war, a former relief agency worker said last night.
By PAUL SCHRAG
Friesen spoke to about 30 people last night at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
"There's a conflict between a concern for human rights and pursuing a military counter-insurgency in a nation where over 80 percent of the people are below the poverty line," said Dorothy Friesen, who worked with the US Air Force from 1979 to 1983 and returned for seven weeks in February and March.
"The people in the Philippines are capable of deciding what they want," she said. "But with a foreign element contributing to the fighting, there is a formidable challenge to lasting peace.
The Philippines needs land reform that would give economic power to the peasants, not the continued violence caused by seeking a military solution, Friesen said.
"Without a substantial land reform program, I don't see how violence can be averted."
The United States is providing $80 million in military aid to the Philippine army this year. Friesen said he approved $10 million for CIA cexert aid.
The money supports Philippine President Corazon Aquino's fight against the New People's Army. The NPA is the military arm of the Democratic Front, a revolutionary group that demands land reform
"If there was land reform, there would be no basis for an insurgency," Friesen said, quoting Jose Maria
Sison, who is thought to be the founder of the communist party in the Philippines.
Modesto Gonzalez, Lawrence resident and native of the Philippines, said after the speech that he agreed that communism was not the main threat in the Philippines. The United States should focus on helping to solve the Philippines' economic problems, he said.
Friesen said a Philippine colonel told her that Aquino realized that the roots of the NPA's insurgency were economic but pursued a military solution anyway.
Some Philippine military officers disagree with the way the fighting is being conducted, she said. Philippine army activity is similar to that of death squads in El Salvador and Nicaragua and the U.S. Phoenix program in Vietnam in the 1960s, in which Vietnamese community leaders were killed, she said.
Some officers oppose such activity because the strategy didn't work for the United States in Vietnam, Friesen said.
Friesen has returned to the Philippines about once a year since she worked there for Mennonite Central Committee, a church relief agency, in the 1970s. During her trip this year, she led a travel seminar for a group of U.S. lawyers.
In Davao, her group saw the results of the Philippine civil war. About 10,000 people were living in camps outside the city after fleeing from bombing and ground fighting.
On Campus
Commonwealth
■ "Street People: Symbol of a Deepening Poverty Crisis," a University Forum, is scheduled at 11:40 a.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries. 2004 Oversee Ave
- "The Humanities Perspective on Child Language Development" and "Toys and Culture: Properties of
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- "Class, State and Capitalist Development: The Case of Chile," a sociology lecture by Maurice Zeitlin.
...
Toys as Reflections of Cultural Stereotypes: part of a Childhood/Youth Faculty Development Seminar is the Pine Room at the Kansas Union.
Campus Christians are scheduled to have a fellowship meeting at 6:30 p.m. today in the Northeast Confer-
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 29, 1987
7
Soviet
*continued from p. 1*
Scotland. We need an American
Gorbachev.
But William Fletcher, chairman of Soviet and East European studies, thinks Gorbachev's intentions are irrelevant. He dismisses glasnost as nice noises and cosmetic adjustments.
"Their problems are structural and systemic," he said. "It's like taking a Model-T Ford and trying to make it compete with a modern automobile. It can't be done."
Gerald Mikkelson, who also is a professor of Slavic languages and literatures, said glasnost was a cause for hope that the United States and the Soviet Union eventually might become allies.
"The freer the people are, the greater the potential for us to become friends," he said. "There's a terrific gap between our societies. The more that gap is narrowed, the greater the potential for friendship and alliance and reconciliation.
"The Russian people will be so grateful to their leaders for seeking to improve their lives that they will respond with heroic efforts."
Norman Saul, who also is a professor of history, said that Gorbachev's reforms were important, but that it was hard to determine how effectively they would be.
"I see an opportunity here. But I
see a very early end to the Cold War."
Throughout the Cold War, nuclear missiles have remained in their silos. But the arms race has sped on, both nations contending that their stockpiles of weapons are not for offensive use and necessary to deter enemy aggression.
Mikkelson, who says anti-Sovietism is a disease in the United States, said U.S. citizens shouldn't perceive their nation as morally superior to the Soviet Union on issues such as the arms race.
"It has been generated primarily by us," he said. "We're the ones running this thing and they're playing catch-up.
"Our leaders have not wanted arms control agreements because they do not want to do anything that would strengthen the Soviet economy and allow them to develop in other wavs."
Mikkelson said the United States was unjustifiably paranoid of the Soviets.
"The American fear of the Soviet Union is mostly irational," he said. "We are stronger than they are militarily and economically. What they call capitalistic encirclement is a reality for them."
Shaffer said economic factors were one thing preventing the United States from seriously pursuing arms control. Although the United States continually battles unemployment, the Soviet Union needs more workers in non-military industries, thus only the Soviets have a sincere desire to stop the arms race. he said.
But Fletcher said Soviet party leaders had no intention of allowing the average Soviet citizen's standard of living to improve.
"For them, every gun that is made is a refrigerator less. For us, every gun that is made creates a job," he said. "If we could stop the arms race, they would prosper. They might prove that socialism might work."
"If you want to preserve the privileges and power you have, the military is a wonderful investment," he said. "The assumption that they want to reduce arms expenditures in order to improve the standard of living for their men and them if the reindeer herdmen in Siberia starve to death."
Therefore, arms control is irrelevant. Fletcher said.
"As long you have the basic structures, you're going to have competition," he said. "Nobody ever gives up anything important in arms negotiations."
"The Soviets don't want arms control. They want arms superiority. We want arms equality, they do not."
Roy Laird, who also is a professor of political science, agrees that the Soviets deserve most of the blame for the killing of his brother. But he sees at least a glimmer of hope.
"Their leaders, like the American leaders, have looked down the gun barrel of nuclear arms," he said.
"The Soviet Union is in very serious economic straits. Even more than the U.S., they can't afford both guns and butter.
"Gorbache would like to arrange affairs in such a way that they could spend more of their scarce resources on the domestic economy."
But the obstacles to arms control may be more formidable than its attractions.
"If we knew there were an ideal balance of power, the leaders could be satisfied with equality," Laird said. "But there is an inescapable tendency among all nations to be satisfied only if the edge is on their side.
"The desire to cut back is very seriously qualified by this natural tendency to be sure you have an ace up your sleeve."
Although the rift between right- and left-wing Soviet scholars is broad, the professors said, open-minded discussion needs to continue. Saul said each side could learn from the other.
"I would be the last one to say that there is only one way of looking at the Soviet threat and the nature of Soviet society," he said.
University Photography would like to thank those organizations who have support us this past year—THANKS! We look forward to working with you next fall! Good luck on your finals!
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Alpha Delta Pi, Alpha Epsilon Pi, Alpha Gamma Delta, Alpha Kappa Lambda, Alpha Phi, Alpha Omicron Pi, Alpha Tau Omega, Beta Theta Pi, Chi Omega, Delta Delta Delta, Delta Gamma, Delta Tau Delta, Gamma Phi Beta, Kappa Alpha Theta, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Phi Delta Tau, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Kappa Tau, Phi Kappa Theta, Pi Beta Phi, Pi Kappa Alpha, Sigma Alpha Eplison, Sigma Delta Tau, Sigma Kappa, Sigma Nu, Sigma Phi Epsilon,Tau Kappa Epsilon, Theta Chi Corbin, Ellsworth, G.S.P., J.R.P., McCollum, Lewis, Naismith, Oliver, Templin Douthart, Grace Pearson, Miller, Pearson, Sellards, Stephson, Watkins
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Wednesday, April 29, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Train
Continued from p. 1
participate, said the team measured, surveyed and inspected the crossing.
"In the next week to 10 days, they will review the survey information and add to that different statistics, such as the number of trains through there every day and vehicle traffic." Whitley said. "Then, possibly, they could come up with a recommendation concerning the crossing."
Brady said the railroad, the county and the department of transportation would review the team's information to follow its official recommendation.
If the agencies decide to improve the crossing, the federal government would pay 90 percent of the cost, and the railroad and the county would decide how to split the remaining 10 percent, he said.
Whitley said the review was not instigated by the deaths of four KU students March 27 at the crossing.
"From what I understand, this is one of a series of normal reviews we've conducted across the state," he said.
going about 65 mph smashed broadside into their car. They had been on their way to a Chi Omega sorority barn party.
The four students died in a fiery crash when a Union Pacific train
Jeff VanCoevern, a Lawrence resident and 1970 KU graduate, said he also had been struck by a train at that crossing in October 1973. And Steven Hicks, Lawrence freshman, said that last summer he barely avoided a train while driving across the tracks there.
VanCoevern said that he had complained several times to Union Pacific railroad about the crossing.
"They just told me, 'You were racing the train. So just go along about your business, citizen,' " he said.
Whitley said he did not know when the train crossing had last been improved.
Yesterday's review of the crossing was part of a transportation department plan to upgrade train crossings statewide, Whitley said.
Of about 9,000 Kansas train crossings to be reviewed, the fatal crossing was number 2,164 in priority, he said.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 29, 1987
9
Nuclear waste burial foes to demonstrate in Topeka
By CHRISTOPHER-HINES
Staff writer
The possibility that Kansas will have a large radioactive waste dump has created concern among a number of Kansans, prompting them to plan a demonstration tommorrow in Topeka.
"We are not satisfied with the answers we have received from the state," said Laura Menhusen, president of North Central Kansas Citizens. The demonstration is scheduled to begin at 9:30 a.m. at the steps of the state capitol.
Kansas belongs to a five-state association, the Central Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact, that is responsible for finding and central radioactive waste disposal site in one of the member states.
The other states in the compact are Nebraska, Oklahoma, Arkansas and Louisiana.
State compactes were formed across the country, at the federal government's request, to better control the country's radioactive waste and to avoid having 50 individual disposal sites.
The compact had an emergency Meeting April 24 in Kansas City, Missouri. We gave disposal study by the New York consulting firm of Dames and Moore.
In its $350,000 study, the firm recommended several disposal sites based on geological studies and population levels. About three-fourths of the recommended sites were in Kansas.
"They're going to choose a disposal technology that is not proven," said David Ebbert, Lawrence resident, who is organizing a local group to go into the state. The state would be liable for the radiative waste for a long time to come."
The compact is not obligated to use the firm's recommendations. At the request of Gov. Mike Hayden it deleted the two sections dealing with disposal in Kansas.
However, the potential of a Kansas site becoming the 10th low-level radioactive waste disposal site in the United States has raised concern and fear among many Kansans. Four of the present disposal sites have developed radioactive leaks.
"Why should we take the waste when Kansas produces the least amount of radioactive waste of all the compact states?" Menhusen
asked
Earlier this spring, the Kansas House approved a bill that would have withdrawn the state from the waste disposal compact.
But the Senate rejected the bill out of concern that withdrawing from the compact would result in the federal government taking control of radioactive waste disposal in Kansas.
Lewis Perky, Osborne resident, has a doctorate in nuclear chemistry and studies organic chemical changes resulting from radiation exposure. He said the present U.S. radioactive disposal technology
meant lining a hole in the ground with plastic and throwing the waste in it.
"The waste can stay radioactive for hundreds of years," said Perky, who plans to attend the demonstration tommorrow. "We need to develop a better technology of disposal before taking any further steps in the compact."
He said France had developed an effective disposal system of sealing waste in large concrete containers and burying them halfway in the ground to monitor their radioactive leakage.
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The finest accommodations on campus are found at the foot of Mount Oread in Naismith Hall. Naismith Hall is just minutes from classes and features front door bus service. But that's just the beginning. One tour of Naismith Hall will show you accommodations that surpass any other student housing. Consider a semi-private suite with weekly maid service, or a fitness center and private pool. And if that's not enough, then consider great menus, a computer center, cable tv lounges on every floor, private parking and even payment options. Now is the time to arrange for the best accommodations at KU, as waiting lists are now forming for the-fall semester. The accommodations of Naismith Hall—you'll love the difference.
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10
Wednesday, April 29, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Engineer shot, killed by contras
The Associated Press
MANAGUA. Nicaragua — A U.S. volunteer working as a mechanical engineer in a small village in northern Nicaragua was shot and killed by contras yesterday morning, the Nicaraguan government announced.
It was the first reported death of a U.S. citizen working for the Sandinista government, which is in a war with U.S.-backed rebels.
The government said the dead U.S. citizen was Benjamin Ernest Linder, 27, of Portland, Ore., the son of David and Elizabeth Linder.
A government spokesman said Linden was killed by a group of six contraband who walked into his office at 8 a.m. in the village of La Camalelaona, where he was working on the construction of a small hydroelectric plant. The village, which is in Jinotega province, is 85 miles northeast of Managua.
Linder died while representatives from 88 countries met in Managua at the 77th Conference of the Inter-parliamentary Union to discuss, among other things, possible ways to end the Nicaraguan conflict between the government and the contras.
The government official, who declined to be identified, said Linder had been working as a volunteer in northern Nicaragua for the past two years.
He had come to Nicaragua in 1985 to work for the Nicaraguan Energy Institute.
"A group of six contrasts came in, shot him and fled," the government spokesman said. "La Camaleona is a small village of not more than 100 scattered families."
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BEAT THE FALL RUSH!!! Have your new KUID made before you leave for the summer. Staff from the enrollment center will be in the residence halls to make new IDs for those students with Student Housing contracts for Fall Semester. There will be NO CHARGE for this replacement ID. Your new KUID will be kept for you to simply pick up on your return next Fall. The IDs will be made in the cafeterias, 4:30 - 6:30 on the following dates.
YOU MAY HAVE YOUR ID MADE AT ANY OF THE FOLLOWING LOCATIONS!!
Wednesday, 4/29-McCollum
Thursday, 4/30-Ellsworth
Monday, 5/4-Hashinger
Tuesday, 5/5-Oliver
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Thursday, 5/7-Templin
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Please come to the Panhellenic Office (in the Burge Union) from Monday, April 27 to Friday, May 1, to pick up a RUSH booklet containing registration forms.
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 29, 1987
11
Chiefs draft backs to help offense KC offense silent in loss to Orioles
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Kansas City Chiefs weren't kidding when they said they wanted running backs.
With the 19th pick in the first round yesterday, the NFL's poorest rushing team nabbed Palmer, the captain of accomplished halfback from Temple.
Then, swapping second-round choices with Houston, the Chiefs went for Christian Okoye of Azusa Pacific, a native of Nigeria whose bricked layers of muscle belie the fact that he first touched a football only three years ago.
Palmer, who led the country in rushing last season, is 5-foot-9*4* and about 185 pounds. Okowe, 25, is 6-1*2* and 253. He sent his stock soaring with a Senior Bowl record of four rushing touchdowns.
In both cases, the Chiefs professed great pleasure.
"We feel extremely confident in Paul's ability," said Les Miller, the Chiefs' head talent scout. "To answer
a question some of you may have — no, we do not feel like 5-9 and a quarter and 184 pounds is a problem."
"This young man is a real running back," said Chiefs Coach Frank Gansz. "He can run. He can cut. He can spin with power. He can slash. He can throw the halftack pass. I think he can play in the band. He's going to infuse into our offense and our overall team a tremendous spark."
Okoye was timed by Chiefs coaches in a 4.45-40-yard dash and seems to hold awesome promise. But he is a raw beginner whose blocking skills are particularly lacking.
"Is it a risk?" Miller asked rhetorically. "Yes, a little bit. It is a project? Yes. But it's a risk we're willing to take."
CHIEFS 1987 DBA PICKS
1st round — Paul Palmer, RB, Temple
2nd round — Christian Okoye, RB, Azusa Pacific
3rd round — Todd Howard, LB, Texas A & M
4th round — traded pick to Houston
5th round — Kittrick Taylor, WR, Washington State
6th round — traded pick to Houston
7th round — Doug Hudson, QB, Nicholls State
8th round — Michael Clemons, RB, William & Mary
9th round — Randy Watts, DE, Catawba
10th round — James Evans, RB, Southern University
11th round — Craig Richardson, WR, Eastern Washington
12th round — Bruce Holmes, LB, Minnesota
Palmer finished a distant second to Vinnie Testaverde in the Heisman Balloting after leading the nation with 1,866 rushing yards. He broke or tied 23 school records while compil-
CHIEFS' 1987 DRAFT PICKS
4,895 career rushing yards and
6,726 all-purpose yards. As a senior,
he set an NCAA record with 2,633 total
yards.
He was the fourth running back taken, which did not especially please the Maryland native, who as a child acquired the nickname "Boo-Boo."
Kansas City did not have a pick in the fourth round, but took Kitrick Taylor, a wide receiver from Washington State, in the fifth.
The Chiefs changed to defense in the third round, picking Todd Howard, a linebacker from Texas A&M.
The Chiefs also traded away their sixth-round pick.
13
The Associated Press
Catcher Kelly Downs is congratulated by teammates Jill Williams, Sheila doubleheader. The Kansas softball team swept a doubleheader from Connellly and Gayle Luedeke after hitting a home run in the first game of a Friends University in their final home games of the season yesterday at
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Mike Boddicker threw a one-hitter last night, yielding only a sixth-inning single to Willie Wilson, and Nelson Simmons had three hits as the Baltimore Orioles defeated the Kansas City Royals 3-0.
Softball team wins final two home games
Staff writer
The Kansas softball team recorded its first no-hitter of the year in the last game before the Big Eight Conference tournament, which begins Friday at St. Joseph, Mo.
Reenie Powell and Roanna Brazier combined efforts, no-hitting Friends University of Wichita in the second game of a doubleheader yesterday at Jayhawk Field.
Bv DAVID BOYCE
Kansas won that game in 13-0, and the first game 7-1, ending the regular
In the second game, the Jayhawks collected 17 hits and were led offensively by senior Sheila Connolly, who went 4-for-5. Connolly had six hits in the two games.
"I think we played well," Coach Bob Stancliff said. "The competition was not that strong, but we needed some games like this to boost our confidence for the Big Eight Tournament."
against top 20 teams.
Kansas scored four runs in the first inning and that was all Powell needed, but Kansas added two more runs in the second.
Boddicker, 2-0, retired the first 13 batters before hitting Danny Tartar-bull on a full count with one out in the fifth. He then walked Bo Jackson on a count, but Steve Balboni grounded to third and Angel Salazar fled out.
Friends shut down the Jayhawks scoring attack in the third innning. But Kansas scored seven runs in the last three innings.
"I thought I was throwing really well," said Powell, who uphed her record to 7-9. "I have been in a slump, so my pitching today is looking up."
In the third inning, Powell's throwing error ended her bid for a perfect game. The error allowed Friends' only base runner of the game to reach base.
Kansas.
Stanclift removed Powell after the fourth inning. Powell said Stanclift wanted to give Brazier some work before the tournament. Brazier pitched the final three innings for
This year, the Jayhawks have played more games against top 20 teams than any school in the country. Of Kansas' 48 games, 22 have been
Stanclift hopes the one-sided victory will raise the team's confidence heading into the tournament.
"For us to do well, we need to be strong in every facet of the game," he said. "We especially need good pitching and defense because we do not have the type of offense to carry us.
Wilson singled cleanly into right field to break up the no-hitter.
"In the past, our offense was good enough to overcome a couple of enemies."
The Jahaykhs took an early 1-0 lead in the first half, and until the lead in the final quarter, the Jamaicans
Kansas committed only one error in the two games and had 25 hits.
In the first game, Sherri Mach pitched a complete game, allowing four hits and one run.
Kansas scored two in the fifth and four in the sixth, making the final score 7-1.
Terry Kennedy singled into left field to open the Baltimore third and went to second on a fielding error by Bo Jackson, the 1985 Heisman Trophy winner. Nelson's triple scored Kennedy. Jackson was drafted by the NFL's Los Angeles Raiders in the seventh round yesterday.
Catcher Kelly Downs reached base in four plate appearances and went 3-for-3 in the first game with five RBI.
For seniors Connolly, Downs, Mach, Laura Cramer and Jill Williams, the doubleheader marked the last time they would play at Jayhawk Field.
son gave up only five hits in seven innings as his record fell to 0-4.
KANSAS 7, FRIENDS 1 (1st game)
Friends 000 100 100
Friends 000 100 -6 -7 8
Maryan and Laestey, Mach and Dows, W-mayn (7.6) . L-Maryan (285-284), Friend, Stu-
tall (7.9) . L-Maryan (285-284), Friend, Stu-
tall (7.9) . L-Maryan (285-284), Friend, Stu-
tall (7.9) . L-Maryan (285-284), Friend, Stu-
tall (7.9) . L-Maryan (285-284), Friend, Stu-
tall (7.9) . L-Maryan (285-284), Friend, Stu-
s
In the eighth, Simmons doubled leading off and Ken Gerhart was safe when Danny Jackson misplayed his sacrifice bunt. Simmons went to third on the play and scored on Alan Wiggins' fielders choice grounder.
Boddicker struck out five and walked two. The Orioles, who snapped a four-game losing streak and won for only the second time in their last nine games, have won all six. Boddicker has started this season.
KANSAS 13, FRIENDS 0 (2nd game)
Friends 000 000 0 - 0 0 3
Kansas 420 214 x=13 17 1
Sage and Lassley. Powell. Braun.
KANSAS 13. FRIENDS 0 (2nd game)
After a double steal put Gerhart at third, Cali Ripken Jr. filled to Jackson in deep left. Jackson threw out Wiggs at third base, and the umpires ruled the out was recorded before Gerhart could cross the plate.
Sage and Lassley, Powell, Brazer (5) and Lueck. W-Powell (7.9), L-Sage.
Eddie Murray led off the Baltimore ninth with a triple and scored on Ray Knight's single.
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The Associated Press
The Padres, last in the National League in hitting and runs scored, reached Cardinal starter Tim Conroy, 0-1, for seven hits and five runs in $4\frac{3}{8}$ innings.
ST. LOUIS — Ed Whitson pitched six strong innings, and Steve Garvey drove in three runs leading the San Diego Padres to a 5-2 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals last night.
Whitson, 3-2, gave up five hits, struck out four and walked two before getting relief help from Dave Dravecky and Lance McUllers. It was Whitson's first victory over the Cardinals since 1984 and his first in four career decisions at Busch Stadium.
Garvey, batting. 182 with three runs batted in, had a run-scoring double in the first and a two-run single in the fifth.
Giants 6. Cubs 2
Pirates 6. Dodgers 1
Expos 7, Phillies 1
PHILADELPHIA — FleoY You-mans hit a solo hero and combined
Braves 7, Reds 3
CINCINNATI - Rafael Ramirez went 4-for-5 and drove in three runs, including a two-run single during a six-rally run in the fifth innings last night that carried the Atlanta Braves to a 7-3 victory over Cincinnati, ending the Reds' four-game winning streak.
with Andy McGaffigan on a four-hitter last night as the Montreal Expos beat the Philadelphia Phillies 7-1 in a game twice delayed by rain.
PITTSBURGH — Junior Ortiz drove in three runs, and Mike Diaz knocked in two last night as the Pittsburgh Pirates ended a four-game losing streak by beating Fernando Valenzuela and the Los Angeles Dodgers 6-1.
CHICAGO — Mike Krukow won his first game of the season, and Jeffrey Leonard hit a two-run home as San Francisco beat the Chicago Cubs 6-2 yesterday.
A second-to-last place finish on Monday after the first round of the Big Eight Conference women's golf championship was not enough to make the Jayhawks quit.
Golf
Oklahoma shot a 945 to take runner-up honors, and Missouri finished in third with 950.
By a Kansan reporter
instead, the team, which finished sixth at last year's conference tournament, dropped 28 strokes from its first-round total in the final two rounds of play and placed fourth in the final standings.
'Hawks finish fourth Oklahoma State takes title
Kansas finished with a 976, well behind seventh-ranked Oklahoma State, which walked away with the championship, shooting a 912.
Oklahoma State's Eva Dahloff
was the individual champion with a 228.
Junior Susan Pekar, who was the tournament champion April 11-12 at the Missouri Invitational, finished with a 238 three-round total that led the Jayhaws.
Tina Gnewchwu followed Pekar with a 242 and Donna Jo Loewen shot a 242 finishing third for Kansas. Marielle Scheid finished with a 257, and Sherri Atichison was a stroke behind with a 258.
The Jayhawks, whose best one-round total was 305 at the Illini Spring Break Tournament in Tampa Bay, Fla., managed to shoot a 320 in the second round and a 314 in the final round and placed in the top half of the tournament.
Kansas started off slowly with a 342 first-round total, which put the team behind the field and forced it to play catch-up for the rest of the tournament.
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12
Wednesday, April 29, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
First round takes four quarterbacks
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — The NFL draft became a quarterback auction yesterday as teams seeking help at football's most critical position reached for question marks in hopes of pulling another Joe Montana or Dan Fouts out of a relatively thin talent pool.
Four quarterbacks were chosen on the first round, the most since the talent-laden 1983 draft. But only Heisman Trophy winner Winny Testavera of Miami, taken by Tampa Bay with a stick, was considered a sure NFL star.
The other three — Kelly Stouffer of Colorado State, chosen by St. Louis; Chris Miller of Oregon, taken by Atlanta; and Jim Harbaugh of Michigan, taken in a shocking move by the Chicago Bears — all had serious question marks about them.
Unlike recent drafts, when offensive and defensive linemen were the hot items, there was a higher premium on skill players in the fourhour, eight-minute first round. Besides the quarterbacks, three wide receivers and six running backs went in the first round. Included in the running backs were Alonzo Highsmith of Miami to Houston and D.J. Dozier of Penn State to Minnesota in two of the nine deals which made the first and second rounds seem like a
NFL draft passes by KU
From staff and wire reports
Thirteen Big Eight Conference players were selected in the first 10 rounds of the NFL draft yesterday, including two first round picks.
Nebraska's Danny Noonan, a 6-foot-4, 280-pound nose guard and one of three Nebraska players picked in the early rounds, was the Dallas Cowbys' first pick and the sixth overall. Raiders made Missouri's John Clay, a 320-pound lineman, the draft's 15th pick.
A second Nebraska player, defensive back Brian Davis, was picked by the Washington Redskins in the second round. He was the draft's 30th pick overall.
No Kansas players were selected in the draft's 10 rounds.
Kansas coaches said they thought the Jayhawks who had the best chances of being drafted were center Paul Oswald, defensive tackle Steve Nave, free safety Wayne Ziegler and defensive end Phil Forte.
No Big Eight Players were selected in the third round. In the fourth round, Seattle chose Oklahoma State defensive back Mark Moore, and Denver chose Nebraska linebacker Marc Munford.
In the fifth round, Chicago took Oklahoma defensive end Steve Bryan, and Houston picked Sooner running back Spencer Munford. And in the sixth round, Colorado tight end Jon Embree went to Chicago.
chances.
No one was saying that about the quarterbacks behind Testaverde, but there were precedents for taking the
Browns coach Marty Schottoneheimer said Junkin was "one of the finest college linebackers I've ever seen."
Fouts and Montana, two of the modern era's most successful quarterbacks, were third-round picks. Fouts was chosen by San Diego in 1973 and Montana by San Francisco in 1979.
Testaverde, who had already signed an $8.2 million contract, was one of three Miami players taken in the first nine picks.
trade mart.
1987 First-Round Draft Picks:
Disgruntled linebacker Chip Banks went from Cleveland to San Diego in a trade which moved the Browns from 24th to fifth in the first round and netted them linebacker Mike Junkin of Duke.
1. Tampa Bay - Vinny Testavale, GB, Miami
2. Indianapolis - Corinne Bennett, BL, Alabama
3. Houston - Alonzo Highsmith, RB, Miami
4. Green Bay - Brent Fullwood, RB, Auburn
5. Chicago - Brian Doyle, BN, St. Louis - Kyle Struffer, DB, Colorado State
6. Detroit - Reggie Rogers, DT, Washington
7. Buffalo - Shane Contan, LB, Penn State
8. Philadelphia - Jerome Brown, DT, Miami
9. Pittsburgh - Rod Woodson, DB, Purdue
11. New Orleans - Shawn Knight, DT, Brigham
12 Dallas - Danny Noonan, NG, Nebraska
13 Atlanta - Chris Miller, BG, Oregon
14 Minnesota - D. Jorzer, BP, Penn State
15 Kentucky - Robert Davis, MB, Missouri
16 Miami - Jon Bosa, DE, Boston College
17 Cincinnati - Jason Buck, DE, Bright Young
18 Seattle - Tony Woods, DE, Pittsburgh
19 Kansas City - Paul Palmer, RT, Tennessee
20 Oklahoma - Tom Johnson, OT, NC State
21 New York Jets - Rick Vogel, RC, Texas A & M
22 San Francisco - Harris Barton, OT, North Carolina
23 New England - Bruce Armstrong, OT, Louisville
24 Washington - Richard Tucker, SF, San Francisco - Terrence Flager, BR, Clennison
25 Chicago - Jim Harbaugh, GB, Michigan
26 Denver - Rocky Nettler, WR, Florida
27 New York Giants - Mark Ingram, WR, Michigan State
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CLASEN-MORSE CHEVROLET 92nd & METCALF OVERLAND PARK, KS.
(Just 25 minutes from KU.)
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1-649-6000
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 29, 1987
13
Rangers slip by Yankees 3-1 in two-hitter
The Associated Press
ARLINGTON, Texas — Edwin Cornei, trying to become the youngest American League pitcher to throw a no-hitter in the modern era, held New
American League
York hitkiss for seven and a half innings until Willie Randolph singled last night, and the Texas Rangers beat the Yankees 3-1.
Correa, pitching one day before his 21st birthday, lost his bid when Randolph lined a 3-2 pitch to left field.
Don Mattingly followed with a double to left-center, knocking Correa out of the game. Dale Mohric replaced Correa and finished for his second save in the combined two-hitter.
Pittsburgh's Nick Maddox was the youngest ever to pitch a no-hitter in the major leagues, when he was 20 years 10 months old, on Sept. 20, 1907, against Brooklyn. Milwaukee's Juan Nieves, 22, pitched a no-hitter against Baltimore on April 15 this season.
Indians 1, White Sox 0
CLEVELAND — Ken Schrom
pitched a four-hitter and Mel Hall stroaked a bases-loaded single past a drawn-in infield with one out in the bottom of the ninth innings last night, giving the Cleveland Indians a 1-0 victory over the Chicago White Sox.
Schrom, 1-2, struck out one and walked none to earn his first shutout since he threw a two-hitter against California last June 6. He out-dueled Chicago starter Joel Davis, 1-2, who allowed only four hits, striking out four and walking two.
Blue Jays 5, Twins 1
TORONTO -- Jim Clancy tossed a
six-hitter, and George Bell drove in three runs, including two with a homer, sending the Toronto Blue Jays to a 5-1 victory over the Minnesota Twins last night.
Mariners 6, Tigers 4
SEATTLE — Ken Phelps hit two solo home runs and Jim Presley added a two-run homer in support of Mike Morgan's pitching as the Seattle Mariners beat the Detroit Tigers 6-4 Tuesday night.
Morgan, 1-3 after his first start in eight days, allowed three runs on eight hits in eight innings.
Jayhawks lose 2 more
By a Kansan reporter
The Kansas baseball team dropped two games to Emporia State yesterday in Emporia, including another in the bottom half of the final iming.
The Hornets beat the Jayhawks 7-4 in the first game of the double-header and 18-17 in the second game. The losses dropped Kansas' record to 12-33-1. The Jayhawks are 1-15 in the Big Eight Conference.
In the second game, KU's Darrell Matthews hits a three-run run in the top of the sixth that gave the Jayhawks a 17-13 lead.
But Emporia State scored five runs in the bottom of the seventh, including a three-run home run by Brett Berry and a solo shot by Steve Michael. Brit Morris took the loss for Kansas.
In the first game, Steve Estes hit a solo home run, his third in three games. Steve Purdy, 1-6, took the loss but received little defensive help.
VINEYARD
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CHINESE CUISINE
New Management Luncheon Special
From $2.95 to $3.45
Cornes with Egg Roll or Crab Rangoon Hot
Hot & Sour Soup or Egg Drop Soup
Lunch: 11 a.m.-2 p.m. p.m.
Dinner: 4:30 a.m.-10 p.m. p.m.
Hot tea or iceed tea Holey
Sunday: 4:30 a.m.-9 p.m. 842-4976
Holiday Plaza 25th & IOWA
Nights out... days on the beach... and a $1000 for my efforts!
THE NEW YORK TIMES
You can earn excellent base wages, cash bonuses, and incentives while working part-time evening and weekend hours. Scheduling is flexible and the atmosphere is relaxed and fun. No experience is required just a willingness to learn a must. If great money is what you want to earn this summer while spending your days at the beach and nights with your friends call us today for an appointment.
841-1200
E.O.E. m/f/h
A SUBSIDIARY OF ENTERTAINMENT PUBLICATIONS. INC
ENTERTEL
TWO WOMEN IN BLACK
ALVAMAR NAUTILUS The Total Fitness Approach
Cardiovascular
Flexibility Total Fitness Strength
STUDENT
SPECIAL $45
Summer
Trained, experienced staff
Plus Tax
- Weight loss and aerobic conditioning
- Saunas for both men and women
- Therapeutic massage
- Tanning bed
- Individual fitness programs
- Weight loss and aerobic co
- Muscle shaping or building
Call:
MAUTILUS
842-7766
ALVAMAR NAUTILUS FITNESS CENTER
1120 billion Pkwy. adjacent to connect roads
WE DON'T PUSH BOXES
COMP
We provide automation solutions!
KAYPRO CORPORATION
KAYPRO CORPORATION IS THE EXPANSION SOLUTION
Kaypro PC & PC/30 grow as your PC power needs grow. Speed and storage expand via an "AT Kit", 6 slots and 3 drive spaces.
MaySpecial: $1475
Kaypro PC with FREE
1200B Modem
COMPUTER OUTLET
Your computer connection at 843-PLUG • 804 N.H.
LOAN OPPORTUNITY
with it at least 6 months after you graduate or drop below half-time study, and you can take up to 10 years to repay.
Apply now for The First Student Loan. For more information contact your college financial aid office, or
Pursue higher education at a lower cost with a government guaranteed student loan from The First National Bank of Lawrence.
Because we offer student loans that work in conjunction with federal guarantees, you pay only 8% (for first time borrowers). Guaranteed. And unlike other loans, The First student loans don't require collateral. Or credit references. You need only borrow a minimum of $1,000 (if a first time borrower), be enrolled at least half-time at an eligible college or university, and not be in default on any guaranteed student loan with any institution. You don't have to start repaying your loan
The First
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF LAWRENCE
900 Massachusetts *Lawrence, KS* (913) 843-0152
1. course requirements change, leaving you with a book no longer required.
2. instructors may change, sometimes requiring a different book
cku
$
EQUAL HOUSING
LENDER
You can lose out on cash if
Get Cash In Hand
WHY RISK LOSING MONEY!
4. you don't sell your books back on a regular basis.
THE K.U. BOOKSTORE
STAYS ON TOP OF ALL TEXT-
BOOK DEVELOPMENTS TO
ENSURE YOU RECEIVE THE
BEST PRICE AVAILABLE.
Textbooks have a limited life span. If you don't sell your books back on a time basis, you could receive nothing for a book on which you spent your limited funds.
KU Bookstores
Kansas Union Burge Union
3. new editions of your book are published, again leaving you with a book of no buyback value.
FURNITURE RENTAL
Quality Furnishings at Affordable prices
MISSION CITY FURNITURE
Month to Month Rentals • Rent to Own • Used Sales
Sofas · Sleepers · Dinettes · Desks Beds · Chairs · Tables · Bunk Beds · Televisions Book Shelves· Lamps · Dressers · Recliners Entertainment Centers · VCR's · Stereos
10
"Proudly Serving Lawrence for 16 Years"
Thompson-Crawley FURNITURE RENTAL
520 E. 22nd Terrace
841-5212
14
Wednesday, April 29, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Experts to discuss postmodernism
By PAUL SCHRAG
Philosophers define today's rapidly changing culture as postmodern, but they're still trying to decide exactly what postmodern means.
Staff writer
In quest of a better definition, about 150 experts on philosophy, literature, architecture and political science will gather Thursday through Saturday at the University of Kansas to present papers and discuss theories at the annual conference of the International Association for Philo-
The topic of the conference is postmodernism, which means many things to many people, said Bill Martin, a philosophy teaching assistant and assistant organizer of the conference.
"Our culture is in flux," Martin said. "Reference and meaning have gone wild. It's up for grabs what culture is about.
"I think the conference will speak to the possibilities of postmodernism. There's a certain element of crisis in it, but some are enabling and exciting."
Gary Shapiro, professor of philosophy and conference organizer, said postmodernism described a culture that was suspicious of ideas saying that human beings could continuously improve their lives and that absolute truth exists. But postmodernism isn't only negative, he said, because it affirms new and creative ways to solve problems.
Martin said postmodernism emerged at different times in different areas of culture. Generally, it began after World War II, he said.
Postmodernism is relevant to
many areas of study, Martin said, and the conference will enable participants to discuss the relationships between postmodern ideas in various disciplines.
Professors from across the country will participate in the conference, including several well-known scholars.
"I think it will be regarded as an important conference not only because we've got well-known, big-name people," he said, "but because there's a tremendous enthusiasm among us for these critical issues at a lot of people's minds. What kind of society is this? What kind of society is it going to be?"
The most prominent participants, Martin said, will be Richard Bernstein, a philosopher known for his writings on relativism; Kenneth Frampton, a historian and critic of architecture; Fredric Jameson, one of the world's most important Marxist literary theorists; and Gayatri Spivak, a literary theorist known for her writings on feminism, Marxism and deconstruction.
Martin said the evening sessions would be the most interesting parts of the conference for the public. They will be in one of the auditoriums in Wescoe Hall if the air-conditioning system is working.
Scholars will discuss papers they have written at morning seminars. They will present their papers at afternoon panels and will give more presentations and responses at plenary evening sessions.
For example, Jameson, who will participate in the plenary session at 5 p.m. Saturday, often illustrates his ideas by talking about popular films, Martin said.
PIZZA PIZZA 842-0600 PIZZA PIZZA DELIVERED
Natural Fiber Clothing
For Men, Women, & Children
SAN DIEGO MUNICIPAL SCHOOL OF TECHNOLOGY
NATURALWAY
820 MASS.
841·0100
Legal Services for Students
Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE!
- Advice on most legal matters
- Preparation & review of legal documents
- Notarization of legal documents
- Many other services available
8:30 to 5:00 Mon thru friday
14:80 Burse (Satellite) Union 844-566
Call or drop by to make an appointment.
Funded by student activity fee.
Alpha Delta Pi Initiates
Having sisters
like you
is like having
friends, smiles
and rainbows
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MICROTECH COMPUTERS
MSD compatible 24 Monthly Disk drive萍湖
25th & Iowa
20 MB XT system : $1195
1 20MB Hard disk drive, TTL Monitor, 1 floppy drive
mono graphic card, Printer port; MS-DOS 3.1 &
Software Bundle, 1 year warranty in store.
FOUNTAIN XT only $799
STATION
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KKΓ New Initiates 1987 Love, Your Sister
SKEW HANDLE
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Classified Ads
Available **Red** & **Breakfast** graduation weekend.
May 15, 16, 17. Call 749-1243 between 7:30 or
8:30.
John sings messages? $20. 814-157 or 843-1296
Need a date? Or perhaps a giftful or fugitive
girl who has bells (almost) everything? Send an en-
dition to (814) 760-8101 or be a gas! Balloon-N-
More, 784-341, 874-311
Sterling Silver Jewelry Repaired
Kizer
Cummings
JEWELERS
800 Madison, 749-4313
Want to live and work on the East Coast? **We will host a presentation on campus for Nannypossibilities in the NYC area at 3 p.m. on 29th Gallery East in the Kansas Union. Midwest Nanny, Inc. WEIGHT LOSS PROGRAM Lose 10-20 lbs in accepted classes. Mailorder Call (Gerrt) 617-425-4255.
ENTERTAINMENT
CARRIAGE RIDES We do Weddings (unique gift) Anniversaries,and Dinner Parties 843-8605
At Your Requests Lawrence's Best and Most Af-
M Your Requests D.J. Sound and Lights for Any Occasio-
nity
Starts Today!
MICHELOB
Light
On Draught
Introduction Special
ONLY 50¢
ALL DAY WEDNESDAY!
• plus
Michelob Light Draws
Dozens of Beer Signs and other Beer Label items
FREE "Motocycle Awareness" bike display at Southern Hills Mall on May 2nd & 3rd, to 6 a.m. to 5 p.m. FREE windshield washing, & FREE balloon
will be given away throughout the evening!
KEYBOARDIST Needed for Established Rock Band Paul at 841-9652
It Could Only Happen at..
It Could Only Happen at...
THE HAWK • 1340 OHIO
will be given away
LAWRENCE COMMUNITY THEATRE PRESENTS
THE BEEKER WARD DARKENING OPS...
Lee and the Boys in the BACKROOM
A. A. M. S. P. B.
- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* DANCE-O-GRAM *
*
843-0510
Private parties for all
Tired of uninspired cover bands and modiester D.J. *s*? Get into the groove with Metropolis Mobile Sound. Professional club and radio D.J.'s. Superior sound and lighting. 150 for all encephalitis.
★★★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
LIBERTY HALL
DEMONS DECLAREMENT
The Decline of the American Empire
HISTORY BY JOHN B. WILSON
FOR RENT
1.2 bedroom luxury apartments now leasing for
rent in Brooklyn, NY. Call 642-7350 at 6:00, then 642-7353
at 642-7358.
1-Bdrm. Apt for Summer Sublease. Nice apartment, dishwasher, close to campus. Rent open.
I Bedroom Apt for summer sublease Furnished
Bedroom B apt for summer sublease Furnished
Call 841 6800 and ask for Trena or
Abbey.
1 BR House just S of campus, no pets. HaLv H,
M_DUN R,M_DUN G, Avail A/4 613-8405
8605
2 Bedroom, 2 Bath for Sublease with Fall option. Balcony overlooks courtyard with swimming pool and basketball court. "Reading of readings" Call and stop by for a look. 843-4806
2. Idfm Townhouse for summer special rate
3. Busselton Townhouse for summer special rate
4. Call 843-905-8784 between 8 a.m. & 5 p.m. on Wednesdays.
4-Bdm, 2 full bath, large kitchen, living room.
Brand new furnished apartment. Sublease summer:
Mastercraft Campus Place. Next to Yello
Sub. Chew (Brazil) 841-3176.
4 Iberm Apartment near campus. Meadowbrook area, 2 baths, dishwasher, refrigerator, garage. Summer sublease with option to pick up lease in August. Rent negotiable. 841 (391).
Accepting deposits for summer or fall at Park
PlaZA South. Summer 1 bedroom $100 2 bedroom
$200 Fall (10 month lease) 1 bedroom $252 2床
bedroom $252 Water pad, gas heated Furnished
available for $30 additional. on KR bill (free)
for $30 additional. on Wk bill W 28th, W 24th,
weekends, W 43rd, W 192d
4 Bedroom house, fully furnished. Available June and July. Family preferred. Call for information.
6 Bedroom home 3 days down, rent low. Available on Otto Low. On龟尾, low, less utilize.
Apt to Saskatee. New, immaculate; furnished 1
bem apt, w/ refrigerator, dishwasher, disposal.
1 block from campus. Frequent price $20.-For
summer $250. Available May 15. Call 789-1653.
Studio available for summer in super apt. technic,
main great maintenance, recreation facilities and
laundry availability I will assume part of expenses.
Call 842 9875 after 6:30 p.m.
Spacious: Peppertree 28H 2 bath.
Chairless/Temma Bus RI Subspace for
Roll-in Shower.
Apartments for summer and fall at University Terrace Apartment, 1607 W. 9th 1 Bedroom for summer, June and July only $190 unfurnished, furnished, all utilities; 1 Bedroom for summer, June and July only, $240 unfurnished, furnished $280, plus all utilities 1 Bedroom for fall, 10 month leave; August 1-June 1, furnished, all utilities; 1 Bedroom for fall; August 1-June 1, $130 furnished, furnished, plus all utilities. Central air, on bus route, large rooms, gas heat. Go see at Aperture 4th, 1607 W. 9th or 8412.20 If you
ARE YOU ATTENDING SUMMER SCHEDULE
for the upcoming start at 21:00?
Delivery Fees: $84.9110
SUBLEASE Two bedroom Village Square Apartment. Large living room, eating kitchen, patio. Pool. Low utilities. Available mid May. $310
941-8385
STOP YOUR APARTMENT SEARCH! Because you come from campus. Excellent for summer student programs.
SUBLEASE. 2 BH furnished apt. 1/2 l/bath, BH
avail Campus $300 month plus room for rent.
BH available on or off campus or 847-796-
0524 or 847-796-0531
CHAMMING STUDIO Fully furnished. Available June 1, 187. Utilities paid, off street parking. Easy walk to KU, downtown, $285 mo. Quiet house. 749-367 aftensions and evenings.
Class. Wood Floor. Dk Apl in house with backporch; 1 block from KU. Available for Sam. Floor. 3 blocks from KU.
Enjoy cooperative living at Sunflower House. You'll have your own room while sharing meals and housework. Spaces open for summer and fall. Ask for And, 749-0871.
- Short term leases
HEATHERWOOD
VALLEY
NOW LEASING
FOR FALL
- Lowest utility bills
-Gas heat, C-A, D-W
accepted
- Quiet location
- FF refrig, Disposal
For more info. call between 964-821-4754
--reserve your room now! For summer and/or fall,
Farmished with most utilities shared. Shared cooking
and bath facilities. Just 2 short blocks from
walking off with aft street parking. No pets.
841-3500
2 BR, 1 Bathroom, Pool, Launchyard Facilities. Built by Rent. Bemidji Heatherwood Apt. B4 857 5590
3 Bedroom Apartment, Summer Sublease: 2 baths, dishwasher, spacious Close to campus
Best Location on Campus, Summer Sublease. HR apL. abbywjhawk Books屋. Furnished office. $275/mo.
Brand new Colony Woods Apst. available for sublease mid-May through December, $185/mo. Dishwasher, microwave, own bedroom, bathroom. Females Bali 641 2617
Experience Student Cooperative Living at
Sunflower House 1406 Tenn.
Private rooms with shared housework and meals
749-0871
Inquire Now For Summer and Fall Spaces
Excellent location. 2 bedroom apartments in four-plex. Carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, and low utilities. Available June 1. Summer Rate $75. Regula $160. At 104 Ilmenau and T341.
Female non-smoking roommate to share 2
bedroom app for #2 school year 845-903, jess
Female non-smoking roommate to share 2
bedroom app for #2 school year 845-903, jess
Also, you can duplex w/ EVERYTHING $100 plus
already. Also, you can avail for summer,
winter, or spring rooms.
Female Roommat need for Summer and/or Fall. Tri-level townhouse, partially solar powered. 2 blocks from campus. Low rent and spiral staircase. DW, microwave. Call 843 6745
Female Roommate needed to share beautifully renovated home. Very close to campus. Summer
Fine location on bedroom basement studio
house. 213 W 50th St. Available 1-877-419-3600 at 1800 Mississippi Ave.
Available 1-877-419-3600 at 1800 Mississippi Ave.
SAVE TIME
- FREE SERVICE
- 50,000 CHOICES
- VIDEO PREVIEWS
- ALL LOCATIONS AND PRICES
Call or stop by.
6600 College Bldd.
Overland Park, Ks.
GREAT PLACES (913)345-8777
For Rent. One Room of a 3 bedroom Apartment.
May & August rent Free. July &八月 is
negotiable Furnished apartment with double
bed and dishwasher. Close to campus. 749-609-618
GORGEOUS 2 bdmr condo with outstanding decor. Includes fireplace, weight room, and POOLSIDE VIEW $420/mo Very low utilities! Call Bath after 5 p.m. 749-3717
GREAT SUMMER RATES Special incentives,
and ROTC Specials
Pinecrest Annexity
Great Deal! Summer Sublease Furnished Apartment split level, two bedrooms, two baths, kitchen, living room at Hanover for only $60 per month. Call Diane; 841-268 or Bentz; 842-405.
HELP*: Need Roomsmates for Summer! Female
Nominee: Smurfe Place Townhouse; $100
month plus 1/4 utilities. Call 864-6243. Ask for
Sheri.
HEY LOOK AT THIS! Brand new 1 Bbm. Apt.
for office. Close to campus D W A/C
D W A/C
GEORGETOWN APARTMENTS
- June & July special: $200
- On the KU Bus Route
- Fenced Pool Area
- Fenced Pool Area
- Tanning Deck
- Completely Privacy Fenced
- Beautifully Landscaped
- Washer & Dryer Hook-ups
- 10, 11, & 12 month leases
630 Michigan 749-7275
Office Hours: 2-6 weekdays
Other Anointments Available
ROOMMATES WANTED Between downtown and
ROOMMATES $110 plus utilities. Call Rick at
(718) 256-4242.
Summer Roommate. Female to live in with 2 others in a brompton Townhouse great location, $175 a month, please talk to ask for Jennifer, or leave message. Rent may be negotiable, must find
NO NEED TO READ ANY FURTHER' Summer
Sublease: 3-bedroom. 1-townhouse.
available mid-May. Certainly furnished. 2 full
bedrooms. Call 841-3583. Ask for John, Phil, or Mark.
ON CAMPUS APARTMENT for summer.
Necessary rent. low utilities. Call 843-4782.
ON CAMPUS APARTMENT for summer
cable rent, low utility! A43 8472 832
ON CAMPUS APARTMENT for summer
cable rent, low utility! A43 8472 832
One bedroom apt. yard, parking, wood floor, $195 discounted plus utilities, 841-6931 starting June 1.
One male graduate student at attractive, quiet,
neighborhood. Rent $260/month, 1633 Vermont, 841-1299
Observed basement apartment available in August.
Walking distance campus/downtown, private entrance,
furnished, $225, includes utilities. 842-9468.
Reserve your apartment now! Just 2 short blocks from university, 1 and 4 bedroom apartments for rental prices paid and off street parking. No pets. 841-5300
ROOMMATE NEEDED for great apartment at
Carmel, CA. Room size 23'x18'. Charge
before 10:30, charge after 9:30. Offer $450.
Mail resume to HR@rooomate.com.
NAISMITHHALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
913-843-8559
AMENITIES
Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the amenities of Naismith Hall. Applications for fall semester are now being accepted while space remains.
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Large i Bedroom Apartment at Hanover Daintree, 14th & Kentucky Newman Daintree, 18th & Keev trying to Summit SUMMER SHIB. Daintree Close to campus. DC, DA, Bellevue. Call 749-6921
SUMMER APSTUBLEASE, SUNISSE PLACE 2
Bathroom, 1020, bapath pool facility, facilities 406
Bathroom, 750, bapath pool facility, facilities 406
SUMMER SCHOOL 7 NO CARP 2 befom available.
Offer valid until June 15, 2018.
avail online at www.summerschool.org
Close to campus. AC, DW. Balcony. Call 749-9621
SUMMER SUBLENE modern and spacious 2 bedrooms. 2 full baths, central air washer and dryer. 749-4823
SUMMER SUBLEASE two bedrooms and 1/12
bathroom apartment. Furnished with swimming
pool, 10 minutes to campus, and on bus route $900
notifiable. Call edudays at 749-1768
SUMMER SUBLEASE STUDIO. Utilities paid.
close to campus. Call 749-2415.
SUMMER SUBLEASE 2 bedroom Townhouse,
down town SUMMER NEGOTIABLE RATES $489.00
SUMMER SUBLEASE 2 bedroom furnished
apartment, close to campus-Tangrove, Call
(316) 531-7650
SUMMER SUILEASE; 3 Bedroom; 1 l/2 bath,
pool, laundry facilities; close to KU. Available
only June 7th, only June 7th, and electric
NEGOTIABLE. rent. Mallia Oglal English
Call 843-3709
Rooms are for summer and the 1987-88 academic year in the Christian living community "Korona" at Ecumenical Christian Ministries. Information come to 1294 Oread or call 843-650-8818.
Roommate wanted, summer, beautiful apt. Close to KU and downtown, spacious, W/D, 8735 plus gas and elec. discount for pet sitting. must like cats(2) . 79-3573
SUMMER SUBLEASE 2 Bdrm, pool. A/C
Available until 15 BEST OFF! Call 841-396-0758
SUMMER SUN SULEASE Towhouse B3.2m, 1Bry,
Garage, Pavilion side, A/C Available May 18
at 9am.
SUMMER SUBLEASE Mails. Apts. 2 Bedroom
May-Aug. 1 May. Paid 842-4317
SUMMER SUBLAGE May 15-Aug 13. 12 Bedroom BedroomHawkesdale Dudley, Rent Negotiated
SUMMER SULSEASE Need two non-smoking females to handle Traffic红线 townhouse. Call
MASTERCRAFT
offers.
apartments--all near KU!
Completely furnished
Consider:
- Custom furnishings
- Energy efficient
- Affordable rates
- Variety of floorplans
- Affordable rates
- Designed for privacy
- Many great locations
- Professional management
CAMPUS PLACE—1145 Louisiana
841.1429
HANOVER PLACE-14th & Mass. 841.1212
SUNDANCE----7th & Florida
TANGLEWOOD—10th & Arkansas
749-2415
OPEN DAILY 1-5
Sublease a once 2 blem ap. 10 min from campa on bus route. Call *Pool*受命 Paolo or Roberto
Sublease Meadowbrook Studio Large plan
available with bedroom Water & cable pad
**Sublease:** Nice 2 bdm. duplex. Avail. May 20
Close to campus.宅 allows you to rent a house or office.
Available May 18, Must meet Stoffeur Place requirements $180/month, plus utilities. Free
Sublease for summer One bedroom apartment adjacent to campus; dishwasher, pool low water pressure
Sublet 2 HR Downbreak apartment DW, FP
in pool, tennis. Caunda and water paid
for
Summer 3 Females or Males wanted 2 Bdrm
Please call 749-3589
Sublease for summer furnished two bedrooms
a. A.C. Great location! B41-0807
Sublease for summer Furnished, 2 bedrooms, very nice apartment one block from campus. Call (800) 556-7891.
Sublease Apartment - Low rent, includes 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths, tennis courts, basketball court, club house, on bus route. 1 Month Free.
841-3196
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, April 29, 1987
15
OLD MILL APTS.
bus route
905 Emery Rd 841-5791
- Close to KU & on
- from Thompson-Crawley
- Laundry facilities
- Rental furniture available
PINECREST
Under New Ownership & Management
SUMMER tenants wanted for spacious 1-bedroom house w/ fence in back yard. Furnished plus microwave and dishwasher. Available right after Christmas, plus 1/4 amenities. Calir Ecvents, 841-3481.
COME TAKE A LOOK!
Sublease 2 brdmu duplex. Available jtst I.Come to campus. 325s, no/mc. Call 841-244 evenings.
All new cabins, cabinets,
cabinetry.
Cable TV
buses to bus route
Laundry facilities
Gas heat, very energy efficient
Air conditioning.
2563 Redbud Lane block E. of Iowa on 26th Furniture by Thompson-Crawley
Summer roommates need Fully furnished
room with daycare 130.00 plus utilities
484-8568 daytime
Summer Special, 3 bedroom apartment with washer and dryer, utilities paid $300; also room in spacious West Lawrence home, $150, washer/dryer, utilities paid 841-414.
Summer Sublease Furnished Studio, close to campground and downtown. Rent negotiable. Call 1-800-253-4760.
Summer Submarine Harvard Square, 2 bedrooms,
specimen living for 3 all usable付费 pool, close
to Harbor.
Summer Sublease: Male roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom apartment. Close to campus, on bus route Swimming Furnished. Please call 841-5583 by 7 p.m.
Summer Sublease, Luxurious Studio, Surisert Terrace Apt. Furnished, laundry facility, $200.00 per month plus utilities. Next to campus. Call after 3:00 p.m. 749-1780
Summer Subsea or longer : 2 bdmr, AC pool cable in Eddingham Place, Call B2011.01
Location
Located among 70 acres of rolling hills and trees, you'll enjoy the convenience of being close to campus and area shopping.
Lifestyle
Meadowbrook offers a selection of spacious and comfortable studios, 1, 2, or 3 bedroom apartments, and townhouses to fit your lifestyle
meadowbrook
RESERVE YOUR
UNIT NOW...
FOR SUMMER OR FALL
Summer Sublease. Nice room, 3 BR duplex, AC
good location on bus route. $890. Low utili-
ty. Call 516-724-1124.
good location on bus route $90. Low utilities.
Last 1/2 of May free. 749-2533 (call late).
Summer Sublease. Need two males to sublease a
bedroom housewife. Furnished. Rent negotiable.
Summer Sublease 3 BR furnished townhouse near campus. bus. Negotiable 841-3640, after 6
Summer Sublease to female: 2 bdmr furnished apt. Very willing to negotiate: 1/2 blocks from
EDDINGHAM PLACE
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
contract
Swimming pool Free Showtime
Satellite T.V.
Exercise Weightroom
Laundry room Fire place
- Energy efficient
- On-Site Management
Open Daily 3:00-5:00
Saturday 9:00-12:00
841-5444
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Management, Inc.
Summer sublet 1, bedroom apt furnished. AC,
A/C of New Jersey, unlimited fire loss $150/mo.
No windows. No air conditioning.
Summer Sublease Sunrise Place 2 Bedroom
Townhouse Pool Free cable rent negotiated
Sunrise Village apartment for rent this summer.
May 19 through July 31. Reasonable rent, pool,
tennis courts less than one year old. Rooms 4
comfortably Call Staci; Clill; Lians; 841-805-686
Berkley FLATS
843-2116 11th & Mississippi
LEASING NOW & FOR FALL
- Over 40 New Units
- Great location
Great location walk anywhere
walk anywhere
* Laundry facilities
- Furnished Units
- On KU Bus Route
SHORT LEASES AVAILABLE
1123 Indiana Furnished by Thompson-Crawley
Summer Suitehouse 3 bedrooms in 4 bedroom apt
1000 sqft. on top of hill for rent
manageable. 841-999-1000
IF YOU LIKE SPACE & QUIET
WE HAVE IT AND YOU
CAN STILL WALK TO CAMPUS
Spacious 2 bedroom
Laundry facilities
Waterfed pool
Swimming pool
10-12 month leases
Summer Sublue Meadowbrook 1 Bedroom 2 balcony 841.0794
Avalon Apartments
- 1 & 2 bedroom
- Gas and water pool
- Laundry facilities
- Close to KU & Hillcrest Shopping Center
- Shopping Center
- On KU bus route
- Extra storage space
- Rental furniture available from Thompson-Crawley
THIS IS IT. We're subscribing our four bedroom two bathroom MASTERCRAFT apartment. It fully furnished and right off campus. 12th & Louis Avenue, 67th Street, Suite 304 to keep as well as negotiate a price. 842-928-936.
Three blocks from Union, two bedrooms apt. for June and July, ac, dishwasher.
Three blocks from Union, two bedroom apt. for June and July, ac dishwasher, backyard patio, basement, neat place $350.00 and low utilities: 740-724-9600
southbridge
Top of the hill location, studio summer sublease
to rent by rent; call 842-2501
Wanted: Student to share 4 bedroom house.
100 mo. plus 1/4 tuition. Summer and or Fall
FOR SALE
Two Bedroom Apartment: Summer Sublet with Fall Option Five Minutes to Fraser. Low utilities, Modern Design. Leave message at 842-1020
Two Rooms Available for Availability at 1720 Louisville.
HILLVIEW APTS.
1745 W. 24th 841-5797
1981 Suzuki GM405-Great Best Cafe. Safe with racing fairing. $800 B.O. B4-1545.
800 B.O. B4-1545.
- 1 & 2 BR units
1972 WV Bug; fair condition, runs $500 00, 843 7463
eeks. Ask for Stephanb
1922 Honda Nightjack 450 includes Ferring, Hardie
luggage, rackage pack, Crusie condi. clo-
nets, fire extinguisher.
ASH POR COMPACT DISCS 841-336 evening
drawing Table and other Drafting equipment
- On bus route - near shopping
- Ample off-street parking
from Thompson-Crawley
1981 Honda CB 750 Custom. Excellent Condition.
battery, with Extras. Call 442 721-6738 or
(800) 330-6939.
Wanted: Summer Sublease. One Female Koomite to share w/ 2 others in Bornfurnished furnished room in a house in the City.
1985 Honda CB 650, only 900 miles. crush cranks,
only $1190 B.O. B 749-848, 842-668
1984 Moped Honda Sprege good condition $250
Mopeds with 7.0L engines 7.0kW
- laundry facilities
- On bus route no
FLY TO CASABLA Morocco Jumve 2. One way
ticket $775 notifiable 842-138 Ask for Mark
*票钱 $75 negotiable 842-1833 Ask for Mark*
*TO FAIL, 20° Olympic Class Sailboat. Floyd Dutchman. Lightweight. Fast, and Affordable.
Call evenings. 749-3905.*
Brand New Mountain Bike. Black Fuji Bivd JLC
Barely reden, Great Bike. Good Price. 842-1843
1966 Yamaha Rivag Jog, one owner, excellent condition. Full accessories. Beautiful Call 841-7651 or email info@yamaha.com
FOR SALE: Schwin Varsity 10 speed bike. Call Lori B. at 842-6067.
For Sale. Long Black Clutch $30 or best offer.
Great for Summer. Call 842-0628
For sale 172 BMW Motorcycle 606/5 20.000
original mine, excellent shape, Mant suit!
For Sale: 1978 Malibu Classie $1,000 Call 749-5168. Leave message will get back to you For Sale: King-size waterbed w/ bumper
GHETTO BLASTER New new Sony, still in Box, Auto Reverse, Equalizer, and Detachable Speakers. Only 87% Perfect for Summer. Call Brian at 842-9266.
IBM PC/XT compatible, includes monochrome graphics, monochrome monitor, switchable Turbo motherboard w / 512K. 1 Flippy drive. 8875. 6 month warranty included. 842-5495.
LEADING EDGE MODEL "D" "P", 1604, IBM Compile. Complete with surge protector. Sharp color monitor. Panasonic XK P1001 printer, word processor, spreadsheet software, $400. CALL 8041 3913.
Guitar: Alvarez Acoustic/Electric Stereo
Sale price: $20.00 20% off $5.00 only six months. Mint-64 bursa. $89.99
MAXS COMICS Comic Books, Playbills, Pen-house, etc. 811 New Hampshire.
Never Been Used. Fanatic 1015 Sailboard 12 X
Never Been Used. North Sail 900 $0.00 or less.
for 749 5483
for 749 5483
NAD 3155 integrated amp 250 £0.00 Advertised last
hour, buyer has to back out of sale. Call Mark,
877-746-8928
**** MOTHIRALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
300 sqm 00d good used furniture
512 EH 87 749-6001
Nike NE2 $29.00 x 35.105 lens with Micr $315.00
Telephone 841-6429, IAidon
Motorola Moto X3
NFE black body with 35-70 Micro zoom
$22.50. Gitzon mounted $60.00 @84.7756
www.nfe.com
PIANO for Upright good condition $400
149.227 Kemp,Regg
Tuxedo Liquidation: Last Week. Three piece tuxes only 17.48 ea. All accessories 1.98 each. Open noon till 6:00. Closing forever April 30th! 900 New Hampshire.
SYNTHESIZER ISOLAR Juno 106 614 key full size analog synthesizer 128 programmable sounds, full MIKI less than one year old. $625 negotiate 749-3539.
SUZUKI 61540L Good campus transportation-
a moped to 330 negel. Dui 841-649-64
...
AUTOSALES
Wedding Dress, never worn, size 6-10 Call Kathy,
1980 Mazda GLC. Good condition, Economic.
7280 mlm Four door, radio, heater. $140 Call
855-662-3500
1978 Postmaster Sunburr Fair condition, dependable
Must sell this week $100 bogus notatlite, keep
Must sell this week $100 bogus notatlite, keep
WINDSURE never been used 12 ft. Comes Comp.
$600.00 best for sale 843.187 Pete
A 1969 Firebird, 350. AM/FM, Cassette, A.C.
B 1972 Firebird, 450. AM/FM, Cassette, 864. BD-
450. AM/FM, Cassette, 864. BD-
1982 Silver Camaro. Great school car. Very
comfortable. $4,000 mileage. 4-cylinder,
mileage .4 cu. ft. Asking $5,000 but not搜
65,000 miles. Amazing value.
73 Chevy Impala $490 or best offer 81-5232
74 Superduty, Superbad, Pioneer Screen, Cube
75 Chevrolet Caprice $649 or best offer 81-5232
Must Sell All Classes: due to graduation I in apparel
and leather, super shaper runs great. 749-807, keep trying
start for 75 Pacer New: Brakes, shocks, springs,
starter, carb, w.pump, distributor. Great shape.
Reliable good gas mileage $95/$18 @ 64-0333.
Cooler with my i20 Ford Mishang. Inside with
my i20 Ford Mishang. Inside with
LOST-FOUND
Found at 4th & Mississippi Large white male
Call (317) 865-2252 or m.a. or after 12pm.
9:00-12:00 before 12am
Drs. R. and S Bogey. Your patients appreciate your concern. We’re itching to know if you make house calls? “Remember, there are still no men, our accountants and associates are our ‘Eagles,’” 308
Found. Watch behind Robinson tennis courts to identify. 842-5810
Nice "Sanus" Stereo set including amplifier,
equalizer, equalizer, and 2 speakers.
Call 749-1985
LOST: Female puppy Black Lab/German Sheep mix 14 weeks old, kid Lenaile, 749-1800
LOST on 4/11/17. Men's Seiko watch, reward Call Steve at 824-4700
Lost: Set of keys on two key chains. Please return
to Lahaytowers or call 841-5446.
The Student Housing Department has openings for student janitorial workers. Must be able to work in a variety of settings. August 14. Residence hall room may be provided with seating. Contact helpful. Contact Carol Cooper at 844-753-2262.
HELP WANTED
ARLINES CRUISELINES HUMBERT; Summer
1982; New York, NY 10017; Television:
Cassie, Newseye; 918) 944-444 Ext. 135
FREE TRIANGLE NETWORK Beginning May 11 8:41 a.m.
M-W FRI 9:30 a.m. Boston family for learning for mothers, help start July/August, min. 1 yr. commitment, room &早餐
call 617-696-3912. B "Burrittle," Z7 Overlook
call 617-696-3912.
Top Fortune 500 company will be hiring outstanding students (or student organizations) for on-campus teaching and strong interest in marketing, advertising, and public relations are preferred. Students must be beginning of Fall semester and during first week of school. $90 plus hour cash bonus. Excellent training for groups. Campus Dimensions, Inc. 2000 713-894-2821 Elena Hoyt, bhoyt@topfortune.com
Are you good with children? Would you like to be paid to live with a California family and help with children? **HELP PARENTS** 770 Menlo Ave, 219 Milpitas, CA 94035 (415) 322-3816.
DIRECTOR TEACHER, DAYCARE, CENTER
and BEC required, MA desirable Experience,
familiarity with Lawrence child care highly
respected. Req. Bachelor's degree in
Salary 12,000 plus benefits. Send resume and
three references to Search Committee, c/o
Lawrence Housing Authority, 1600 Haskell
Avenue, Lawrence, RS 66043. Resumes must be
submitted by May 8. ILA is an EEO/AO
Employer
CounselorsCamp Wiedemann Hiring for summer Camp 311-684-5431
Clerk typist in East Asian Language and Cultures. 10-20 hours per week. Work study applied.
Waterfront Staff Camp Weidemann Now hiring WSI and Lifecycle Call 318-684-6531.
BABYSISTER: my home. Good boys. 2-6 years.
M-W-F:早餐. Beginning May 11, 811-453.
DATA CLERK, 14 hour, 20 hrs week, word work computer, data entry, and office work. Must be KEI enrolled for one hour, spring or summer leave. Must apply, 864-300-6360. Application deadline: May 11.
Cocktail Waitresses Need Fartly weekend
workings. The average hourly wage 8 W 34th
(behind McDonald's) s 7.4-10. Cooks,
Dishwashers, and Line Personnel, Apply
between 2 and 5 p.m. at Sirion Stockade,
101-105 St. Martin Street, London.
EARN $3 PARTTIME! Established manufacturer seeking Aggressive Students to promote Your School Sites GOOD INDUCTION AND EASY VACUUM VELIMEL 825 Lackman R. LENZA, KS 66219
FULL AND PART TIME HELP!* National Firm preparing for Spring and Summer work. If accepted, you will earn 810 starting. Some evening and weekend positions are available and some evening positions require a high quality, corporate scholarships are awarded, internships are possible, and you may earn 2,34 credits/gr or semester. During summer break you must work 9am-5pm. 341-867-Mon-Fri between 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Get the best of both worlds! Part time summer work available for men and women. Must have flexible hours and live in Greater Kansas City. You must be a full-time employee available. No experience necessary will train Applications taken at Allied Van Lines, 4304 Flint, Lenexa, KS, Saturday, May 2nd at 8:30 a.m to 10:00 a.m. GOVERNMENT JOBS, $16.00 per job. yr. Now GOVERNMENT JOBS, $67.00 per job. Ext. R 978-4958 for current federal list.
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
HALF-TIME DIRECTOR-DOUGLIAS COUNTY
depending on experience. Qualifications:
expience with volunteers, good writing, speaking
skills, understanding of the business,
self-motivated. Responsible for grant
meeting.
Send恳请 outreach and development
Sand Send恳请 outreach and development
Lawrence 90944 Deadline: 1189 Massachusetts
Lawrence 90944 Deadline: 1189 Massachusetts
tions, self-motivated. Responsible for, grant
writing/management. bookkeeping. reports;
presentations; recruiting, organizing evaluating
volunteers; community outreach and develop-
JKHIK-FM needs staff persons for summer and fall-applications at the Alkamex. Must be at least 18 years old.
"Lerootz" A Skincare product proven successful
for 10 years, it is now available in the
introduction to America by Gunila of Sweden in the near future. We are looking for dedicated persons
for a series of "Free Tries." If interested please
contact us at gunila@skincare.com
Massachusetts Street Deli and Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse now hiring food service and table service employee. Must have a least one year exp in the restaurant industry or service starting pay 3.75 per hour plus profit sharing, table service 2.01 per hour plus tips. Apply to Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse above Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse.
NANNY POSITIONS AVAILABLE Good salary
positions Dallas. Texas Call 9:49 p.m. (214)
488-2507
NEED EXTRA MONEY? work as a cashier for June (9) week of (August 18, 19) and 21) fee collection. Applications accepted through April 30 at General Incarriage or L·Oakey 308
Needed: Line cook, 3 years experience necessary.
Tuesday and Wednesday, Alvaran Country
PART-TIME DRIVE HOSPARENT ASSISTANT. Need mature individual willing to make a 1 year commitment at a local Christian Boy's Ranch. 3 m., M-F, P and 9-3 Saturday's per month. Call AlaT at 482 9356 for application. O.C. Kernville, P.O. Box 309, Lawrence, OH 60046. 842 9356
DONALD G. STROLE
- D W I.'s & Traffic
* Fake I.D.'s & other criminal offenses
* Family Law & other legal problems
Part time advertising sales representative needed in Lawrence for small weekly newspaper advertising.
Part-time position with interior design and retail
decoratation for the Drapery Manufacturing 210 w. 38th Terrace.
CITY OF NEW YORK
Rape Victim Support Service seeking volunteers. Work with victims of sex assault and give community programs. Training provided. Must be a graduate degree in psychology, 7:30 p.m. on 1419 Massachusetts at Headquarters. Application at headquarters & Emily Taylor, 644 W. 8th St., 8:30 p.m. to mail R V S.S. 1419 Massachusetts, 60044
REWARDING SUMMER for sophomore and older college men in Colorado mountains working with children. Backpacking, horseback riding, skiing. Travel abroad now; include program interests and goals. SAN BORN CAMPS. Florissant, CO @BIBL. Secretary-Reposition point open immediately.
Secretary Descriptionist position open immediately
warmly. Req. Master's degree in wpm, and fwp. Word processing experience
required. Send resume to Secretary of State, July and
July and 20 hours per week August and 17-84
school year. Applicant at 719 Massachusetts, above.
SUMMER JOBS IN NORTH JOHNSON COUNTY
Temporary and permanent positions available
Work 20 to 35 hours per week. Flexible schedule.
Applied by telephone at 11:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. (436) 841-6000.
For Mr. Jeffries
SUMMER JOB FORS THE ENVIRONMENT EARN $2,000 to $3000 PHRG hiring summer staff in 70 cities, including Kansas City, St. Louis, Chicago, Madison, Boulder, Seattle, San Francisco, San Diego, Boston, DC Career opportunity available. Call SARA tsoilrre 1-800-622-2223
Summer job: Part-time Nanny needed for 2 year old boy at my house. You must be a New Yorker and have a No. five day through Friday, beginning May 11th. We will accept references. Pay $2 50 hour Please电话 814-208-6944
SUMMER WINE COOLER MERCHANDISERS
Learn marketing at its most basic level: Students
needed merchandise leading line of wine coolers.
must be 21 years old, have reliable car and live in
the Kansas City area. Send resume to Merchant
Avenue, Kansas City, MO 64116, 40 Atlantic Ave,
Akansas City, MO 64116
The Mathematics department is now accepting applications for the position of graduate teaching assistant and a junior research or quenchments for a bachelor's degree by August 15, 1987 and have a strong mathematical background. Applicants must pass an oral exam demonstrating English competency. Applicants should submit a letter in writing to the Mathematics department and two letters of recommendation to Charles Himmelberger, de. of Math., 217 Strong Hall, University of Texas at Austin.
Hardees
Hardees of Lawrence on the Kansas Turnpike is currently hiring for all shifts.
- Flexible Scheduling
- Start at 3.50 to
3.75 per hour
3. 75 per hour.
We are also taking applications and hiring people who are interested in employment starting in late May or early June.
- Meal Discounts and
Opportunity for advancement
PERSONAL
Call 843-8203 Today
B.A.C. I- will always be there when you need me
Lav v.a. Donald
Congratulations New ACACA actives. Good luck
for the upcoming season!
FOR A GALLERY TIME CALL 783-6243
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, NERD! Study now and we will make it up later. NEAly, Nerdette
Leaving from my life you took away my joy. After the pain has finally gone you will have forgotten me and there will be nothing to hold in my arms. Lock your doors girls TJ is back in town!
Love that Eric Love. Always running into you.
Mark G. Always remember me and the Karate kid. I'll never stop loving you, K.M.
Shawnee Mission South . 83 grades Reunion/Grad Party May 9, at 10 a.m. on Beautiful Lone Star Lake. For info and details call Lorib Lort @ 842-0067. We deeply appreciate the deepest gratitude to all of the friend students and instructors who have shown such kindness and are a great source of great tragedy. We will certainly miss him.
TJ LEads the Men of Delta Chi In battle to conquer the almighty BEE-VAR'M. May 3, 1877
spare the almighty BEE-VAR! May 9, ... To Dave, my favorite guy. The past four weeks, I watched him play the guitar with Sandi, Sandi to the guy in the blue bathing suit at Robinson: Your smile is cute, but why don't you come to talk to him? And how can we not talk to him?
Want to dance and get naked for a group of fun girls at a bachelor party? Call 749-7584
MISCELLANEOUS
♠
ACE
♠
THE ASSOCIATION OF COLLEGIATE ENTREPRENEURS IS HOLDING AN INFORMATIONAL MEETING ON APRIL 30 AT 6:30 P.M. IN THE WALNUT ROOM IN THE KANSAT UNION.
SERVICE
704 MASS.
842-4000
SPECIAL YOUTH FARE
(Age 12-25)
$469 Round trip
Depart May 29 or June 11
Call today for details.
Be creative in gift gifting. Fulfillant with beautiful bounties. Portraits for all occasions. Call us 212-576-8039.
BUS. PERSONAL
HEMACHINE BACKACHE ARM PAIN, LEGG
BLEEDING COMPLETE quality (chronic care) drill Dr. Mark
Tillman
Enjoy smooth, creamy
Frozen Yogurt
that tastes like Ice Cream
but with 80% less fat!
--FREE SAMPLES--
I Can't Believe It's YOGURT!
Frozen Yourt Stores
OPEN: 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Daily Noon-11 p.m. Sundays
Louisiana Purchase Shopping Center
GLEY-LIESHAN* for WKS/MO/Info PERSONALLY. P.O. Box 218, Dialy City, CA 94507. Send resume to Graduate Students. Do Your Parents need a place to stay for Commencement? Two Air Force Air Cadets are needed.
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING
HOT TURB AT HALF CULT
RADIO 71325
10 VISITS $25.00
25th & Iowa · 841-6232
MATTE BROWN
Most reasonable rates in town for all your photo needs especially graduation, resumes, and portfolios. Call Photos Plus, 749-3068. Need music for your wedding "Call Jean, 843-7304."
REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquarters.
We're here because we care.
8-6 a.m. to 4 p.m.
We're always open.
New Connection, 300 Elm, Elm, North Lawrence,
Burlington, NJ to 6.6 mileage by appointment.
Hair Salon: Hair saloon in April and May; $8 cuts and sets, $10 permits
Rare and Used Equipment Buy, Sale or Trade
www.hairsalon.com
SERVICES OFFERED
AUTO-TINTING: Best scratch resistant solar
lithium-ion life warranty. PROTINT of
太阳能电池。
MATH TUOR FOR 1976, M A., $4./hr (courses
above) 199, M /r; 843.9602
CHIMSON SUN PHOTO is looking for young women interested in developing a modeling portfolio, 15% over direct cost. No set fee. Call 841-9689.
K1 PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ekachrome
servicing within 24 hours. Complete B/W service.
PASSOVER $6.00. Art & Design Building,
Room 206, 864-4767
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation reserved 841.7290
PRIVATE OFFICE Ogb-Oyn and Abortion Services (Overland Park) . (911) 801-8678
**MUSIC** *H*-8 track studio, P A and Lights,
Red House Audio 8 track studio, MUSIC
Mobile Party Music, Maximum Audio Wizardry,
Call Brad 749-1275.
WE'RE YOUR
AUTHORIZED
commodore
REPAIR SPECIALISTS
MIDWEST
APPLIANCE SERVICE
Metcalf South Mall
95th & Metcalf, O.P. Ks.
(813) 347-6888
Reliable Grad Assist wants to house-sit for summer. Ref. avail. Call 749-4065 (Scott).
Styressamst. All ladies' dresses can be made here in town. You choose your favorite designs or styles from the latest fashion magazines. I will make them for you. Call Su, 814-349.
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided 841-2316.
1-1000 pages. No job too small or too large. Ace
wordprocessing, MIDL and Java. 827-M4H, 841-M19I
852-M7H, 863-M19I
A Z W Processuring Worker. Quality resumes,
Resume Forms, Reqs. and Files. Filed
storage available. 843-1860 up to 9pm.
AAA TYPING has low cost word processing/document storage starting at $19/pg. Call 8412942 after 6 p.m. weekdays, any time weekends. Campus pickup available.
A2 professional typing. Term papers, Theses.
B2 professional typing. A reasonable HSM
Ethernet Typewriter. 842-3240.
24-Hour Testing 13th semester in Lawrence
Resource Information, papers. Go to camp at
www.lawrence.edu/testings/2019.
Accurate Word Processing. Meadowbrook location
experience. Call 749-1968
EVENINGS
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, terms, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mail lists. Letter quality
printing, spelled correct. 842-2742.
Absolutely Fast Typing. Dependable and experienced with reasonable rates. Call Kathy at 814-340-9 a.m. p.m. or at 768-804-2afer 5 a.m.
814-340-9 a.m. p.m. or at 768-804-2afer 5 a.m.
WITHIN LIFELINE 814-340-9 Resumes #15
WRITING LIFELINE 814-340-9
DONT pay too much for resumes! Ours average $10.00. Copies on patron $2.50 per page.TRANSCRIPTION UNLIMITED, 10.12 Massachusetts, 842-469. Professional Templates.
Experienced Typeist Dissertations, terms, paper papers, etc. Reasonable Rates Call 842-3203. For professional typing/writing process, call 842-3203. Spring special $12.20, page, double-screw, nca.
I-1 I TRIO Word processing. Responsible.
Conscientious. Reliable. Call 842-3111 for service
Experiential typetist .dissertions, term papers
842-3120 after 6:15 p.m. M or S/Suil M
842-3121 after 7:00 p.m.
Dependable, professional, experienced
TRANSCRIPTION also; standard tape 843-8877
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW
will return. KEEP WATCHING THIS AD
Guaranteed Perfect typing done on a word process. Located near Lawrence Hospital Call 617-208-3550.
GOOD IMPRESSIONS Typing/Word Process-
er Resumes-Spelling corrected 841-706 Typeet
Resumes-Spelling corrected 841-706
Quality typing; excellent editing; grammar
testing; high-quality delivery; reliable
packup delivery available 843-0247
KU SECRETARY Typing and word processing
KBU securely, fast, accurate. Spelling corrected,
letter quality Pickup on campus. Monica 841-8246
Evenings-weekends.
TYPING-Call 842-4868 before 10 p.m
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word process
manuscript, recourses, thesis, letter
to cover
Smart Word Processing includes editing and spelling checking. Very reasonable rates. Foster, 749-270-3186
Resume Service-laser-written 10 copies ONLY
$395-749-2195 after 5 p.m.
TYPIING PLUS assistance with composition editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses dissertations, papers, letters, applications resume. HAVE M.S. Degree 814-6254
3 Summer Subleases, males, extremely close to campus. nice. $85/92/month plus utilities.
Donations of books and magazines needed. Support Friends of the Lawrence Public Library) Brantford, NY.
Why pay for typing when you can have word resumes. Since 1905, B443-347. These resume学历
WANTED
Nested: roommate for a very nice fully
turned-up apartment. on bus route, pools &
baths, gym, parking lot, laundry room.
Melissa Female Roommate Wanted! May through
September 2 bd apartment. Call 841-8816.
Early morning.
Needed: One or two roommates for summer. New trippers, overnight bed, fully furnished; new car park; private parking space.
Non-smoking Male Roofman wanted to share 2
weeks of job, yearly $150 plus one. Call:
643-829-1222, Calif Office.
Personal care attendant needed for female quadriadic EVeenings. M-Su, $4.00/hour. 842-1794. Resident Roommae needed to share 3 Baths quiet, nice room, 842-978, call after 5:00 p.m.
ROOMMATE for a店 in a brand new, well located apt. 4 & I Brats, tastesfully furnished 160㎡
ROOMMATE NEEDED FOR SUMMER MONTHS. LIVE in Meadowbrook Apartment; Swimming pool; dog-friendly kitchen; tennis court; patio.
Roammate wanted to share large 2 BR apt.
Available June 1st, 1887 for summer and school year
97-88. 9th Street location, Laundry facilities,
Gymnasium, Rent plus 1/2 dependant and
1/2 dependant.
Roommate $157.00 Deposit, Negotiable Cheap
Summer only or into Pail Fillment 841 1069
DVDs, CDs & more!
STOP One Roommate Needed Summer w/ Fall
Spring option, cabin, cable garden, Lo Deposit
Sill homeless for next year? Roommate wanted
room in apartment. Payment 1/2 rent and 1/3
charge. Call 844-590-7675
SUMMER ROOMMATE NEEDED Brand New
room rent. 845-3490, Anthony
Mary rent. 845-3490, Anthony
Summer Roommate. luxury 2 bdrm. Sunrise
Place townhouse fully furnished. pool $100 mm
$125,000.
Summer roommate must for furnished apartment on bus route, 1j/mo. plus 1/2 utilities
Summer roomsmates have fully furnished house. Close to campus 130.00 plus utilities
WANTED: Female roommate to share expenses in house at 1015 Illinois for 1987-86 school year. If interested call (417) 867-9115 ask for Ann, Laura, or Nancy.
WANTED. Roommates to share a nice large bed room townhouse. 13th & Kentucky. 842 877-7
Wanted. Good used computer with three features. IBM/AMiga mini-crystal. 95% MKD603 6-bed
Modern Option? 843-5354, Leave in
Help: Want for Summer Near, agile, quick,
thorough, for odd cleaning jobs for yard.
porch, some inside. Call 843-8580
Wanted: Male roommate to ap at Colony
Woods Must be neat, to sharecribe Call 749-1883
16
Wednesday, April 29, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Double Coupons
Dillons FOOD STORES
Double Your Savings On All Manufacturer's "Cents Off" Coupons Up To And Including 50¢ In Value. Bonus Special-
F. Williams
COTTAGE CREME
WITH CHEESE AND NUTS
Small Grower
NET WT. 34 OZ (118 g)
Dillon's Cottage Cheese
Small or Large Curd. Lowfat Small Additional Purchases $100 Ctn.
Super Coupon!
Dillon's Cottage Cheese
K.U.
ROCKY TOP
COLA
K.U.
ROCKY TOP
COLA
Pettons
Super Coupon!
Limit Two Bills. With Coupon
Limit One Coupon Per Custr-
Coupon Good April 29. May
Super Coupons Not Included
41260 09025 7
ROCKY TOP
COLA
79¢
Limit One Cm. With Coupon
Limit One Coupon Per Customer
Coupon Cup April May S. 1987
Coupon Cup June July Double Coupon Program
Bonus Special
2 Liter Plastic Btl.
61040987
Rocky Top Pop
Assorted Flavors, Regular or Diet Additional Purchases 69C Btl.
Pittbons
Rocky Top Pop
Assorted Flavors, Regular or Diet.
2 Liter Plastic Btl.
BARS
FRANKS
Limit Two Bills, With Coffee
Limit One Coffee Per Customer
Coupon Good April 29, May 5, 1987
In Double Coupon Program
With This Coupon
Bonus Special
12 oz. Pkg.
Bar-S Beef Or Meat
Franks
Additional Purchases 79C Pkg.
39¢
61240 000037
Super Coupon!
Beef or Meat,
12 oz. Pkg.
Bar-S Franks
With This Coupon
Rollbros
With This Coupon
59¢
Del Monte
KU
Delmon
Ad Prices Effective
April 29th Thru
May 5th, 1987.
Limit Rights Reserved.
(Ad Not Good In Pittsburg, Ks.)
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
HAPPY TURKEY
Thursday
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Details. page 2
April 30, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 144
(USPS 650-640)
Legislature approves fee release, pay increase
By CHRISTOPHER HINES
Staff writer
TOPEKA — On the first day back from their recess, the state House and Senate yesterday gave final approval to the University of Kansas' 1987 fee release, fiscal 1988 operating budget, and classified and faculty salary increases.
■ See related story p. 3.
"It wasn't a total surprise," said State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, of the state Legislature's quick approval of the measures. "But it was a little touch-and-go this morning."
Within hours of one another, the full House and Senate yesterday approved budget recommendations made by a joint appropriations conference committee two
weeks ago. The measures now go to Gov. Mike Hayden, who is expected to approve them.
Cancellor Gene A. Budig went to Topeka early yesterday and met with 53 legislators in a last-minute effort to gain support for the University's budget.
"It gave me the opportunity to make the case once again," he said. "It has been a very productive and positive day for the University of Kansas, but we are taking nothing for granted, and I will be back today and tomorrow."
House and Senate action yesterday included a 1987 fee release of $953,000. Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said the money would be used to pay for summer courses that were opened Tuesday.
*From what we we're hearing at the
Legislature, they were not going to touch the committee's recommended fee release," Brinkman said. "Students paid those fees, and the money is going where it will benefit them most."
house and Senate leaders met two weeks ago for four days of intense negotiations to work out their differences on several spending bills. During this year's legislative session, the House consistently has lowered Hayden's fiscal 1988 budget, which cut state university budgets, and the Senate has given strong support to his budget recommendations.
The committee recommended, and the House and Senate approved, a faculty salary increase of 3 percent and a classified employee salary increase of 2 percent, both beginning Jan. 1. The House and Senate also restored Hayden's 38 percent
1987 budget cut, which cost KU $3.1 million.
Budig he also met with legislators to win support for KU's 1989 budget, including a new three-year financing plan proposed by the Board of Regents.
"I was there to make a good showing," he said. "This plan is very important to the future of the University."
"You always want to do what we need to do." Winter said. "However, I'm never completely satisfied with anything less than perfection."
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, said that final approval yesterday of changes in the corridor system of state university financing was an important victory. The change would add $1.7 million to KU's budget starting in 1989. But Winter said he was disappointed about the small salary increases.
The Senate approved Winter's proposal to return $41,000 that was cut from the University's law school budget. The money would be part of an omnibus spending bill to be approved by the Legislature before the end of this session.
State Sen. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said approval of the committee's recommendations required a delicate coalition of Democrats and Republicans.
"I am really thrilled, and I feel 100 percent better," she said. "I am proud that we got together to support this bill."
Solbach said the universities would have received more money if Hayden had given stronger support to his original budget recommendations.
"Instead of the House moving towards the governor's position, he is moving towards the House position," Solbach said.
Speeders' quick wits can mean no tickets
By PAUL BELDEN
Staff writer
Road warriors, listen up.
You're going to want to clip this article and tape it to your dashboard for the ride home. Because you're not safe yet.
res. Congress did pass a bill to let states raise their speed limits, but as a highway patrol spokesman said, "It's not been raised here. We are still enforcing the 55 miles per hour speed limit in the state of Kansas."
If they pull you over on the flatlands somewhere, you're going to have to be fast with a good story.
So here are some of what the KU police officers consider the all-time best attempts to avoid a ticket. Memorize them if you have to. Some of them have even worked, and all of them are true.
Steve Hoyt, KU police officer,
told of the time he saw a car
speeding east on Ninth Street
about 12:30 a.m.
"I finally got the car stopped after playing siren songs. I approached the driver, asked to see her driver's license and inquired as to what the rush was.
"She burst into tears and said, 'I have head lice!' "
Some excuses are just too ignorant to work.
And she had the medicine to prove it. In sympathy, Hoyt let her off with a warning.
Scott Ferris, KU police investigator, said he once stopped a motorist who had run a stop sign.
"Everybody knows you don't have to stop after midnight," was the driver's excuse. He got a ticket.
Here is another excuse of the ignorant variety, as told to Ferris: "My friend got a ticket here last week, and I wanted to see if I could get away with it." He didn't.
Another driver once told Ferris that KU police couldn't give tickets off campus.
"I proved him wrong." Ferris said.
Always be prepared to back up your story. Don't expect a police officer to take your word for it.
See TICKETS, p. 6, col. 3
John Brothers, KU police
POLICE
KU police officers like Gene Hatfield hear many excuses from drivers pulled over for traffic violations
Photo illustration by Darcy Chang/KANSAN
All-sports ticket may increase $5
By LAURA BOSTROM
Before taking effect, the KUAC budget must be approved by Cancellor Gene A. Budig and the Board of Regents.
Staff writer
The increase was approved yesterday afternoon at the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation board meeting in the Adams Alumni Center. The ticket price also was increased in 1986.
Student sports enthusiasts may be asked to pay $60 for next year's all sports ticket — $5 more than this year.
Susan Wachter, assistant athletic director, brought up the increase as part of the 1987-88 budget report.
Wachter said that the costs of operating an athletic program had increased and that ticket prices reflected that increase.
"Until football revenue comes up, the Athletic Department has a problem," said Sue Glatter, Student Senate representative to the KUAC board. "They've got to make it up somewhere."
Glatter said increased capital costs and building improvements were using substantial parts of the department's budget.
Students who purchase the all-
sports ticket may attend all home basketball and football games and the Kansas Relays.
The individual prices reflect a $5 total increase in the basketball ticket price for students and a $1-a-game, or $15, increase for tickets without the student discount. The price of football tickets will not change.
Wachter said the tickets individually were worth $25, $40 and $2, for football, basketball and the relays, respectively.
The student all-sports ticket cost $45 from when it was first used in 1981 until it was raised to $55 a year ago.
Wachter said the all-sports ticket was a bargain compared to those offered by other athletic departments.
Glatter said she was concerned about the proposed ticket price increase when she first heard about it.
"But it's something they have to do." Glatter said. "It's affecting everyone across the board."
Some students said they still would buy the ticket regardless of the $5 increase.
"That isn't anything really," said Ralph Ryan, Kansas City, Kan.
See KUAC. n. 6. col. 6
Staff writer
By JOHN BUZBEE
Fraternity to rebuild; damage was $450,000
Sunday's fire in the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity house caused about $450,000 damage, a representative of the fraternity said yesterday.
But the fraternity will be back, said Tom Wertz, chapter adviser.
"We're full speed ahead," he said.
"We'll be open, and it will be new."
The fraternity will repair the building, 1645 Tennessee St., this summer and hopes it will be ready for occupancy by Aug. 31. Wertz said
Insurance covered the building and all chapter property. Most members insured their own property. An electrical short caused the fire, investigators said Monday.
gators and riffle Lawrence fire chief Jim McSwain said Monday that fraternity members contributed to the blaze by fighting it themselves and waiting to call the department.
But a statement issued by the alumni board said the fraternity
members called the fire department immediately and fought the fire while they waited for the department to arrive.
Fraternal president Ken Jones, Leawood junior, said the fire wouldn't dent the house's membership or cause any problems for rush.
"If anything, I feel like our house is stronger than ever," he said. "It's really brought everybody together."
None of the building's occupants were hurt in the fire, which broke out around 1 p.m. But many of the 62 live-in members lost clothes, books, notes and everything else kept in their rooms.
Some teachers are giving the members breaks in classes, Jones said, and others are not.
"I guess that's life," he said.
"We're grateful for everything that's going right. With the help from the University and the help from our friends, I couldn't have asked for more."
Few KU applicants to be hurt by deadline, counselors say
Bv BENIAMIN HALL
New deadlines on applications for admission to the University of Kansas shouldn't cause problems for many students, high school counselors said yesterday.
Staff writer
Norm Reidel, a college counselor at New Trier High School, said the new application deadline wouldn't be a problem for students there.
KU decided this semester to begin enforcing deadlines on admission. Tomorrow is the deadline for in-state applications, and out-of-state applications had to be filed by April 1.
New Trier sent more students to KU than any other high school in the Chicago area, Bruce Lindvall, director of admissions, said yesterday.
Reidel said that many universities imposed earlier deadlines than KU. The University of Illinois, for example, has a Nov. 15 priority deadline for applications.
"Most of our kids will already have filed applications by April 1," he said.
Lois Mazuca, a counselor at Glenbrook North High School in the Chicago area, said students were accustomed to application deadlines.
"Many schools in this country have deadline dates. So Kansas was an exception in that area," she said. "The kids just took it in stride here."
Mazzuca said she encouraged students to apply to colleges from September through December.
"If the information is getting to the students in a timely manner, there shouldn't be a problem," she said.
"It's really only fair to colleges to have deadlines, for planning and to know who's coming."
But Sherry Slade, a counselor at Lawrence High School, said the change caused some problems because it occurred in the middle of the year.
'Many schools in this country have deadline dates. So Kansas was an exception in that area.'
— Lois Mazzuca
Glenbrook North
High School counselor
"I think it was confusing, to say the least," she said. "It was done at an inappropriate time, because it wasn't in all the information they sent out."
Slade said faculty members at Lawrence High School had made an extra effort to publicize the deadlines.
"We've made a big deal of it here," she said.
But students at high schools more distant from Lawrence may be less likely to know about the deadlines in time, she said.
stade said she supported the idea of KU imposing an application deadline.
"We've told our kids all along to apply early anyway," she said.
Linnavall said any student applying to KU late in the spring would have trouble finding housing and getting into orientation.
"All of these people have expected this." he said. "They're not surprised. They just ride these kids to say, 'Do these things early.' They're very supportive of what we've done.
Lindvall said the deadlines
"The bottom line is that we're trying to do this first for the students and second to give us a little lead time to do some planning."
wouldn't have a significant effect on the total number of applications received.
June 30 is the deadline for transfer students and readmitted students, Lindvall said.
"I think the toughest group to deal with will be the readmitted students," he said.
Lindvall said that non-traditional students, who hadn't been in high school recently to hear about the new deadlines, also could be affected.
"We're already up in both in-state and out-of-state admissions. And my guess is that by June 30, we will have as many or more transfer students and readmitted students than last year." he said.
"That non-traditional person could be in a bit of a bind," he said. "But that's why we have an exceptions committee set up, to deal with people who have legitimate grips."
INSIDE
No dramatic aid
Since 1970, Watkins Hospital has served mainly as a first aid center because it is not equipped to handle traumatic injuries and major surgery. See story page 3.
Anticipation
Kansas center Paul Oswald had to wait in anticipation until the 11th round of the NFL draft Tuesday night before he found out that Pittsburgh Steelers drafted him. Oswald was the only Jayhawk football player chosen in the 12-round draft. See story page 13.
2
Thursday, April 30, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Around the World
S. African police surround union, make arrests for railway deaths
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa
— Riot police surrounded a black union headquarters yesterday while officers went through the 11-story building with masked witnesses, apparently to make arrests for the killing of four railway workers.
The state-run South African Broadcasting Corp. reported on its television news that at least 11 people were detained after police searched the downtown building while it was cordoned off late into the evening. The corporation gave no details.
More than 75 policemen, wearing plastic-visored helmets and ear gas canisters slung over their
shoulders, stoot guard with shotguns, pistols, dogs and whips in front of barricades.
Officers used dogs to repeatedly push back hundreds of pedestrians and journalists trying to watch the entrance of the building, headquarters of the Congress of South African Trade Unions and its affiliates.
Tuesday night, the bodies of three black men and one of mixed-race were found under a pile of burned tires at a train station, according to a police statement. It said the victims "had been brutally assaulted with knives and pangas (sharpened sticks) and their bodies set alight."
U.S. engineer killed in battle, contras save
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras — A U.S. engineer killed in northern Nicaragua was caught in a firefight between rebel fighters and Sandinista militia, the largest U.S.-supported contra force said yesterday.
The account contradicted Nicaraguan statements that 37-year-old Benjamin Ernest Linder, of Port-au-Prince, was outlived by the contrasts and slain
The Nicaraguan Democratic Force said that it held the Nicagagua government responsible for the death of the first U.S. citizen to
die in Nicaragua's civil war.
Nicaragua said the U.S. government was to blame for supporting the contras.
"The death of Linder was produced in the midst of a firefight between one of our patrols and a group of militia of the Sandinista army, which accompanied us in the field," PDN said in a released statement.
Yesterday, Linder's body was in Matagalpa, a Nicaragua provincial capital, where a ceremony was held in his honor.
Across the Country
Activist guilty in contra affair. blames North
WASHINGTON — Conservative activist Carl R. "Spitz" Channels pointed to former White House aide Oliver North as a fellow conspirator yesterday as he pleaded guilty to the first criminal charge of the Iran-contra affair.
Channell was formally accused of defrauding the government by telling contributors to his National Endowment for the Preservation of Liberty that their gifts would be tax deductible even though the money actually was used to provide military aid to the contras.
Channell pleaded guilty to a
single count and agreed to cooperate in independent counsel Lawrence E. Walsh's investigation.
Walsh's formal charge, known as a criminal information, said Channel was involved with a government charge did not identify that official.
However, when Channell was asked in court by U.S. District Judge Stanley S. Harris to name the people with whom he conspired, he said, "Col. North, an official of the National Security Council."
House narrowly approves trade sanctions
WASHINGTON — The House yesterday defied a presidential veto threat and narrowly approved legislation to force Japan and other countries to end 'excess and unwarranted' trade surpluses or face stringent U.S. sanctions.
Gephardt, D-Mo., urged lawmakers to adopt "a new way, a tougher way," to fight the $166 billion trade deficit and related job losses in some industries.
The House voted, 218-214, to attach the plan to a sweeping, 900-page trade bill after the plan's sponsor, Rep. Richard A.
Under Gephardt's plan, countries with "excess and unwarranted" trade surpluses with the United States would be forced to eliminate them or face 10 percent annual reductions.
Goetz says on tape he intended 'to murder'
NEW YORK - Bernard Goetz intended "to murder" the four youths he shot on a subway car "to make them suffer as much as possible," he told police in a recorded statement played yesterday at his trial.
at times emotional, told police in Concord, N.H., where he surrendered Dec. 31, 1984.
"I admit, for those guys, all this time, I wanted to do the worst possible that a human being could do." Goetz, sounding nervous and
Nine days earlier, Goetz drew a gun and shot four young men he claimed were trying to rob him on the subway. His trial on attempted murder charges began Monday in state Supreme Court, the trial-level court in New York.
From the KANSAN Weather Service
LAWRENCE FORECAST
Weather
Sun
Today will be nice and mostly sunny with a high of 80 degrees. Tonight, skies will remain clear as the temperature drops to 50 degrees. Tomorrow, skies will be partly sunny with the high being 80°.
WEATHER FACT: The record low temperature for this date is 36 degrees in 1932.
OMAHA
82 / 51
DES MOINES
78 / 49
LINCOLN
83 / 50
CONCORDIA
85 / 51
KANSAS CITY
81 / 50
TOPEKA
80 / 53
COLUMBIA
85 / 53
ST. LOUIS
89 / 52
SALINA
84 / 52
WICHITA
86 / 54
CHANUTE
82 / 53
SPRINGFIELD
88 / 55
TULSA
87 / 63
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 30, 1987
3
Local Briefs
Soviet poet to give reading at KU banquet
Oleg Chukhontsev, a poet from the Soviet Union, will read Russian poetry Saturday at the KU Slavic department's annual awards banquet. Chukhontsev is one of the Soviet Union's most talented poets, said Gerald Mikkelson, professor of Slavic languages and literatures.
The banquet will begin with a Slavic potluck dinner at 5:30 p.m. at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. Awards will be given to the most outstanding Slavic students of 1986-47. Slavic entertainment, including music and dance, will be presented.
Tri-service review planned tomorrow
For the first time since 1969, the tri-service review of the three ROTC services will be in Memorial Stadium, at 5 p.m. tomorrow.
The review, which recognizes selected cadets from each service and honors graduating seniors, is the culmination of the year’s activism. Victor Goodpasture, Jayhawk Battalion public affairs officer
Goodpasture said that anti-war sentiment prevalent during the late '60s and early '70s caused the war to be canceled for several years.
Lt. Gen. Robert H. Forman,
deputy commander of training for TRADOC; Maj. Gen. Ralph Tcee,
adjudicial general of the Kansas National Guard; and Chancellor Gene A. Budg will attend.
Gradating ROTC seniors will receive their commissions at 11 a.m. May 18 at the Kansas Union.
Study abroad picnic planned for today
The office of study abroad will sponsor a picnic at 5:30 p.m. today at Potter Lake. All foreign exchange students at the University of Kansas, students planning to study abroad and students who have participated in KU's study abroad program are invited to attend.
Campus and Area
Tax returns need security number
Taxpayers need to show a social security number for each dependent age 5 and older on tax returns filed after Dec. 31, 1987 because of the Tax Reform Act of 1986.
All students who do not have a number will need to apply for one this year.
Anyone needing a number or replacement for a lost card should contact a social security office to complete the necessary application.
From staff and wire reports.
KU libraries will get $175,000 from fee release
By JENNIFER WYRICK
The University of Kansas libraries will receive $175,000 because of the Kansas legislative conference committee's agreement to a 75 percent fee release, Chancellor Gene A. Budig announced yesterday.
Staff writer
The Legislature took final action yesterday on the release of the fees, which were generated by unexpected enrollment increases in the fall. The conference committee made its recommendation April 17.
“This is a needed and deserved
Buddic said in a prepared statement!”
"The special allotment more than makes up for the budget recrescion that the libraries suffered this academic year."
In November, the library budget was reduced by $166,000. The reduction was a result of the 3.8 percent budget cuts that Gov. Mike Hayden ordered because of declining state revenues.
James Ranz, dean of KU libraries, said his staff worked earlier in the year with departmental faculty representatives, trimming about $300,000 from periodicals acquisitions.
The library budget is divided between periodicals and books, Ranz said, and the reduction made it impossible for the library to purchase books that it normally would have purchased.
Ranz said yesterday that he had
not received official word from the administration about the allocation, but that he thought the money would be used to repair damage to books that was incurred after the budget cut.
"We have not canceled any period-
ity, but failed to buy
thousands of books."
Ron Francisco, chairman of the University Senate Library Committee, said he was glad that the central administration could make the allotment in light of its own budget problems.
"They recognized the importance of the situation and the extent of potential damage to the libraries," Francisco said.
But the allocation isn't enough to cure the libraries' problems he said, because domestic inflation and the rising prices have reduced the libraries' buying power.
acquire cataloging equipment for the collections that will move to the new science library, he said.
Budig said that $150,000 of the libraries' special assistance allocation would be used for acquisitions. The other $25,000 will be used to
Del Shankel, acting executive vice chancellor, said in a prepared statement yesterday that the $25,000 allowance or the science library was overdue.
"We are already way behind on cataloging acquisitions to be housed in the science library." Shankel said. "We were scheduled to begin preparing the cataloging system at the beginning of last year.
The $13.9 million science library building is scheduled to be completed in 1990.
New street lights brighten campus
By KJERSTI MOEN Staff writer
Planning becomes a reality
When the lights finally went on,
campus looked brighter than ever.
After more than 10 years of talking and three years of planning, the bulk of 24 new street lights on main campus were switched on for the first time Monday.
Workers have been installing the lights on Jayhawk Boulevard. Naismith Drive and Crescent Drive since March 6, said Don Montgomery, project manager for Huxtable and Associates, 815 E. 12th St.
The lights have been switched on and off since Monday in a testing period. The new and old lights will burn simultaneously for a few weeks until the old ones are taken down, he said.
Four new lights had defective bulbs and won't work for a few days until new bulbs are shipped, he said.
The $100,655 project was financed through the office of facilities planning. Student Senate and the chancellor's office.
David Epstein, who was student body president in 1985 when the Senate allocated its share of the financing, said he thought the new lights were terrific.
Epstein, Prairie Village senior, said the lighting project was important to him because the Senate's long-term efforts to add lighting to campus culled in his term.
The lighting project got under way in 1965, after Ron Helms, professor of architectural engineering, studied the crime rate and lighting on campus. Helm's studies concluded that the campus needed more lighting to improve the safety of motorists and pedestrians.
"They're an excellent design. They have great light. Overall, I'm very happy that the lights are up," he said.
"Things can get done, and I think the lighting shows that," Epstein said. "It's almost like a triumph because of the odds that were against us."
Helms said that he was pleased with the new lights but that he couldn't clearly determine the difference until the old lights were taken down, and the new lights burned alone. He said he had to take pictures of campus in the old and the new light to be able to compare.
Greg Wade, the landscape architect who was responsible for the contracting on the lighting project, said he had not seen the new lights but had received many positive reactions.
"I think it's going to turn out pretty good," he said, adding that some branches needed to be cut from trees to allow the light to distribute better.
"I hope that the lights will be up to the caliber that people expected," Wade said.
Wade was aware that completion of the the lighting project had taken a long time.
"It does take a bit of time to get these things done," he said. "I just hope that once the lights are on, and we get the old ones out, it will be a clear improvement, and that people will see that we've made an effort to upgrade the lighting on campus."
Campus lighting will be further upgraded this summer, Wade said. On May 5, Architectural Services will open bidding on a project that will add lights to the area between Haworth and Summerfield halls.
Also, residence and scholarship halls may receive additional outdoor lighting this summer. he said.
"We've always been trying to upgrade lighting with other projects. That's been an ongoing concern," he said.
Later, lights will be added to areas around Snow Hall, the planned science library and the planned human development center. Wade said.
Darey, ChennaiKANSAI
Darcv Chang/KANSAN
High winds make for rough windsurfing at Clinton Lake. Winds gusted from the southwest up to 30 mph yesterday
Watkins is limited in trauma care
Surf's up
Staff writer
3y JOSEPH REBELLO
Recently, Glenn Hardesty, an employee at University Printing Services learned a painful lesson about where to go for emergency medical care.
Hardesty's left hand was trapped in a printing press he was operating. His index finger was flattened, like a crushed grape, he said.
Hardesty's instinct was to get into his car and drive over to Watkins Hospital. Watkins, he said, was the campus hospital, and that was where he always went for emergency care
This time, all Hardesty got was first aid. His wound was cleaned, his finger X-rayed. Then he was referred to an orthopedist at another hospital.
But the last time Hardesty had a serious wound was 17 years ago, and he found that Watkins had changed considerably since then.
often that people with traumatic injuries actually came to the hospital thinking they could be treated there. But cases such as Hardesty's illustrate a common perception among students and staff that Watkins's emergency capabilities are greater than they really are.
Watkins officials said it wasn't
"What we need to educate the student population about is that if they have a major, catastrophic injury, they ought to go directly to Lawrence Memorial Hospital and not waste any time here," said Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins.
Until 1970, the hospital was equipped to deal with most traumatic injuries and was capable of performing surgery, said James Strobi, director of student health services. But since then, it has served primarily as a first aid center.
Yockey said Watkins stopped providing care for serious injuries because of a broken jaw.
unsound to maintain the equipment needed for that purpose.
Yockey said, "The hospital as a whole needs to meet as many needs for as many people as possible."
That realization has caused some KU departments to advise their staff not to use Watkins for serious injuries.
A safety committee for classified A team has recommended that serious cases be taken directly to Lawrence Memorial Hospital, said Phillip Rankin, assistant director of personnel services and a member of the committee.
And last month, after Hardesty's accident, John Sayler, director of University Printing Services, told his employees to do the same.
Brian Lawrence, the director of operations, said that the Douglas County Ambulance Service took serious cases to Lawrence Memorial anyway.
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Thursday, April 30. 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Opinions
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Taking a bite out of plan
It was once a good plan, but now the University of Kansas needs to see if it is being used.
The plan is a reciprocal agreement that allows students from Missouri to pay instate tuition at KU while they are enrolled in the school of architecture and other programs. Kansas students can pay in-state tuition while attending dental school or other programs at the University of Missouri-Kansas City.
The programs have been equitable in the past, but a recent surge in Missouri architecture students at KU cost the University $1.3 million in fiscal year 1986. That amount will likely soar to $1.5 million this fiscal year, said Stanley Koplik, Kansas Board
of Regents director.
Because it is more expensive to teach dental students, MU also charges Kansas an additional $40,000 each year to make up the difference.
The economic picture in the state right now and financial problems that the University has had should be enough for KU to re-evaluate the program.
With the recent increase in architecture students, Kansas is getting it from both ends.
If the financial benefits are equal for the two universities, then the plan is a great idea and a tremendous benefit for the students of the two states. But if KU continues to lose money in the agreement, it needs to reconsider the plan to see if the cost is worth it.
Today's Bible lesson: Religion, or so-called religion in this case, provides no money back guarantees for customers not completely satisfied.
Sorry, no refunds
It seems that some people must have been asleep during the lesson because three very upset members of a family are suing the PTL club for $601 million on behalf of 500,000 "unsatisfied customers" as well as themselves. In their suit, they claim that the money they contributed to the PTL club was not used for the purpose of Christian works, beliefs and endeavors. These followers think they were erroneously led to believe that this is what the money was being used for.
Two suits were filed by Buchans family. The first suit filed is seeking the return of $11,800 that the family contributed to the club and $1 million in punitive damages. Another suit was filed by the family on behalf of the estimated 500,000 people who also were duped
The suit has been filed in response to the recent sex scandals that have rocked the PTL club, which stands for Praise the Lord or People That Love.
into contributing to this organization, for which they are asking $100 million in compensatory damages and $500 million in punitive damages.
It is a shame that these people gambled and lost, but can they really blame the PTL for their own mistakes? If they were foolish enough to think they were contributing money to a worthwhile organization, and they were proved wrong, then they should accept the consequences.
Before giving money to any club or organization, especially a religious one, people need to investigate the group. They shouldn't just blindly contribute, expecting the club to be worthwhile because of its "affiliation" with God and religion.
Don't cloud memories
The first anniversary of the world's worst nuclear disaster, at the Chernobyl power plant, passed with demonstrations around the globe, the biggest in Europe.
Remembering the Chernobyl disaster should have brought back some of the same
People remembered the accident with peaceful protests, for the most part. The United States also remembered the disaster, but on a smaller scale, with a few rallies around the country. However, the United States did not react to the anniversary with the same urgency as the citizens of some European countries.
The disaster plagued the Soviet Union last year. But it also should have been a lesson to other governments, especially the United States. The accident led the Soviet Union to increase reactor safety.
feelings of fear and doubt that circulated immediately after the accident. The nuclear disaster happened in the Soviet Union. But, a disaster of the same magnitude could occur in the United States.
Nuclear plants in the United States have not been devoid of accidents or problems. In 1986, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission reported more than 3,000 mishaps at U.S. plants. The Soviet Union and the United States should not rule out the possibility of another disaster. The two countries should set the example of checking and double-checking safety at nuclear plants.
Government officials around the world should not block the Chernobyl disaster from their minds. Instead, they should be aware of the potential for disaster and work to make the world a safer place to live.
News staff
News staff
Frank Hansel ... Editor
Jennifer Benjamin ... Managing editor
Juli Warren ... News editor
Brian Kaberline ... Editorial editor
Sandra Engelland ... Campus editor
Mark Siebert ... Sports editor
Diane Duttmeier ... Photo editor
Bill Skeet ... Graphics editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Lisa Weems ... Business manager
Bonnie Hardy ... Ad director
Denise Stephens ... Retail sales manager
Kelly Scherer ... Campus sales manager
Duncan Calhoun ... Marketing manager
Classified Copper ... Classified manager
Jennifer Lumianski ... Production manager
David Nixon ... National sales manager
Jeanne Hines ... Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 200 words and should include the writer's name, address and telephone number if the writer is affiliated with the University, include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. Guest shots should be typed, double-spaced and fewer than 700 words. The
The Kansan reserves the right reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Staffer-Flint Hall.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawn, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and on Wednesday during the summer session Second-class postage paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Subscriptions by mail are $40 per year in Douglas County and on the county county. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student activity.
writer will be photographed
POSTMASTER Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
Experiencing and surviving 'The Line'
I trained for The Line for weeks. I practiced standing in one spot and looking as if I wasn't skipping three classes to be there. The day before The Line, I drank plenty of water and snarfed carbohydrates in preparation.
---
John Benner Columnist
My alarm sounded at 3 a.m. I
donned my running shorts and
a sweat shirt, grabbed my backpack
and went to face the monster.
I arrived at Strong Hall at 3:15 and entered through the southeast door. I walked past those who had arrived before me. I passed the sleeping bags and campstoves. I maneuvered around the pup tents, the La-Z-Boy recliners and the cots. I took my place on the second floor, at the end of The Line.
To pass the time, I struck up a conversation with the guy in front of me. "Hey," I asked, "When did you get here?"
"Have you eaten?"
"I brought some rations, but they ran out late last night. I am getting pretty hungry."
A woman farther up in line over
heard us. "How about if I make a food run? Some of us haven't eaten for days." She licked her lips in anticipation of nourishment. She wouldn't last much longer without food.
A man behind her in The Line had vacant eyes and a desperate look on his face. "Hey, lady. If you get out of line, that's it. I'm not letting you back in." He nervously shifted his feet and glanced over his shoulder for support from those farther back in line.
The people behind him jeered at the woman. Some threw enrollment cards and then hurriedly retrieved them. The woman slid, with her back to the wall, and sat on the floor, defeated and demoralized.
I pulled my folding stool from my backpack and set it up, waiting for the enrollment center to open. I fell asleep about 4 a.m.
I had horrifying dreams of Soviet toilet paper lines and of Depression-era bread lines. I was relieved when I awoke at 6 a.m.,跑步 running down my face and tracing a path that would end in my shorts.
I looked behind me and saw that The Line stretched out of sight, possibly ending somewhere near the window. I watched as he was rubbing his eyes and yawning.
"Hey," he said. "Will you wake me if The line starts to move?"
As he dropped off, his head dipped down toward his chest and his arms
"Sure. Don't worry."
He slept fitfully, Ficked a little, and muttered mostly incomprehensible words. At one point he even shouted: "Oh great God in heaven, I didn't realize it had a flag!"
went limD.
Thinking that he had suffered enough, I awakened him from his sleep.
"Is The Line moving yet?" he asked.
"No. You were kicking and yelling.
I thought it best to wake you."
"Thanks. I was having this terrible dream about . . ."
"Yes, I know. It's OK. Everything will be OK."
We began to talk about the reason we were in The Line. I realized, from overhearing bits and pieces of other conversations, that everyone had an excuse for being there. I didn't hear anyone say, though, 'I was too lazy to get here at my scheduled time, so here I am.'
1, myself, had what I thought was a good excuse. I told the guy in front of me about how the cruel and uncaring history department had left me high and dry after it canceled its only summer course above the 300 level.
He listened, but I knew he was just waiting to tell me he was there.
At 7:30, The Line began to move.
"What's on going on there?" I yelled.
"They're opening up early," someone yelled back. A cheer arose from the crowd. People got to their feet and packed up their gear. We stood in
The word was passed back through The Line that the enrollment center would open at 8 a.m. the beginning of the journey was at hand.
At 8:15, I was able to take my first step toward the objective. I speculated that the infamous "accordion effect" was the cause of the shortening of The Line. Soon, we began to move forward at regular intervals.
At 10 a.m., I got to the first floor. The offices were open, and the Strong Hall workers had to weave in and out of The Line to get to their offices.
the same spot for more than half an hour.
At 11 a.m., I passed the rack that held the pamphlets about alcoholism. I thought then that I certainly knew what would drive me to drink,
At 11:30, I rounded the final turn and saw the actual computer room. For so many hours it only had been a vision in my head. I blinked my eyes, sure that it was just a mirage. It was not.
Suddenly, I realized that the lunch hour was fast approaching, and that I must get into the computer room before they slammed the door. I out the last half hour and was one the last people to get in before lunch.
I handed my card to the man on the stool and waited. He looked it over but didn't look happy. "It's OK," he said, disappointed. "And you're a senior, too. This was our last chance to get you."
Evolution of a Product
But I still have a bad taste in my mouth...
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Mailbox
Everybody's mess
A letter to the editor that appeared in Monday's Kansan seems to miss the point. The point is that all students leave trash and newspapers on Wesco beach, and we do not want visitors to see this mess.
Joanne Stohr uses this problem to express her personal feelings toward the greek system. She suggested that the greeks are solely at fault.
I agree that visitors to the University of Kansas should not see this because it reflects poorly on the student body. I do not agree that the greeks are the only ones who gather and litter though.
Tracie Fitzgerald St. Louis junior
Column full of myths
After reading Malek Bouzid's guest shot on the Middle East in last Thursday's Kansan, I would like to constructively examine the myths in his letter.
Bouzid says, "The Middle East is that no man's land . . . has been bugging us for eternity." By "us," he means the West, I presume. He goes on to say, "The Arab World" is a collection of 20 countries created by
France, England and Italy ...
These two statements are self-contradictory; if the second statement is true then the first must be false, for the second statement indicates clearly who has been bugging who.
Next, he erroneously includes Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia and Libya in the Middle East. If North Africa and the Middle East were laid end-to-end, would they span the gap between the left and right sides of Bouzid's brain?
Bouzid says, "Qatar: Where else have you seen a 'q' not followed by a u?' Where else is Bouzid's idiocy best reflected? Trying to spell an Arabic word in English is like trying to fly a plane without wings.
Then, what authority does he have to speak about Arabs or Muslims? Boudiz is neither an Arab nor a Muslim. Would his broken spoken Arabic dialect make him an expert in the Middle East? So, is he trying to fool? His expertise is best demonstrated in dishonesty and treachery. Didn't he receive more than $30,000 in scholarship money from his native country? Any decent human being would honor his contract. As a token of appreciation to his native land, the least he could do is to give thanks. How ungrateful can he be?
zenith. Last year he claimed to be a U.S. citizen (Kansan, April 3, 1986). I have known him for years, so tell me, how can someone with an expired foreign passport receive American citizenship in the span of a few years?
Lastly, he says, "Israel: Holy Land. Democracy with Western standards." I think this statement would sell best as a headline in the National Enquirer. The reality is rather this, Israel: Stolen Land. Zion and cockey living with Uncle Sarn money.
Bouzid's dishonesty is reaching its
Louqmane Tidjani
Louqmane Tidjani
Algiers, Algeria graduate teaching
Where will funds go?
I hope all 36 KU students who attended the Washington march had a good time. It's too bad about the rain and drizzle, but that obviously didn't dampen your spirits since "everybody there was bonded by a common purpose," and the atmosphere was "exciting, intense and dramatic." By the way, did anybody think about what will happen to that $25,000 that Jackson Browne presented to the African National Congress? I did, but I guess that's just me? I did, that Should be good for
a few medium-sized car bombs, or perhaps a gross of firebombs. The infamous necklace is a lot cheaper, requiring only a used Michelin tire and a gallon of gasoline, and the black children have all the good rocks they need.
Or maybe the ANC gets its weapons from the same wonderful people who supply our Pentagon. That $25,000 should be good for a couple of defective monkey wrenches, or one used toilet seat.
If I get really silly, I might imagine that they could use that money to buy some food. Food's good, especially considering Africa's present state, Nah. Or perhaps a nice tractor for farming? That has been tried too, but the nice United Nations people who sent the last one forgot to include gasoline and spare parts. That is the West's incredible depth of understanding of African affairs.
If you've read this far, you might have gathered that I'm being sarcastic. I guess my perspective is a bit warped, though, since some of my relatives still in South Africa might be the next victims of that car bomb.
Richard MacDonald Leawood graduate student
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5
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Thursday, April 30, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
4-30 © 1987 Universal Press Syndicate
"More worms? ... Saaaaaaaay - why are you being so nice to me all of a sudden?"
Tickets
sergeant, thought he'd really heard a wild one after he stopped a car early one morning on Sunnyside Avenue for going 30 mph in a 20 mph zone.
"She said she was sorry, but she was trying to beat the sun," Brothers said.
"I explained to her that the speed of light was 186,000 miles per second and asked how she was going to beat that. She told me that she was a biology grad student working on a research project involving greenhouse plants at Haworth. She had to get to her
"We went together to Haworth, and sure enough, she was trying to beat the sun," he said. She didn't get a ticket.
plants before the sun's rays hit them and opened them up for the day," he said.
Ferris didn't bother to check out one student's story, though he might have been tempted.
"A man who struck a car in the parking lot west of Lewis Hall told me he was driving too fast, because he had to buy a rubber, because he had a girl哭泣 in his room. He was arrested for OUI
(operating a vehicle under the influence of alcohol). I believe she left."
And if you're short on imagination or too moral to lie, tell the truth.
You'll probably still get a ticket, but the police officer will be sure to remember you.
Hold your head up, speak loud and don't blush when you tell the police officer what a speeder once told Ferris: "I was speeding because I didn't see any cops around."
KUAC
Continued from p. 1
sonhomore
Ryan said he was an enthusiastic follower of KU sports, one who even camped out for the KU-KState basketball game. But he said the most he would pay for all-all-sports ticket would be $70.
"There should be some kind of reduction if you don't use one part," Ryan said.
Ryan said he attended basketball and football games but not the relays.
Mitchell Klinsky, Glenview, Ill., junior, said he would purchase a $60 ticket, although he only used the ticket to attend basketball games.
On Campus
University Council will meet at 3:30 p.m. today in the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union.
Sankar Chatterjee will speak
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Arts/Entertainment Ancient play addresses modern probems
7
Antigone will be at 7:30 p.m. today, 8 p.m.
tomorrow and at 2:30 p.m.
sunday in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre in
Murphy Hall. Tickets are $6 and $4 for adults
and $3 and $4 for KU students. All seats are
reserved.
By JERRI NIEBAUM
Staff writer
Antigone will wear blue jeans instead of ancient Greek robes in the University Theatre department's rendition of "Antigone," opening tonight at the Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall.
Although Sophocles wrote the first rendition of the play 2,400 years ago, the issues that it addresses are alive today, according to Ronald A. Willis, chairman of the theatre and media arts department and director of the play.
Antigone is a 20-year-old woman who must choose between life and personal values when she acts against the law of Creon, who is her king, her uncle, and her future father-in-law.
Two of Creon's sons have killed each other in battle — one, Creon thinks, in honor and one in disgrace. It turns out that both of them were trying to overthrow the state, but Creon did not know that at the time. Creon orders that the one who has died in his favor should be buried royally. He leaves the other to rot on the battlefield.
When Creon discovers that Antigone, his niece, has broken his decree, he must decide whether he will maintain his state's order by carrying out his threat and killing Antigone or give up that order by saving a woman whom he knows has done no real wrong.
Antigone knows her cousin will not continue to live in the afterworld if she doesn't help him, so she buries him. Creon has decreed that anyone who buried his son shall be put to death.
Creen chooses to maintain order, but he gives Antigone the opportunity to live if she admits that she was wrong in burying her cousin.
"If that's what happiness means, then she doesn't want any of it," Hardy said.
She said Antigone was stubborn and idealistic and would not compromise her ideals even to save her own life. Creon then entombs her in a vault, where she stabs herself to death instead of starving.
Her fiance, Hameen, also kills himself and, as with most Greek tragedies, many of the other characters die. too
"It's a comedy about bloodletting." Willis said jokingly.
But he was serious about the play's messages. Willis said "Antigone" contained a web of issues and themes that he hoped audience members would think about after they saw the play.
He said that one of the play's themes was, "What will you put up with in order to have an orderly state?"
wins compared Creon's decision to decisions that President Reagan must make to balance the budget. To maintain an orderly state, some programs have to be cut, but a leader must decide how many people have to suffer for the state to maintain order. Willis said.
He said Antigone's decision to die
reminded him of the area teen-age who blew himself up in a car earlier
“Are you ever justified in choosing death over life?” he said.
Creon's decision to kill Antigone also brings up the death-penalty issue, he said.
“Are we justified in doing that?” Willis said. “Should we kill cop-killers but not child molestors?”
Antigone was a woman in a male-dominated world. Thus, feminist issues also are brought up, he said.
"I hope the play prods people into thinking," Willis said.
Tonight's performance will be a world premiere of a new translation of the play written by Robert Anderson, associate professor of French and Italian. He translated the play from a French version written in the 1940s by Jean Anouilh.
The characters will wear modern clothes, and a narrator will wear a punk outfit to represent a modern-day dissident.
Jaroslav Malina, a Czechoslovakian scenographer who has been visiting KU this semester, designed the play's setting. The curtains and
wings will be pulled away from the stage, and a huge muslin sheet will stretch from the rafters to the floor. A pile of wood will be on the floor, and sloping shapes of wood covered with reflective plastic will define space at the edges of the stage.
"It's a place of the mind more than
a place of geography." Willis
said.
Hardy said acting was difficult on the set because there were not properties or extraneous set pieces to act second.
"When you're up there on a virtual empty stage, it's you," she said.
But Hardy said that she had enjoyed the challenge of developing her character.
"If you don't do something with the words, people might as well just read the play," she said.
from live actors, but they also will come from a video that will serve as a news source for Antigone's 1987 audience.
In the original "Antigone," a messenger brought news of Hameon's death to the audience. In Willis' version, a newscaster with footage of the incident brings the news.
Sara Lahey, Fairway senior, plays Antigone's sister, Ismeine. She said that performing in the play had changed the way she thought about things and the way in which she made decisions.
"All of the actors in the show have gone beyond just acting a part," she said.
ALEXANDRA BURGESS
Lahey said the actors joined Willis in hoping that the audience also would go beyond only watching a play.
Dannv Rav/KANSAN
Antigone, played by Melinda Jo Hardy, Overland Park senior, discusses her feelings with her fiance, Hameon, played by Gregor Cunenne, Lewood
freshman. The play "Antigone" opens at 7:30 tonight in Crafton-Preyer
Theatre in Murphy Hall.
THEATRE OF THE AVE. LOS ANGELES
Dannv Rav/KANSAN
Sara Lahey, Fairway senior, portraying Antigone's sister Ismene, argues with Antigone in the first scene of the play.
Live music may be on the decline, bar owners say Many local bands' fans are under 21,and market for live entertainment has diminished
Staff writer
By JENNIFER FORKER
In 1985, the Kansas Legislature voted to increase the drinking age from 18 to 21 for 3.2 percent beer.
Two years later, more than half of the University student population is under the age of 21, and those students are restricted from most beer taverns in town. They aren't allowed to enter private clubs, and they miss out on live entertainment.
What effect has this loss of clientele had on Lawrence bars and bands? Some people think the law has reduced the quality and quantity of Lawrence's live entertainment scene. Others say the law is not to blame.
Mona Tipton, co-owner of the Bottleneck, a club that was formerly Cogburn's, 737 New Hampshire St., said the increased drinking age for 3.2 percent beer put Cogburn's out of business because most of the clientele at Cogburn's had been under 21.
It also had a significant effect on local entertainment.
"I do think the law could very well kill live music in Lawrence. I really do." Tinton said.
Before the increased drinking age, Cogburn's could hire many local bands. But the people who went to see bands that play "underground music," music that isn't geared to Top 40 hits, were 18 and 19. She said it was harder to get older people out to see newer, wilder music.
it's not that you can't draw music for older crowds. It's just that you can experiment more with the younger crowds." Tipton
So Cogburn's closed and The Bottleneck opened, with attempts to appeal to the older crowd. The club won't have bands for a while so that they won't need cover charges. Tipton hoped the change would draw curious people to the bar.
She said the bar eventually would return to featuring live music.
Rick McNeely, owner of the Jazzhaus, 92% Massachusetts St., said the music scene was in good shape.
"A lot of these bands out right now are great." McNeely said. "There's a lot of good stuff happening all of the time. You just have to look for it."
Bands wary of future
Brad Growcook, Lenessa senior and member of the Mahoots, a band that formed last semester, said he was wary about starting a band.
"There aren't many places to play, especially when we write our own music." Growcock said. "The odds are against you for succeeding. Everybody and his brother plays a guitar. There's not a whole lot of new music going on anymore.
He said the drinking age increase ended many big University parties, where residence hall parties, where bands could get publicity. Also, beer taverna's in bands less frequently, he said.
Dave Taylor, guitarist for the Answer, said Lawrence night life was dying out because nightclubs had a difficult time earning profits. He said that in the past, The Police, the Go-Go's and Devo had played in Lawrence.
"The liquor law made a hard business a lot harder."
"There's always been your group who will see bands and those who absolutely won't." Taylor said.
"Now it's all you can do to get in to see a band at Johnny's," he said.
He said there was no market in Lawrence to support bands.
He said that bars with live music needed to attract the middle group. He defined the middle
group as those people who didn't crave live music, but who turned to it when they tired of the dance club atmosphere and its piped-in music.
"Lawrence nightclubs are struggling to get people in," he said. "It's not an issue of people not liking music. Everyone likes music. It's an issue of people wanting to go out to a club and wanting to see a band."
He said that people weren't used to live entertainment and didn't know how to react to it. He said that a couple of years ago, people
I do think the law could very well kill live music in Lawrence. I really do.'
do.'
would jump on stage to talk to the band members. Crowds now are too hesitant to even dance to the music, he said.
— Mona Tipton owner of The Bottleneck
"It takes a good 45 minutes for things to get warmed up." he said.
He said The Answer, once a popular local band, was breaking up because bar owners couldn't afford to pay them. Many Lawrence bar owners wanted to book live music but were unable to afford bands. The Answer was unable to cover costs associated with performing.
Bars can't pay bands
Tipton said The Answer had been Cogburn's top money-making local band since it first played at the bar in October 1985.
Tipton said that people didn't
have the money to spend on cover charges, and that they would rather go to a bar that had a DJ and no cover charge. It's cheaper for bars to hire a DJ instead of a band, she said.
"Older people would rather go to a bar with a DJ or background, recorded music," she said.
Young people who work don't want loud music when they go to bars after work. They want to relax.
"Most of them don't want to hear music, no matter how fun it is." Tipton said. "I've gotten so discouraged.
"We have a lot of good talent in this town. It's discouraging to have good talent and have no one show up for it."
Ken Wallace, owner of the Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio St., said he couldn't gamble on hiring a band to play unless he was certain the band would attract a large audience.
He said five bands that made money for The Hawk last semester returned this semester to play at the bar. And although bands need exposure in bars to gain popularity and make a good income, he can't risk hiring new bands, he said.
"It's difficult to book live music profitably over a span of time," Wallace said.
Last semester, Wallace said he overbooked bands and had three bands play each week.
bums play even more,
"That's obviously too much," Wallace said.
He said the cost associated with hiring bands was too great to have that many bands play a week. Business at The Hawk is down, he said.
"Bringing in live music worked to a certain extent. But the expense of having a band is great," he said.
He said an alternative that many small bars and parties have turned to was hiring DJ's.
to was coming to
"When it comes right down to it,
if you're going to run something
"I don't think live music will die all together. There'll always be a place for it." Wallace said. "Things as they are, I wouldn't invest in a small band right now. There's too much uncertainty."
Tight finances for bands
small, are you going to gamble on a band or a DJ who can adapt to what people want?" he said
"We used to be able to do this for a living," he said. "Now being in a band is a supplemental income."
He said The Answer used to make $3,000 a weekend, and now was lucky to make $700.
One of Taylor's strategies for making ends meet is to find a part-time job, he said.
"That's how much it'd dropped in the last two years," he said. "We used to be one of the largest grossing bands out of Kansas City.
"We kind of have to roll with the punches."
taylor said that a positive effect of bands breaking up would be a surge in underground music.
But he said that bands playing underground music would be playing at places some people wouldn't go, such as the Rock Chalk Bar, 618 W. 12th St.
"It's a shame that the bigger clubs here, with the capacity to have bands, can't have bands," he said.
He also said that outdoor camp parties, like Wheat Meet and the band where bands revolved, a lot of events, were no longer big events.
Taylor attributed the live music scene's trouble to the 1985 liquor law. The liquor law decreased business for local beer taverns, and subsequently, for bands.
suggestions for minors
Taylor suggested enacting an under 21 stamp law that would
allow minors into clubs but not permit them to drink alcohol. Stamping the hands of people over 21 at bar doors would insure that minors were not served alcohol. This way, the minors would be able to socialize and hear good music, while the bars would be able to bring in more revenue. This in turn would help local bands stay in business.
"I think it's a really good idea. Other states I've been in have done it." Taylor said.
He said the underage stamp act worked at other universities in Texas and Wisconsin. In the long run, minors probably would abuse alcohol less because it was less tempting to drink alcohol in a bar, where they could get caught, then on a back country road.
Wallace favored the elimination of a city ordinance that allowed minors into beer bars without the privilege of drinking alcohol until p.m. Taking the ordinance off the book maps would allow minors to remain in bars until closing time.
"I don't know how many 3.2 bars are going to be left in two years anyway," Wallace said.
Wallace said small bars and clubs might give way to national chain restaurants like Bennigan's and Chi-Chi's.
Wallace said these places easily derived 30 percent of their profits from the sale of food and had little trouble obtaining liquor-by-the-drink licenses.
He said the appearance of such bars would mean the disappearance of live music in Lawrence.
"McDonald's has more variety than some of these bars," he said.
8
Thursday, April 30, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
English instructor's drama based on the novel 'Queer'
By JERRI NIEBAUM
"Anybody who knows me knows that I am an invert and a jungle."
That is a line from "Lee and the Boys in the Backroom," written and directed by Paul Stephen Lim, lecturer in the English department.
The play is based on the novel "Queer," a partially autobiographical story by William Burroughs, Lawrence resident and author. Lim, who has known Burroughs for about 10 years, also based the play on letters that Burroughs wrote to fellow writers he said.
"It's about how a writer becomes a writer, and it's essentially a love story," Lim said. "Except that it's a homosexual love story."
Lee is a middle-aged man living in Mexico City in the early 1950s with his wife and two children. He is addicted to drugs and has fled the United States because he is afraid of being arrested on drug charges.
While living in Mexico, Lee begins to withdraw from drugs and to pay attention to food, drink, sex and relationships that have been put aside because of his drug addiction.
"This is that period where he is rediscovering life," Lim said.
While he is rediscovering life, Lee visits a bar called the "Ship Ahoy,"
where he tells fantastic stories. In search of love and in search of an audience for his stories, Lee uses his tales to court male lovers at the bar.
He soon becomes frustrated with his boyfriends and turns to his typewriter.
And from the typewriter comes
Louis Pasteur, representative of
Burgundy (first book).
"A typewriter doesn't talk back." Lim said.
Lim said he worked directly with Burroughs while writing the play so that he could retain some of the style that Burroughs used in "Queer."
"His writing style and my writing style are quite different." I said.
But Lim said he had managed to incorporate the two styles into a new style that satisfied him.
"The play is true to the spirit of William Burroughs," he said.
Lim wrote the play in one month. He wrote the play after he had cast it and the theater had scheduled it.
"The people were agog," he said.
"They said, 'You can write a play in a month?' I said, 'Watch me.'"
The actors read "Queer" and the play in sections as Lim wrote them.
Charles Whitman, Lawrence resident, will play Lee in the play.
"I have enjoyed and been petrified
He said he saw Burroughs as a "near-mythic figure in American literature," so he had jumped at the chance to perform in the play.
by the process at the same time," Whitmap said.
But he said he wasn't sure how the audience would react to it.
"It's a homosexual love story," Lim said. "Women are just simply not in that world."
No women perform in the play, but two woman-sized mannequins, designed by Elle Patton, Lawrence resident, will sit on-stage. They will represent Lee's wife and Lee's "hapelessly heterosexual" boyfriend. Allerton's girlfriend.
"We just don't know what's going to happen." he said.
Jay Karnes, Omaha, Neb., senior,
blavs Allerton.
"I just had to think, 'My God. It's got to be hard for him seeing his life played out on stage,' " Karnes said of Burroughs.
"Lee and the Boys in the Backroom" will be at 8 p.m. May 8, 9, 11 and 12 and at 2:30 p.m. May 10 at the Lawrence Community Theatre, 1501 New Hampshire St. Tickets are $4 for senior citizens and $5 for the general public. For reservations, call 843-7469.
Award-winning Canadian film flops
"The Decline of the American Empire" bathed in critical acclaim when it arrived at the Academy Awards as Canada's official entry for best foreign language film.
Gil Chavez
Columnist
The film's humor, or lack of it, or my lack of it, was one of the problems. Rumor had it that this was a comic-drama. I saw the drama but little of the comedy.
But as most things that have to do with the Academy Awards, the film's reputation exceeds itself.
I found little to laugh at in the film, and neither did other members of the audience. The scene in which men mimic the dances and conversations in pickup bars and a scene that features a flashback about a man who accidentally solicits a transvestite were the only scenes where I saw a spark of humor.
For the most part, it seemed to be a blunt slice of life. Denys Arcand directed and wrote this frank account of an afternoon in the lives of eight self-satisfied French Canadian academics. They while away the hours finding historical justification for their sexual pursuits.
The world being as it is, the truly brave are never truly bored. Sadly, these middle-aged academics are bored and frightened. They're afraid that old age will rob them of the physical and intellectual qualities that feed their narcissism.
During the afternoon, the men cook dinner while the women work out at a fitness center. Both groups engage in long discussions of sex in its varied contexts, kinks and subterfuges. Arcand uses recurring themes in a score based on Handel's music to echo the themes in the conversations. In fact, the film is one long discussion of sex and love. It's a modern Plato's Symposium with flashbacks.
Arcand's central theme is that civilizations decline when personal satisfaction becomes paramount to all societal values. One of the characters, a rough fellow who interrupts them, says, "All intellectuals do is talk."
Yet the plot lines are set so skillfully that they almost save the film. By now all the important events have occurred except one, a disclosure by one of the women that alters the relationships within the group.
It's unfortunate that the subtleties of the plot are wasted on such hackneyed characters. It seems that every few years a variation of the same group of yuppies trots out to a different location to act out the tragedies and comedies of Baby Boomer Sexual Angst.
I have seen these mythical boomers in college, marriage, divorce, idealism and disillusionment. All that is left for them is old age and death, and it won't be soon enough.
'Extreme Prejudice' audience might get lost in the crossfire
For those of you not familiar with the term "Extreme Prejudice," it is the U.S. armed forces' nice way of saying "kill everyone in sight." That's just what this film attempts to do.
John Benner Columnist
Nick Nolte as Jack Benten with Maria Conchita Alonso as Sarita in "Extreme Prejudice."
JEAN JOHNSON
The movie also displays a prejudice of its own through its portrayal of Mexicans as gun-wielding, tequila-swilling, drug-drunk murderers. Additionally, the plot manages to combine cops vs. dealers and hysterically brutality to attract as many blood-hungry viewers as possible.
courtesy Tri-Star Pictures, In
The most disappointing part of this film is that some very good performances are wasted.
Nick Nole paints a better-than-average and almost believable picture of Jack Benteen, a Texas ranger who must hold a drug trafficking ring headed by his boyhood best friend.
Rip Torn, as an abrasive but good-hearted sheriff, turns in the one truly superior performance, is killed off much too early in the film. He and Noelle play off another quite well until he is gunned down, the type of thing that happens much too often in this movie.
To add some complication to the plot, Bentene's lover, Sarita Cisneros (Maria Conchita Alonso), also is the former girlfriend of his coke-dealing pal, Cash Bailey (Powers Booth).
As the story progresses, we see that a group of super-secret U.S. soldiers, all of whom are supposed to have died in combat or in
It was annoying and difficult to ignore Alonso's Italian accent. Perhaps the producers thought we would be so wowed by her performance as a Mexican saloon singer that we wouldn't notice. She doesn't sing that well.
accidents, has arrived in El Paso presumably to stop Bailey from raking in any more easy money
This is implausible enough, but the group then is ordered to rob a bank and to follow Bailey across the border to Durango, Mexico. The reasons for these irrational acts eventually are explained in a way that could convince only the most gullible viewer.
When this elite squad follows Bailey to his stronghold in Durango, they find that he has set up a "company town" that is populated by his drug-smuggling henchman.
This idea previously has been explored in "The Heart of Darkness" and again in "Apocalypse Now." This film is inferior by comparison.
"Extreme Prejudice" has some serious plot shortcomings, and the producers have succumbed to the temptation to create yet another "shoot-em-up" without a purpose.
The good performances of Nole and Tern, especially when they are in a scene together, unfortunately are not exploited. We can only hope they again will be paired up and will be allowed to act without someone shooting at them.
JAYHAWKER
The 1987 edition of the Jayhawker Yearbook has now arrived.
Pick yours up at Hoch or in front of the Union between 8:30 and 4:30.
Distribution will last for only two weeks
You must have your KUID and receipt of purchase.
Yearbooks can still be purchased
A 2 3 4 5
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 30, 1987
g
Search for missing local man fails
By PAUL BELDEN
Staff writer
After a bloodhound in a boat snellled something yesterday in the Kansas River, the Lawrence fire department dragged the river but did not find Elmer Wolford, the Lawrence man who disappeared on April 17.
"We'll do a patrol down to Eudora tomorrow," said Rich Barr, a Lawrence Fire Department captain.
He said firefighters dragged an area near the north bank of the river just below the Bowersock Dam and several other areas farther downstream but did not find anything.
The water level, almost 5 feet above normal, hampered the search, he said.
Wolford has been missing since he and a Topeka man went over the dam in a small boat. The Topeka man palled himself out of the river at the Eighth Street boat dock.
Yesterday, a bloodhound named
Markie picked up a scent in the river north of the retaining wall on the dam's north side. After the search turned up nothing, Markie still indicated by her actions that something was down there.
Len Rimbey, a corrections officer from Lansing and the dog's owner, said he believed his dog.
"She found three drowned people just last summer," he said. "One in Perry, one in Pomona and one in this river, only down by Bonner Springs."
Rimbey said a body under water was just like a can of oil with holes in it.
Oil leaking out of the can will create a slick on the water's surface, as do body fluids that are released as the body decomposes. Those fluids collect on the surface, where trained dogs can smell them, Rimbrey said.
But the water below the dam is so turbulent, making it difficult for Markie to pinpoint where the smell is
Cunningham, Randy Manis, of Lecompton and a friend of Wolfford's, drove the boat that held Rimbey and Markie.
coming from. he said.
"We know he's dead," Manis said.
"We just want to find his body.
"We grew up with him. He was just a little younger than us, but we grew up with him."
Manis said that he thought Wolford still was not far from the dam and that he would search again today.
He said iron bars stuck out from the concrete on the downstream side of the dam. The bars were turned down and could have caught Wolford's body.
"From here to Topeka, I know this river pretty good." Manis said. "I've hit holes 150 feet deep out there just below the dam."
At one time while Manis, Rimby and Markie were on the river, the small fishing boat drifted dangerously close to where the water rolled and boiled just below the dam.
Study in the Union Extra Space During Finals!
10:30
BEGIN
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GALLERY EAST Smokers' study room
Both rooms located on level 4 of the Kansas Union (next to SUA) 7 a.m.—11 p.m. May 5-9 11 a.m.-4 p.m. May 10 7 a.m.-4 p.m. May 11-14 try the Burge Union for quiet lounge areas to study
Also try the Burge Union for quiet lounge areas to study
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10
Thursday, April 30, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Coalition director says state should aid homeless
By JERRI NIEBAUM
Staff writer
When a hungry, cold and drunk man who lived in the street asked a KU student for money to buy food several months ago, she gave it to him.
"I just thought at the time that it was important to get him some food," said Rhonda Chaffin, Lawrence junior.
Chaffin, a social welfare major,
also gave the man directions to
headquarters, 1419 Massachusetts
where he probably spent the night.
Chaffin was one of about 50 people who yesterday attended a lecture by Paul Johnson, director of the Public Coalition of Kansas, at a University Forum luncheon at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Orca Ave.
The coalition was begun in 1971 by churches concerned about welfare legislation. In that year, the Kansas Legislature made a 5 percent cut in cash grants for welfare recipients, Johnson said.
I'm firmly convinced that this is a
political problem — that we can find housing funds, that we can feed people if we want to." Johnson said. "It's a question of diverting resour-
Johnson said Kansas was the only state that did not have a public housing finance agency to build free or inexpensive housing for poor people.
Until a year ago, the original state constitution prevented having one. The legislators who drafted the constitution were afraid the state would lose money if it supported such an agency, Johnson said.
But an amendment to the constitution last year now makes it possible for such an agency to develop, Johnson said, and he hopes Kansas will have one someday.
But the agency won't develop unless the people want it, said Ed Dutton, associate professor of social welfare. He said he had not seen much public interest in developing such an agency.
"We have to get an attitude in our society that there are hurting people
who are poor." he said.
Forrest Swall, assistant professor of social welfare, agreed with Johnson that poverty was a political problem that could be solved with a diversion of funds.
"It's not an unsolvable problem. It's not an insurmountable problem," he said. "But it's not solvable by the homeless, and it's not their fault that they are homeless."
Swall said funds from prisons and mental health institutions could be diverted to help house the homeless. He said that a lot of inmates were not serious offenders and that they could be watched by the state while living in and working from their own homes.
He said he thought many people living in mental health clinics did not need to be there either. By caring for these people outside the clinic, the government could take care of them and other homeless people more cheaply.
Dutton said that most homeless people came from mental health and substance abuse facilities.
the government started a trend to de-institutionalize people in the 1950s.
"We moved them from the back wards to the back alleys," he said.
The federal government does provide some mental patients with Supplemental Securities Income funds as part of the social security program. But Swall said that many patients were found ineligible for the aid and didn't have any other income.
Dutton said that 25 to 50 homeless people lived in Lawrence. Many of them stayed at a Salvation Army refuge this winter. The refuge closed in March when the weather got warmer.
Many of them eat at the First Christian Church, 1000 Kentucky St. on Sunday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday when the LINK Program, a local charity, serves food.
But feeding them and giving them shelter only temporarily solves the problems of the homeless, Johnson said. He is more concerned with providing long-term funds and programs to eliminate the problem.
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Attire: Please wear your shorts and usual running shoes.
**Where:** South entrance of Watkins Memorial Hospital. (We will be outside if weather permits.)
**Who:** Any runner (beginning or advanced) who is a student, faculty or staff at KU.
Cost: The evaluation is tree, necessary supplies will be charged for.
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HOURS: Seniors...8-12, 1-5
Juniors...10-12, 1-5
Sophomores...1-5
Freshmen...1-5
Non-Degree...3-5
PLACE: Enrollment Center Room 111 Strong
TRANSACTIONS ACCEPTED:
Procedure: Present an approved* ADD card for each desired class.
1. Simply ADDING or ENROLLING in one or more of the classes listed below:
2. ADDING one or more of the classes listed below AND changing other Summer classes to accommodate the added class(es). Procedure: Present approved* ADD and DROP cards to obtain the desired outcome.
3. ADDING one of the classes listed below if you are already early enrolled in the same class for Fall Semester: Procedure (a) Present an approved* ADD card to add the Summer class; (b) Present an approved* DROP card to drop the Fall Class; and (c) optional; also present an approved* ADD card for another Fall class in order to make your Fall class schedule complete again. (Take care to obtain a Special Permission/Approval card if required by the Timetable to add the Fall class.)
APPROVALS NEEDED:
unless you are an undergraduate in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, you MUST obtain your Dean's Stamp on each Add and Drop card. (Note: Some schools may require you to obtain your Adviser's approval first.) You may request your Dean's Stamp at your Dean's office between 1:00 and 5:00 p.m. Thursday and between 8:00 a.m. and 12:00 noon Friday.
SOMC 130. FUNDAMENTALS OF SPEECH:
CLASS INFORMATION
51 LAKER AUDIENCE COMMUNICATION, 3 creds.
20215 11:30-12:30 MTWRF, 4076 Wesco, Staff, 26 spaces
COMS 150 PERSONAL COMMUNICATION, 3 credits
COMS 534 SPEECH AND PERSONAL RELATIONS, 3 credits
20380 10:20-12:20 MTWRF, July 6-July 31, 2 Fraser,
Coboy, William, 30 spaces
1000 9:10-10:10 MWTF4 4046 Wescrox, Stan, 25 space
ENGL 209 INTRODUCTION TO FICTION, 3 credits
ENGL 102 COMPOSTION AND LITERATURE, 3 credits
26686 9:10-10:10 MTWFR 4046 Wescos. Staff. 25 spaces
EMP101 TO ACTION TO ECTION, 3 credits
26730 10:20-11:20 MTWRF, 4041 Wescos, Staff, 35 spaces
HIST 115 EUROPE 1789 TO THE PRESENT, 3 credits
94407 9-10-10 10 MTWRF, 124 Fraser, Clark, Vincent 35 spaces
HIST 128 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES THROUGH
THE CIVIL WAR, 3 credits
34419 10:20:11 20 MTWRF, 108 Blake, Bass, Patrick 35 spaces
MATH 115 CALCULUS I, 3 credits
43085 8:00-9:00 MTWFR, 1072 Malott; Staff, 35 spaces
MATH 122 CALCULUS II, 5 credits
43165 700-9.0 MTWRF, 2007 Malott, Staff, 40 spaces
686 ABBLED MATHEMATICAL STATISTICS 1 creatrity
MATH 526 APPLIED MATHEMATICAL STATISTICS 1, 3 credits
43240 9:10-10 MTR 1072, Moltail, Staff 35 spaces
43240 9-10-10 MTWRF, 1072 Moltt, Staff, 35 spaces
PHIL 114 INTRODUCTION TO LOGIC, 3 credits
PHIL 148 INTRODUCTION TO LOGIC, 3 volumes
45302 9-10-10-10 MTWRF. 2 Fraser, Morse, Warner, 40 spaces
45308 12-4-10-10 MTWRF. 106 Fraser, Staff, 40 spaces
POLS 110 INTRODUCTION TO U.S. POLITICS, 3 credits
POLST 10 INTHUUA NTDT0 U5 POLICHTS 3 Rbeds
32705 8:00-10:00 June 9, 2017 7.108 Blake, Paddock,
Burke
POLS 652 POLITICS IN WESTERN EUROPE; 3 credits
32810 11:30-12:30 MTWRF, 109 Blake, Francisco, Ronald
50 spaces
PSYC 300 STATISTICS IN PSCHIOLOGICAL RESEARCH, 4 credits
48130 11:30-12:30 MTWRI, 210 Blake, Martin, Edward 40 spaces
SOC 620 SOCIAL ORGANIZATION, 3 credits
52175 11:30:12MTWF,106 Fraser, Weller, Jack 40 spaces
SAM1198 ELEMENTARY SPANISH U1.5 credits
53415 8:00-10:00 MTWRF, 4044 Wescoe, Staff, 25 spaces
SPAN 131 INTERMEDIATE SHIPLAND 1, credits
SPARTAN 42
53425 11:30-12:30 MTWRF, 4056 Wescoe, Staff, 25 spaces
WC 10.20.11-30 READING-DISCUSSION PROGRAM II, 3 credits
54185 10:20-11:30 MR_4027 Wescoe, Staff, 10 spaces
54193 11:30-12:30 MR_4027 Wescoe, Staff, 10 spaces
54193 11:30-12:30 MR_4029 Wescoe, Staff, 10 spaces
CLASS INFORMATION
(Repens Center, Overland Park, Kansas)
(Regents Center, Overland Park, Kansas)
Enrollment in the following course will not be open until the Regents Center enrollment session on June 2. (See page 9 of Summer Timetable for details.)
COMS 549 HUMAN RELATIONS IN ORGANIZATIONS, 3 credits
88090 5:00-10:00 p.m. W, 104 Regents Center, Downs, Cal 40 spaces
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 30, 1987
Perspiring KU artists find no relief for heat
By JOSEPH REBELLO
Staff writer
For the last two weeks, students in the art and design building have sweated over their work, but not always because they've been working too hard.
Mostly, it's been because the building's air conditioner has been broken since April 16, and the building has few windows.
Students say the oppressive heat in the building has made it hard for them to work on their final class projects. And some professors say the heat and the acrid smell of turpentine in the studios has caused some students to go home with headaches.
"I've noticed that there aren't students working much over here anymore," said Gregg Armstrong, Muscotah senior. "It's been so hot that you can't stand to be here. And it's hard to do painting and things like that any place other than a studio."
Peter Thompson, dean of fine arts,
said most class periods were at least
three hours long, which made some
students skip class rather than
endure the heat, and made some
professors cancel their classes.
Roger Shimomura, professor of art, said, "The interesting thing is that this building was designed to be an energy-saving building. But no windows there are no windows. I guess they just never expected it would end up like this."
Shimomura said he gave his students the option of working at home.
Thompson said that a chilling unit in the air conditioning system burned out and that facilities operations officials promised to replace the unit by yesterday evening.
Late yesterday afternoon, Thompson said he was told that the air conditioner was fixed. But Thompson, who visited the building, said he could not tell whether the air conditioner was working.
"If they haven't fixed it, it's going to be terrible." Thompson said. "Because of the design of the building, there's just nothing you can do. And it's not easy for students to get work accomplished in that heat."
Bob Porter, facilities operations' associate director for physical plant maintenance, could not be reached for comment.
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Are you graduating in Spring '87, Summer '87, and/or know someone who is a Fall '86 graduate? The Office of Minority Affairs is having its annual "Minority Graduation Luncheon" to nonor graduating students, on Saturday, May 16, from 2 to 4 p.m. in the Kansas Room, Kansas Union. Tickets can be picked up FREE of charge for graduates in 324 Strong Hall by May 1. Parents and guests can attend for $10 each.
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Stop by to fill out an application.
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Lawrence Kansas 60644
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1516 W. 23rd St.
Lawrence, KS 66044
(913) 843-8222
12
Thursday, April 30, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
University schedule changes set as summer nears
By PAUL SCHRAG
Staff writer
The University of Kansas will shift into its summer schedule after commencement May 17.
KU residence halls will close at 9 a.m. MAY 15, except for graduating seniors, who may stay until 9 a.m. May 18.
Joseph R. Pearson Hall will remain open during commencement weekend for visitors who cannot find accommodations at local hotels and motels. Last year, JRP was filled for commencement, and some visitors were held in Gorilla House; Perez Carobin Hill, said Keith Stoneer, director of student housing.
JRP isn't full for commencement yet, Stoner said, but many applications are expected in the next two weeks.
All dorms will close for the summer except JRP, which will be open during summer school, from noon June 7 to 9 p.m. on July 31. Usually
about 200 students stay in the residence hall during summer school, Stoner said.
The office of residential programs, 123 Strong Hall, is accepting applications for rooms in JRP for the summer session. The office never turns away students who want to stay in the summer during the summer session. Stoner said.
The residence halls will open at 8 a.m. on Aug.17 for the fall semester.
Summer session classes will be June 9 to July 31. Enrollment for new enrollees will be June 8. Registration and fee payment will be June 9.
Fall formal sorrority rush registra-
ter will be Aug 15. Rush will be Aug
16.
Fraternity formal rush will be Aug. 14-17.
Fall classes will begin Aug. 24.
Enrollment for new or readmitted students will be Aug. 17-20. Residual enrollment will be Aug. 17-18.
Registration and fee payment will be Aug. 18-19 for those who enrolled in April, June and July. Others will register and pay fees Aug. 21.
Watson Library will be open these hours during the summer:
May 14, 7; 30 am. m-5 p.m. May 15,
8 a.m. m-5 p.m. May 16, 9 a.m. m-5 p.
May 17, noon. m-5 p.m. May 18, 22,
8 a.m. m-25, 23, 9 a.m. m-5 p.
May 24, 25-26.
May 26 June 7: Monday through Friday, 8 a.m.5-p.m.; Saturday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sunday, closed; June 8, 9 a.m.-8 p.m.
June 9-July 31: Monday through Thursday, 8 a.m.-10 p.m.; Friday, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; Saturday, 9 a.m-5 p.m.; Sunday, noon-5 p.m. Exceptions: July 3, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; July 4, closed.
■ Aug. 17-23: Monday through Wednesday, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; Thursday, 8 a.m.-9 p.m.; Friday, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; Saturday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sunday, noon-5 p.m.
day, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; Saturday and
Sunday, closed.
Regular hours will resume Aug 24. The Kansas Union will be open during weekends.
- May 18-June 7: Monday through Friday, 7 a.m.-5 p.m.; closed Saturday and Sunday.
■ June 8- July 31: Monday through Friday, 7 a.m.-9 p.m.; Saturday, 7 a.m.-5 p.m.; closed Sunday.
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DOWNTOWN
SUNRISE PLACE
9th & Michigan
Featuring: Luxurious two bedroom townhouse living
- Prices start from $385
- Free cablevision
- Energ efficient
- Swimming pool
- Within walking distance to campus
We are open for show
We are open for show Monday—Saturday 1:00-6:00 p.m. Please stop by our office or call 841-1287.
Hours Aug. 1-16 will be the same as May 18-June 7. Regular hours will resume Aug. 17.
Positions of:
International Club Elections for 1987-1988
President
Vice-President
Treasurer
Secretary
Social Chairperson
must submit candidacy by Friday, May 1st, 1987 at 404 Blake Hall.
Elections will be held Saturday, May 2nd,1987 at 404 Blake Hall
The Burge Union will be closed May 18 to June 7 and Aug. 1-16, except for the University Placement
For further info call 864-3523 ext.29 or 842-2706
The Diary of
April 23,24,25,26 $ ^{*} $ ,30
Aug. 1-16: Mondav through Fri
By Frances Goodrich & Albert Hackett
May 1,2,3* 8:00 p.m., *2:30 p.m.
ANNE FRANK
April 25 show will be interpreted for the hearing impaired
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Hurry! Going Fast! Louisiana Place Luxury Apartments Now Renting... and at Reduced Prices for Fall.
Some two-bedroom summer leases still available. 1136 Louisiana (2 $ _{1/2} $ blocks from the Union)
- Amenities two years old
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(No Pets)
Call Now!: 842-2700 - 9:30-6:00 p.m. or 843-3228
542-3513 - After 6:30 p.m. Ask for Mark
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Fri. Special: All You Can Eat Tacos 4:30-6:30 $2.00
7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 843-0540
Center, Legal Services for Students and the Organizations and Activities
Sanctuary
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Now for a limited time get our award-winning
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The Burge Union will be open June 8 to July 31. Monday through Friday, 7 a.m.-5 p.m. It will be closed Saturday and Sunday.
65c
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Coupon Expires May 17, 1987
One coupon per customer per visit
Not valid with any other offer
Two campus bus routes will run during summer school The Meadowbrook and Trailridge routes will be combined into one route that will run once an hour, and the 24th Street and Ridge Court bus also will run once an hour.
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"Stand By Me"
7:30 p.m. 5/1/87
Popcorn and Drinks Provided
Free
ECM Student Christian Center
A
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Supported by
ECONOMIC CHRISTIANIST MUSEUM
OF CHRISTIANISM, NEW YORK
The Presbyterian Church (USA)
The Episcopal Church (USA)
The Church of the Blessed
The Church of the Blessed
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HOT TUB A HEALTH CLUB
I'll just use the text from the image if it's clearly legible. If not, I'll just represent it as a black and white illustration of two stylized figures wearing swimsuits. The background is plain black.
Let me re-examine the text in the image.
Top left: "FASHION"
Bottom left: "FIGURES"
Top right: "SWIMSUITS"
Bottom right: "FIGURES"
The text is:
FASHION
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25th & Iowa • 841-6232 HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
FALL RUSH 1987
All students planning to go through formal sorority rush in August:
Please come to the Panhellenic Office (in the Burge Union) from Monday, April 27 to Friday, May 1, to pick up a RUSH booklet containing registration forms.
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, April 30, 1987
Sports
13
Ace!
Recruit is one of best in country, coach says
By ROB KNAPP
Staff writer
One of the top young tennis players in the country is coming to KU, Kansas men's and women's tennis coach Scott Perelman announced yesterday.
1980
John Falbo
John Falbo, the 1985-86 United States Tennis Association's 16-and-under champion in both singles and doubles, has signed a national letter of intent to play for the Jawhaws, Perelman said.
Falbo, ranked among the top five players in the world in his age group that year, is the highest-ranked tennis player ever recruited by Kansas. In the 1986-87 Orange Bowl World Championship reached the semifinals in doubles and the quarterfinals in singles.
"On paper, he's the finest tennis player Kansas has ever recruited." Perelman said. "But more than that, he's an outstanding individual. He is the kind of leader that can help us maintain our status as a national tennis power."
The Kansas men's team won its first Big Eight Conference tennis championship in 22 years over the
weekend in Oklahoma City and will now advance to the NCAA championships. But the Jayhawks lose three seniors next year, including starters Kevin Brady and team captain Mike Wolf.
Falbo is a native of Charleston, W.Va., and currently attends the Palmer Tennis Academy in Wesley Chapel, Fla. He chose Kansas over traditional tennis powers Southern California, Clemson, Stanford and Texas Christian.
KUAC says opening may be filled soon
By a Kansan reporter
The Kansas University Athletic Corporation is working with the greatest possible speed to find a replacement for current Athletic Director Monte Johnson, said Redwood, KUAC board chairman
Redwood said the board had received 35 to 40 applications for Johnson's position before Monday's deadline.
The athletic director search committee plans to interview five or six top candidates before the end of next week. Redwood said. From those people, the committee will recommend a candidate to Chancellor Gene A. Budig.
Redwood had said earlier that the committee planned to have the new athletic director named by the
middle of Mav
Redwood did not want to comment on any of the candidates the committee is considering for the position. He was concerned that publicity about potential candidates might affect their present jobs.
The Athletic Department also has closed applications for the position of athletic director.
Gary Hunter, associate athletic director, has received nearly 100 applications.
Hunter had said earlier that the search committee for the baseball position would review the applicants and narrow the field to the final three to five.
The committee will then interview those candidates the first week of May and announce the new coach by May 10.
Dwight Gooden leaves rehabilitation center
NEW YORK - New York Mets pitcher Dwight Gooden left a drug rehabilitation center yesterday, ending his 28-day treatment for cocaine use.
The Associated Press
Gooden walked briskly out of the Smithers Alcoholism and Treatment Center yesterday afternoon. He entered a waiting car, and was driven away.
The 1985 National League Cy Young Award winner was surrounded by a crowd of about 50 people outside the center, but did not speak. However, he did wave to a group of people gathered in a second-floor window of the center
Gooden, 22, entered the center April 2 after testing positive for cocaine. He is expected to resume pitching in the major leagues by June 1 after a training program that will include private workouts at Shea Stadium and a couple of starts at Class AAA Tidewater, Ore., of the International League.
Baseball Commissioner Peter Ueberroth must give permission before Gooden may return to the major leagues. Ueberroth had threatened to suspend the pitcher unless he sought treatment for his drug problem.
KC beats Orioles on throwing error
The Associated Press
Royals
2
JOHNSON
2
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Willie Wilson said the Kansas City Royals were lucky to beat Baltimore 5-4 last night, and Orioles Manager Cal Ripken Sr. agreed.
"We probably shouldn't have won this game the way we played — the way I played," said Wilson, who tripled home the tying run with two outs in the ninth inning and scored the winner with the help of Floyd Rayford's throwing error. "We were lucky."
Ched DeShazo/KANSAN
"I don't mean to take anything away from the other team, but the Kansas City ballclub did not beat us," Ripken said. "We beat ourseleves, and that's why I'm angry."
The Orioles, with Cal Ripken Jr. hitting a leadoff triple, scored twice in the top of the ninth to take a 43 lead. Then, with one out in the Royals half of the ninth, Thad Bosley singled off Dave Schmidt, 2-1, and Juan Rivera, 3-0. But Bosley's baserunning blunder got him thrown at third.
KANSAS CITY, MO. — Alan Wiggins, Baltimore designated hitter, slides under Angel Salazar and advances safe to second base. Salazar, Kansas City shortstop, went one for three during the Royals 5-4 win over the Orioles last night at Royals Stadium.
Wilson then tripled into right field but Beniquez held up momentarily at third and was barely safe with the tying run.
Rookie Kevin Seitzer hit a routine grounder to third baseman Rayford, who bounced a throw to first base that Eddie Murray could not scoop up.
"I made two mental mistakes in the ninth," Wilson said. "I should have gotten over to help on Ripken his triple and I should have caught the single that Terry Kennedy hit to give them the go-ahead run."
"It was pretty, but we'll take it." Royals Manage Bill Gardner said.
The loser was Dave Schmidt, 21,
and Dan Quisenberry, 1- got the
bomb.
Cal Ripken Jr., who homered and doubled earlier, tripped to ignite a two-run Baltimore rally in the ninth. Murray singled home Ripken with the tying run, bringing Quisberry from the bulpen in relief of Bud Black. Nelson Simmons moved Murray to third with a single and Terry Kennedy's two-out single brought him in with Baltimore's four-run.
Royals starter Charlie Leibrandt
surrendered a towering two-run homer to Ripken in the first inning and allowed nine hits and three walks through six as the Orioles stranded 10 runners. Leibrandt walked Alan Wiggers to lead off the game. One out later, Ripken drove his sixth home run deep into the left-field bleachers.
The Royals picked up a run in the bottom of the first after Wilson walked, took second on Seitzer's single and went to third on Frank
White's fly ball. Hal McRae, making only his second start of the year, lined to Rick Burleson but the second baseman three wildly to first trying for a double play and Wilson scored.
Wilson reached on a fielder's choice in the third and stole second ahead of Seitzer's league-leading fifth triple. White, hitting, 197, then lashed a double into right-center field.
The Orioles failed to score in the
Simmons followed with a single, and went to third when Fred Lynn, who also had two singles, doubled into right. But Kennedy hit a soft pop fly over the mound and Angel Salazar threw him out at first as the runners held. Rayford then grounded out.
third despite two doubles and a single. Murray led off with a shot that bounced high off the left field wall, but Bo Jackson ran the ball down and threw Murray out at third.
Rangers win sixth straight, beat Yanks
The Associated Press
ARLINGTON, Texas – Pinch hitter Geno Petrelli looped a two-out, two-strike single into right field last night and scored Don Slaughter from third base, giving the Texas Rangers a come-from-behind 8-7 victory over the New York Yankees.
Petralli delivered his clutch hit off Yankees reliever Cecilio Guante as the Rangers won their sixth consecutive game, the longest current streak in the big leagues.
American League
Guante's record dropped to 1-4, while Mitch Williams 2-1, picked up one.
Slaught sarted the Rangers' rally with a two-out double down the left field line. Steve Buechele beat out an infield single to set up Petruali's game-winning hit that gave the Rangers a sweep of the two-game series with the Yankees.
There was a 34 minute delay before the start of the third inning because of a linebacker.
Indians 6, White Sox 5
CLEVELAND — Doug Frobel, called up from Class AAA Buffalo the day before, sent the first pitch in the bottom of the ninth inning over the
fence in right-center, giving the Cleveland Indians a 6-5 victory over the Chicago White Sox yesterday.
The 27-year-old Frobel was pinch hitting for rookie Dave Gallagher when he drove the 400 foot home run in a game, 1-2, the White Sox third pitcher.
Rich Yett, 1-0. Cleveland's fourth pitcher, got the win in relief, throwing 1 $ \frac{3}{4} $ hitless innings.
Cleveland trailed 5-3 after Chicago scored three runs on just one hit against four Indians pitchers in the top of the eighth. But the Indians tied it in the bottom of the inning on an RBI groundout by Cory Snyder and Pat Tabler's run-scoring single to left.
Blue Jays 8. Twins 1
TORONTO — Lloyd Moseby and Ernie Whitt hit home runs and propelled the Toronto Blue Jays to an 8-14 loss before the Minnesota Twins last night.
Joe Johnson, 1:2, allowed only three hits and killed three in 7% of games.
relied The victory was Toronto's third straight, its longest win streak of the year.
Right hander Mike Smithson, who entered the game with only two wins in eight career decisions against the Blue Jays, suffered his first loss of the season against three wins.
Red Sox 11, Mariners 5
SEATTLE — Seldom-used Mike Greenwell had three hits, including his first home run of the year, and drove in four runs, pacing a 13-hit attack as the Boston Red Sox beat the Seattle Mariners 11-5 last night and snapped a five-game losing streak.
Greenwell entered the game with just one hit in 11 at-bats this year. He was playing left field for Jim Rice, who had the day off.
Don Baylor and Dwight Evans also homered for the Red Sox and right-hander Al Nipper raised his record to 267-149. But the Mariners, going just one inning,
The Red Sox collected 12 hits by the third inning, with every starter gettin' it.
Tigers 2. Angels 1
AHAHEIM, Calif. — Darrnell Coles
annaled to drive in the tie-breaking
run in the 10th inning and give the Detroit Tigers a 2-1 victory over the California Angels last night.
Darrell Evans began the inning by walking against reliever Donnie Moore, 1-1. Pinch runner Terry Harper was forced at second on Larry Herndon's bunt, but Matt Nokes singled and Coles followed with his double into the left field corner. It was Coles second hit in his last 33 at bats.
Eric King, 2-1, blanked the Angels over the last three inning for the victory.
Nokes homered off Angels starter Don Sutton and gave Dan Petry a lead he couldn't hold.
California tied it in the eighth. Mark McLemore walked, Brian Downing was hit by a pitch and White singled in the run off King.
Sutton and Petry, two struggling veterans going into the game, staged a masterful pitched duel. Sutton faced only three batters over the minimum through the first seven innings, holding the Tigers to four singles.
Petry had a one-hitter through five. Her workout out of jams in both the sixth and seventh innings.
Cards' 5-run 8th-inning rally leaves Padres gasping 10-6
The Associated Press
ST. LOUIS — Curt Ford's single snapped a tie in the bottom of the eighth inning last night and Vince Coleman followed with a two-run single as the ST. Louis Cardinals rallied for five runs and a 10-6 victory over the San Diego Padres.
St. Louis, trailing 6-5, pounded relievers Lance McCullers, 22, and Dave Drawecky. The rally featured Jack Clark's leadoff triple and Willie McGee's RBI double that tied the score 6-1. It was St. Louis' fifth come-from-behind victory in 19 games this year.
Rookie Rod Booker drew a one-out intentional walk before Ford's goahead hit. Dravecky came in and walked pinch hitter Tito Landrum before Coleman's two-run single. Terry Pendleton capped the inning with a run-scoring single.
Pat Perry, 1-0, pitched a scoreless ninth inning and was credited with the victory although Todd Worrell was the pitcher of record when St. Louis took the lead for good.
CINCINNATI Ken Griffey and Rafael Ramirez hit consecutive two- home runs hit Bill Glickinson in
Braves 5. Reds 2
National League
the third inning last night and led the Atlanta Braves to a 5-2 victory over the Cincinnati Reds.
Atlanta's Zane Smith, 2-1, allowed five hits in eight innings plus for his first career victory over Cincinnati. Smith, who had retired 14 consecutive batters, was relieved by Gene Garber after the Reds opened the bottom of the ninth with a single and a walk. Garber earned his second save.
PHILADELPHA — Shane Rawley became the first Philadelphia pitcher to throw a complete game this season, limiting Montreal to six hits as the Phillies beat the Expos 5-0 last night.
Phillies 5. Expos 0
The Phillies took a 1-0 lead off Bob Sebra, 1-3, in the second inning when Glenn Wilson led off with his third home run of the season. They added a run in the third when Juan Samuel doubled and scored on a single by Mike Schmidt.
Rawley, 1-1, who missed the last two months of the 1968 season with a broken bone in his left shoulder, struck out four and walked four.
Dodgers 10, Pirates 2
PITTSEBURGH — Bob Welch held Pittsburgh to one hit in seven innings and ran his pitching streak to 27 innings without an earned run as the 15th baseman pitched by Pedro Guerrero's three-run night, beat the Pirates 10-2 last night.
Guerrero, who scored three times, tripled and started the Dodgers' two-run second-inning rally. He later scored on Mickey Hatcher's double. Mike Sioscia followed with an RBI single off Bob Patterson, 1-3, to make it 2-0.
Welch, 3-1, struck out eight and allowed only R.J. Reynolds' two-out double in the second inning.
Mets 2. Astros 1
NEW YORK — Keith Hernandez continued his career success against Mike Scott with a home run and an RBI single, and Sid Fernandez pitched seven scoreless innings, leading the New York Mets past the Houston Astros 2-1 last night.
Hernandez, with a .383 lifetime average against Scott, connected for his sixth career homer against the Houston right-hander. No other batter has more than three home runs against Scott.
Steelers select Kansas center in the 11th round of NFL draft
By DIANE FILIPOWSKI
Staff writer
Kansas center Paul Oswald had to wait until the 11th round of the NFL draft Tuesday night before he knew that he had been drafted by the Pittsburgh Steelers.
"I expected to get drafted."
Oswald said yesterday, "but the fact that I went so late disappoints me a little."
Oswald, who is 6-foot-4, 27 pounds and from Hayden High in Topeka, started every game last season for the Jayhawks. He missed five games in 1985 because of a knee injury.
Paul Oswald
Oswald said he went to Pittsburgh two weeks ago for a practice session and for a meeting with coaches.
"I left with a good feeling because I thought my workouts had gone well." Oswald said. "They also told me they were going to work me into their plans and draft me."
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child, a former Jayhawk drafted by the New England Patriots in 1984, had told him not to.
Oswald said he spent Tuesday afternoon playing basketball with friends and relaxing. He said he didn't go home until about 7:30 p.m. because his friend, Paul Fair-
"I was okay until the 6th, 7th and 8th rounds had passed," Oswald said. "Then I needed my roommate (Pete Popovich) and his fiance to help me out."
Oswald said he received a phone call that evening from his agent, who told him that the Redskins and the Steelers wanted to draft him. But the waiting wasn't over until the final call came at 11 p.m. from
Pittsburgh.
"I feel fortunate because a lot of people wish that they could play Big Eight ball and they never get the chance to." Oswald said. "I feel as if I am in the next group that got drafted to make an NFL team. I'll just make adjustments like I have had at every level."
Coach Bob Valesente said he was disappointed that more KU players were not drafted, but that this was a great day for Oswald.
"Paul has a challenge in front of him now." Valesante said. "I'm sure he will be given every opportunity to make the team."
Valesente said he thought Oswald had been drafted by the Steelers had of his vexibility
"Paul can play center or guard," Valesca said. "With a pro team's limited roster, they have more ability to play several positions."
Oswald, who will graduate with a degree in personnel administration, said he was going to concentrate on football and making the team. He said he was going to visit Pittsburgh coaches tomorrow and Saturday and would return in the summer for a minicamp.
1
14
Thursday, April 30, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
一
Pistons beat Bullets to complete sweep
The Associated Press
The Detroit Pistons completed a 3-0 sweep of the Washington Bullets in the NBA playoffs last night, while the Indiana Pacers avoided elimination with their first-ever postseason victory.
Chuck Person had 23 points, 17 rebounds and seven assists as the Paceers beat Atlanta 96-87, leaving with a 2-1 lead in the best-of-5 series.
The Pacers, in their 11th NBA season, are in the playoffs for the second time. They lost 2-0 in a miniseries against Philadelphia in their only previous appearance in 1981
In Landover, Md., Rick Mahorn hit one of two free throws with 4 seconds remaining, giving the Pistons a 97-96 triumph over Washington.
Elsewhere, Milwaukee took a 10-2 series lead with a 121-120 victory over the Philadelphia 76ers. In later games, the Los Angeles Lakers completed a 3-0 sweep of Denver with a 140-103 victory and Golden State avoided elimination with a 110-95 decision over Utah, which still leads the series 2-1.
Tonight, Portland is at Houston and Dallas at Seattle, with the home teams leading both series 2-1.
"I worked hard on my free throws in summer, so this felt good." Mahlkai.
Tomorrow night, it's Milwaukee at Paladone, Atlanta at Indiana and Anaheim.
Mahorn, a notoriously poor foul shooter before this season, missed his first free-throw attempt. But he made the second, giving the Pistons the sweep when the Bullets failed to get the ball in bounds successfully after calling timeout twice.
Getting summer work shouldn't take all summer.
Mahorn shot .829 from the free throw line in the regular season, after wavering between 575 and 683 in six previous campaigns. For the game he was only 5-for-11, but he made the one that counted.
Teammate Bill Lambeer said Mahorn may have worried after a similar miss in previous years, but added: "He's been shooting well and when you're having a good year, and things go right, you have more confidence."
Employment
At Adia, we've got a variety
or interesting assignments
ready and waiting. Great
opportunities with top companies,
at top pay . right in
your area. And our flexible work
schedules leave plenty of time to
enjoy the summer. So this year
spend your summer working at a job.
Nor looking for one.
In Kansas City Area Call:
Overland Park Midtown 451-8070 756-0340
ADIA
ANTIGONE
The University of Kansas Theatre presents *ANTIGONE*
By Jean Anouilh *In* new translation by Robert Anderson,
7:30 p.m. April 30, 1987 • 8:00 p.m. May 1, 2, 1987
2:30 p.m. May 3, 1987 • Crafton-Prey Theater, Murphy H
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
reserves accepted. For reservations call (913) 864-3082
All seats reserved • For reservations call: (913) 864-3982
VISA/MasterCard accepted for phone reservations
Partially funded by the KU Student Activity Fee
not价 for students
NEW
HOW ABOUT ONE MONTH'S
FREE RENT
ALONG WITH LIVING WITH ALL
YOUR FRIENDS NEXT YEAR!
COLONY WOODS
APARTMENTS
1301 W. 24th
(one block East of Gammons)
The apartment complex built with the student in mind!
THE SUNSHINE BAND
- LEASES BEING ACCEPTED FOR NEXT FALL
- LARGE, BRAND NEW, ONE BED ROOM APTS ($345)
STILL AVAILABLE! CLOSE TO POOL, HOT TUBS,
LUNAR.
- Substantial closet space
- Adequate room for two students
- Newly carpeted apartment
- Located on the Bus Route
- Located on the Bus Route
- Satellite available
- Fully equipped Kitchen with MICROWAVE, DISH WASHER, and ICE MAKER.
Sign a 12 month lease for a one bed room apartment (good from 4-19-87 through 4-30-87) and receive you last month's rent FREE. Not valid with any other offer or promotion.
842-5111
ClassifiedAds
PIZZA PIZZA 842-0600 PIZZA PIZZA DELIVERED
Available: Bed & Breakfast graduation weekend
15, May 16, 17 | Call 749-1243 from 7:30 or
8:30 AM.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Scarbright & Assoc. 843-1278;
John sings messages 201. B54 18741 or 843-1299
Sporting Goods Sample Sale; Camping gear,
baseball equipment; camping gear;
sporting goods. 903 Sunset Drive, Saturday
Sporting Goods Sample Sale: Camping gear,
backpacks, sleep bags, running wear, general
sporting goods. 903 Sunset Drive, Saturday
7:30-4:30
WEIGHT LOSS 105S PROGRAM Lose 10.25 lbs in 30 minutes of all approved, All Control accepted CMDs 070610-095401-00010000000000
ENTERTAINMENT
At Your Requests Lawrence's Best and Most Affordable D. J. Sound and Lights for Any Occasion
SUMMER HAWK '87
Starts May 18
"Roll Out the Barrel"
Every Day!
Open Daily at 4:30
Monday thru Thursday
Open Daily at 4:30
Friday and Saturday
Refills $1.00
Friday and Saturday
Refills $1.25
Your "HAWK" Glass is a great investment in summertime fun.
It Could Only Happen at..
FREE "Motorcycle Awareness" bike display in Southern Hills Mall on May 2nd and 1rd. 10:00 a.m. to: 5:00 p.m. FREE windshield washing, & FREE billeen
THE HAWK · 1340 OHIO
KEYBOARDIST Needed for Established Rock Band. Paul at 841-9652
*LAWRENCE COMMUNITY THEATER PRESENTS*
*THE EXCICTING WORLD PREMIERE OF*
Lee and the Boys BACKROOM
Based in the queen's court, and the unpopular correspondence of William B. HUMBERT "Agapter" and Mayed by PAUL TEPHENE TLM May 8, 1959 and May 30, 1959 to Gilbert S. Nichols $4.7m & Tom P. Cunningham $4.3m.
TOMMY BENZIE
Tired of uninspired cover bands and meduce D.J. *s*^7. Get into the groove with Metropolis Mobile Sound. Professional club and radio D.J.'s. Superior sound and lighting. Hot Flops for all ork
LIBERTY HALL
"Delicious decadence." 7:30 & 9:30
The Decline of the American Empire
[R]
UNITED DEVELOPMENT ACADEMY
FOR RENT
1 bed bedroom luxury apartment now leasing for
$23,900. Call info 842-7200 before 6:00 am or at 432-5131.
Call laff at 842-7200 before 6:00 am or at 432-5131.
1. Housemate for 3 bdrm room $700 plus 1/2
utilities. Convenient location. Quit, Graduate
students preferred. Room available June 1
respectively. 842-6038.
1/2 Munch Free Sublease large 1 BR apt. in Meadowbrook for summer, we will bail half of the rent. Call us at (800) 345-6700 or bdmr. Apm for Summer Sublease. Nice apartment, weatherless to campus. Rent open Monday through Saturday from 9am to 6pm.
4 Hdrm. 2 full bath, large kitchen, living room.
3 Bedroom. MasterCraft Campus Place, Next to Yello
MasterCraft Campus Place, Next to Yello
2 Bbm Townhouse for summer special rate, laundry facilities, swimming tennui K-1-Basement. 400-635-7800.
4 Ibrm Apartment near campus, Meadowbrook area. 2 baths, dishwasher, refrigerator, garage. Summer sublease with option to pick up lease in Rent.瓜留账号: 841-3913.
3 Bedroom Apartment, Summer Sublease. 2 baths, bathroom, spacious Close to campus
2 Bedroom, 1 bath apartment in 4plex. Great location near campus; $300/month plus utilities. Available around 6/1/87. Call evenings, weekends: 842-9614
2 BR, 1 Bathroom, Pool, Launery Furniture
2 bth. Rent: Rent HeavyArt wood Call 841-3520
8 bth. Rent: HeavyArt wood Call 841-3520
6 Bedroom house 3 doors down from the Jahaykah
Cafe on Oko Low rent, low utility. Available
on bookings only.
Accepting deposits for summer or fall at Park Plaza South. Summer-1 bedroom 1/2 bedroom $200. Fall (10 month lease) 1 bedroom 2/2 bedroom $252. Water paid, gas heated. Furnished available for $4 additional. On UK busine. Office of the Mayor. 1371, W2. Width 348. Width 613. Weekdays 8:47, Wednesdays 14:17.
5 Bdrm. House for rent on Kentucky below camp
Aval. 8/14 • Crab 913-821-177 days,
6 Bedroom. 901-821-237 days.
4 bedroom house, fully furnished. Available June and July. Family preferred. Call for information.
1 BR House just S of campus, no pets H. Lv. H,
R.D. MIN RG & Gar Avail 6/1, 843-8905
RENT LARGE FAMILY HOME
Double Gar., Expansive Living Area
Near KU Bus Route, REASONABLE
R.M. DIN, RM & Gar Avail. 6/1 843-900-250
Apartments for summer and fall at University Terrace Apartments, 107 W. Hickman, 1 bedroom unfurnished, $205, plus all utilities. 2 summer, June and July only, $240 unfurnished, unfurnished for fall, 10 monthLEASE, August 1-June 1, $250, unfurnished $235, plus all utilities. 2 summer, June and July only, $240 unfurnished, $290 unfurnished, plus all utilities. Central air, on bus route, large rooms, gas heat. Come see at www.rm-din.com or 843-901-8230 if no answer call 843-1433.
adt to Sublease: new, immaculate, furnished 1 bdpt apt w/ refrigerator, dishwasher, disposal 1 block from campus. Regular price $290-For savings $200 Available May 15 Call 749-1695 G SUMMER SCHOOL? Special summer rates starting at $210 Berkeley Parks. 945-211-691
Aspen West now leasing for Summer. Energy efficient, i 1 and 2 bedrooms. 3 Blocks west of Iowa on 15th. Private patio/decks, ceiling fans, no pets. $260-$440/month. 749-1288 office house. Saturday.
WEST HILLS APARTMENTS 1012 EMERY RD. 841-3800
for summer & fall
Spacious 1 & 2
bedroom apartments
furnished & unfurnished
Great location
near campus
Now taking reservations
OPEN
Monday-Wednesday-Thursday 1:004:00
DISPLAY APARTMENTS
Best Location on Campus School Sublease 1
HR apt, abwej Jayhawk Bookstore. Furnished
located on campus.
No appointment needed
Stop by office located in
middle of complex by pool
Brand new Colony Newspaper Apt. available for sublease mid-May through December, $185/mm dishwasher, microwave, own bedroom, bathroom. Females Call 641-3617
**CHAMMING STUDIO** Full furnished. Available
on-site or in-KU. Downsize $295. Moist!
Easy walk to KU. Downsize $92. Moist!
Free parking. Free Wi-Fi.
Classic, Wood Floor, 3 Bdr Apt in house with back porch, 1 brock from KU. Available for Sum total of $25,000.
IF YOU LIKE SPACE & QUET
WE HAVE IT AND YOU
CAN STILL WALK TO CAMPUS
Spacious 2 bedroom.
Laundry facilities
Waterfed fine
10-12 month leases
VILLAGE SQUARE
Enjoy cooperative living at Sunflower house.
You'll have your own room while sharing meals
and spaces. Spaces open for summer and fall.
*ask for Andi.* 794-6871
Female non-smoking roommate to share 2
Bedroom apf for *87* school year *843-901*, Jean
Lee for *87* school year *843-901*, Jean
lee for *87* school year *843-901*, fail, new duplex w/Everything $160 plus
fall, unbranded or unfounded, for summer.
Unbranded or unfounded, 842-6217.
Excellent location; 2 bedroom apartments in four-floor, carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, and low utilities. Available June 1. Summer Rate and low utilities. A148 I 1048 I 1341 Ohio Call 842-4824
Female Roommate needed for Summer and/or Fall. Tri-level townhouse, partially solar powered, 2 blocks from campus. Low rent and utilities. Stage staircase DW, microwave. Call 817-360-2594.
Female Roommate need to share beautiful renovated home. Very close to campus. Summer vacation. No fees.
SAVE TIME
- FREE SERVICE
- Find your apartment or rental home in the Kansas City area.
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Call or stop by.
6600 College Bvld.
Overland Park, Ks.
For Hent: One Room of a 3 bedroom Apartment May & August rent free. June & July rent is negotiable. Furnished apartment with double bed and dishwasher. Close to campus. Call 249-700-607.
Fine location on bedroom basement studio apartmert. CA equipped kitchen. Low utilities. Available June 1, $175 at 1801 Mississippi. Call 842-4242
GREAT PLACES (913) 345-8777
GORGEOUS 2 bdm condo with outstanding decor. Includes fireplace, weight room, and POOLSIDE VIEW. $420/mo Very low utilities! Call Bebat after 5 p.m. 748-3717
GREAT SUMMER RATES SPECIAL incentives.
Special Ops for NYC TPCS! Special
Pinecrest Apartments, 4/9-20/23
**HELP:** Need Roommate for Summer? Female
roommate plus 1/4 cellphone Call 686-6243
***
No deposit. Sublease 2 bdrm/2 bath luxury Peppert Appt. Air fireplace, wet walk, har bin walk, Pool & tennis court. Water paid Rent negotiable. **2*0884 at 6 p.m. or 749-7637**
HEY LOOK AT THIS! Brand new 1 Bbpm. Apt
HEY LOOK AT THIS! Close to campus. D/W A/C
Apt
Male nonsmoker needed to share nice 2 bedroom apartment this summer. 1 3/4 baths, from campground.
NO NEED TO READ ANY FURTHER' Summer Sublease: 3-bedroom - 3-level townhouse, available mid-May. Certainly furnished, 2 full bedrooms. Call 814-567-2929, Call 814-567-2929, Ask for John, Phl, or Mark
ON CAMPUS APARTMENT for summer.
Negotiable rent. low utilities. B4 834 4728.
Dorset basement apartment in August.
120 West 48th Street, New York, NY 10026;
furniture furnished, $252, includes utilities, 842-956-
RENT ME for summer 2 bedroom in house, 1116
Tennessee, hardwood floors, utilities paid
One bedroom apt, yard, parking, floor; $165 discounted plus utilities; 849-631-1901. One male graduate student at attractive, quiet, room. Tuition费:$260/month; 1633 Vermont; 849-1390.
MASTERCRAFT
offers
Completely furnished
apartments--all near KU!
Consider:
• Custom furnishings
- Energy efficient
- Affordable rates
- Affordable rates
- Variety of floorplan
- Variety of floorplans
- Designed for privacy
- Many great locations
HANOVER PLACE—14th & Mass.
SUNDANCE----7th & Florida 911.5055
- Designed for privacy
- Many great locations
- Professional management
TANGLEWOOD—10th & Arkansas 749-2415
OPEN DAILY 1-5
GEORGETOWN
- June & July special: $200
- Wired for cable TV
- Fenced Pool Area
- Tanning Deck
- Completely Privacy Fenced
- 10, 11, & 12 month leases
- Beautifully Landscaped
* Washer & Dryer Hook...
- Washer & Dryer Hook-ups
- Dishwasher, garbage disposal, counter
disposal, & pantry
749-7279
Reserve your room now! For summer and/or fall,
Furnished with most utilities paid. Shared cooking
and bath facilities. Just 2 short blocks from
walking with off street parking. No pets.
841-5500
ROOMMATE NEEDED for great apartment at 79th St. and Chelsea Ave. with Chris Bell before Feb. 15, 2016 after Aug. 31, 2015.
ROOMMES WANTED Between downtown and
campus $110/month plus utilities Call Rick at
780-235-9060
Summer Roommate: Female to live in with 2
mothers and 1 stepmother. Must be plus
plus sibs, garage, lots of room. Must be
durable, please call, ask for Jennifer, or leave
message. Rent may be negotiable, must find
Roommate wanted, summer, beautiful apt. Close to KU and downtown, spacious, W/D, $175 plus gas and elec. Discount for pet sitting, must like cats(2). 749-3578
Roommate Share beautiful house near campus
and/or fall. 841-797-6255 for units.
Summer and or fall. 841-797-6255 for units.
Rooms available for summer and the 1987-88 academic year in the Christian living community "Koronaum" at Ecumenical Christian Ministry come to information to 1024 Orad or Call 843-4833.
STOP YOUR APARTMENT SEARCH! One bedroom sublease, excellent location one block from campus. Excellent for summer student Rent 285, but negotiable. Call 814.3741.
Location
Located among 70 acres of rolling hills and trees, you'll enjoy the convenience of being close to campus and area shopping.
Lifestyle
Meadowbrook offers a selection of spacious and comfortable studios, 1,2, or 3 bedroom apartments, and townhouses to fit your lifestyle
RESERVE YOUR
UNIT NOW...
A SUMMER OR EA
meadowbrook
15th & Crestline
842-4200
SUBLEASE for summer months-furnished two
bedrooms, one kitchen and bks from campus and downtown. Call 841-40031
SUMMER APT SUBLEASE, SUNRISE PLACE 2.
room, 1,4 bedrooms, facility, facilities 4,
841-7911, 791-7411
SUBLEASE GREAT STUDIO-Meadowbrook
BASement furnished available May 14
£35 plus £60 per month
SUBLEASE Two bedroom Village Square Apartment. Large living room, eating kitchen, patio, pool. Low utilities. Available mid-May. $316
841-8385
SUMMER SCHOOL $100 NO CAR? 2dbm available
third pay,就此. May 4, 8am - campus rent.
requested thaill, thus.
Studio available for summer in super app. com.
Studio available for summer in super app. com.
available I will provide all of expenses.
available I will provide all of expenses.
SUMMER SUBLEASE: Large 1 Bedroom Apartment at Hanover Place, 14th & Kentucky St.
SUMMER SUBLEASE: Large 2 Bedroom apartment Closet to Campus. AC, DW, Balcony. CAT-749-3631.
SUMMER SUBLEASE modern and spacious 2 bedrooms. 2 full baths, central air washer/and
ventilator.
SUMMER SUBLEASE two bedroom and 1-1/2
bathroom apartment. Furnished with swimming
pool, 10 minutes to campus, and on bus route $300
neonatal. Call expenses at 749-1788.
SUMMER SULEASEL 3 Bedroom, 1/2 bath,
pool, laundry facilities, close to KU. Available
mid-may pay only June, July, and electric.
pad pay only. Rent. malls Ode English Apts.
443 73709
SUMMER SUBLEASE STUDIO - Utilities paid;
close to camps. Call 749-2415.
SUMMER SUBLEASE Malls Apts. 2 Bedroom
May-Aug-14 May, Paid Maid 842-4517
SUMMER SUMMERLEASE; 2 bedroom Townhouse,
furnished private garage; close to campus and
local businesses.
SUMMER SUMMERLEASE; 2 bedroom furnished
apartment, close to campus-Tangwall Co-op.
SUMMER SUBLEASE 2 Bd课, pool, A/C
SUMMER SUBLEASE 15 BEST HOUR Call: 841-694-1
Keep Trying
SUMMER SUBLEASE Townhouse 3 Berm, 2 Im-
aging Suite 250E. A/C Available May 16
Call 749-2962
Apartments
Shopping Center
• On KU bus route
- Gas and water paid
- Laundry facilities
SUMMER SUBLEASE May 15 Aug 15 Two床
room Heatherwood Duplex, Rent Negotiated
available
- On KU bus route
Avalon
- 1 & 2 bedroom
- Close to KU & Hillcrest Shipping Centre
- SUMMER SUPLEASE: Need two non-smoking females to trailblade Trailer townhouse. Call
- On KU bus route
- Extra storage space
- Rental furniture available from Thompson-Crawley
9th & Avalon Rd. 841-579
SUMMER SUBLEASE. Roommate design.
Sunrise Terrace 4HR, 2B, hour on room, close to campus, cheap rent. Call Chris: 842-8688, leave message!
SUMMER rentals wanted for spacious 4 bedroom house / wi fence in back yard. Furnished plus microwave and dishwasher. Available right after opening. 1 + 4 activities. Earl, Eric, Eve. 841,3481
Sublease 2 bdr duplex. Available June 1st Close to campus $253.00; mail M4-244-2400 eavesdropping
Sublease for summer furnished two bedroom
apt. A/C Great location Call 144-8007
Sublease. for summer. Furnished. 2 bedrooms, very nice apartment one block from campus. Call
Sulksale Apartment Low rent, includes 2 rooms. On-campus, on bus route 1 More Free: court, club, on bus route 1
Sublease Meadowbrook Studio Largest plan available with bedroom Water & cable paid.
**Sublease.** Nice 2 bdmr, duplex, Avail. May 20.
Checkcase. Data rented. List no. 831-7800.
Subasse nce 2 btm ap. tp. 10m from campus;
on route. Call Eventlounge Paolo or Roberto
331-448-7959; www.eventlounge.com
EDDINGHAM PLACE
- 10 or 12 month
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
contract
* Swimming pool
- Free Showtime
Satellite T.V.
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
- Exercise Weightroom
- Laundry room
* Fire place
- On-Site Management
Open Daily 3:00-5:00
Saturday 9:00-12:00
841-5444
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Professionally managed by Key Valley Management, Inc.
Subluse for summer One bedroom apartment adjacent campus. datashower. pool low deck.
Sublease 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms. Fully furnished. Close to campus and fun bars. Needful
SUBC 2 BR Meadowbrook apartment DW, FP
Subcat BPA, pool, tennis, Cabin and water paid
Summer 3 Females or Males wanted 2 Bdrm
Please call 745-369
Summer roommates needed. Fully furnished house教会 to campus 100 plus utilities.
AMENITIES
Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the amenities of Naismith Hall. Applications for fall semester are now being accepted while space remains.
NAISMITHHALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 60044
913-843-8559
Summer Sublease. Furnished Studio, close to campus and downtown. Negotiable call.
University Daily Kansan / Thursday. April 30, 1987
15
HILLVIEW APTS.
1745 W. 24th 841-5797
NOW LEASING FOR FALL!
Starting at $260
Sublease $2 Bedroom, Stouffer Place. Available
quirements $10.00/month. plus utilities. Free
insurance.
1 & 2 BR units
Laundry facilities
On bus route - near shopping
Ample off-street parking
Rental furniture available from Thompson-Crawley
Summer Sublease-Harvard Square, 2 bedrooms, spaces living for 5 people, all utiliing pool, pool close to campus.
Summer Sublease: Male roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom apartment. Close to campus, on bus route. Swimming Furnished. Please call 841-5583 by 7 p.m.
Summer Sublease or longer 2 bdrm, AC pool,
cable in Eddingham Place. Call 842 0111
Summer Sublimate, Luxurious Studio, Sunrise Terrace Apt. Furnished, laundry facility, $200.00 per month plus utilities. Next to campus. Call after 5:00 p.m. 749-1780
**Submem Subleece.** Nice, roomy bD duplex. AK,
Last 1/2 of May free. 749-2553 (call late).
Summer Sublease: Need two males to sublease 3 bedroom townhouse. Furnished. Rent negotiable.
Summer Sublease 3 BR furnished townhouse near campus, bus. Negotiable. 841-3600, after 6.
HEATHERWOOD
VALLEY
NOW LEASING
FOR FALL
- Short term leases accepted
- Lowest utility bills
- in town
- Gas heat, C-A, D-W
- FF refrig Disposal
- Quiet location
For more info. call between 9-6, Mon.-Fri., 843-4754
--everything is fine!
Summer* Sublease to female: 2 bdm furnished
*A very willing group* negotiate 1/2 blocks from
the house.
Summer扎床架: 3 bedrooms in 4 bedroom apt.
2 baths,卫生间,和10ft. On top of hill.
5 bedrooms,3 baths.
Summer Sublease Meadowbrook 1 Bedroom 2 balcony 814 - 0394
Summer Sublease Surprise Place 2 Bedroom
Townhouse Pool. Free cable Rent noughtable
Summer Sublease nce 2 brly furnished apart
Campus location. Close to Campus.
Tangweilow. 841-7998.
Summer Subbase 3 birm. Townhouse 3 story.
Cash for $475/mo; negative cash 149-201-90
£475/mo; negative cash 149-201-90
Summer subunit, 1 bedroom apt furnished. AC,
11th New Jersey, utilities free $190/mo no fail.
AC, 1st floor, utilities free $230/mo no fail.
Nurse Village apartment for rent this summer.
A 1-bedroom apartment with tennis court less than one year old. Koons's room is also on the same floor as the first one.
southridge
Southridge Plaza Apts. LEASING for fall 1 &2 bedroom apartments 10 month leases water & cable paid
pool
1704 Went 24th
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
842-1160
THIS IS IT. We're sublining our four bedroom bachelor MASTERCARET apartment. It fully furnished and off camp onwards. 12th & Lonely Lane is available to keep as well as negotiate a price. 842-9266.
Three blocks from Union, two bedroom apt for
June and July, acid, dishwasher, backyard patio,
basement, neat place. $50.00 and low utilities.
749-7604
Two Bedroom Apartment: Summer Sublet with Fall Option Five minutes to Fraser. Low utilities. $17,500.
Two Rooms Available for Summer at 120 Louisiana Call 749-6510 and ask for info.
Wanted: Student to share a 4 bedroom house
$190/mo plus 1/4 utilities and/or Fail
rate.
BEST VALUE!
Large size 1, 2, 3 bedroom apts, on bus route. All have gas heat, appliances, carpet and drapes. Extra room to choose from. If you want the most room for your dollar, then come see us a 2166 W, 26th or call 843-644-644
Gatehouse
FOR SALE
1972 VW Bug, fair condition, runs $500 00, 843-746
esk. Ask for Stephanb
1981 Honda CB 750 Custom. Excellent Condition.
With Estrasx Call Rock 842-731 or
Jon 843-6603.
1981 Suzuki GS450G Great first bike. Cafe style with racing fairing. 800 B O B 0.841-1545
with racing fairing 800 B.O O 841-1545
1922 Honda Nightawk 450 includes Ferring,
Saddle bags, Luggage rack, Cruise. Excellent
condition $780.00 842-1904
1880 Honda BT 680, only 9000 miles, Head crashes, price only $1100, one BM 749-1848, 842-6688
1984 Mopd Honds Spree Good condition $250
Call: 842-8097 after 7 p.m.
1908 Yamaha Vira Jog, one owner, excellent condition. Full accessories. Beautiful Call 841-7951 or 841-7960.
Bird New Mountain Bike. Black Fuji Bike Blvd
Barrelley ridden. Great Bike. Good Price. 842-1834
DSCCS 841-3265 evening.
Drawing Table and other. Drafting equipment
Cheap Call Martial 841-4692
FLY ROUNDTIP KANSAS KIDS TO POHOENIX 12
Arizona. Leave May 15. Come back May 18. Two
packets $100 each b.o. b.o. Call 1-232-9377, Topkea
FLY TO CASCABLAAN C. Mobile: 1-622-0674, June one-way
FOR SAIL, 20 Olympic Class Sailboat Flying
Ship, Lightship, Fast, and Affordable.
Call Inquiries: (315) 897-3644.
FOR SALE: Schiwann Varsity 10 speed bike. Call Lori B. at 842-0867.
For Sale: 1978 Malibu Class 1, $1000
For Sale: 1978 Malibu Class 2, $1499
For Sale: King size water heater; heater &umper
For Sale. Long Black Coach, $30 or best offer.
Great for Summer. Call 842-9828.
For sale 172L BMW Motorcycle R60/ 2.50 / 100
for sale Shuttle Shape Mutt 119.06 119.
Ask for Tank at 844-6898
Guitar Alvarez Acoustic/Electric Stereo
$250.00 for $300.00 only six months. Mint sell! 864-2833.
MAX'S COMICS Comic Books, Playbills, Pen-thouse, etc. 811 New Hampshire.
- **MOTHBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE**
**152 E 8, 749-490** p. Saturday 10 p.m.
152 E 8, 749-490
NAD 3155 integrated amp 250.00 ** Advertise last**
bought by hotel to back out of Call Mark,
C649.50
Never Been Used. *Fanatic* 100 Sailboard, 12 x **2**,
5.6 m squared. *North Sail* 600 dB best for
sailing.
Nikon FE black body with 35-70 Micro zoom
$25.00, Gitzom monopod $60.00 @924.776.
http://www.nikon.com/products/nikon-fe-black-body-with-35-70-Micro-zoom
PIANO for Upright good condition $400
749-227. Keep trying.
Sporting Goods Sample Sale: Camping gear,
backpacks, sleeping bags, running wear, general
sporting goods, 903 Sunset Drive, Saturday
7:30-4:30
SUZUKI 615401. Good camp transportability better than a moped. $300 negot. B41-6449-684
B41-6449-684
SYNTHESIZER Roland Jung 106 61 key full size analog synthesizer 128 programmable sounds, full MIDI less than one year old. $625 negotiable 749-3559.
Tuxedo Liquidation: Last Week. Three piece
tuxes only 17. 48 ea. All accessories 1.98 each. Open
tenil t 6:00. Closure forever April 30th! 900 New
Hampshire.
Wedding Dress, never worn, size 6-10 Call Katy
8443-326 ext. 341 or 749-3987 Price negotiable.
WINDSURF never been used 12 ft. Comes Compa
$600.00 @ best rate. 843-1871 Pete
AUTOSALES
1978 Mazda LGC Good condition, Economic,
mil. Four door, radio, heater, 1400 Call
845-232-2888
1978 Postoffice Sundib. Fair condition, dependable
mortgage sell this week. $500 negotiable. 841-677 kiley
to the credit bureau.
1982 Silver Camaro, Great school car. 4 New Tires, Sierra cassette. Pop Up uproof, Great mileage, c.4 yyl asking $5,000 but negotiable. 56,000 miles Call to us. Call 749,2456 for 5 p.m.
Chevy Impala $400 or best offer 814-5232
Superbible Sunroof, Pioneer Locker, Ski
Bonus
A 1969 Firebird, 364. AM/FM, Cassette, A.C.
1970 Firebird in excellent condition. 864-228
1975 Firebird in excellent condition.
Just a little bit. Class will be to graduation I'm part-
man of the class. I am in super shirt runs great. 749-409, keep trying
Super Sharp 1970 MG Midget convertible. Runs great.
$2200, Kevin 864-2902
LOST-FOUND
Found at 5th & Mississippi Large white male pup, 6 months old. Very fuzzy callate. *callate*
LOST. Female puppy Black Lab/German Sheep mix 14 years old, Call Ed 749-1890.
LOST on 4/11/17, Men's Seiko watch, reward. Call Steve at 842-4780.
Nice "Sanau" Stereo set including amplifier, equalizer, and 2 speakers. Call 798-5430.
HELP WANTED
ARLINES CRUISELINES HIGH; Summer
Arlines, Newsweek (916) 944-444 Ext. 133
Cassette, Newsweek (916) 944-444 Ext. 133
Are you good with children? Would you like to be paid to live with a California family and help with children? **HELP P ARENTS** 770 Menlo Ave. 219, Mount Park, CA 94035. (415) 322-8168.
BABYSISTER my home. Good boys 2-6 years.
M-W-F Patterson. Beginning May 11; 841-456
kenton family looking for mothers begin; start
July/August; min. 1 yr commitment, room &
room 2; max. 3 yrs; ageen aged 8 & 7; write/call
collect 817-593-3811, C. bristolta, 27 "Overlook"
*K. Newton, Mass. 02159*
Camp Counselors-Camp Wiedemann Hiring for summer Camp 316-684-6451.
Cocktail Waitresses Needed Part-time weekends.
Apply in person. A Playhouse, W 84th W 24th
E 10th St, 3rd Floor, 119 Lexington Ave.
Clerk typist in East Asian Language and
Study work. Work study approved For details. 684-3100.
DATA CLERK, 44/hour, 20 hrs/week, word work.
DATA CLERK, computer data entry, and office work.
Must be KU enrolled for one hour, spring or sum-
mer session. No phone calls. #86-30-301.
Application deadline: May 1
Cook, Dishwashers, and Line Personnel Apply
to the following at p.m. in Stockade, 1054.
No phone. If you have questions call
EARN $3 PART-TIME! Established manufacturer **seeks** Aggressive Students to promote Your School Sites: GOOD HELP AND EASY LINKS TO VALUE MEMORIES. 805 Lasklam R, LENZEN, KS 66219
DIRECTOR-TEACHER, DAYCARE, CENTER BA and ECE required, MA desirable. Experience, familiarity with Lawrence child care highly desirable. Bachelor's degree in Law $12,000 plus benefits. Resume and three references to Search Committee, c/o Lawrence Housing Authority, 1600 Haskell Avenue, Lawrence KS 60043. Resumes must be by May 8. Ma is an IEOA an Employer
FULL AND PART TIME HELP! National Firm preparation for Spring and Summer work. If accepted, you will earn 8 b startings. Some evening classes may be offered; flexibility is allowed during final exams. If you quality, corporate scholarships are awarded, internships are possible, and you may earn 2.34, 2.65 or 3.00 summer week full-time work is available. Call (913) 855-8067 Mon-Fri between a 9 a.m.-p.m.
Get the best of both worlds! Part time summer work available for men and women. Must have business skills. Kansas City area. Packing and trussing are required. Available. No experience necessary-will train. Applications taken at Allied Aviation 8430 Flnt, Lakes, MS; May Saturday, 8 a.m to 10:30 a.m. JOBS IN STOCK $1,650,000 or yoy. Now hiring. **$1,650,000** Ext. R. 978-848-2000 for current federal list.
HALF-TIME DIRECTOR-DOUGLESS COUNTY RAPE VICTIM SUPPORT 80400/4000年 depending on experience. Qualifications: experience with volunteers, good writing, speaking and organizational skills, public relations, self-mastery in writing/writing/management; bookkeeping; reports; presentations; recruiting, organizing, evaluating volunteers; community outreach and development; event planning; Douglas County R.V.S. 149 Massachusetts, Lawrence, 60044. Deadline May 2nd
Nanny Placement agency looking for nannies:
Nanny Finder, P-0 Box 403, Chapel
Nanny Finders, P-0 Box 403, Chapel
Needed: Line cook, 3 years experience necessary.
Apply in person between 2:00 and 5:00 on tuesdays and Wednesdays Alvamar Country Club, 1809 Campus Drive.
Hardees
Hardees of Lawrence on the Kansas Turnpike is currently hiring for all shifts.
- Start at 3.50 to
- Meal Discounts and
- Flexible Scheduling
- 3. 75 per hour.
- Opportunity for adjustment
*Lerentez* A skincare product proven successful in the skin care industry, Lerentez introduced to America by Gauilla of Sweden in the near future. We are looking for dedicated persons with a Bachelor's degree and please call 1-811-2871 or visit www.161-4871.com before April 30.
We are also taking applications and hiring people in our employment starting in late May or early June.
Massachusetts Street Deli and Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse now hiring food service and table service employees, some on daytime availability, Food service starting pay 3.75 per hour plus profit sharing, service 2.0 per hour plus tip. Apply to Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse above Bob's Bob's Smokehouse.
- Free uniforms
Call 843-8203 Today
LEROSETT
NANNY POSITIONS AVAILABLE: Good salary.
Dallas. Texas. Call 849-514. p.(214)
465-2077
A skincare product proven successful in Scandinavia for Oil and Problem skin
We are looking for dedicated persons for a series of FREE tests.
PART-TIME DRIVER/HOUSEPARENT ASSISTANT. Need mature individual willing to make a 1 year commitment at a local Christian Boys Ranch. 3 bch, m, F-M and 9-5 three Saturday's per year at the ranch at 842 953 for application. On Youth Ranch. P.O. Box 389, Lawrence K, 6604 842, 9536
Please call
1-681-2751
Deadline: April 30.
Secretary Receptionist position open immediately. Duties include general clerical typing, 40 minutes of help per day, helpful Approximately 30 hours per week June through September, six weeks in school year. Apply at 719 Massachusetts, above 2500 West.
Part time advertising sales representative need
make your own videos. Call Trac. 814-9643.
www.hotvideo.com
Rape Victim Support Service seeking volunteers
Work with victims of sex assault and give com-
munication support to them. Please be over
meet him. info meeting 6/11 and 6/17.
7:30 p.m. on 1419 Massachusetts at Headquarters.
Application at headquarters & Emily Taylor
@rivascareer.com. Mail to:
R V S S., 1419 Massachusetts, 60044
Part-time position with interior design and retail
travel. Draper, Maker 1,201 W 98th Terrace
Lakewood. Make 1,201 W 98th Terrace
Security Officers
JOIN
KANSAS CITY'S
LARGEST
Wells Fargo Guard Service is seeking security officers for full & part time employment. We will provide you with make "you" a success in our field.
- Best Pay in K.C.
• Life Insurance
• Free Uniforms
• Holiday Pay
• Weekly Vacation
• Weekly Paychecks
YOUR BENEFITS:
- 18 years or older
* Valid driver's license
* Phone in home
* You are a Driver
* Clean police record
Be where the action is. Join the Wells Fargo team. Apply in person Monday through Friday, Interviews from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
REOUIREMENTS
Wells Fargo Guard Service
3245 Broadway
K.C. Mo.
EOE MF
SUMMER JOBS IN NORTH JOHNSON COUNTY
temporary and permanent positions available.
Work 20 to 35 hours per week. Flexible schedule.
5:10 per hour. Call 11:09-90:01. A839-6184 Ask
for information.
SUMMER JOB FORS THE ENVIRONMENT
EARN $1000 to $3000 a year summer salary or
earnings based in Kansas.
Chicago, Madison, Boulder, San Francisco,
Nashville, Denver, Dallas also available. Call Sara tolrfire
tunnels.
The Mathematics department is now accepting applications for the position of graduate teaching assistant. The requirements for a bachelor's degree by August 15, 1987 and a master's degree by December 31, 1987 are the same. Foreign applicants must pass an oral exam demonstrating English competency. Applicants should submit a letter in form to the Math Department, followed by two letters of recommendation to: Charles Himmelmeyer, Dept. of Math, 217强 Hall, Northbridge, NY.
SUMMER WINE COOLER MERCHANDIERS
Learn marketing at its most basic level! Students needed merchandise leading line of wine coolers.
must be 21 years old, have reliable car and live in the Kansas City area. Send resume to Merchant-Ave, Kansas City, MO. MO 64116
490 Atlantic Ave, Kansas City, MO. MO 64116
Summer Jobs. New Fifties Club opening in Lenexa. Hiring bartenders and cocktail waitresses. Will train. Apply at J.R. Hoots, 7920 Quivera Road, Hennessy. 888-444-804
Speech/Language clinician/program assistant Language Acquisition Pre-school. Serve as a classroom teacher and coordination of a group of students in the development of speech/language pathology with speech-language pathology students. Assist in the development of curriculum materials. Obtain knowledge of speech/language pathology, CERT-SP. Require experience preferred. Starting date 6-8-87. Send letter of interest, v1.3 letters of recommendation to Department of Speech, Language, PhD, PhD, Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing, 2101 Hayworth.
MISCELLANEOUS
Top Fortem 500 company will be hiring outstanding students (or student organizations) for on-campus work. Students must have a strong interest in marketing, advertising, and public relations preferred. Students must be in the beginning of Fall semester and during first week of the beginning of Fall semester. $40-hour plus cash bonuses. Excellent training offered by Campus (Group Dimensions. Inc., 2000 Pearl Street, New York, PA 10138; Attn: Ellen Brophy, 1-800-992-2111
ALASKA Summer Employment
Waterfront Staff Camp Weidemann Now hiring
WSC and Lifeguard Call 316-684-6531.
- Eam $600+ /week in cannery
* Eam $8,000-$12,000 + for 2 months on fishing vessel
- No experience necessary
- Ages 18-70+
- Over 8,000 openings
- Male or female
- Male or female
To receive your 52-page
employment booklet, send $5.95 to M&L Research, P.O. Box 84008, Seattle, WA 98124.
Gradrating and you think you are hip. But how much you are paying for Credit Cards? 10% Visa & Mastercard. Scaribaugh & Assoc. 843-3729, 273-7342.
ACE
THE ASSOCIATION OF COLLEGIATE ENTRE-PRENEURS IS HOLDING AN INFORMATIONAL MEETING ON APRIL 30 AT 6:30 P.M. IN THE WALNUT ROOM IN THE KANSAS UNION.
PERSONAL
Binky-Happy 21!! You're legalhope you can hold your locker now. Love, your rooms.
BONGO DAVY you are so sweet. Please continue for the third time. a tool for my work CHERRY TOMATO
Chris C. I will be looking May 9 a 9 a.m. Will I find you?
Christine I will by 5 m. everywhere else.
Congratulations New ACACIA activities. Good luck next year. 655 997 1001 1006 1007 1008 1010 1011
Congratulations to our New Intiates! We love you! Love, All the Alpha Gams
I have to you than for your support. I
hope, there's turnaround. You're have! Have an
meet.
FOR A GOOD TIME CALL T.J. 843-6244
Karen: Art History was never so fun. Like to talk with you again. Todd: 844-6606
Meat-Look closely and read carefully--this personal is finally for you. Happy 21st honey! You blast tonight. How about a late night get together? We'll have a great time. Can we thank me later for keeping the picture out!
Melissa, Klara, Lura: Thanks for the wonderful
timely this year. You are all the BEST! Love,
love you.
Michelle. There are just two things I have to say:
Here is your Personal and I Love your Mommy!
I'll give you the full name, too!
M & M, you are one Hot Blue Light Special! I know we can learn this through the summer. I penciled you in for July 25! Your Dugout or Mine? Love ya Lots. Peanut
HAPPY GRADUATION, BRUCE
I LOVE YOU, KIMBERLY
ROLY POLY TICKLE MY HOLY. !J T8 ' 87
Shawnee Mission South '83 grades Reunion/Grad Party! May 9, a 10:00 p.m. at beautiful Love Star School and detail call BL at 842 b6 8573 SI THE TRIDEL Wilma, WHAT'S THIS ABOUT THE DOUBLE STAINPIN STIPED FURY Love ya TEJT
Steph, Maria, Cary-Duedi! Nothing beats new potato-style toy! Catastralified, Yale Scupper, McNan's, Beach, Tad, limo, Remember it doesn't last longer afterwards. Don't forget me--Wendy!
WAFFLESTOCK Last wake weekend Saturday
Sunday for information call Paul, Faul,
Paul.
Steve in Chem E; you summer opportunity!
Come study a broad In Oatle; Call Now!
BUS. PERSONAL
To the gay in the blue bathing suit at Robinson:
"I can't talk to you. I'm not here to talk to me!" The girl in the black and blue shirt
TJ LEads the Men of Delta Chin to battle to conquer the almighty BEE-VAR! May 3, 87
Be creative in gift gifting. Fulfill fantasies with beautiful beauties. Portraits for all occasions. Call (617) 250-3480.
EUROPEAN
WOMEN'S HOT TENT
HOT TENT HEALTH CLUB
25th E. Iowa • 814-623-832
10 VISITS $25.00
---
HEADACHE, BACKACHE, ARM PAIN, LEFG PAIN? Student and most insurance accepted. For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark Johnson 843-9379
GAYLEBISMAN? P. Write for KS/MO info PERSONALLY, P. Box 218, Dily City, CA 9401-6218 Mailed discreetly/confidentially Graduating Seniors, Do Your Parents need a Bachelor or Commencement? Two Airconditioned, Large House Available May 16 & 17 Call 821-3421.
Call or drop by Headquarters. We're here because we care. 841:2345 1419 Mass.
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO REALLY LISTEN
Headed to Colorado after finals' Great deal on a Call Tern: 1-728-3963 (Topka) Keep trying
Don't Forget!
Sell books back.
See Advisor
Plane
Tickets
Home
Soc. final on Thurs.
Check TODAY for the best prices and the lowest fares.
Maupintour
KU Union/831 Mass.
749-0700
Most reasonable rates in town for all your photo
courses. Call Photo Classes Ft. 784-2650
or portfolio prints. Call Photo Classes Ft. 784-2650
Enjoy smooth, creamy Frozen Yogurt that tastes like Ice Cream but with 80% less fat! --FREE SAMPLES--
I Can't Believe It's YOGURT! Frozen Yogurt Stores
OPEN: 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Daily
Noon-11 p.m. Sundays
Universities Nursing Centers
Need music for your wedding? Call Jean, 483-730-5241. Listen to "Love Is a Wonderland." New Connection, 300 Elm, North Lawrence, 442-4013. Tuesday Saturday at 9, 6 evenings by appointment. Hair style done with you. Way through summer. Call Jean, 483-730-5241.
GREENS PARTY SUPPLY
808 W.23rd
Weekly Beer Specials
April 22-28
Heineken 12 pk. $6.99
Coors Light 12 pk. $5.37
Old Style 12pk. $4.12
Busch 12pk. $3.98
Weidmann 12pk. $3.49
SERVICES OFFERED
AUTO-TINTING: Best scratch resistant solar
film available. Lifetime warranty. PROTINT of
the film is recommended.
CRIMSON SUN PHOTO is looking for young women interested in developing a modeling portfolio. 15% over direct cost. No set fee. Call 841-9699.
DONALD G. STROLE
- D.W.1/5 & Traffic
* Fake DJ's & other criminal offenses
* Family Law & other legal problems
* 16 East 13th St. 842-1133
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest
DRIVING LICENSE. Driver license obtainable, transportation
drivers, driver license obtained.
HARPER
LAWYER
1101 Mass
Suite 201 749-0123
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES. Ekhachanova
UK Photographer Services - Ekhachanova
PAINT $60.00 Art & Design Buildings
PHOTOS $40.00
MATIH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $/hr. (courses above 199, HP.) =843-9032
Moving? Call for Herman Help! Dirk and Dirk help you with their lovely Dude Truck! 841-1797.
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Jgn and Abortion Services.
Overland Park. 931-433-1878
MUSIC ****** MUSIC ****** MUSIC ******
Red House Audio t-bracket track. P. A. and Lights,
Mobile Party Music, Maximum Audio Wizardry.
Call Brad 749-1275.
Reliable Grad Assist wants to house-sit for
Ref. avail Call 749-4095 (Scott).
(www.graff.net)
Seamstress. All ladies' dresses can be made here by seams, patterns and styles from the fashion magazines. I will design and run my own business.
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-236.
842-5937
SELF STORAGE
1
One block west & 6 blocks north of Holiday Inn
412 N IOWA
- New Modern Facilities 412 N IOWA
TYPING
A3 professional typing. Term papers, theses.
IBM Typewriter 842-398
Typewriter typewriter 842-398
A-Z Word processing Service. Quality resumes, Faxes and Letters. File storage available. 843-1850 up to 9pm.
1-1-1 TRIO Word processing. Responsible.
Conscientious Reliable. Call 842 3111 for service
AAA TYPING has low cost word processing/document storage starting at $11/pg.c Call 842.1942 after 4 p.m. weekdays, any time weekends. Campus pickup available.
Accurate Word Processing Meadowbrook loca
experiences experience 749-1968
EVENINGS
Absolutely Fast Typing. Dependable and experienced with reasonable rates. Call Kathy at 841-7409 a 9 p.m. and at 749-2648 after 3 p.m.
WITNESS LIFETIME 841-3468. Resumes $15
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, letters, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter quality
printing, spelled correct. 842-724-274.
Dependable, professional, experienced.
Service E-Level EEE.
Service TRANSCRIPTION and standard tape.
DISSERTATIONS THESES LAW
AND STATUTIONS will but still
keep WATCHING THIS AD
DONT pay too much for resumes! Ours average $10.00. Copies on paper $2.50 per page. TRANSCRIPTION UNLIMITED. 10.12 Massachusetts 842-469-300. Professional Templates
Experienced typist; theses, dissertations, term papers 842 2120 at 6:15 p.m. M/F or Sal/Sun.
Experienced Typist. Dissertations, theses, term papers, etc. Reasonable Rates. Call 842-3202
For professional typing/word processing, call
professional 4809 spring special $120, page, double-
space. For personal use, call
Guaranteed Perfect typing done on a word processor. Located near Lawrence Hospital. Call
KU SECRETARY Typing and word processing,
Affordable, fast, accurate. Spelling corrected, let-
ter quality. Pickup on campus. Monica 814 8246
Evenings-weekends
GOOD IMPRESSIONS Typing/Word Process-
types Resumes Spelled corrected 841-427
GOOD IMPRESSIONS Typing/Word Process-
types Resumes Spelled corrected 841-427
Resume Service-laserwritten 10 copies ONLY
$20.749-2193 after 5 p.m.
Smart Word Processing includes editing and spelling
and punctuation, reasonable rates. Foster: 792-246
10 a.m. to 7 p.m.
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, edgar, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes HAVE M.S. Degree. 814-6254
TOP-NOTCH SERVICE'S professional work pro-
gram, designed for printers, thesis, these
quality printing, etc. 842
Why pay for typing when you can have wordress, resumes, files. Since 1983, H-403, Theses, resumes. Since 1983, H-403, Theses, resumes.
WANTED
Donations of books and magazine needed. Supported by the Lawrence Public Library. Involved in the preparation of a book.
2 Female husbands wanted to share 3 bedrooms.
Near Nasr alim, utilities paid. nicely furnished,
free of charge.
3 Summer Subcases: males, extremely close to
women. nice $85-92/month plus utilities.
841 6062
Male roommate for summer Share room in 3 bedrooms apartment $15 per month / 4 utilities
Molly Female Roommate Wanted May through July. clean quiet 2 bd apartment 841-816-816
Neded: one or two roommates for summer. New triplet, own bedroom, fully furnished, near car park. Small apartment.
Needed: roommate for a very nicely furnished apartment, on bus route, pools and tennis court.
Non-smoking Male Roommate wanted to share 2 BR apt for $84.88 year $150/mo plus 1/2 room size.
Personal care attendant needed for female quadriplegic. Earnings. M-Su. $40./hr. 824-1794.
Responsible Roommate need to share 3 BR quiet, nice air, qreat 842-9738, up 5 p.m. on call
ROOMMATE (For Fall in a brand new, well located apt. 28 + Baths; fattely furnished 166 mo. room)
ROOMMATE NEEDED FOR SUMMER MONTHS.
Live in Leedswood Apkins Swimming
Park. Must be 18 years old or older.
Roommate $157.90 Deposit, Negotiable, Cheap!
Summer only or into Fall. In furnished. 841-1096.
Roommate Mali Apt. summer option to renew
Cball. Call 841-1096. NPDEM furnished.
Roommate(s) needed to sublease for the sum
available May 20th. Call 842-0067
Roommate wanted for summer. Shattered nice 3 yrs old roommate. Wanted to refinish fireplace table / 12% off first month rent. Avail
STOP! One Raaminate Needed. Summer w/ Fall.
Spring option. Ductile, cable garage. Loose
material. 60 ft.
SUMMER ROOMMATE NEEDED. Brand new
roommate needed. Bedside Male Mid. Free
may reel. 843-949, Anthony J. Duffey
Summer Roommate! luxury 2 bdm, Sunrise
Pine street fully furnished, pool $100/mm²
Summer roommates needed. Fully furnished
campus campus. campus plus utilities
414-856-9868
WANTED: Female roommate to share expenses in house at 1015 Illinois for 1987-88 school year. If interested call (417) 667-9115 ask for Ann, Laura, or Nancy
WANTED: Summer Rooms to share a nice
large 5 bed townhouse, 13th & Kentucky
1
Wanted: Help for Summer. Neat, quick,健
康, house for old cleaning jobs for yard.
Deli kitchen, or a large closet.
Roommate to share at Apollo
Woods. Must be neat, call 749-1883
Wanted: Roommate to share 3 bedroom Appt
= 87-88 school year. $15.00 or negotiable. 842-3625
16
University Daily Kansan/Thursday, April 30, 1987
JOHN WALLACE DODGE-YUGO Where KU Goes ... YUGOS
®
$3990.00
ONLY
®
LET'S GET SERIOUS
YUGO
Receive Special Financing Through the Chrysler Credit Corporation.
GRADUATING SENIORS
YUGO
$3990
THE ROAD BACK
TO SANITY
THE PERFECT FIRST CAR
JACKY'S VEHICLE
John Wallace Dodge OF OVERLAND PARK
I-435 & Metcalf
(913) 642-4600