WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms high will be 80 degrees,the low will be 66 degrees.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid,high of 85 degrees,low will be 66 degrees.
Weekend: There will be a chance of thunderstorms daily,with highs in the low 90s,lows about 65
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP
DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION
FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
Wednesday June 10,1987
Vol. 97, No.146 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
By PAUL BELDEN
Staff writer
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations.
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towers find the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
He had one vice, however; he smoked quite a bit. . like a chimney,
in fact.
But University officials didn't need him anymore, so they hired a team of hit men to rub him out.
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus.Chunk is dead, smokestack is dying a slow death.
facilities and operation began *began* contractors, w week, should i completely torr weeks, dependi Two smokest above the roof o replace the 245 has been a KU he said. Tom Anderss ties and operati planned to have the internal wo first then dem But. but coordinate the than originally Part of the re more likely than completed and on line before Anderson said. "It's easier to
Richard Perkins, associate director of utility management for KU
"It's easier to
Par sta
By STORMY
Staff writer
Enjoy the parking. It w.
Starting A
everyone a l
campus, sa assistant d
services.
The parkin
pay for a
multilevel p
said.
Residence
housing pe
lowest incre
blue zone pe
Group 1 v notparkin the wrong
Group 2 v permit, pla
(Note: Gro within sev and corree parking se
WH
Permi
Blue Zone
Red Zone
Yellow Zex
Dorm &
Campus
Red Mout
Blue Mot
Meter Fa
Parking
Parking V if paid aft of reciept
Parking Vi
if paid **will**
of reciept c
ing than heating." he said.
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct. 15, depending on the weather.
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up to full operational capabilities, and sometimes a third," he said.
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-fette-square sections of the smokestack, cutting renforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down, Perkins said, but as the stack gets
New vice chancellor selected
By CARLA PATINO
Staff writer
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the job from 55 candidates, said Del Shankel, chairman of the executive vice chancellor search committee.
When Ramaley begins her duties
Aut. 1, she will be the second highest
ruler in Nigeria.
She will replace Shankel, who has been the acting executive vice chancellor for the KU campus since January when the resignation of
of English.
KANSAN MAGAZINE
May 1, 1987
CLASS OF 1987
had the candidates variety of kills and about KU academicom 1982 to be the e president he has also native posiety, the Uni the Univer-Center. original 55 committee and Rama-
presented
lphabetical
mittee did
choice, but
was the
nt to the
ch commi-
tions of the
qualified to
lig for his
iate vice
airs and a
ber, said,
woman did
see's selec-
pressed by Ramaley's ny told in how sorry
Neb., gra:
h commit-
ey was an
ous underdent needs "catching
nnounced at the all 16.
rt
f the Anti-
Brigade,
usible last
lition of a
1 Lebanon
on us. S.
absences in
tary frog
a suspium a Venema
a further
y security
city
tailed to
as harm-
reportedly
an unexe
unecan
an aban
mdb debris
alit leaders
of interne-
ted to halt
countries
hijacking
of avia
e to moni- of airlines ms," they
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms high will be 80 degrees,the low will be 66 degrees.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid,high of 85 degrees,low will be 66 degrees.
Weekend: There will be a chance of thunderstorms daily,with highs in the low 90s,lows about 65
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP
DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION
FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
Wednesday June 10,1987
Vol. 97, No. 146 (USPS650-640)
PAGE 2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
By PAUL BELDEN
Staff writer
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towers find the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
He had one vice, however: he smoked quite a bit. . like a chimney,
in fact.
But University officials didn't need
nothing anymore they hired a team of
hikers.
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus. Chunk by chink, the KU smokestack is dying a slow death.
Richard Perkins, associate director of utility management for KU
facilities and office
began Jedi contractors,
week, should I
completely tort
weeks dependi
often, the poper
Two smokest
above the roof of
replace the 245
has been a KU
he said.
Tom Andersen ties and operations planned to have the internal wo first, then demo But, he said coordinate the than originally Part of the re more likely than completed and on line before Anderson said.
"It's easier to
Pa sta
By STORMY Staff writer
Enjoy the parking. It w
Starting At everyone a l
campus, sa assistant d
services.
The parkir pay for a multilevel psaid.
Permm
Residence housing pe lowest incre Blue zone pe.
WH
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the job from 55 candidates, said Del Shankel, chairman of the executive vice candleholder search committee.
Blue Zone
Red Zone
Yellow Ze
Dorm.
& Campus
Red Mote
Blue Mot
Meter Pa
When Ramaley begins her duties Aug. 1, she will be the second-highest ranking administrator on campus.
Parking
Parking Va if paid with of reciept c
ing than heating." he said.
Group 1 v not parkin the wrong Group 2 v permit, pla (Note: Gro within sev and correct parking se
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct. 15, depending on the weather.
Parking V
if paid aft
of reciept
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-feet-square sections of the smokestack, cutting renforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up to full operational capabilities, and sometimes a third," he said.
[Picture of a damaged aircraft with broken wings and structural frame].
New vice chancellor selected
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down, Perkins said, but as the stack gets
Staff writer
By CARLA PATINO Staff writer
of English.
Contents
Kansan Magazine
PERSONALS
Volume 3, Number 7
PERSONALS ADS: Where the shy write to meet. See P. 6.
GETTING AROUND
Disabled KU students find ways to make do when traveling on campus. 5
GROUP HOME
A young couple takes care of 10 foster kids and considers it good experience for parenthood. 16
RIVER QUEEN
A ride on a triple-decker steamboat can be a fun education. 19
HOTEL REBORN 20
The Eldridge got a facelift before its reopening this week.
DEPARTMENTS
Interview P.3
In Focus P.11
On the cover: Illustration by Dave Eames
First Person P.18
KANSAN MAGAZINE is a monthly supplement to the University Daily Kanan. Articles and photographs to be considered for publication are on request.
Game Plan P.22
Cover Story P. 9
A Look Back P.8
EDITOR: Lynn Maree Ross
ASSOCIATE EDITOR: John Bener
CONTRIBUTING STAFF: Julie Adam, Joellen Black, Laurea Bostrom, Daryang Chang, Todd Cohen, Roger Corey, Jody Dickson, Diane Dultmeit, Dave Eames, Patricia Feeney, Beth A. Fisher, Tim Hamilton, Bridget Huuer, Kirk Kahler, Jerri Niebum, Peggy O'Brien, L.A. Danny Ray, Amy Rhoads, Paul Schrag, Bill Skeet, Juli Warren, Jenny Wryrick.
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had the candidates variety of kills and about KU academic com 1982 to been the president he also has positive posiity, the Uni der University Center. original 55 committee and Rama-
2
nt to the
bth committ-
ions of the
qualified
tig for his
presented
phabetical
mittened
did choice,
but was the
pressed by Ramaley's my told in how sorry
iate vice airs and a ber, said woman did see selec
ous underdent needs "catching
Neb., gra-
th commi-
tey was an
nnounced at the all- 16.
rt
f the Anti-
Bri-
bage last,
insible last
'of a
l Lebanon
as on U.S.
ishes on U.S.
tary frog
a suspicion a Venue
a further
y security
city
letailed to
as harm
reportedly
an unexe
uncone
an aban
KANSAN MAGAZINE/May 1, 1987
mb debris
sit leaders
of internag-
do to halt
countries
hijacking
of avia-
e to moni of airlines ms," they
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms,
high will be 80 degrees, the low will be 66 degrees.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid, high of
85 degrees, low will be 66 degrees.
Weekend: There will be a chance of thunder-
storms daily, with highs in the low 90s, lows about 65
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
Wednesday June 10,1987
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
Vol. 97, No. 146 (USPS650-640)
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
By PAUL BELDEN
Staff writer
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations.
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towers find the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
He had one vice, however, he smoked quite a bit, like a chimney,
But University officials didn't need him anymore, so they hired a team of hit men to rub him out.
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus. Chunk is always smokestack is dying a slow death,
ition began Ji contractors, we week, should I completely torr weeks, dependi Two smokest above the roof c replace the 245 has been a KU he said.
Tom Andersen ties and operated planned to have the internal wow first, then demo But, he said coordinate the than originally Part of the re more likely than completed and on line before Anderson said. "It's easier to
Richard Perkins, associate director of utility management for KU
Pa sta
The parkir pay for a multilevel p said.
Residence housing pe lowest incre Blue zone ple
By STORMY
Staff writer
Enjoy the parking. It w
Starting At everyone a l
campus, sa assistant d
services.
WH
Perm
Blue Zone
Red Zone
Yellow Zi,
Dorm &
Campus
Red Motu
Bla Motu
Meter Pa
Parking 1
Parking V
if paid wifi
of receipt c
Parking V if paid aft of receipt
Group 1 v not parking the wrong Group 2 v permit, pl (Note: Gro within se and correct parking se
ing than heating," he said.
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct.15,depending on the weather.
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up to full operational capabilities, and sometimes a third," he said.
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-feet-square sections of the smokestack, cutting renforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down, Perkins said, but as the stack gets
(1)
New vice chancellor selected
By CARLA PATING
Staff writer
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the job from 55 candidates, said Del Shankel, chairman of the executive vice candlelor search committee.
When Ramaley begins her duties Aug. 1, she will be the second-highest ranking administrator on campus.
She will replace Shankel, who has been the acting executive vice chancellor for the KU campus since January when the resignation of
INTERVIEW
Robert Lineberry
'This is a time in which major and most minor institutions in the United States are competing for quality students in the same way that they compete for athletes.'
In what ways has this year been especially challenging and eventful for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences?
of English.
The most important thing was the discovery that we had an additional 1,100 students in the college, bringing our total undergraduate enrollments to more than 2 million. Our ranks dominated almost every issue this year.
Second in importance was the mid-year recission that made our finances even tighter. On the plus side, it was a sterling year in terms of the quality of faculty that was added, so we see a lot of positive things this year as well as the adverse effects of the enrollment.
How severe is the overenrolment problem?
It has pluses and minuses to it. On one side, we are continually pleased that so many students and so many good students choose the University of Kansas. A lot of other institutions, some in our own state, are struggling with sudden and severe downturns in enrollment. It is more pleasant to wrestle with the problem of a attractive rather than being too untattractive.
But it does have a lot of adverse effects, including the swelling of class sizes and section sizes, overworking an already busy faculty and causing students some dislocation in their schedules. Some students are being closed out of classes they would like to take as part of their degree program. We simply haven't gotten new resources to meet them. So it's been a burden on the faculty, on the staff, on equipment and supplies and on the students.
In the long run, we hope and expect that the Legislature will give us some relief from this overenrollment or underbudgeting, which are merely two sides of the same coin. And if not, the exacerbation of resources is going to continue.
That certainly seems a reasonable expectation to me. I'm also the first to understand that the state of Kansas has had some serious problems, but I don't think some thinks it's a little too easy to point
What are the prospects for improving the situation?
Since the state requires an open-admission policy, shouldn't it also be willing to provide the resources to meet the needs of the students that the policy brings in?
finger and to cast blame. We're here for the long haul, and we're more interested in what the University has over a five- or 10-year period than in the problems of any given year. So we remain optimistic that the Legislature and the governor will continue to place the needs of the University of Kansas high on the state's agenda, partly because the governor and the Legislature know that the only place, realistically, that's going to deal with the problem of the brain drain and economic development is the University of Kansas and other Regents institutions.
If it were up to you, would the University have an open-admission policy?
I've always thought that one of the attractive features of the University of Kansas was that it attempts to balance the concept of equality of opportunity with the concept of excellence. There is something that appeals to my populist soul about that. As long as we can continue striking that balance, I favor very strongly a continuation of the system that we have come to appreciate over 100 years of our history. The real question is whether, without adequate funding, we're going to compromise the quality of education that good students have rightly come to expect from us. The jury is still out on that question.
The most important thing the college controls is the standards of retention in the college. We have undergone a process of increasing the standards over about a six-year period. We have produced a more rigorous curriculum, we have higher standards for remaining in the college, and I think we will have a stronger undergraduate profile because of that.
We take in 70 percent to 75 percent of the new freshmen in the University. It seems to me that it is often unfortunate that the college is a wide-open funnel. It is a source of some chagrin to members of the college faculty to see one school after another raise its requirements in order to reduce their enrolments and encourage, therefore, the college to take in students that they may not want in another school. This creates what I have called the Flying Dutchman problem. There are probably 2,000 to 4,000 students in the college who would rather be某处
What are the consequences of the fact that other schools at KU can be selective, while the college can't?
Given an open-admission policy, to what extent can the college manage, or restrict, its enrollment?
else it is difficult for our faculty to manage students whose hearts are not with us. So I have a concern about the degree to which the college becomes a home for Flying Dutchmen.
BY PAUL SCHRAG
How does the enrollment situation look for next fall?
My understanding is that enrollment applications remain at least as strong for next year as they did for last year. It looks like enrollment will be up again.
We continue to do very, very well. ACT scores remain well above national averages. Equally important is that our ability to attract minority students is good, while nationally, that is going down.
Will the college be able to deal with that?
Looking to the future, how is KU doing in competition with other universities to bring in high-quality students?
Is the competition becoming more intense?
With some dislocations, it will be able to handle the bulk of that. Students' flexibility is going to be limited. Some problems are emerging in upper-division courses, courses that require high enrollment levels, 50 or more, where we may not have the faculty to add new sections.
This is a time in which major and most minor institutions in the United States are competing for quality students in the same way that they compete for athletes. That's a welcome development, in my judgment. So far, KU has held its own in this competition. I am concerned about our ability to do so in the future, and that is why I urge us to put as much money as possible into honors fellowships, and fellowships for merit scholarships and other high-quality students, because I don't want to lose either of the two competitions of the '90s. The first competition is for high-quality faculty members. The graduate schools will not be producing as many faculty members as the universities want to absorb because of their high rates of retirement. I want to start now to hire the largest possible number of good faculty members.
Secondly, I want to continue to attract the largest possible number of high-quality students to the honors program and to the entire University. Those are two competitions that KU cannot afford to lose.
SIR DAVID MICHAEL JOHNSON
A.
THE LAWRENCE H. MORRIS SENATE CEREMONY
Robert Lindeyne, dean
the College of Liberal Arts
and Sciences and
is also a professor of poli-
tics.
had the candidates variety of kills and about KU academicom 1982 to been the president he has also resi posity, the Uni the Univer- Center. original 51 committee and Rama-
nt to the bh committions of the uqualified to lig for his
presented
|phabetical
mittee did
choice, but
was the
Neb., grah committee was an
pressed by Ramaley's ny told in now sorry
iate vice
airs and
a ber, said,
woman did
ae's selec
ous underdent needs "catching
nnounced at the all-16.
rt
f the Anti-
Briach,
usable last
lament of a
'lebanon
ibs on U.S.
iasbies
tary frog
a suspicion a Venene
a further y security
city.
called to
as harm-reportedly
an unexe
unceon
an aban
---
md debris
itl leaders
of intern-
gated to halt
countries
hijacking
of avia-
ness
e to moni of airlines ms," they
3
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms high will be 80 degrees,the low will be 66 degrees. Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid,high of 85 degrees,low will be 66 degrees. Weekend: There will be a chance of thunderstorms daily,with highs in the low 90s,lows about 65
DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP
FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
Wednesday June 10,1987
Vol. 97, No. 146 (USPS650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
By PAUL BELDEN
Staff writer
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations.
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-townsers the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
He had one vice, however, he smoked quite a bit, like a chimney,
But University officials didn't need him anymore, so they hired a team of hit men to rub him out.
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus. Chunk is an Army member, smokestack is dying a slow death.
ition, has and j
begin, contract
v week, should
completely t
weeks, depend
two smokest
above the roof
replace the 246
has been a KU
he said.
Richard Perkins, associate director of utility management for KU
Tom Anders
ties and operat-
planed to ha
the internal wi
first, then dem
but, he said
coordinate the
than originally
Part of the r more likely
the completed
and on line before
Anderson said.
"It's easier b
Group 1 v
not parking
the wrong
Group 2 v
permit, pl
(Note: Grow
within se
and corne
parking se
Pa sta
By STORMY Staff writer
Enjoy the parking. It w
Starting a
everyone a campus,
s. assistant o
services.
The parki
pay for a multilevel
said.
Residence housing po
lowest incre
WH
Residence housing pe lowest incre Blue zone pc
Perm.
Parking
Blue Zone
Red Zone
Yellow Zi
Dorm. &
Campus
Red Mot.
Blue Mot
Meter Pa
Parking V
if paid will
of reciept
Parking V if paid aft of reciept
When Ramaley begins her duties Aug. 1, she will be the second-highest administrator on campus.
The image shows a large, partially destroyed aircraft with its tail and wings intact but heavily damaged. The structure is made of metal and wood, with visible cracks and splintered pieces. There are no clear identifiable marks or inscriptions on the aircraft.
ing than heating," he said.
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct. 15, depending on the weather.
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the job from 55 candidates, said Del Shankel, chairman of the executive vice chancellor search committee
New vice chancellor selected
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up to full operational capabilities, and sometimes a third," he said.
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-feet-square sections of the smokestack, cutting renforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down, Perkins said, but as the stack gets
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
Staff writer
By CARLA PATING
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4
had the candidates variety of kills and about KU academic from 1982 to been the e president he has also rative posity, the Unite the Univer-Center. original 55 committee and Rare
nt to the ch commi tions of the qualified to lig for his
presented lphabetical imittee did choice, but was the
iate vice
airs and
ber, said,
woman did
see's selec-
pressed by Ramaley's ny told in now sorry
Neb., gra:
h commi-
tev was an
ous underdent needs "catching
nnounced at the all- 16.
rt
of the Anti-
Briagde,
unsible last
lastion of a
n Lebanon
kisses on U.S.
abbies in
tary frog
a suspicion v a Venene
a further
security
city
lettered to
as harm
reportedly
an unexe
uncone
an aban
mb disb
nit leaders
of interne-
tion to halt
countries
hijacking
of avia-
e to moni of airlines ms," they
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms, high will be 80 degrees, the low will be 66 degrees.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid, high of 85 degrees, low will be 66 degrees.
Weekend: There will be a chance of thunderstorms daily, with highs in the low 90s, lows about 65
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
Wednesday June 10,1987
Vol. 97, No.146 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
Staff writer
But University officials didn't need
many hours to hire a team of
hi-res people.
By PAUL BELDEN
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus. Chunk by chuck, the KU smokestack is dying a slow death.
He had one vice, however; he smoked quite a bit. . . like a chimney, in fact.
tion began Jeg contractors, we week, should I completely torm weeks, dependi Two smokest above the roof of replace the 245 has been a KU he said. Tom Andersen ties and operati planned to hae the internal wo first, then demo But, he said coordinate the than originally Part of the re more likely that completed and on line before Anderson said "It's easier to
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towns for the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
Richard Perkins, associate director of utility management for KU
Pa sta
By STORMY Staff writer
Enjoy the parking. It wi
Starting At everyone a l
campus, se assistant d
services.
The parkir pay for a multilevel p said.
Residence housing pe lowest incre Blue zone pe
WH
Perm
Blue Zone
Red Zone
Yellow Ze
Dorm.
& Campus
Red Mote
Blue Mot
Meter Pa
Parking
Parking V if paid will of receipt
Parking V if paid aft of reciept
Group 1 v not parkin
the wrong
Group 2 v permit, pla
(Note: Gro
within sev
and correct
parking se
ing than heating." he said.
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct. 15, depending on the weather.
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up to full operational capabilities, and sometimes a third," he said.
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-feet-square sections of the smokestack, cutting reinforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down, Perkins said, but as the stack gets
New vice chancellor selected
By CARLA PATINO
Staff writer
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the job from 55 candidates, said Del Shankel, chairman of the executive vice candlelor search committee.
When Ramaley begins her duties Aug. 1, she will be the second-highest ranking administrator on campus
By Roger Corey
She will replace Shankel, who has been the acting executive vice chancellor for the KU campus since January when the resignation of
Inaccessibility hinders disabled Survey committee examines limitations of campus buildings
Legend
All floors can be reached
Some floors can be reached
No floors can be reached
Entrance
Handicap parking space
Carpenter
Continuing Education
K.S. "Boots" Adams Alumni Center
Helen Foreman
Spencer Museum of Art
Smith Hall
Hillop Child Development Center
University Relations Center
Grace Pearson Hall
Dyche Hall
Spooner Hall
Douthart Hall
Springue Apartments
Danforth Chapel
Lippincott Hall
Stephenson Hall
Battenfeld Hall
Pearson Hall
Watson Library
Westkline Hall
Sellards Hall
Miller Hall
Blake Hall
Guest House
Jolliffe Hall
Facilities Operations
Twentz Hall
Blake Hall Annex
Community Service Center
Chancellor's Residence
Motor Pool
Garage
Summerfield Hall
Howorth Hall
Murphy Hall
Marthy Hall
Marrin Hall
Snow Hall
Lindley Hall
Annex
Broadcasting Hall
Och Auditorium
Art & Design Building
Millery Science Building
Military Science Anns
Military Science Annas
Murphy Hall
On a cold sunny afternoon in late December, Res Swartz, Salina junior, was standing on top of a grain elevator in Nebraska City, Neb., with two other workers. Swartz had gotten a job over Christmas break with a grain company and was given the assignment that afternoon of taking samples of corn stored in a 30-foot-high steel bin.
"We were probing," Swartz said. "Taking something of the corn. I ran a pole down to 20 feet and something got stuck. I thought it was probably a corn cob, so I pulled the rods up to check."
Swartz took a firm grasp on the aluminum rods with his bare hands and began to pull. The rods rose higher and higher into the air. Just over his head, unknown to Swartz, was a high power voltage wire.
of English.
SunnySue Avenue
Computer Services
Facility
Robinson Health and
Physical Education
Center
Westside Hospital
When the rods and wire connected, a burst of 12.400 volts shot down the aluminum shaft and into Swartz. The current ran up the young man's arms, down his back, and tore out the back of his legs and hips.
"I thought I was dead," Swartz said. "I looked at my right arm. It looked so motionless and distant, I thought it was off my body. Then I realized I couldn't move and I was scared."
An ambulance took Swartz to Nebraska City Memorial Hospital, but it didn't have a burn unit, so he was transferred to Lincoln Nebraska Hospital.
Lorna Zimmer, director of the
"I was lucky," Swartz said. "They have one of the best burn units in the area."
"It's incredible," Swartz said. "They do everything for you but get a date for Friday night."
His parents telephoned the KU Student Assistance Center and learned that services available to disabled students included note takers, note reviewers, the use of tape recorders, telecomunicators for deaf students, equipment to illuminate hands of signers in dark classrooms and a lift van service.
Swartz was in the hospital at Lincoln for two months. During that time his right hand was amputated and he lost the use of the left. On March 6 he was transferred to the Rehabilitation Institute in Kansas City, Mo., where he was fitted with a prosthesis for his right arm.
As he recovered, Swartz made plans to return to the University in the fall. But he had no idea what services were available for disabled students.
"We only help those students who identify themselves as needing help," she said. "Some disabled students choose not to ask for help. It's their business and privacy."
student assistance center, said it was fortunate that Swartz's parents had telephoned.
Students with disabilities include those who are partially sighted or blind, have health-related problems, learning disabilities, orthopedic problems, hearing loss and speech difficulties.
Zimmer said the center's program began in 1978 with three disabled students and now had between 120 and 140 students.
Zimmer said the KU campus was 80 percent accessible to students using wheelchairs. Some campus buildings that look inaccessible are not.
"Iippincott doesn't look accessible, but at the back there is a ground level entrance," she said. "And the Natural History
Museum is accessible from the side of Dyche Hall."
Dawn Semon, a Madison, Wis., graduate student who uses a wheelchair, said that overall the University was good for accessibility, but that she wished the administration would make a few additional changes.
She said the worst problem was the entrance to Strong Hall. The entrance for disabled students is in the rear of the building on the northwest corner. It is the only entrance to the administration building accessible to students using wheelchairs. The entrance has a stone threshold that students using wheelchairs find difficult to maneuver, and the entrance often is blocked by delivery trucks.
"Strong Hall is so important." Semon said. "You'd think they would have a better entrance for disabled students."
Semon said cars parked illeg-
See DISABLED, p. 17
A person in a wheelchair is seated inside a vehicle. The wheelchair has large wheels and a seat cover. The background includes trees and a car roof.
Glen White has to drive from Haworth to Bailey to get to a class.
KANSAN MAGAZINE/May 1, 1987
had the candidates variety of kills and about KU academic rom 1982 to been the e president he has also rative posity, the Uni der Univer-Center. original 55 committee and Rama-
nct to the
commit-
mitions of the
qualified to
lig for his
presented
phabetical
mittee did
choice, but
was the
Neb., gra:
committey was an
pressed by Ramaley's ny told in now sorry
ous under- dent needs "catching
iate vice
fairs and a
ber, said,
woman did
mee seele-
sie
nnounced at the all 16.
rt
of the Anti-
Briagde,
msilious last
tition of a
bay a Lebanon
in basses on U.S.
tary frog
a suspium a Venene
a further
security
city
lettered to
as harm-
reportedly
an unexe-
neun anaban
mb debis
itl leaders
of interna-
tion to halt
courtries
i hjacking
of avia-
e to moniof airlines ms," they
5
A
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms,
high will be 80 degrees, the low will be 66 degrees.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid, high of
85 degrees, low will be 66 degrees.
Weekend: There will be a chance of thunder-
storms daily, with highs in the low 90s, lows about 65
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
Wednesday June 10,1987
Vol.97, No.146 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
By PAUL BELDEN
Staff writer
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations.
But University officials didn't need him anymore, so they hired a team of hit men to rub him out.
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towers find the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
He had one vice, however: he smoked quite a bit. . like a chimney, in fact.
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus. Chunk by chunk, the KU smokestack is dying a slow death.
facilities and opi
ition began JU
contractors, w
week, should I
completely torr
weeks, dependi
Two smokest
above the roof of
replace the 245
has been a KU
he said.
Richard Perkins, associate direc
Tom Anderson
ties and operati
planned to hat
the internal wo
first, then dem
But, he said
coordinate the
than originally
part of the r
more likely tha
completed and
on line before
Anderson said.
"It's easier to
"It's easier to
Pa sta
By STORMY Staff写
Enjoy the parking. It w
Starting At everyone a l
campus, sa assistant d
services.
The parkir pay for a multilevel p said.
Residence housing pe lowest incre blue zone pl
WH
Blue Zone Red Zone Yellow Ze Dorm. & Campus Red Motte Blue Mote Meter Pa
Permit
Parking
Parking V
Parking V
if paid will
of receipt c
Parking V if paid aft of reciept
Group 1 v not parkin the wrong Group 2 v permit, pla (Note: Gro within sev and correct parking se
ing than heating." he said.
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct. 15, depending on the weather.
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up to full operational capabilities, and sometimes a third," he said.
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-feet-square sections of the smokestack, cutting renforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the
smoked hatack had been torn down.
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the job from 55 candidates, said Del Shankel, chairman of the executive vice chancellor search committee.
New vice chancellor selected
By CARLA PATINO
When Ramaley begins her duties Aug. 1, she will be the second-highest ranking administrator on campus.
Staff writer
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
'I'm calling about the ad
of English.
TABLING BOOK
By Beth A. Fisher
Special to the Kansan Magazine
Angela Snyder seemed to bump into John everywhere she went — on campus, at parties, in restaurants. She wanted to meet him, but whenever she worked up enough nerve, he was gone.
Snyder waited anxiously for replies. She received a variety of responses. She said some were pleasing, but others were disgusting. She also heard from not just one but three Johns.
The solution, she decided, was an $8 ad in the University Daily Kansan. "John? Hey Blondie! Have seen you on campus, crew parties, Valentino's. Dying to meet you! Fellow Blondie Angela . . ."
Snyder experienced the wide readership attracted by persons
The ads reflect an intriguing blend of stage fright and grandstanding. Someone too shy to initiate a friendship face to face may choose to place an aggressive, flashy ad complete with home phone number. The advertiser may then relax, confident of a position of power, and wait for the world to respond.
Clayton Reid, Fort Collins, Colo., sophomore, said people who placed personal ads came across to a lot of people as desperate.
"I'd be very interested to meet these people. It makes me wonder what they're like and what kind of people they think they're going to attract by advertising." Reid said.
Like Reid, many readers wonder what motivates personal advertisers, but finding out is not easy.
Some who place personals are naint to reveal why they choose to put their private dilemmas on public display, but some are willing to explain themselves. One is Richard Felton.
Felton has learned the difference between being alone and being lonely, he said. Being lonely hurts.
Felton, a 34-year-old law student from Junction City, was tired of being lonely. So when he met a woman at a jazz concert last February who seemed like someone he would like to get to know, he tried to track her down with a personal ad.
ADVERTISING PERSONALS
had the candidates variety of kills and about KU academicom 1982 to be the president he has also rative posity, the Unite the Univer-Center. original 51 committee and Rama-
nt to the
ch commi-
tions of the
qualified to
lig for his
presented lphabetical mittee did choice, but was the
pressed by Ramaley's ny told in now sorry
iate vice
fairs and
a ber, said,
woman did
eele seele-
Neb., gragh committee was an
ous under
udent needs
"catching
nnounced at the all- 16.
rt
if the Anti-
Brileg
usible last
tion of a
n Lebanon
basses on U.S.
absences in
iary frogged a suspicion a Venea further security city
tailed to as harm- reportedly an unexe uncon- an aban
6
*mb debris*
*leaders of*
*interna-
tion* to
*haiti*
*hijacking*
*asia of*
KANSAN MAGAZINE/May 1; 1987 □
ie to moni of airlines ms," they
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms high will be 80 degrees, the low will be 66 degrees.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid, high of 85 degrees, low will be 66 degrees.
Weekday: There will be a chance of thunderstorms daily, with highs in the low 90s, lows about 65
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
Wednesday June 10,1987
Vol. 97, No. 146
(USPS650-640)
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Staff writer
But University officials didn't need him anymore, so they hired a team of hit men to rub him out.
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus. Chunk by chunk, the KU smokestack is dying a slow death.
included and o-
pition began Jil
contractors, w
week, should i
completely lor-
weeks, dependi
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
Two smokest above the roof replace the 245 has been a KU he said.
By PAUL BELDEN
Tom Andersen
ties and operati
planned to hat
the internal wo
first, then demo
But, he said
coordinate the
than originally
Part of the re
more likely tha
completed and
on line before
Anderson said.
"It's easier t
He had one vice, however: he smoked quite a bit. . . like a chimney, in fact.
"It's easier to
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations.
Pa sta
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towners find the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
Richard Perkins, associate director of utility management for KU
By STORMY Staff writer
Enjoy the parking. It w
Starting At everyone a l
campus, sa assistant d
services.
The parkir pay for a multilevel p
saided.
Residence housing pe lowest incre Blue zone pl
WH
Perm
Blue Zone
Red Zone
Yellow Zo
Dorm. &
Campus
Red Mote
Blue Mot
Meter Pa
Parking V if paid aft of recipt
Parking V.
Parking V.
if paid with
receipt t
Group 1 v not parkin the wrong Group 2 v permit, pla (Note: Grow within sev and correct parking se
ing than heating," he said.
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct.15,depending on the weather.
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up to full operational capabilities, and sometimes a third," he said.
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-feet-square sections of the smokestack, cutting reinforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down, Perkins said, but as the stack gets
New vice chancellor selected
Staff writer
By CARLA PATINO
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the job from 55 candidates, said Del Shankel, chairman of the executive vice chancellor search committee.
Inaccessibility hinders disabled
When Ramaley begins her duties Aug. 1, she will be the second-highest ranking administrator on campus
By Roger Corey
She will replace Shankel, who has been the acting executive vice chancellor for the KU campus since January, when the resignation of
Survey committee examines limitations of campus buildings
of English.
Legend
All floors can be reached
Some floors can be reached
No floors can be reached
Entrance
Handicap parking space
Continuing Education
K.S. "Boots" Adams Alumni Center
Helen Foreman
Spencer Museum of Art
Smith Hall
Hilltop Child Development Center
University Relations Center
Dyche Hall
Spooner Hall
Grace Pearson Hall
Douthart Hall
Sprague Apartments
Danforth Chapel
Lippincott Hall
Pint Hall
Wetson Library
Fraser Hall
Battentfeld Hall
Peerson Hall
Watkins Hall
Seltards Hall
Miller Hall
Blake Hall
Guest House
Jolliffe Hall
Facilities Operations
Motor Pool
Community Service Center
Blake Hall Annex
Chancellor's Residence
Lindley Hall
Snow Hall
Mervin Hall
Strong Hall
Bailey Hall Annex
Bailey Hall
Broadcasting Hall
Hoch Auditorium
Art & Design Building
Military Science Building
Military Science Arena
Summerfield Hall
Heworth Hall
Garage
On a cold sunny afternoon in late December, Rex Swartz, Salina junior, was standing on top of a grain elevator in Nebraks City, Neb., with two other workers. Swartz had gotten a job over Christmas break with a grain company and was given the assignment that afternoon of taking samples of corn stored in a 30-foot-high steel bin.
"We were probing," Swartz said. "Taking samples of the corn. I ran a pole down to 20 feet and something got stuck. I thought it was probably a corn cob, so I pulled the rods up to check."
Swartz took a firm grasp on the aluminum rods with his bare hands and began to pull. The rods rose higher and higher into the air. Just over his head, unknown to Swartz, was a high power voltage wire.
SunnySide Avenue
Computer Services Facility
Wetlands Hospital
Ronan Health and Physical Education Center
When the rods and wire connected, a burst of 12,400 volts shot down the aluminum shaft and into Swartz. The current ran up the young man's arms, down his back, and tore out the back of his legs and hips.
"I thought I was dead," Swartz said. "I looked at my right arm. It looked so motionless and distant, I thought it was off my body. Then I realized I couldn't move and I was scared."
An ambulance took Swartz to Nebraska City Memorial Hospital, but it didn't have a burn unit, so he was transferred to Lincoln Nebraska Hospital.
"I was lucky." Swartz said. "They have one of the best burn units in the area."
Lorna Zimmer, director of the
"It's incredible," Swartz said. "They do everything for you but get a date for Friday night."
As he recovered, Swartz made plans to return to the University in the fall. But he had no idea what services were available for disabled students.
Swartz was in the hospital at Lincoln for two months. During that time his right hand was amputated and he lost the use of the left. On March 6 he was transferred to the Rehabilitation Institute in Kansas City, Mo., where he was fitted with a prosthesis for his right arm.
His parents telephoned the KU Student Assistance Center and learned that services available to disabled students included note takers, note reviewers, the use of tape recorders, telecommunicators for deaf students, equipment to illuminate hands of signers in dark classrooms and a lift van service.
"We only help those students who identify themselves as needing help," she said. "Some disabled students choose not to ask for help. It's their business and privacy."
Students with disabilities include those who are partially sighted or blind, have health-related problems, learning disabilities, orthopedic problems, hearing loss and speech difficulties.
student assistance center, said it was fortunate that Swartz's parents had telephoned.
Zimmer said the center's program began in 1978 wifft three disabled students and now had between 120 and 140 students.
Zimmer said the KU campus was 80 percent accessible to students using wheelchairs. Some campus buildings that look inaccessible are not.
"I lippincott doesn't look accessible, but at the back there is a ground level entrance," she said.
"And the Natural History
Museum is accessible from the side of Dyche Hall."
She said the worst problem was the entrance to Strong Hall. The entrance for disabled students is in the rear of the building on the northwest corner. It is the only entrance to the administration building accessible to students using wheelchairs. The entrance has a stone threshold that students using wheelchairs find difficult to maneuver, and the entrance often is blocked by delivery trucks.
Dawn Semon, a Madison, Wis., graduate student who uses a wheelchair, said that overall the University was good for accessibility, but that she wished the administration would make a few additional changes.
"Strong Hall is so important." Semon said. "You'd think they would have a better entrance for disabled students."
Semon said cars parked illeg-
See DISABLED, p. 17
Glen White has to drive from Haworth to Bailey to get to class.
KANSAN MAGAZINE/May 1, 1987
had the indicates variety of hills and about KU academics am 1982 to been the president has also positive position, the Uni Envierenter original 55 committee and Rama-
t to the commi-
tions of the
alified to
g for his
presented
phabetical
mittee did
choice, but
was the
ate vice
ursa and a
ber, said,
woman did
e's selec
ressed by tamaley's told in ow sorry
Neb., gra-
n commi-
ty was an
ous underdent needs "catching
announced at the all 16.
rt
f the anti Brigade, insible last lation of a n Lebanon n on U.S. absions in
fary frogged a suspicion a Venema a further security city. lettered to as harm reportedly an unexe uncone anaban
mdb disbets
titler leaders
of internag-
to halt
countries
jhacking
of avia-
te to moni of airlines ms," they
5
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms,
high will be 80 degrees, the low will be 66 degrees.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid, high of
85 degrees, low will be 66 degrees.
Weekend: There will be a chance of thunder-
storms daily, with highs in the low 90s, lows about 65
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP
DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION
FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
Wednesday June 10,1987
Vol. 97, No.146 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
By PAUL BELDEN
Staff writer
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations.
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towners find the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
He had one vice, however: he smoked quite a bit. . like a chimney, in fact.
But University officials didn't need him anymore, so they hired a team of hit men to rub him out.
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus. Chunk is always smokestack is dying a slow death.
ition began J
contractors,
w week, should I
completely torr
weeks, dependi
Two smokest
above the roof or
replace the 245
has been a KU
Richard Perkins, associate director of utility management for KU
Tom Andersen
ties and operati-
planed to hath
the internal wo
first, then derm
but, he said
coordinate the
than originally
Part of the ri
more likely tha
completed and
on line before
Anderson said
'I miss it to
"It's easier to
Pasta
By STORMY Staff writer
Enjoy the parking. It w
Starting at everyone a
assistant d services
The parkin pay for a multilevel p said.
Residence housing pe lowest incre Blue zone pe
Blue Zone
Red Zone
Yellow Z2
Dorm. &
Dorm.
Red Mou
Blu Mou
Meter Pa
Perm
WH Perm
Parking 1
Parking V
if paid with
of receipt c
New vice chancellor selected
Parking V if paid aft of reciept
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the job from 55 candidates, said Del Shankel, chairman of the executive vice chancellor search committee.
Group 1 v park
not parkin the wrong
Group 2 v permit, puI
(Note: Gro within sev
and correct parking se
ing than heating." he said.
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct. 15, depending on the weather.
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up to full operational capabilities, and sometimes a third," he said.
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-feet-square sections of the smokestack, cutting renforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down, Perkins said, but as the stack gets
When Ramaley begins her duties
Autu he will be the second-highest
ranking police officer.
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
She will replace Shankel, who has been the acting executive vice chancellor for the KU campus since January, when the resignation of
By CARLA PATINO
Staff writer
in the personals'
Whether or not she was a romantic, Felton will never know. She didn't call.
"To whistling brunette in balcony at Bobbie McFerrin, wearing black skirt and grey (?) jacket. You called me a gentleman for allowing you first down the stairs. Please call Richard . . . if you're as romantic as I."
Felton did receive a response from another woman who was just passing through town, read his ad and was intrigued enough to call him. She left a message on his answering machine without a phone number.
Felton said the other calls he received evidently were from angry men who couldn't remember where their girlfriends had been that night.
However, when "Adam" invested $5.50 in a personal ad in late February, he said the results were a lot better than spending $5.50 in a bar.
Even though he didn't find the whistling brunette in the personals, Felton, who describes himself as quite the opposite of ugly, hopes to meet a woman with interests similar to his.
"I don't like boring people, and I don't like a boring me," Felton said. Felton listed his interests and hobbies in detail: running, wrestling, cooking gourmet foods and working as a defense attorney for the traffic court.
Felton's interest in music leads him to many concerts. At one, he interrupted his monologue to a seatmate only long enough to applaud.
"I want to find someone who talks more than I do, about substantive things," he said. Although Fellon said that persons might
Although Fellon said that personalists might be a good way to meet people, his own $9 ad cost too much for the results.
of English.
voices. Some men called because they were upset because their girlfriends had answered Adam's ad.
Adam made a list of the names and phone numbers of the women who answered his ad.
"I'm trying to find a girl who I want to spend a lot of time with, and the ad is increasing the odds of that happening," he said.
Although he hasn't met all the women on his list, Adam has been surprised by the ones he has met.
"They're good-looking and nice. None of them were duds." he said.
Adam admitted that he was frustrated with trying to approach women at bars but was quick to point out that he did not place the ad because he was desperate.
"I know a lot of girls. They're just not the girls I want to go out with," he said.
Frustration with trying to meet people face to face is the main reason people resort to personal ads, according to Patricia Schoenrade, assistant professor of psychology.
"By using an ad, advertisers are hoping to reduce the risks of initiating the relationship or facing rejection."
"It's not the kind of thing that people think of when they think of initiating a relationship," Schoenrade said. "When people do place personal ads, they often describe it as a last resort."
"The assumption is that someone who answers the ad is at least interested."
"There is a notion of interpersonal relationships as a marketplace, and people that are willing to place ads are comfortable with that notion." she said.
When all the interested parties have responded, the advertiser still has the opportunity to be selective. Schoenrade said.
Personals advertisers get into the marketplace despite the risk of getting calls from who Schoenrade says are a lot of inappropriate people.
Bill Osborne, advertising director of the Topeka Capital-Journal, said that personals advertisers might try to protect themselves by requiring that respondents write to a "blind box number."
An obscene or harassing caller or even a would-be rapist could be among those who respond to a personal ad, and that problem concerns some newspaper advertising staffs
"But there are still risks, depending on the ad," he said.
It turns out that the risks to personals advertisers are as old as personals themselves, which have existed in America since colonial newspapers.
In 1828, William Corder placed a matrimonial personal ad in the New York Herald that received 96 responses.
See PERSONALS, p. 26
was willing to tell his story, but asked that his real name not be used.
About 50 callers replied to Adam's ad, although not all of them had friendly female
KANSAN MAGAZINE/May 1, 1987
had the candidates variety of kills and about KU academic rom 1982 to be the e president he has also rative posity, the Uni der Univers Center. original 5 committee and Rama-
presented
lphabetical
mittee did
choice, but
was the
pressed by Ramaley's ny told in now sorry
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ish commi-
tions of
the qualified
to the Conclu-
ous under- dent needs "catching
Neb., gra-
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'airs and a
ber, said,
woman did
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f the Anti-
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nit leaders
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ie to moni of airlines ms," they
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms high will be 80 degrees,the low will be 66 degrees. Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid,high of 85 degrees,low will be 66 degrees. Weekend: There will be a chance of thunderstorms daily,with highs in the low 90s,lows about 65.
DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP
FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
Wednesday June 10,1987
Vol. 97, No.146 (USPS 650-640)
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Staff writer
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
But University officials didn't need him anymore, so they hired a team of hit men to rub him out.
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus. Chunk by chuck, the KU smokestack is dying a slow death.
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
tor of utility managemen facilities and oriences
facilities and orion began Jian contractors, w week, should I completely torn weeks, depend on rebuilding above the roof or replace the 245 has been a KU he said.
By PAUL BELDEN
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations.
He had one vice, however: he smoked quite a bit . . like a chimney,
in fact.
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towers for the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
Tom Andersen ties and operati planned to has the internal wo first, then dem But, he said coordinate the than originally Part of the r more likely the completed and on line before Anderson said. "It's easier to
'It's easier to
Richard Perkins, associate direc-
Pa
sta
By STORMY
Staff writer
Enjoy the parking. It w.
Starting At everyone a l
campus, s assistant d
services.
The parkir pay for a multilevel p said.
Residence housing pe lowest incre Blue zone incre
Perm
WH Permn
Red Zone
Blue Zone
Yellow Zd
Dorm.
& Campus
Red Mote
Blue Mote
Meter Pai
Parking Vehicle if paid will of receipt c
Parking
Parking V if paid aft of reciept
Group 1 v not parkin the wrong Group 2 v permit, pli (Note: Go within sev and correct parking se
ing than heating." he said.
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct. 15, depending on the weather.
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up to full operational capabilities, and sometimes a third," he said.
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-feet-square sections of the smokestack, cutting reinforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down.
The image shows a damaged structure with multiple overlapping components. The walls are broken, and the floor is severely compromised. There are visible cracks in the wooden framework, and the metal beams are detached and leaning to one side. The overall condition of the building suggests it has been severely damaged.
New vice chancellor selected
By CARLA PATINO Staff writer
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the job from 55 candidates, said Del Shankel, chairman of the executive vice chancellor search committee.
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
When Ramaley begins her duties
Ari, she will be the second-highest
rank I.
She will replace Shankel, who has been the acting executive vice chancellor for the KU campus since January, when the resignation of
A LOOK BACK
Student leaders of the past
PETER B. ROSS
CINEMA BARBERA
M. R. TARRAS
of English
Marie Stevens
William Linlor
Jerry Palme
Sarah Fawcett
[Picture of a man in a suit and tie].
F
By Laura Bostrom
ifty years ago, KU student Marie Stevens was known as Queen Marie.
She had won many beauty contests, and the campus magazine and yearbook, the Jayhawker, chose Stevens as a Hill Headliner.
The yearbook tradition of honoring outstanding student leaders began in 1937 with the original Hill Headliners. Fifty years and three name changes later, the Jayhawker is still honoring outstanding students with the Hilltonner award.
Beauty queens were important back then. The Jayhawker editors sent pictures of top campus beauties to a Hollywood panel for judgment, and the yearbook dedicated several pages to their pictures.
Stevens, whose married name is Huey, didn't take the pageant route. Since her graduation in 1937, Huey has been a teacher and a principal.
Huey remembered Dean of Women Agnes Husband, a stern and proper woman who was quite conscious of proper etiquette. When Huey was one of 10 KU women invited to enter the Miss America contest, she remembered a meeting the contestants had with the dean.
"You will be asked to parade around in a bathing suit," the dean said. "No one with high KU standards would do such a thing."
"But I never studied when I went through college," she recently said.
The concern for proper behavior was everywhere on campus in the '30s. Huey was a member of the women's pep club, the Jay Janes. Only men were cheerleaders then.
Huey didn't do it.
So the Jay James ushered, sold programs and sat together at the games in their white KU sweaters and white pleated skirts.
"It was poor manners, or coarse, for college girls to be cheerleaders," she said.
She danced to jazz bands in the Kansas Union and once discovered her bathing suit black with dust after hanging it to dry on a car. She saw Amelia Earhart lecture on campus, walked in a parade behind President Franklin Roosevelt and listened to Count Bassie play in Kansas City
Huey keeps many memories from her time at KU.
Now, at age 71, Huey still is active in education. She substitute teaches and often is hired by the school districts in her home of Portland, Ore., to test gifted and talented students.
william Ivan Linior studied science and electrical engineering, debated and was a "um-drum" swimmer while a KU student in the '30s.
Few women attended college when Huey was young. Huey said she blamed her education on the small number of jobs available during the Depression.
Linlor, now 71, has been a scientist since his graduation from KU in 1937.
Though his debating skills helped get Linor a page as a Hill Headliner 50 years ago, he said he had since learned to keep his mouth shut.
"There was nothing else to do," she said. "It's a wonderful blessing, the way it worked."
W
After graduation, he started work for the General Electric Company in Schenectady, N.Y.
After World War II was ended by the nuclear bomb, Linlor was drawn to study nuclear energy.
He enrolled at the University of California at Berkley and received a Ph.D. in nuclear physics in 1953.
When radiation and its harmful effects were discovered, "It convinced me that there was no way that power plants could be useful," he said.
Linor remained in science. He has worked at Hughes Aircraft, the Atomic Energy Commission in Washington, D.C., and he worked at NASA for 20 years.
Though retired, Linlor still works on his science, maintaining his own lab at the back of his house in Fortuna, Calif. "I call it the Linlor Lab."
S
Sarah Fawcett said she took what ever challenges appeared in her path.
Fawcett, 46, who received a Hilltopter award in 1962, was in Lawrence last weekend for her daughter's initiation into Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority.
And the challenges have led Fawcett from Kansas in 1962 to master's degrees at Harvard University and the University of Connecticut and to jobs in sales and teaching.
She said women had fewer opportunities then than they do now. She attributed her strength and independence to her family's history of independent women.
Her grandmother was a career golfer,
and her mother has a master's degree in
architecture.
But Fawcett's greatest challenge has been dealing with multiple sclerosis. She developed MS about three years ago.
The frustrations of slurred speech and impaired movement have been hard on Fawcet, but she said the disease offered her different things.
"MS has given me a chance to shine in a different light," she said.
twenty-five years ago, Jerry Palmer was active in KU's student government, the All Student Council, as treasurer, president, committee member and national convention delegate. He was an officer in his fraternity, Kappa Sigma, and a KU cheerleader. All these activities helped bring Palmer a Hilltop award.
Palmer remembered KU football games played in the early '60s. He was a cheerleader and still has his KU sweater and megaphone that he used at the games.
After graduating, Palmer attended KU law school. He now is a lawyer in Topeka and president of the Kansas Trial Lawyers Association.
Palmer remembered the "ballet of blue on the Kansas grid iron" with players such as All-America quarterback John Hadl. He also recalls times at the Kappa Sigma fraternity house, where his son, Chris Palmer, now is a member. He remembers a spontaneous speech by Chancellor Frank Murphy about "the dignity and worth of the American student."
See HHLTOP, n. 17
d the dates
city of
and KU.
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1982 to
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resident
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niverser.
final 55
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to the
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KANSAN MAGAZINE/May 1. 1987
; to monifi airlines ns," they
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms high will be 80 degrees,the low will be 66 degrees.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid,high of 85 degrees,low will be 66 degrees.
Weekend: There will be a chance of thunderstorms daily,with highs in the low 90s,lows about 65
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP
DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION
FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
Wednesday June 10,1987
Vol. 97, No.146 (USPS650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
By PAUL BELDEN
Staff writer
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations.
But University officials didn't need him anymore, so they hired a team of hit men to rub him out.
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towns find the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
He had one vice, however: he smoked quite a bit. . like a chimney, in fact.
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus. Chunk by chunk, the KU smokestack is dying a slow death.
ition began ji
contractors, w
week, should I
completely torr
tions, dependi
Richard Perkins, associate director of utility management for KU's campus in Philadelphia.
Two smokestack above the roof of replace the 245 baskets on a KU he said.
Tom Andersen ties and operati planned to has the internal wolf first, then demo But, he said coordinate the than originally Part of the r more likely tha completed and on line before Anderson said.
"It's easier to
By STORMY Staff writer
Pa sta
Enjoy the parking. It w
Starting At everyone a I
assistant d services.
The parkin pay for a multilevel said.
WH
Residence housing pe lowest incre Blue zone pe
Perm
Blue Zone
Red Zone
Yellow Zc
Dorm. &
Campus
Red Motz
Blue Motz
Meter Pa
Parking V if paid will of receipe
When Ramaley begins her duties Aug. 1, she will be the second-highest ranking administrator on campus
Parking W if paid aft of receipe
Parking 1
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the job from 55 candidates, said Del Shankel, chairman of the executive vice censor search committee.
Group 1 v not parkin the wrong Group 2 v permit, pla (Note: Gro within sev and correct parking se
ing than heating," he said.
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct. 15, depending on the weather.
She will replace Shankel, who has been the acting executive vice chancellor for the KU campus since January, when the resignation of
New vice chancellor selected
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both them up and down in a third, and sometimes a third," he said.
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-foot-square sections of the smokestack, cutting reinforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down, Perkins said, but as the stack gets
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
COVER STORY
By CARLA PATINO Staff writing
Staff writer
ALEXANDER J. SMITH
Jerry Palmer, former Hillipper, stands in front of a ball and the Hall next to the statue that was the brunt of many pranks through the years. He dressed up the statue and painted it on St. Patrick's Day, red on Malibu yellow and orange other occaions.
Statues have witnessed years of student antics
As graduation nears and those leaving the University of Kansas turn their thoughts to the ceremonial walk down the hill, all the pomp may make them aware of many traditions. Yet some traditions, for various reasons, are only faded memories.
Some of the long-ago traditions remain a part of a more innocent past, while others died because they were dreamed up by rambunctious spirits. These latter traditions were examples of sheer orneriness at its finest, and good or bad, they survive only in the minds of those who were creative before their time.
At one time, Lippincott was called Green Hall. It was the law school, and it was also the hub of activity. Unfortunately, the activity was not always welcomed, at least not by pretty young ladies passing by the building.
Whenever a couple that was holding hands walked by the hecklers, a chorus whistled "Here Comes the Bride," which made the couple quicken its pace to just short of a full-breath run.
At that time, the president of the school's senior class attributed his cohorts' behavior to the fact that lawyers were forced to study so hard that they had to do something to relieve the extreme pressure on their cerebrums. He admitted that it also was largely a biological matter.
The law men countered the attack by planting poison ivy on the path behind the school and by strategically positioning several members across Jayhawk Boulevard to combat the flankers.
An even worse fate occurred if two girls escorted by one man passed by the school, a dangerous act in itself. The men would descend on the trio with a rous-
Tradition has it that as early as 1904, the male law students would sit outside Green Hall and make catcalls at the women who were on their way to class.
of English.
To thwart the men's unwelcomed attention, several women tried to travel on the path behind the building or sneak across the street to escape the stares of their bold counterparts.
By Jennifer Wyrick
ing chorus of "The Third Man Theme." The song was from a 1950s movie about love and intrigue in post-war Vienna.
The group even went so far as to count, in unison, the number of steps that a girl took as she walked into Green Hall. This usually caused her to speed up until she tripped on the last step.
Several women law students joined the men on the steps, directing their wisecracks at the hapless males walking by. But alas, the women's efforts did not match those of the men.
Through the years, the statue of the mentor and his student has worn green paint on St. Patrick's Day, red paint on May Day and yellow-orange tints on other occasions.
Not only did the women match wits with the men, but they also vented some frustration on the statue outside Green Hall. Late that night, the women dressed "Ucle Jimmy Green" in women's clothing for everyone to see the next day.
Finally, one day in 1960, a group of perturbed women from GSP-Corbin Hall staked their claim to the Green Hall steps and succeeded in quashing some of the future lawyers' fun.
The statue was even included in the law school-engineering school rivalry. The students awoke one morning to find "Uncle Jimmy Green" holding a T-square and his student clutching a wooden, 45-degree angle.
All of this attention obviously affected the apprentice, because his next accessory was an ice pack for his head. This possibly was not as bad as "Uncle Jimmy Green's" Halloween attire, a single pumpkin smashed over his head.
This incident may have been the most outlandish plank played on "Uncle Jimmy Green," but it certainly was not the only one.
But the sculptured men were not the only ones made to wear headgear. As soon as the chancellor gave the signal at the first football game of the season, every freshman male had to cover his locks with a light green skull cap adorned with a bright
red button not less than one and a half inches in diameter.
The men had to wear the caps every day, except Sundays, until the last football game of the season. They tipped their hats to faculty members and touched them to the seniors.
The penalty was stiff if a "freshie" was caught without his cap. The Men's Student Council sanctioned and enforced paddling as the primary means of dealing with the rebels.
The council said that the purpose of the caps was to link together the new men of the University, but the freshmen were reported to have had a different opinion.
Such class rivalries were quite common when the campus was much smaller. Sometimes quips between different class members turned into brawls, until one night.
The chancellor referred to the bedtime garb as "robes of peace." Then and there, a new tradition was born.
Later, women joined the traditional nightshirt parade that wound its way through the streets of Lawrence each year. The parade took place the night before the first home conference football game.
In 1905, an enthusiastic group of night-shirted freshmen and sophomores decided to replace annual class fights with a peaceful midnight parade.
With the parade winding through campus and down Jayhawk Boulevard, it's a wonder that "Uncle Jimmy Green" and his young student escaped getting a change of wardrobe from the carousing students. It makes one wonder what the two are really discussing.
The pajama parade made its way to the chancellor's front doorstep and roused him from bed so that he, too, could join in their fun.
The tradition ended in 1957, however, because of the amount of vandalism that occurred during the parade.
University Archives supplied some information for this story.
KANSAN MAGAZINE/May 1, 1987
nt to the
commi-
titions of the
qualified to
lig for his
/ had the candidates variety of kills and about KU 'academic rom 1982 to been the e president e has also rative posity, the Uni- Center. original 55 committee and Rama-
Neb., gra-
h commit-
ley was an
presented
phabetical
mittee did
choice, but
was the
iate vice
fairs and
a ber, said,
woman did
dee shee'
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pressed by Ramaley's my told in now sorry
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nnounced at the all- 16.
rt
of the Anti-Briade,
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kson on U.S.,
bassins in
iary froged a suspicion a Venea further security city.
letailed to as harmreportedly an unexeun unconan aban
umb debris
nit leaders of in-
terna-ted to halt
countries
hijacking
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ness
ie to moni of airlines ms," they
9
A
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms,
high will be 80 degrees, the low will be 66 degrees.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid, high of
85 degrees, low will be 66 degrees.
Weekend: There will be a chance of thunder-
storms daily, with highs in the low 90s, lows about 65
DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
Wednesday June 10,1987
PAGE 2
Vol. 97, No.146 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
By PAUL BELDEN
Staff writer
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towers find the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
He had one vice, however: he smoked quite a bit. . like a chimney, in fact.
But University officials didn't need him anymore, so they hired a team of hit men to rub him out.
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus. Chunk is standing, smokestack is dying a slow death.
ition began
contractors,
week, should
completely
tire weeks, depend
Two smokes
above the roof
replace the 246
has been a KU
he said.
Richard Perkins, associate director of utility management for KU (or the University)
Tom Anderson
ties and operat-
planned to hit
the internal w
first, then den
but, he sai
coordinate it
than originally
Part of the
more likely it
completed an
on line before
Anderson said
"It's easier
Pe
When Ramaley begins her duties
Ause she will join the second-highest
ranking in the NBA.
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
Pa sta
W Pe
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the job from 55 candidates, said Del Shankel, chairman of the executive vice chancellor search committee.
She will replace Shankel, who has been the acting executive vice chancellor for the KU campus since January, when the resignation of
New vice chancellor selected
Blue Zn Red Ze Yellow Dorm Camp Red M Blue M Meter
By STORM
Staff writer
Enju lift
parking I.
Starting
everyone
campus,
assistant
services.
The par
pay for
multlevel
said.
Residen
housing
lowest in
Blue zone
ing than heating," he said.
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct. 15, depending on the weather.
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
Parking if paid of recie
Group not pat the wn
Group permit
(Note:
withir and cc parkir
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up to full operational capabilities, and sometimes a third," he said.
Parkin if paid of recd
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-feet-square sections of the smokestack, cutting reinforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down, Perkins said, but as the stack gets
By CARLA PATINO
Staff writer
ORCHARDS GOLF CLUB
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Like the time I went to my first KU-K State football game. Man, was that a wild night. We celebrated my 21st birthday at Gammons, too. That was crazy. And it seems like yesterday that I came to Gammons. And when we went down to Gammons on the last day of classes... oh yeh. That was yesterday.
I can't believe it. Four long years and two hot and sticky summer semesters here, and provided I was a teacher, and yet it all seems like we were yesterday.
I'M FINALLY OUTTA HERE.
Well, at least I've got one more night to howl. Gammams has this big party for us, and that's where we sort of a tradition around here, and now it's my turn. And after that, kiss me.
GAMMONS
SNOWMEN
Hmm. That doesn't sound so hot, I had my fun at school, and I'm done with it. But we cannot go Gammons again? Nah, I'd rather flag a final.
I sure spent a lot of time at that club. Weird how it can all end, just like that.
Well anyway, I guess I've just about rocked my last chalk. So long, KU. Thanks for the memories. But ammunition, I'll be seeing you sooner or later.
Sooner, if I don't find a job.
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had the candidates variety of kills and about KU academic com 1982 to been the e president he has also rative posity, the Uni Der Center. original 51 committee and Rama-
nt to the
h commi-
tions of the
qualified to
lig for his
presented
phabelical
mittee did
choice,
but was the
iate vice
airs and a
ber, said,
woman did
eele selec
pressed by Ramaley's my told in how sorry
ous under- dent needs "catching
Neb., grah committey was an
nnounced at the all-16.
rt
10
of the Anti-
Brigade,
usable last
of a n
Lebanon
kis on U.S.
ubs in
U.S.
tary frog
a suspici
m a Venena
a further
security
'city.
called to
as harm
reportedly
an unexe
uncone
an aban
KANSAN MAGAZINE/May 1, 1987
mb debris
cit leaders
of internag-
cation to halt
countries
i hijacking
of avia-
ie to moni of airlines ms," they
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms high will be 80 degrees,the low will be 66 degrees.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid,high of 85 degrees,low will be 66 degrees.
Weekend: There will be a chance of thunderstorms daily,with highs in the low 90s,lows about 65
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
Wednesday June 10,1987
Vol. 97, No. 146
(USPS 650-640)
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Staff writer
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
But University officials didn't need him anymore, so they hired a team of hit men to rub him out.
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus. Chunk is now the only smokestack is dying a slow death.
ition began JB contractors, we week, should I completely torr weeks, dependi Two smokest above the roof of replace the 245 has been a KU he said.
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations.
He had one vice, however; he snaked quite a bit, like a chimney, in his waist.
By PAUL BELDEN
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped find out-of-towers find the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
Tom Andersen ties and operati planned to hat the internal wo first, then dem But, he said coordinate the than originally Part of the re more likely tha completed and on line before Anderson said.
"It's easier to
Richard Perkins, associate director of utility management for KU
Pa sta
By STORMY Staff writer
Enjoy the parking. It w
Starting At everyone a l
campus, s assistant d
services.
The parkir pay for a multilevel g said.
Residence housing pe lowest incre Blue zone ple
WH
Perm
Blue Zone
Red Zone
Yellow Zi
Dorm.
& Campus
Red Motu
Bla Mof
Meter Pa
Parking
Parking Vs.
if paid will
of receIPT c
Parking V
if paid aft
of receipt
Group 1 v not parkin the wrong Group 2 v permit, pla (Note: Go within sev and correc parking se
ing than heating," he said.
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct.15,depending on the weather.
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up to full operational capabilities, and sometimes a third," he said.
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-feet-square sections of the smokestack, cutting reinforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down, Perkins said, but as the stack gets
A
New vice chancellor selected
By CARLA PATINO
Staff writer
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the job from 55 candidates, said Del Shankel, chairman of the executive vice cchancellor search committee.
IN FOCUS
When Ramaley begins her duties Aug. 1, she will be the second-highest ranking administrator on campus.
She will replace Shanker, who has been the acting executive vice chancellor for the KU campus since January, when the resignation of
You can call me Nicole ..
Story by Jerri Niebaum
Three pairs of Sheer Energy pantyhose, a pile of makeup, a curly wig and a sparkly dress, and it's show time for "Nicole Porter."
"After it's all over, I just usually shake their hand and say, 'happy birthday' in my deepest, most masculine voice." Munkars said.
Munkins, 32, is one of two female impersonators who deliver strip-o-grams for the Mabel H. singing team at the annual Mabel H. singing competition.
In a size 7 dress and a pair of women's size $7 \frac{1}{2}$ high-heeled shoes, Porter dances as a refined redhead, a sophisticated brunette or a sexy blonde.
Unsuspecting birthday boys gets a shock when sexy Nicole becomes smiling Bill Munkirs, Kansas City, Mo., after he strips away his black feather boa, black and gold evening gown and padded corset, revealing a pair of male pectorals.
Mabel H. is named for Mabel Hite, a Kansas City actress who left the Midwest to make it big on Broadway around the turn of the century.
People would talk for days about the famous actress. Today, people talk for days after they see the men who can dress and dance like women.
Gail Bronfman, 1984 KU graduate and manager of Mabel H. said, "When female impersonators bolt down to the ground, they get
She said Munkirs was even better at putting on makeup than most women she knew.
"There's an underground culture of men who do this," she said.
"We really want to get this guy," she said, imitating a typical customer. They usually do get him and the rest of the unsuspecting audience as well.
He was convincing enough that his friends talked him into competing at a female-impersonation contest at a Kansas City bar later that year. Munkirs wore second place.
Bronfman has watched Munkins perform his gag stripetease several times. She said revenge usually motivated the subject's friends to hire the female impersonator.
Munkirs first dressed as a woman for a Halloween party seven years ago. He wanted to see whether he could pull it off.
The prize got him a paid job performing a lip-synch dance routine at the bar, and Munkins soon found himself with a closet full of women's clothes and jobs to wear them to.
"People scream and laugh in absolute shock," Bronten said.
"I didn't really pursue this," he said. "It just came to me."
Munkirs has been performing three-minute dances for the service for about two years
"It's a dirty job, but somebody's got to do it," Munkins said.
He used that line to pacify a 17-year-old subject who told him, "You should be ashamed of your-
Most of Munkirs' customers don't get upset, however. They just open their eyes, drop their iaws and stare at him.
He said one man danced with him and thoroughly enjoyed the show until the end. Then he just stared and fell forward on his face.
Continued on next page
"Their reaction is what makes it worthwhile." Munkirs said, imitating the wide-eyed stares he gets.
Ivy
KANSAN MAGAZINE/Mav 1.1987
had the candidates variety of kills and about KU academic com 1982 to been the e president he has also rative posi.ly, the Uni the Univer-Center. original 55 committee
presented
lphabetical
mittee did
choice, but
was the
Neb., gra-
ch commit-
ley was an
nth committions of the qualified to lig for his
iate vice aires and a seel, said, woman dide seele's seel
ous under-
dent needs
"catching
pressed by Ramaley's
my told in
how sorry
nnounced at the all 16.
rt
of the Anti Brigade, unsible lastition of a n Lebanon on U.S. onbases on U.S.
fary froged a suspium a Veneme a further security t city. laitied to as harm reportedly an unexe uncone an aban
umb debris
nit leaders
of interna-
tion to halt
countries
h i jacking
of avias
ie to moni of airlines ms," they
11
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms high will be 80 degrees,the low will be 66 degrees. Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid,high of 85 degrees,low will be 66 degrees. Weekend: There will be a chance of thunderstorms daily,with highs in the low 90s,lows about 65
DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP
FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
Wednesday June 10,1987
Vol. 97, No. 146 (USPS 650-640)
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
By PAUL BELDEN
Staff writer
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations.
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towers find the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
He had one vice, however; he smoked quite a bit. . . like a chimney, in fact.
But University officials didn't need him to be hired a team of hikers to catch them.
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus. Chunk by chunk, the KU smokestack is dying a slow death.
fractures and ori-
tition began JI
contractors, w
completely tort
weeks, dependi
Two smokest
above the roof of
replace the 245
has been a KU
he said
Richard Perkins, associate director of utility management for KU
Tom Andersen and operation planned to have the internal wo first, then demo But, he said coordinate the than originally Part of the er more likely the completed and on line before Anderson said. "It's easier to
Pa Sta
By STORMY Staff员
Enjoy the parking. It w
Starting At everyone a l
campus, s assistant d
services.
The parkir
pay for a multilevel
said.
Residence
housing pe lowest incre
blue zone pe
WH
Perm
Blue Zone
Red Zone
Yellow Ze
Dorm.
& Campus
Red Mote
Blue Mot
Meter Pa
Parking
Parking V.
if paid will
of reciept c
Parking V if paid aft of reciept
Group 1 v not parkin the wrong Group 2 v permit, pla (Note: Gro within sev and correct parking se
ing than heating," he said.
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct.15,depending on the weather.
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up to full operational capabilities, and sometimes a third," he said.
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-feet-square sections of the smokestack, cutting reinforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down, Perkins said, but as the stack gets
图2-3
New vice chancellor selected
By CARLA PATINO
Staff writer
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the job from 55 candidates, said Del Shankel, chairman of the executive vice chancellor search committee.
When Ramaley begins her duties Aug. 1, she will be the second-highest ranking administrator on campus.
She will replace Shankel, who has been the acting executive vice chancellor for the KU campus since January, when the resignation of
Bill Munkira and partner, Crea Kelly, practice their dance duet for a City in Motion dance produc tion.
...or maybe Bill
of English.
"He was pretty loaded," Munkirs said.
His customers never would have suspected, but besides bumping and grinding for birthday boys, Munkiris has danced with the Kaw Valley Dance Theater in Lawrence and the City in Dance school in Kansas City. Mo. and modern dance for 14 years.
He said he hadn't considered making a career for himself performing as a male dancer, but he has danced in amateur performances with both groups.
Munkins studied Spanish and French at Wichita State University, where he graduated with a liberal arts degree in 1977.
Munkins works full-time transcribing medical records at a Kansas City hospital. He said an interest in language and a fascination for medicine made his job of writing medical histories interesting to him.
"They're strictly hobbies," he said.
As interesting as his work is, however, Munkins thrives on performing. He enjoys the variety of characters he can portray as a woman.
"It has lots of possibilities," he said.
evening gowns, lingerie, a leotard studded with rhinestones, high-healed pumps, a specially made tuxedo jacket, four or five wigs, fingernails, eyelashes and multiple pairs of pantyhose.
ALEXIS LABRERA
Female friends supplement Munkirs' costume wardebe, which consists of short dresses.
Munkins also shops in women's stores for costumes, but he doesn't try them on if he thinks the sales clerk will be uncomfortable.
Munkin says he wears women's clothes well because he has feminine features. He remembered a gas station attendant saying, "Can I help you ma'am?"
"I never got a complex over it, but it made me aware that I just happened to have feminine fea
"If it doesn't fit, I take it back," he said.
tures." he said.
"Shaving itself is a traumatic experience. Putting makeup on top of that is like adding insult to injury.
Now for $50 a performance, Munkin takes advantage of his feminine features. He spends an hour getting into drag, putting on the support hose that pinch his feet and the makeup that irritates his eyes and skin.
Before Munkirs begins his act, a woman in a tuxedo sings a message to the victim and introduces Nicole. Then Munkiris dances to a recording of "Let Me Entertain You" from the Broadway musical "Gvysv."
"I don't like to do it two days in a row," he said, pointing at his red eyes that had been bordered with eyeliner the night before.
Although some people have commented about Munkirs' feminine features, he isn't always sure he's fooling his audience.
"I keep wondering/'does he know?" Munkirs said. "Am I pulling this or not?"
--unt to the high commissions of the unqualified to lig for his
Munkirs used to take his wig off to let the victim in on the joke, but now he takes off the corset so the man has no question that Nicole is really a Bill.
"I think some people thought it was just a woman with a receding hairline." Munkirs said.
Choreographer Richard Pond gives advice to Munkirs on how to lift his partner.
1980
presented lphabetical imittee did choice, but was the
iate vice
fairs and
a ber, said,
woman did
eele's selec
had the candidates variety of kills and about KU academic 1982 been the president he has also positive posity, the Uni the Univer Center original 55 committee and Rama-
pressed by Ramaley's ny told in how sorry
Neb., gra-
ch commit-
tey was an
vous underdent needs "catching
Ivy
innounced at the all 16.
Munkiraspends an hour apply- ing his makeup.
rt
of the Anti-
Briugade,
miss last sight
of a t
n Lebanon
ks on U.S.
assies in
tinary frog
a suspicion a Venene
a further
security
t city
lecalled to
as harm-
reportedly
an unexe
unceon
an aban
12
um bdeb
nit leaders
of interna-
tion to count
1 countries
h j iacking
s of avia-
ie to moni of airlines ms," they
KANSAN MAGAZINE/May 1, 1987
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms, high will be 80 degrees, the low will be 66 degrees.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid, high of 85 degrees, low will be 66 degrees.
Weekend: There will be a chance of thunderstorms daily, with highs in the low 90s, lows about 65.
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
Wednesday June 10,1987
Vol. 97, No. 146
(USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
By PAUL BELDEN
Staff writer
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations.
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towers for the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
He had one vice, however, he smoked quite a bit, like a chimney,
But University officials didn't need
many more men they hired team of
hikers
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus.Chunk by chunk, the KU smokestack is dying a slow death.
taches and or-
tiates began. Jn contractors,
a week, should I
hold tory weeks, dependi
Two smokest
above the roof or
replace the 245
has been a KU
he said.
Richard Perkins, associate director of utility management for KU
Tom Anderst ties and operati planned to has the internal wo first, then derm But, he said coordinate the than originally Part of the r more likely the completed and on line before Anderson said. "It's easier to
"It's easier to
Parsta
By STORMY Staff writer
Enjoy the parking. It w
Starting At everyone a l
campus, se assistant d
services.
The parkir pay for a multilevel p said.
Residence housing pe lowest incre Blue zone ple
WH
Perm
Blue Zone
Red Zone
Yellow Zi
Dorm.
& Campus
Red Mot
Blue Mot
Meter Pa
Parking
Parking V.
if paid will
of reciept c
Group 1 v not parkin the wrong Group 2 v permit, plu (Note: Gro within sev and correct parking se
Parking V if paid aff of reciept
ing than heating," he said.
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct.15,depending on the weather.
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up to full operational capabilities, and sometimes a third," he said.
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-feet-square sections of the smokestack, cutting reinforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down, Perkins said, but as the stack gets
Bombing of the Japanese Consulate in Kobe, Japan
New vice chancellor selected
By CARLA PATINO
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the job from 55 candidates, said Del Shankel, chairman of the executive vice chancellor search committee.
Staff writer
When Ramaley begins her duties Aug. 1, she will be the second-highest ranking administrator on campus.
BOB FORTY! FRUMPY!
of English.
Photos by JoEllen Black
Bob Durden, left, and Tom Hunter, both of whom came up with a get surprise present from their friends. The men did not find out that Nicole was a man until he bared his belly.
BOB
KANSAN MAGAZINE/May 1, 1987
had the candidates variety of kills and about KU academic com 1982 to be the e president he has also positive, the Uni the Univer-Center. original 55 committee Rama-
nth committi tions of the ualified to lig for his
presented lphabetical mittee did choice, but was the
iate vice
fairs and
a ber, said,
woman did
see's selec-
pressed by Ramaley's ny told in how sorry
Neb., grah commit-
ev was an
ous underdent needs "catching
nnounced at the all-16.
rt
if the Anti-
Brigade
missible last
tion of a
n Lebanon
ks on U.S.
abs on
tary frog
a suspicion a vene-
nion a further
security
city
tailed to
as harm
reportedly
an unex-
uncion an aban
uib debis
nit leaders
of interna-
tion to halt
to countries
ii hijacking
of avia
ie to moni of airlines ms," they
13
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms,
high will be 80 degrees, the low will be 66 degrees.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid, high of
85 degrees, low will be 66 degrees.
Weekend: There will be a chance of thunder-
storms daily, with highs in the low 90s, lows about 65
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
Wednesday June 10,1987
Vol. 97, No. 146 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
By PAUL BELDEN
Staff writer
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations.
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towers find the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
He had one vice, however: he smoked quite a bit. . . like a chimney, in fact.
But University officials didn't need him anymore, so they hired a team of hit men to rub him out.
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus. Chunk is dead, smokestack is dying a slow death.
facilities and ori-
tion began JJ
contractors, i
week should I
commend two
term weeks, depen-
dite
Two smokest
above the roof
replace the 245
has been a KU
he said.
Richard Perkins, associate director of utility management for KU
Tom Andersen ties and operated planned to hat the internal wo first, then demt But, he said coordinate the than originally Part of the r more likely that completed and on line before Anderson said. "It's easier to
Pa sta
Permit
Perm
By STORMY Staff writer
Enjoy the parking. It w
Starting At everyone a l
campus, se assistant d
services.
The parkir pay for a multilevel
said.
Residence housing pe lowest incre Blue zone ple
Blue Zone
Red Zone
Yellow Zi
Dorm.
& Campus
Red Mote
Red Mote
Meter Pa
Parking
Parking V if paid wif of receipe
Group 1 v not parkin the wrong Group 2 v permit, pla (Note: Go within sev and correct parking se
Parking V if paid aft of reciept
ing than heating," he said.
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct.15,depending on the weather.
New vice chancellor selected
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up to full operational capabilities, and sometimes a third," he said.
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-feet-square sections of the smokestack, cutting reinforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the job from 55 candidates, said Del Shankel, chairman of the executive vice chancellor search committee
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down, Perkins said, but as the stack gets
When Ramaley begins her duties Aug. 1, she will be the second highest ranking administrator on campus.
She will replace Shankel, who has been the acting executive vice chancellor for the KU campus since January, when the resignation of
By CARLA PATINO
Staff writer
of English.
16 33 12
16 33 12
A
J 3 4
The Big On The One You Have Been
CASINO D
FOR ONE WEEK
Monday April 27
DICE
Savings on every item of clothing
HERE'S HO
1. Select your merchandise.
2. Take your selections to one
3. Spin our BIG CASINO WHEI
4. Remember, YOU CAN'T LOS we never put on sale!!--Polo
HOURS: M-T-W-F-Sat.
9:30 a.m.-6:00 p.m.
Thurs. 9:30 a.m.-8:30 p.m.
Sun. 12-5:00 p.m.
5. See your friends and ENJOY
6. HURRY, SALE ENDS SOON
MISTER GE
MENS & WOMENS TRADITIONAL CL
had the candidates variety of kills and about KU academic rom 1982 to been the e president he has also resiative posity, the Uni der Universer Center. original 55 committee and Rama-
presented lphabetical mitetee did choice, but was the
unt to the ch commissions of the qualified to lig for his
iate vice fairs and a aber, said, woman did ee's selec-
pressed by Ramaley's any told in how sorry
Neb., grach committee was an
ious under-
dent needs
"catching
nnounced at the all 16.
rt
of the Anti-
Brigade,
impossible tastion
of a
nation
abasses on U.S.
temporary foresuip a suspicion a Venene a further security t city. detailed to as harm reportedly an unexe unconcean an aban
14
omb debris
nit leaders of interna-
ged to halt
n countries
hijacking
les of avia-
e to moni- of airlines ms," they
KANSAN MAGAZINE/May 1, 1987
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms high will be 80 degrees, the low will be 66 degrees. Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid,high of 85 degrees,low will be 66 degrees. Weekend: There will be a chance of thunderstorms daily, with highs in the low 90s, lows about 65.
DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP
FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
Wednesday June 10,1987
Vol. 97, No. 146
(USPS 650-640)
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
By PAUL BELDEN
Staff writer
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations.
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towers find the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
He had one vice, however: he smoked quite a bit. . like a chimney, in fact.
But University officials didn't need more training, who hired a team of hikers to guide them.
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus. Chunk by chuck, the KU smokestack is dying a slow death.
Richard Perkins, associate director of utility management for KU
[Diagram of a damaged aircraft engine]
ing than heating," he said.
includes an
tition began in
contractors, w
would completely torr
weeks, dependi
Two smokest
above the roof of
replace the 245
has been a KU
he said.
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct. 15, depending on the weather.
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up to full operational capabilities, and sometimes a third," he said.
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-feet-square sections of the smokestack, cutting reinforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the job from 55 candidates, said Del Shankel, chairman of the executive vice chancellor search committee.
New vice chancellor selected
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down, Perkins said, but as the stack gets
By CARLA PATINO Staff writing
Staff writer
When Ramaley begins her duties
Achen, she will be the second-highest
rank in the game.
She will replace Shankel, who has been the acting executive vice chancellor for the KU campus since January, when the resignation c
Tom Andersen ties and operati planned to hat the internal wo first, then dem But, he said coordinate the than originally. Part of the r more likely than completed and on line before Anderson said. "It's easier to
of English.
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KANSAN MAGAZINE/May 1. 1987
had the candidates variety of kills and about KU academic form 1982 to been the president he has also rationality, the Uni der Univer- Center. original 55 committee and Rama-
unt to the
ch commi-
tions of the
qualified
lig for his
presented
phalectical
amittee did
choice, but
was the
iate vice fairs and aiber, said, woman did eee's selec-
pressed by Ramaley's any told in how sorry
Neb., grach committee was an
ous under-
dent needs
"catching
nnounced at the all 16.
rt
if the Anti-
Brigade.
last able last
of a n
n Lebanon
on uS. U
abbes in
ons
itary froged a suspicion a Venea a further security t city. detailed to as harm reportedly an unexe uncon an aban
umb debis
nit leaders
of internas-
ged to halt
1 countries
2 bjacking
3 avia of
avia
e to moni of airlines ms," they
15
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms high will be 80 degrees, the low will be 66 degrees.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid, high of 85 degrees, low will be 66 degrees.
Weekend: There will be a chance of thunderstorms daily, with highs in the low 90s, lows about 65
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
Wednesday June 10, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 146
(USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Two smokestack above the roof of replace the 245 on a KU he said.
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Staff writer
But University officials didn't need
him anymore, they hired a team of
bikers.
facilities and oper-
tion began Jjn
contractors, w
week, should I
completely tort
weeks, dependi
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations.
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus.Chunk by chunk, the KU smokestack is dying a slow death.
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towers find the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
He had one vice, however, he smoked quite a bit, like a chimney,
Tom Andersen ties and operated planned to has the internal woo first, then demo But, he said could be done than originally Part of the re more likely than completed and on line before Anderson said.
By PAUL BELDEN
Richard Perkins, associate director of utility management for KU
"It's easier to
Pa
sta
Group 1 v not parkin the wrong Group 2 v permit, pl. (Note: Grow within sev and correct parking se
By STORMY Staff writer
Enjoy the parking. It w
Starting A everyone a l
campus, as assistant d
services.
The parkir pay for a multilevel i said.
Residence housing pe lowest incre Blue zone ple
Parking V if paid aft of receipt
Parking V
if paid will
of reciept c
WH
Perm
Blue Zone
Red Zone
Yellow Zi
Dorm.
Campus
Red Mot
Blue Mot
Meter Pa
Parking
ing than heating," he said.
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct. 15, depending on the weather.
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up to full operational capabilities, and sometimes a third," he said.
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-feet-square sections of the smokestack, cutting renforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down, Perkins said, but as the stack gets
New vice chancellor selected
By CARLA PATINO
Staff writer
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the job from 55 candidates, said Del Shankel, chairman of the executive vice chancellor search committee
When Ramaley begins her duties Aug. 1, she will be the second-highest ranking administrator on campus.
Ten children and still counting
She will replace Shankel, who has been the acting executive vice chancellor for the KU campus since January, when the resignation of
Mark and Liz Counts' house has nine bedrooms and five bathrooms. "We stopped counting at 75 doors." Liz said.
The Counts take care of 10 children. But none of them are their own. All of the children are wards of the state.
Mark said he paid $450 a month for groceries and $400 a month for electricity. The washing machine runs continuously.
During the past four years, the Counts have been group home parents to about 40 children who either were delinquent or sexually, mentally or physically abused by their natural parents. The Counts now are ready to have their own child.
"We're in the process," Mark said last week.
English.
"I have always wondered," Mark said. "I like the job I have, taking care of these kids that are already in the world. Do I really want to create another being to
Only three of the Villages' group home parents have children of their own.
Mark, 29, and Liz, 25, are the youngest group home parents working for The Villages, Inc., a Topeka organization that manages 14 group homes, three of them in Lawrence. Villages is financed by the Kansas Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services and by private donations.
By Todd Cohen
However, deciding to have a child, after caring for some very troubled children, was a decision made with some reservations.
grow up in a world like this?"
Liz added, "I think it's just the whole society, the drugs and nuclear stuff.
"In fact, we we've always wanted to adopt our first child," Liz said, "thinking, 'if there are so many children in the world that need care, let's do that.'"
"But the adoption process is so long and so complex and so expensive. After investigating it, there were too many problems." she said.
Instead, a lifelong love for children overrode their worries. They said it was time to have their own child. And it's not like they are going blindly into something.
The Counts' formal education ended after high school, but they worked with children and have taken state and Villages'
The Counts have years of child care under their belts. Liz was babysitting when she was 10 and working in a group home at age 18, caring for children aged 17. Both also were Catholic church group leaders in Iowa. After working three years in Iowa group homes, they moved to Kansas.
"They have educated themselves very well."
Bob Rooks, Villages personnel director, said, "They came to us with two years of home experience, which was exceptional. Mark and Liz Counts are examples of solid parenting skills without the benefits of having been parents.
training classes ever since. The Villages was more interested in their commitment than in college degrees.
"I think they thought we were young and that they could make us into what they wanted us to be, and they did. We had some really good teachers," Mark said.
Liz said, "We were just really enthusiastic. We were anxious to learn."
Mark also said the chance to work together was a big reason for their move to Kansas.
"We were looking to work together when we came to the Villages," Liz said. "It's the only type of job I know that you can be around each other 24 hours a day."
Mark said, "Years ago, we tried this apart. She was working at a Vietnamese group home, and I was in another group home 75 miles away. Her days off were different than mine.
"We did that for six months and hated it."
Besides commitment to each other, Rooks said that the Counts also had met the most important criterion; evidence of caring.
"We need both the husband and wife to be strong. Both of them have to be committed," Rooks said. "They have to be tolerant."
But the evidence of caring goes deeper
Liz said that in high school, she was drawn to child care after See FOSTER. p. 73
1985
Mark and Liz Counts
COUNTS
Young foster couple enjoys caring for a house full of children. They say the experience has prepared them to have a child of their own.
eb., gra-
commit-
/ was an
had the indidates arity of Ils and bout KU academic n 1982 to been the president has also positive posi tive Uni- Univer- inter. original 55 committee Rama-
to the commi-nts of the lified to for his
resented
metabetic
ittee did
dice, but
was the
te vice
ars and a
er, said,
oman did
's selec-
essed by amaley's / told in w sorry
as underent needs catching
nounced the all 5.
rt
the Anti-Bri-
gide, sible last
on of a
Lebanon
in U.S.,
masses in
KANSAN MAGAZINE/May 1.,1987
fry frog
a suspia
a vena
further
security
city.
tailed to
as harm-
sportedly
an unexe
uncone
an aban
16
bj debris
t leaders
f interaed to halt
countries
hijacking
of avia
to monif airlines ns," they
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms high will be 80 degrees,the low will be 66 degrees.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid,high of 85 degrees,low will be 66 degrees.
Weekend: There will be a chance of thunderstorms daily,with highs in the low 90s,lows about 65
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
Wednesday June 10,1987
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
Vol. 97, No.146 (USPS650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Staff writer
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
But University officials didn't need him anymore, so they hired team of hires to work on it.
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations.
tion began Ji contractors, w week, should I completely torr weeks dependl
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus. Chunk is a diving student. His smokestack is dying a slow death.
Two smokest above the roof of replace the 245 has been a KU he said.
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towers find the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
He had one vice, however: he smoked quite a bit . . like a chimney, in fact.
By PAUL BELDEN
Tom Andersen ties and operates planned to hat the internal wo first, then demo But, he said coordinate the than originally Part of the re more likely that completed and on line before Anderson said. "It's easier to
Richard Perkins, associate director of utility management for KU
"It's easier to
Pasta
Group 1 v not parkin the wrong
Group 2 v permit, pl.
(Note: Grow within sev and correct parking se
Parking V if paid aft of reciept
By STORMY Staff writer
Enjoy the parking. It w
Starting at everyone a l campus,
sa assistant d services.
The parkin pay for a multilevel ɪ s
Residence housing pe lowest incre blue zone p
WH
Perm
Parking V if paid will of receipt o
Blue Zone Red Zone Yellow Zc Dorm. & Campus Red Mote Blue Moet Meter Pa
Parking
ing than heating," he said.
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct.15, depending on the weather.
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up to full operational capabilities, and sometimes a third," he said.
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-feet-square sections of the smokestack, cutting reinforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the
ceiling is covered by torn
Excellent dirt, but the black gore.
Aerial view of a damaged airplane.
New vice chancellor selected
Staff writer
By CARLA PATINO Staff writer
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the job from 55 candidates, said Del Shankel, chairman of the executive vice chancellor search committee.
She will replace Shankel, who has been the acting executive vice chancellor for the KU campus since January, when the resignation of
When Ramaley begins her duties Aug. 1, she will be the second-highest
Ten children and still counting
Mark and Liz Counts' house has nine bedrooms and five bathrooms. "We stopped counting at 75 doors." Liz said.
The Counts take care of 10 children. But none of them are their own. All of the children are wards of the state.
Mark said he paid $450 a month for groceries and $400 a month for electricity. The washing machine runs continuously.
During the past four years, the Counts have been group home parents to about 40 children who were either delinquent or sexually, mentally or physically abused by their natural parents. The Counts now are ready to have their own child.
English.
"I have always wondered," Mark said. "I like the job I have, taking care of these kids that are already in the world. Do I really want to create another being to
"We're in the process," Mark said last week.
Only three of the Villages' group home parents have children of their own.
Mark, 29, and Liz, 25, are the youngest group home parents working for The Villages, Inc., a Topeka organization that manages 14 group homes, three of them in Lawrence. Villages is financed by the Kansas Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services and by private donations.
However, deciding to have a child, after caring for some very troubled children, was a decision made with some reservations.
By Todd Cohen
grow up in a world like this?''
Liz added, "I think it's just the whole society, the drugs and nuclear stuff.
"In fact, we've always wanted to adopt our first child," Liz said, "thinking, 'if there are so many children in the world that need care, let's do that.'"
"But the adoption process is so long and so complex and so expensive. After investigating it, there were too many problems." she said.
Instead, a lifelong love for children overrode their worries. They said it was time to have their own child. And it's not like they are going blindly into something.
The Counts have years of child care under their belts. Liz was babysitting when she was 10 and working in a group home at age 18, caring for children aged 17. Both also were Catholic church group leaders in Iowa. After working three years in Iowa group homes, they moved to Kansas.
The Counts' formal education ended after high school, but they have worked with children and have taken state and Villages'
"They have educated themselves very well."
Bob Rooks, Villages personnel director, said. "They came to us with two years of home experience, which was exceptional. Mark and Liz Counts are examples of solid parenting skills without the benefits of having been parents.
training classes ever since. The Villages was more interested in their commitment than in college degrees.
"I think they thought we were young and that they could make us into what they wanted us to be, and they did. We had some really good teachers," Mark said.
Liz said, "We were just really enthusiastic. We were anxious to learn."
Mark also said the chance to work together was a big reason for their move to Kansas.
"We were looking to work together when we came to the Villages," Liz said. "It's the only type of job I know that you can be around each other 24 hours a day."
Mark said, "Years ago, we tried this apart. She was working at a Vietnamese group home, and I was in another group home 75 miles away. Her days off were different than mine.
"We did that for six months and hated it."
Besides commitment to each other, Rooks said that the Counts also had met the most important criterion; evidence of caring.
But the evidence of caring goes deeper.
"We need both the husband and wife to be strong. Both of them have to be committed," Rooks said. "They have to be tolerant."
Liz said that in high school, she was drawn to child care after See FOSTER, p. 23
STEVE & JONNIE BROCKS
Mark and Liz Counts
COUNTS
Young foster couple enjoys caring for a house full of children. They say the experience has prepared them to have a child of their own.
had the indidates arity of Ils and bout KU cadem典 in 1982 to seen the president has also posiive the Uni. Universiter. original 5 mmittee d Rama-
resented
metical
ittee did
oice, but
was the
eb., gra-
commit-
7 was an
to the commitments of the lifted to for his
te vice
rs and a
r, said,
man did
's selec-
essed by amaley's told in sorry
as under-ent needs catching
nounced the all-3.
rt
the Anti-
brigade,
sible last
on of a
Lebanon
masses in U.S.
assies in
fry frog
a suspia
a vene
further
security
city.
stailed to
as harm-
sortedly
an unexe
unceon
an aban
KANSAN MAGAZINE/May 1., 1987
16
nb debris
it leaders
f interned
to halt
countries
hijacking
of avia
to moni f airlines as," they
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms high will be 80 degrees,the low will be 66 degrees.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid,high of 85 degrees,low will be 66 degrees.
Weekend: There will be a chance of thunderstorms daily,with highs in the low 90s,lows about 65
DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP
FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
Wednesday June 10,1987
Vol. 97, No. 146 (USPS 650-640)
PAGE 2
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
Staff writer
By PAUL BELDEN
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations.
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towns for the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
He had one vice, however: he smoked quite a bit. . like a chimney, in fact.
But University officials didn't need him anymore, so they hired a team of hit men to rub him out.
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus. Chunk by chunk, the KU smokestack is dying a slow death.
Richard Perkins, associate direc-
tor of utility management for KU
"sploit" (security)
ition began Ji contractors, w week, should I completely torsi weeks, dependi
Two smokest above the roof of replace the 245 has been a KU he said
Tom Andersen ties and operates planned to has the internal wolf first, then demo But, he said coordinate the than originally part of the re more likely tha completed and on line before Anderson said. "It's easier to
"It's easier to
Pa sta
By STORMY Staff writer
parking. It w
Starting At everyone a l
campus, s
assistant d
services
WH
Perm
The parkin pay for a multilevel said.
Blue Zone Red Zone Yellow Z4 Dorm & Campus Red Motte Red Motte Meter Paer
Residence housing pe lowest incre Blue zone pe
When Ramaley begins her duties
Aug. 1, she will be the second-highest
rank in the Corps.
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the job from 55 candidates, said Del Shankel, chairman of the executive vice chancellor search committee.
Parking
ing than heating," he said.
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct. 15, depending on the weather.
Parking W if paid aft of reciept
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up here," he said, and sometimes a third, "he said.
Parking V
if paid wil
of reciept
Group 1 v not parkin the wrong
Group 2 v permit, pla
(Note: Gro within sev and corred parking se
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-feet-square sections of the smokestack, cutting renforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down, Perkins said, but as the stack gets
New vice chancellor selected
She will replace Shankel, who been the acting executive v chancellor for the KU campus sin January, when the resignation
By CARLA PATINO Staff writer
HILLTOP
Continued from p. 8
John Creighton, a 1987 Hilltopter, said the award was the ultimate thank-you from the University.
Creighton, Awood senior, has been a KU Relays tri-chairman, president of Alpa Kappa Lambda fraternity and a personal aid to Gov. Mike Hayden while Hayden was running for governor.
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She also said there were no disabled parking spaces at Watkins Hospital.
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"Can you imagine," she said. "At a hospital?"
Semon said that unless a person spent a week in a wheelchair, he couldn't realize what areas on campus were accessible. Buildings that have been modified make disabled students think someone has taken their special needs into account.
"The mirrors in most of the restrooms are too high," she said. "So are many of the telephones and drinking fountains. And I have a hard time reaching the seventh floor button in the Fraser Hall elevator."
"It makes you feel a part of things when you know someone is making a special effort for you," she said.
DISABLED
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She said students with disabilities also had difficulties in the way objects were positioned.
She said that too often students with disabilities were invisible to other students, which made them feel isolated, hidden and unimportant. But students with disabilities also have a right to attend the University.
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"Some people just don't think," she said. "Or you assume the curb cut won't be needed. Sometimes it makes me angry."
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ally, blocking curb cuts, were a common problem for students in wheelchairs.
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Continued from p. 5
"The way I feel about myself,
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"I'll be able to sleep late," he said. "I can take it easy for a while. I'm just happy to be alive."
He said it used to be difficult getting up for class.
He agreed that the entrance to Strong Hall was difficult and often blocked.
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He also said a lot of blind students on campus had problems navigating the hills, steps and walkways. "It would be nice if someone could produce a map in braille."
"But on the bright side," he said. "they've just installed a new elevator that is very helpful."
"I'm exhausted every time I try to wheel myself up that steep ramp in front of the library." White said.
the person I am, I haven't changed. But people don't interact with me the same way. They're afraid they will say something wrong. They don't understand I'm the same Dawn who used to ride in ten-speed bicycle races." she said.
In the meantime, Swartz is back home in Salina, driving a new red Pontiac Firebird his parents bought, and getting into shape so he can return to KU in the fall. He plans to live off camp when he returns, but he reminisces about his days at the Delta Union fraternity house.
Although there are areas of the campus that are inaccessible, some people are working to improve the situation.
Glen White, a member of the committee, is a research assistant at the national center for independent living at KU. An automobile accident at age 15 left White a paraplegic.
An accessibility survey committee is examining 40 buildings on campus to see whether they meet the American National Standards. Next year it will complete the survey by examining the remaining buildings on campus.
When the survey is completed, the committee will make recommendations to upgrade the buildings.
White has noticed specific problems in a few of the buildings on campus. He said that Fraser Hall had only one restroom accessible to students using wheelchairs and that was on the first floor.
"The most difficult barriers are attitude barriers. Those are harder to break down and surmount," he said. "We need to get to the point where society looks at us as people first and disabled second."
He said most people were disabled in some way.
Blake Hall is the same, he said, but those are architectural barriers and can be modified or changed.
"Wearing glasses or contacts is a form of being disabled," he said. "My disability is just more obvious because I use a wheelchair."
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Thurs. 10-8
KANSAN MAGAZINE/May 1, 1987 17
y had the candidates variety of skills and nabout KU f academic from 1982 to been the se president he has alsoitative posity, the Uniiter the Univer- Center. original 55 committee and Rama-
ant to the ch committions of the qualified to dig for his
e presented
alphabetic
nmittee did
choice, but
r was the
pressed by Ramaley's any told in how sorry
riate vice
fairs and
a aber, said,
woman did
lee's selec-
nous under-udent needs e "catching
Neb., grach commitley was an
announced at the all- 16.
of the Anti Brigade, onsite lastition of a in Lebanon kcs on U.S., mbassies in
ort
literary frogted a suspicom a Venea a furthervy security it city.
detailed to alarmreportedly an unexine unconan aban
omb debris
leaders
of interna-
ged to hail
n countries
hijacking
hes of avia-
ue to moni of airlines ems," they
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms high will be 80 degrees,the low will be 66 degrees. Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid,high of 85 degrees,low will be 66 degrees. Weekend: There will be a chance of thunderstorms daily,with highs in the low 90s,lows about 65
DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP
FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
Wednesday June 10,1987
Vol. 97, No.146 (USPS650-640)
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Staff writer
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations.
But University officials didn't need him anymore, so they hired a team of hit men to rub him out.
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus. Chunk by chunk, the KU smokestack is dying a slow death.
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towners find the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
tion began
contractors,
week, should
completely to
weeks, depend
Two smokes
above the roof
replace the 24
has been a KL
he said.
By PAUL BELDEN
He had one vice, however; he smoked quite a bit. . . like a chimney, in fact.
Tom Anders
ties and operat-
planed to he
the internal wi-
first, then dem
but, he sai
coordinate tha-
most originally
Part of the r
more likely the
completed and
on line before
Anderson said.
"It's easier i-
Richard Perkins, associate director of utility management or KU faculty.
Pa
sta
By STORMY
Staff writer
Enjoy the parking. It sw
Starting At everyone a l
campus, s assistant
o services.
The parkir
pay for a multilevel
said.
Residence
housing pe
lowest incre
blue zone pe
WH
Perm
Group 1 v notparking the wrong Group 2 v permit,pla (Note:Gro within sev and correct parking se
Blue Zone
Red Zone
Yellow Zc
Dorm. &
Campus
Red Mote
Blue Mot
Meter Pa
Parking V
Parking V if paid will of receipt i
Parking V
if paid aft
of receipt
ing than heating," he said.
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct. 15, depending on the weather.
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up to full operational capabilities, and sometimes a third," he said.
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-feet-square sections of the smokestack, cutting reinforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down, Perkins said, but as the stack gets
TURKEY
New vice chancellor selected
Staff writer
By CARLA PATINO Staff writer
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
FIRST PERSON
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the job from 55 candidates, said Del Shankel, chairman of the executive vice cancellor search committee.
When Ramaley begins her duties
Anw. 1, she will be the second-highest
rank in the organization.
Appalachian spring
A different state a different state of mind
By Peggy O'Brien
West Virginia isn't like any other state. The people, the land, the economy all are unique.
Outsiders sometimes call West Virginians hillbillies, a title they accept with pride. These backwoods people never will leave the "hollers" where their families have lived, in some cases, for 100 years. Sure, many could move in order to find jobs, but most are not willing to. The land is the family's most valued possession.
I didn't go to this obscure state during spring break because I thought I'd witness a miracle. I wanted to go somewhere, anywhere, and this trip offered by the St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center was cheap.
So I, and 11 other people piled into a white 15-passenger van with very little room and very little idea of what to expect.
After 18 hours in the van, we turned off the interstate outside Charleston, W.Va., and wound our way, slowly, through the countryside. The roads were hilly and
narrow with hairpin turns at practically every corner of the sparsely populated area.
The mission is the only Catholic church in the mostly Baptist Clay County. It consists of buildings that serve as the church, parish center and game room, food pantry and clothes store.
We found Maysel, a tiny hamlet, and The Mission of the Risen Lord, nestled in the hills of Clay County.
Brothers Ted Letendre, David Huhn, Phillip Drouin and volunteer Joe Byrne greeted us as we piled out of the van. Right away, or at least after downing a pizza they had for us, we felt at home.
The brothers don't serve only the Catholics in the area. In fact, few people in the area are Catholic. The brothers help whoever they can, whenever they can.
The Brothers of Christian Instruction, an order of Catholic men, run the mission.
When a house burns down, when a roof needs to be fixed, when the
senior citizen center needs painting or a house has a gas leak, the people of Clay County call the brothers.
of English,
Few people have jobs. The school district employs the most people since the coal mines closed in the late '50s. When the mines shut down, men and the families they worked to support were left with nothing.
The local people don't have much, but what they have they were willing to share. Gifts of food, time and energy are all they can afford. They give these freely.
Although official statistics don't show it, the brothers said Clay County was the poorest in the United States, with what they estimate to be about 60 percent unemployment.
Health care officials who work with the people are shocked by how malnourished the children are, Letendre told us. David, one boy with whom our group had the chance to spend some time, had been chewing tobacco since he
was 2 years old.
While we ate, Letendre gave us the rundown of what we'd be doing for the week, roeroofing a house, fixing a gas leak, painting a senior citizens center. The brothers never know who might need help.
He filled us in on stories and dismal details, which are a part of life for the people of the area. In fact, Nona Carte, a Clay County resident, watched her home burn to the ground the day before our arrival.
In that area of West Virginia, people heat their homes with wood burning stoves, and fires such as the one that destroyed Nona's home are not uncommon.
The style and pace of life there forced me to reflect on my life and priorities.
Our main instruction from the brothers as we went about our work was to take time to get to know the people.
We expected to find poor people, and the people we met were
See TRIP, p. 25
KANSAN MAGAZINE/May 1, 1987
ey had the candidates
d variety of skills and
m about KU.
of academic from 1982 to
as been the vice president
he has alsoitative posi-
ty, the Unit
the Univer-
sity
Corel
original 55
committee
and Rome.
, Neb., graarch commitalev was an
e presented
alphabetical
memittee did
choice, but
was the
tant to the cherritions of the qualified to adig for his
of the Antil Brigade, onsible lastation of a in Lebanon cks on U.S., mbaissies in
ciate vice ffairs and a amber, said, woman did tee's selec
mous under- student needs e "catching
18
announced at the all- 16.
impressed by Ramaley's any told in how sorry
rt
litary frogged a suspicion a Venea a further security city it city. detailed to ox as harm reportedly r an unexeine uncon- an aban
omb debris mit leaders s of internadged to halt m countries in hijackinghes of avia-
due to monitor of airlines ems," they
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms, high will be 80 degrees, the low will be 66 degrees.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid, high of 85 degrees, low will be 66 degrees.
Weekend: There will be a chance of thunderstorms daily, with highs in the low 90s, lows about 65
DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP
FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
Wednesday June 10,1987
Vol. 97, No.146 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
Staff writer
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations
But University officials didn't need him anymore, so they hired a team of hit men to rub him out.
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towers find the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus.Chunk of concrete smokestack is dying a slow death.
He had one vice, however: he smoked quite a bit. . . like a chimney, in fact.
By PAUL BELDEN Staff writer
ition began Ji contractors, w week, should l completely tori weeks, dependi
Richard Perkins, associate direc-
tor of utility management for KU
(gladiator)
Two smokest
above the roof (
replace the 245
in a KU
he said.
Tom Andersen ties and operation planned to hat the internal wolf first, then demot But, he said coordinate the than originally Part of the re more likely that completed and on line before Anderson said. "It's easier to
"It's easier to
Pa sta
By STORMY
Staff writer
Enjoy the parking. It w
Starting At everyone a l
campus, sa assistant d
services.
The parkir pay for a multilevel i said.
Residence housing pe lowest incre blue zone pe
WH
Perm
Blue Zone
Red Zone
Yellow Zi-
Dorm.
& Campus
Red Mot
Blue Mot
Meter Pa
Group 1 v not parking the wrong Group 2 v permit, plu (Note: Gro within se and correct parking se
Parking 1
Parking V if paid will of receip e
Parking V
if paid aft
of receipt
ing than heating." he said.
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct.15,depending on the weather.
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up to full operational capabilities, and sometimes a third," he said.
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-foot-square sections of the smokestack, cutting reinforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down, Perkins said, but as the stack gets larger, even more fire will come.
(1)
New vice chancellor selected
By CARLA PATINO Staff writer
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the candidates, said Del Shankel, chairwoman of vice chancellor search committee.
Aug. 1, she will be the second highest
August winner.
Riverboat captures past
I'll be there for you. I'm here to help. I'll be there for you. I'm here to help.
Left Charlie
Merrick, merck-
dian of the Missouri
River Queen.
History of the
history of Kansas City and
the Missouri
sengers aboard the
boat.
Below: Dory
Kirkbright, 4
Wolters, 5-year-old sister
Beeky, look
over the back of the vessel as you approach it way up the Missouri River. The girls were waiting from her
Riding on the white triple-deck Missouri River Queen, with its giant red paddle wheel churning away, was like taking a journey through the past.
Bv Tim Hamilton
Cruising on the Missouri River as it winds its way through Kansas City, one almost could picture Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn with their raft on the river's bank.
The company offers different kinds of cruises including a two-and-a-half-hour dinner and entertainment cruise, complete with a rock band; a two-hour moonlight cruise on weekends; and a two-hour brunch cruise on Sundays.
Some hints of the 20th century may be seen in the infrequent bridges, the half-submerged barges near the bank and the silhouette of the buildings in downtown Kansas City, Mo. Other hints are the River Queen's plush accommodations, three wet bars and two 400-horsepower motors that power the boat along a seven-mile stretch of river.
The Kansas City Riverboat Company owns the River Queen. Since 1964, the company has transported its customers back through time to the days of the wild west, steam locomotives and the steam-powered riverboat.
The company also offers a $5.75 one-hour educational daytime cruise that promotes the vital role of the river in the history of the city and region.
The educational value of the Missouri River has been overlooked, said Richard Lynn, a 24-year captain of the River Queen. "We're very positive about imparting the information to the students because they are the ones who will be taking care of the river in the future."
"The whole purpose is to get people down to the river," said Joe Stanley, sales representative for Kansas City Riverboat.
He said the River Queen could carry more than 600 people. Between 10,000 and 40,000 students enjoy the day cruises every spring.
The two most significant in the history of the city are the sites of the original Chouteau fur trading post and the Old Westport Landing.
The River Queen passes many historically significant spots along its route.
Francois and Bernice Chouteau founded the original fur trading post in 1821 when they came to the area from St. Louis. The original settlement was not far from where the Chouteau bridge now stands.
Lynn said the day cruises, designed for students and children, were sanctioned by the School Board as educational field trips.
Lynn, who said he was a student of the river's history, said the Chouteau settlement was the origin of the Santa Fe, Oregon and California trails.
He also said the Chouteau's original settlement was flooded twice, so they relocated the post down the river.
"It wasn't until later that a fellow named McCoy came into the K.C. area and said to the Chouteau, 'Hey, I’d kind of like to make a little township here,'" Lynn said.
The rest is Kansas City history.
Although the daytime cruise emphasizes the historical value of the river, many passengers on the River Queen are just "free-bootin", as Huckleberry Finn would say.
of English,
Darlene Chausein Hallgren, Minneapolis resident who was in Kansas City to visit relatives, said she came to ride the river because she had grown up near it.
See RIVER, p. 27
"I was raised in Elk Point, South Dakota, right outside of Sioux City, Iowa, on the Missouri
1975
KANSAN MAGAZINE/May 1, 1987 19
ey had the candidates d variety of skills and m about KU. ef academic from 1982 to as been the ice president he has also srative positaity, the Uni eral Univer L Center original 55 committee n and Rama-
presented alphabetical committee did choice, but was the
tant to the rech commitations of the qualified to adig for his
ciate vice
fairs and
amber, said,
woman did
teele's seele
, Neb., grach commitaley was an
impressed by Ramaley's many told in how sorry
nous under- student needs "catching
announced at the all 16.
rt
of the Anti-
bil Brigade,
onsible last
ation of a
in Lebanon
cks on U.S.,
massies in
literary frogged a suspicion a Venea further security it city.
detailed to
ix as harm-
reportedly
r an unex-
ine uncon-
an aban
omb debris mit leaders s of internadged to halt m countries in hijackinghes of avia-
due to monti of airlines items," they
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms,
high will be 80 degrees, the low will be 66 degrees.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid, high of
85 degrees, low will be 66 degrees.
Weekend: There will be a chance of thunder-
storms daily, with highs in the low 90s, lows about 65.
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
Wednesday June 10,1987
Vol. 97, No. 146
(USPS 650-640)
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
By PAUL BELDEN
Staff writer
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations.
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towns for the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
He had one vice, however, he
had quite a bit. . . like a chimney,
in fact.
But University officials didn't need him anymore, so they hired a team of hit men to rub him out.
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus. Chunk is always smokestack is dying a slow death.
Richard Perkins, associate director of utility management for KU facilities and operations; said demolition began. Jy
ition began contractors, week, completely t weeks, deeper Two smok above the re replace the has been a F he said. Tom Ande ties and oper planned to the internal first, then de But, he se coordinate than original Part of the more likely completed on line before Anderson sait "It's easier
W
Perr
Blue Zor
Red Zor
Yellow Zor
Dorm Zor
Campu
Red Mo
Blue Moe
Meter P
1937. NOBLE CROSSING. LINES WERE DENIED. THE TOWER IS GROUNDED ON THE BAY. THE ENTRY POINT IS MARKED BY A BLACK HOLE. THE TOWER IS GROUNDED ON THE BAY. THE ENTRY POINT IS MARKED BY A BLACK HOLE. THE TOWER IS GROUNDED ON THE BAY. THE ENTRY POINT IS MARKED BY A BLACK HOLE.
By STORM
Staff writer
Enjoy it
parking. It
Starting
everyone
campus,
assistant
services.
The pari
pay for a
multilevel
said.
Residence
housing p
lowest inc.
Blue zone
Parking if paid of reciep
Parking if paid a of reciep
Pa sta
Group 1 not park
the wren
Group 2 permit, p.
(Note: Gate within se
and corr parking
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up to full operational capabilities, and sometimes a third," he said.
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-feet-square sections of the smokestack, cutting reinforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
ing than heating," he said.
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct. 15, depending on the weather.
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down, Perkins said, but as the stack gets
New vice chancellor selected
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the job from 55 candidates, said Del Shankel, chairman of the executive vice chancellor search committee
When Ramaley begins her duties Aug. 1, she will be the second-highest ranking administrator on campus.
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
She will replace Shankel, who has been the acting executive vice chancellor for the KU campus since January, when the resignation of
By CARLA PATINO
Staff writer
Mark Teasner
Fargo, N.D.
senior, checks
room receipts
during the
desk clerk.
The stained
glass sight
above the
counter
recovered from
the basement
during
renovation.
HOTEL ELDRIDGE
AMOCO
Hotel back in business
T
Bv Todd Cohen
the best thing about Kansas was the Holiday Inn, grumbled Michigan Gov. James Blanchard as he left Lawrence after a three-day conference of Midwestern governors in 1983.
For more than 100 years, the Eldridge Hotel had welcomed lodgers to Lawrence. But in 1970, its doors closed. For 16 years, the former hotel was a cheap apartment building and home to a bar and several small stores.
But on the subject of Kansas hotels, Rob Phillips, general partner of Eldridge Investors, thinks the Eldridge Hotel, a five-story, 62-year-old brick building at Seventh and Massachusetts streets, is the best.
e of English
Maybe. Maybe not.
"It was a pit," the hotel's general manager, Nancy Longhurst, said recently. But that was before the building's $1.5 million renovation last year.
Now, like a phoenix. Eldridge Hotel has been revived.
"The whole upstairs was just gutted." Phillips said last week. "Except for the lobby, the only original things are the window openings and doors."
When the building was erected in 1925, it replaced the second Eldridge Hotel building, completed in 1863. The owners spent lavishly on the lobby but built small, square rooms.
But in 1987, beneath a burgundy canopy, a tuxedo-clad valet welcomes and ushers guests from a dusty Seventh Street inside to the hotel's refurbished lobby, resplendent with an ivory-colored grand piano, a fireplace, chandeliers and a goldfish pool.
If it's afternoon, a bartender named Frankie Porter waits in the lobby with drinks. If it's Friday, hors d'oeuvres are served and a pianist entertains.
One of five bellmen, sporting a bow tie, is available to guests' luggage up to their room, which may be the D.C. Haskell executive suite; the Colonel
Eldridge honeymoon suite, complete with jacuzzi; or the room named for Amos Lawrence, who is the city's nameake.
Each room is named for an important person in Lawrence's history, including former governors Robert and George Docking.
"We're supposed to know them all," said bellman Scott Stutley, a Washburn University sophomore, who admitted he still was memorizing the names.
Plaques, with biographies of the room's namesake, soon will join paintings by eight local artists that already adorn the hotel's walls.
And a 1938 Buick Special limousine soon will be available to transport guests around town.
Filling the hotel's register wasn't easy. It meant starting before the hotel reopened its doors December 31.
"If people think a hotel is just opening the door and letting the people come and
had the candidates variety of hills and about KU academic am 1982 to been the president has also positive position, the Uni Die Uni-enter. original 55 committee
presented
phabetical
mittee did
noice, but
was the
t to the committions of the alified to g for his
eb., gra-
commit-
y was an
ite vice irs and a er, said, oman did its selec-
ressed by
amaley's
y told in
w sorry
us under-ent needs 'catching
nounced
: the all-
3.
the Anti-
Brigade,
last lea-
n of a
Lebanon
on U.S.,
assies in
rt
ry frog
a suspia
a Vene
further
security
ity.
tailed to
s harm
portedly
n unexe
uncon
aban
20
b ib debris
leaders
interna d to halt
countries
u jacking
of avia
KANSAN MAGAZINE/May 1, 1987
to moni- airlines s," they
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms high will be 80 degrees,the low will be 66 degrees.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid,high of 85 degrees,low will be 66 degrees.
Weekend: There will be a chance of thunderstorms daily,with highs in the low 90s,lows about 65
DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP
FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
Wednesday June 10,1987
Vol. 97, No.146 (USPS 650-640)
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
By PAUL BELDEN
Staff writer
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations.
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towers find the University. He did these chores unfairly, seven days a week.
He had one vice, however: he smoked quite a bit. . . like a chimney,
in fact.
But University officials didn't need him anymore, so they hired a team of hit men to rub him out.
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus. Chunk by chunk, the KU smokestack is dying a slow death.
Richard Perkins, associate director of utility management for KU facilities and operations, said demolition began.
ition began,
contractors,
week, shoub
completely t
weeks, deper
two smok
above the ro
replace the
has been a k
he said.
Tom Andie
ties and open
planned to
the internal
first, then
last.
But, he se
coordinate
than original
Part of the
more likely
completed
on line befor
Anderson sai
"It's easier
[Image of a damaged building]
W]
Pen
ing than heating." he said.
Blue Zor
Red Zor
Yellow Zor
Dorm
Campu
Red Me
Blue Me
Meter P
Parking
Pa sta
Parking if paid w of reciep
By STORM
Staff writer
Enjoy it
parking. It
Starting
everyone a
campus,
assistant
services.
The pari
pay for &
multilevel
said.
Residene
housing i
lowest
Blue zone*
Parking if paid of recie
Group 1 not park
the wron
Group 2 permu, p.
(Note: Gn within se
and corne
parking s
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up to full operational capabilities, and sometimes a third," he said.
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-feet-square sections of the smokestack, cutting reinforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
When Ramaley begins her duties Aug. 1, she will be the second-highest ranking administrator on campus.
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the job from 55 candidates, said Del Shankel, chairman of the executive vice chancellor search committee.
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct. 15, depending on the weather.
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down, Perkins said, but as the stack gets smaller,
New vice chancellor selected
By CARLA PATINO
Staff writer
Mark Teaser
Fargo, N.D.
room receipts
during his shift
as desk clerk
glass sign
above the
recovered from
the basement
renovation.
HOTEL ELDRIDGE
AMACO
e of English
Hotel back in business
Bv Todd Cohen
T
the best thing about Kansas was the Holiday Inn, grumbled Michigan Gov. James Blanchard as he left Lawrence after a three-day conference of Midwestern governors in 1983.
But on the subject of Kansas hotels, Rob Phillips, general partner of Eldridge Investors, thinks the Eldridge Hotel, a five-story, 62-year-old brick building at Seventh and Massachusetts streets, is the best.
For more than 100 years, the Eldridge Hotel had welcomed lodgers to Lawrence. But in 1970, its doors closed. For 16 years, the former hotel was a cheap apartment building and home to a bar and several small stores.
Maybe. Maybe not.
"It was a pit," the hotel's general manager, Nancy Longhurst, said recently. But that was before the building's $1.5 million renovation last year.
Now, like a phoenix, Eldridge Hotel has been revived.
"The whole upstairs was just gutted." Phillips said last week. "Except for the lobby, the only original things are the window openings and doors."
But in 1987, beneath a burgundy canopy, a tuxedo-clad valet welcomes and ushers guests from a dusty Seventh Street inside to the hotel's refurbished lobby, resplendent with an ivory-colored grand piano, a fireplace, chandeliers and a goldfish pool.
When the building was erected in 1925, it replaced the second Eldridge Hotel building, completed in 1863. The owners spent lavishly on the lobby but built small, square rooms.
If it's afternoon, a bartender named Frankie Porter waits in the lobby with drinks. If it's Friday, hors d'oeuvres are served and a pianist entertains.
One of five bellmen, sporting a bow tie, is available to carry guests' luggage up to their room, which may be the D.C. Haskell executive suite: the Colonel
Each room is named for an important person in Lawrence's history, including former governors Robert and George Docking.
Eldridge honeymoon suite, complete with jacuzzi; or the room named for Amos Lawrence, who is the city's name-sake.
"We're supposed to know them all," said bellman Scott Stutley, a Washburn University sophomore, who admitted he still was memorizing the names.
And a 1938 Buick Special limousine soon will be available to transport guests around town.
Plaques, with biographies of the room's namesake, soon will join paintings by eight local artists that already adorn the hotel's walls.
Filling the hotel's register wasn't easy. It meant starting before the hotel reopened its doors December 31.
"If people think a hotel is just opening the door and letting the people come and
had the candidates variety of hills and about KU. academics am 1982 to been the president has also positive position, the Uni Enieur-enter. original 55 committee and Rama-
presented
phabetical
mittee did
noice, but
was the
t to the commi-
nitions of the
alified to
g for his
us underent needs 'catching
pressed by
amaley's
told in
sorry
ute vice
irs and a
er, said,
doman did
its selec-
jeb., gra-
commit-
y was an
nounced
the all-
3.
the Anti-Brigade,
last lea st in of a
Lebanon on U.S.
assies in
rt
fry frogs
a suspia
Venue
further
security
ity.
tailed to
s harm
portedly
n unex-
uncon-
aban
20
b debris
leaders
interna-
t to halt
countries
u jacking
of avia-
KANSAN MAGAZINE/May 1, 1987
to moni- airlines s." they
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms, high will be 80 degrees, the low will be 66 degrees.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid, high of 85 degrees, low will be 66 degrees.
Weekend: There will be a chance of thunderstorms daily, with highs in the low 90s, lows about 65
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP
DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION
FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
Wednesday June 10,1987
Vol. 97, No. 146 (USPS650-640)
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
Bv PAUL REIDEN
Staff writer
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations.
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towers find the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
He had one vice, however; he smoked quite a bit. . . like a chimney, in fact.
But University officials didn't need him anymore, so they hired a team of hit men to rub him out.
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus. Chunk is sitting behind his smokestack is dying a slow death.
ition began Jc contractors, w week, should i completely torr weeks, dependi Two smokest above the roof of replace the 245 has been a KU he said.
Richard Perkins, associate direc tor of utility management for KU (gilpin)
Tom Anders
ties and operati
planned to hat
the internal wo
first, then derm
but, he said
coordinate the
than originally
Part of the r more likely
the completed and
on line before
Anderson said.
"It's easier to
Pa sta
By STORMY Staff writer
parking. It w
Starting At
everyone a I
campus,
s assistant
d services.
WH
The parkin pay for a multilevel I said.
Perm
Blue Zone
Red Zone
Yellow Zi
Dorm.
& Campus
Red Mote
Blue Moist
Meter Pa
Residence housing pe lowest incre Blue zone pe
Parking 1
Parking V
if paid will
of receipt
ing than heating." he said.
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct. 15, depending on the weather.
Parking V if paid aft of reciept
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
Group 1 v not parking the wrong
Group 2 v permit, pli.
(Note: Gre within se and correct parking se
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up to full operational capabilities, and sometimes a third," he said.
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-feed-square sections of the smokestack, cutting reinforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down, Perkins said, but as the stack gets fuller, it will still be ash.
New vice chancellor selected
When Ramaley begins her duties
Aug. 1, she will be the second-highest
ranked woman in the Army.
She will replace Shankel, who has been the acting executive vice chancellor for the KU campus since January, when the resignation of
By CARLA PATINO Staff writer
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the job from 55 candidates, said Del Shankel, chairman of the executive vice cancellor search committee.
Staff writer
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
Café de la Vieille
Paul Santalauria,
head chef
for the Winhot
Room, prepares for
the dinner hour.
Mark Tesmer, Fargo, N.D., senior, a desk clerk who works beneath an original green stained-glass "Eldridge Hotel" sign, said, "Initially it was kind of slow."
again
Fresh flowers adorn the windows of the Hotel Room, a restaurant in the restored room.
e of English,
Longhurst added, "You have to start your sales immediately, pre-sell before you see it."
Longhurst said the hotel always was full on weekends and would be full for KU graduation May 17. Many business people stay and use the board rooms that are available on every floor for meetings. Guests of the University of Kansas stay in the hotel, most recently, journalist Nicholas Daniiloff.
stay, they're wrong. It's a sales job," Phillips said.
But not anymore. Tesmer said he was looking forward to a busy May.
Three Lawrence High School students even came to have a slumber party in
See HOTEL, p. 28
MOTHER OF THE BEST FRIEND
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KANSAN MAGAZINE/May 1, 1987 21
had the
anddies
variety of
ills and
about KU
academic
ism 1982 to
been the
president
has also
positive
position,
the Uni-
eer Uni-
venter.
original 55
committee
and Rama-
presented
phabetical
mittee did
noice, but
was the
t to the 1 commi-
mitions of the
alified to
g for his
ite vice
irs and a
er, said,
oman did
its selec-
us underent needs 'catching
ressed by
amaley's
told in
sorry
leb., gra-
commit-
y was an
nounced
the all-
3.
the Anti-
Brigade,
ible last
in of a
Lebanon
on U.S.,
assies in
rt
fry frog
a suspia
a Vene further security ity.
tailed to
s harmportedly
n unexe
unconan
aban
bdebris
leaders
internad to halt
countries
u jacking
of avia
to moni- airlines s," they
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms high will be 80 degrees, the low will be 66 degrees. Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid, high of 85 degrees, low will be 66 degrees. Weekend: There will be a chance of thunderstorms daily, with highs in the low 90s, lows about 65
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
Wednesday June 10,1987
Vol. 97, No. 146
(USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations.
By PAUL BELDEN
Staff writer
But University officials didn't need
them to hire a team of hikers to rob
lacitizes i tion beg contractio week, she completes weeks de the above above the replace it has been he said. Tom Atari ties and planned the intern first, then But, he coordinate than origi Part of more like completed on line be Anderson "It's eat a
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towers find the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
he had one vice, however, he
smoked quite a bit, like a chimney,
and
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus.Chunk by chunk, the KU smokestack is dying a slow death.
P
S1
By STO Stait write
Enjoy parking Starti everyon campusur assista; servicee The p pay for multileve said.
Reside housing lowest Blue zor
Richard Perkins, associate director of utility management for KU
W
Blue S
Red Z
Yellow
Dorn
Camp
Red M
Blue
Mete
Parki
Parkin
if paid
of red
Parkin
if paid
of rec
Group
not pa
the wr
Group
permit
(Note:
within
and co
parkin
ing than heating," he said.
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct. 15, depending on the weather.
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up to full operational capabilities, and sometimes a third," he said.
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-feet-square sections of the smokestack, cutting reinforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down, Perkins said, but as the stack rets
New vice chancellor selected
By CARLA PATINO
Staff writer
GAME PLAN
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the from 55 candidates, said Del Shaheen and his vice chancellor search committee.
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
When Ramaley begins her duties
Aug. 1, she will be the second-highest
rank in the league.
Roller hockey players practice sprinting down the link to build up their speed and to improve their high welt ocity turns.
Sport may roll into Olympic arena
The game is a cross between ice hockey and basketball, but the players wear roller skates.
A player with a wooden stick slaps a small rubber ball against a wall, off a teammate and past a scrambling goalie, eliciting cheers from the scoring team.
It's popular in Europe and may even become an Olympic sport.
The name of the game is roller hockey. About 12 sports fans from Lawrence, Eudora and Baldwin City are playing the sport in Lawrence.
Roller hockey is similar to ice hockey because the players use hockey sticks and skate around a rink, yet it's different because the players score goals by hitting a rubber ball into a net.
David now is a coach and a player for the team. He and another player, Carlin Kampschroeder, a 17-year-old Lawrence High School student, even built a locker room in a storage closet at the rink for the team. Players can use the lockers as long as they pay $10-a-month dues. The money is used to buy equipment.
David Rose, an 18-year-old Lawrence High School student, began playing the sport two years ago at Fantasyland Skating Rink in Gladstone. Mo When Jack Rose, David's father, bought Fantasyland Skating Rink, 3210 Iowa St., David decided to start a club in Lawrence.
In play, the game is more like basketball. Each team has five players, including a goalie. The object is to use teamwork and strategy to score goals without checking, foiling or blocking.
Ise Lrose, David's mother, said anyone could play, regardless of skating ability. By chasing the ball around, beginners are forced to concentrate on the game, causing them to forget
The team competes with roller hockey teams from rinks in other cities. This spring, for example,
the team won third place and its first trophy in a tournament with teams from Bethany, McPherson and Fantasyland of Gladstone.
Jack Rose said that when an area rink was host for a tournament, the host team was then expected to travel to the visitor's rink for a game.
Jennifer Hayden, 16, is the only girl on the team. She said that she liked the game and that being the only girl on the team was a challenge.
Mike said he sometimes got frustrated because most of the opposing teams had played together longer than the Lawrence team. Because the Lawrence team always is getting new players, the team can't progress as fast as he would like.
Hayden said she liked playing both offensive and defensive positions. She even has played goalie.
That was how Mike and Larry Baxter found out about the sport last fall. Mike, 14, and Larry, 12, travel from Eudora to skate at Fantasyland and play roller hockey. Both boys said they thought roller hockey was a fun sport.
The Roses try to recruit team members who already like skating and enjoy sports by publicizing the team at Fantasvland.
"I blocked every shot. It was fun," she said.
Both boys and girls are welcome to play on the team.
"That's what makes it hard," he said.
By Peggy O'Brien
Jack Roe said no one had been hurt since the team was started. The players might fall down, but checking isn't allowed.
that they are on skates.
Racing around and around the oval rink at dizzying speeds, the players improve their skills. But not without a few spills.
"The object is to have fun and not tear up the rink," Jack Rose said.
But, that doesn't mean the game never gets physical.
"It's not really like hockey, but
there's some pushing and shov ing," David Rose said.
The club provides helmets for the players to wear. It also provides goalie equipment.
Jack Rose doesn't ask the club, which was formed only a year ago, to pay for the use of the rink. He's giving them the chance to get on their feet financially.
Although roller hockey is new to Lawrence, the sport is popular abroad. The Confederation Pan Americana de Roller Hockey governs more than 25,000 compete-
titive skaters in 1,000 skating clubs in the United States. The confederation makes and enforces rules and standards for the sport.
Rose said the U.S. roller hockey team was ranked sixth internationally. Italy, Spain and Portugal are the top three countries in the sport.
Roller hockey is recognized as an Olympic sport by the U.S. Olympic Committee and will be a demonstration sport at the 1992 Olympics.
Larry Baxter slams the ball into the goal during a scrimmage.
r of English,
COLLEGE HOCKEY
stant to the arch commissions of the qualified to udici for his
ley had the candidates
ad variety of skills and
im about KU.
ief academic from 1982 to
has been the ice president.
She has also
strivative posi-
ty, the Uni-
d the Universal Center.
he original 55
committee
in Rama-
re presented
alphabetical
committee did
it choice,
but
wer was the
ociate vice affairs and a number, said, a woman did wife the seele's tee-
impressed by Ramaley's bany told in how sorry
a, Neb., graarch commitalev was an
mous under- student needs re "catching
announced t at the ally 16.
of the Anti Al Brigade, possible lastation of a in Lebanon acks on U.S. ambassies in
rt
ilitary frogated a suspirrom a Venetia; a further avy security it city.
detailed to ox as harmed reportedly an unexnine uncon- an aban
22
bomb debris
militers leaders
is of internadged to halt
am countries
in hijacking
ches of avia-
nue to moni- ns of airlines lems," they
KANSAN MAGAZINE/May 1. 1987
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms,
high will be 80 degrees, the low will be 66 degrees.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid, high of
85 degrees, low will be 66 degrees.
Weekend: There will be a chance of thunder-
storms daily, with highs in the low 90s, lows about 65
DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP
FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
Wednesday June 10,1987
Vol. 97, No. 146 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
By PAUL BELDEN
Staff writer
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations.
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towers find the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
He had one vice, however: he smoked quite a bit. . like a chimney, in fact.
But University officials didn't need him anymore. He hired team of him at the university.
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus.Chunk by chunk, the KU smokestack is dying a slow death.
Richard Perkins, associate director of utility management or KU (agency) for the San Diego Water Department.
ition began
contractors. W
completely torr
weeks depend
Two smokest above the roof or replace the 245 has been a KU he said.
Tom Andersen ties and operati planned to has the internal wo first, then dem But, he said coordinate the than originally
Part of the rmore likely tha completed and on line before Anderson said.
"It's easier to
Perm
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the job from 55 candidates, said Del Shankel, chairman of the executive vice chancellor search committee.
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
WH
When Ramaley begins her duties
When I, she will be the second-highest
rank in the company.
Parking V if paid will of receipt c
Blue Zone
Red Zone
Yellow Za
Dorm.
& Campus
Red Mot
Blue Mot
Meter Pa
Parking
Residence housing pe lowest incre Blue zone pe
By STORMY Staff writer
Group 1 v not parkin the wrong Group 2 v permit, pli (Note: Go within sev and correct parking se
Enjoy the parking. It w
Starting At every a
campus, s as assistant
d services.
Parking V if paid aft of receipt
New vice chancellor selected
Pa
sta
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up to full operational capabilities, and sometimes a third," he said.
ing than heating." he said.
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-feet-square sections of the smokestack, cutting renforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
The parkin pay for a multilevel I said.
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct. 15, depending on the weather.
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down, Perkins said, but as the stack gets greater and taller, all else goes.
By CARLA PATINO
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
Staff writer
She will replace Shankel, who has been the acting executive vice chancellor for the KU campus since January, when the resignation of
FOSTER
Continued from p. 16
seeing children who needed help. Mark said he remembered the day that a child in his care ran away from a group home.
"I didn't sleep for two days. I felt guilty. I thought, 'What did I do, what did I do?' " he said. "I thought maybe I should quit."
But he stuck to it, and now he and Liz have their home on what they pleasant Ridge. The home and its neighboring group home are located in a 40-acre clearing on top of a wooded hill south of Lawrence. A mile-long gravel driveway winds down to a county road.
The house and grounds are immaculate. The kitchen is spotless, and in the children's rooms, everything is in its place. Outside, the children help clear snow from the road in the winter and mow the lawns and cut firewood in the summer.
Mark said that such work was a new experience for most of the children and that it was good for them.
"And if we're going to be like a real family, well, we don't need to be doing that."
Working with children and letting the Villages worry about the finances and regulations is the best part, they said. "I think the Villages philosophy behind that is if we're going to be strapped down with paperwork all the time and writing these reports, we can't be proper parents," Mark said.
Mark said he would prefer to
do more parenting and have less contact with the children's natural parents.
"I have a really hard time with some of those parents," Mark said. "I can put up with kids mouthing off to us all day long. But you get an adult mouthing off to me, and that's a different story.
"Sometimes this person beat this kid for 10 years, or sexually abused them, and then they start saying I have been rude.
angry about is you taking a kid they couldn't handle, and that you're handling it," he said.
"What this parent is really
Mark and Liz handle things so well that the children often return to seek advice or to introduce their girlfriends and boyfriends.
"You have to look at the rewards," Liz said.
She said it was satisfying to see the children graduate, knowing they wouldn't have done so without having lived at the group home.
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NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL
KANSAN MAGAZINE/May-1, 1987
ley had the candidates id variety of skills and im about KU.ief academic from 1982 to has been the ice president She has also strative positivity, the Unid the Universal Center. he original 55 im committee and Rama-
re presented
alphabetical
committee did
t choice, but
wer the was
stant to the rech commissions of the qualified to udig for his
ociate vice affairs and amber, said, a woman did tee's selec-
mpressed by Ramaley's bany told in how sorry
1. Neb., graarch commitaley was an
mous under-udent needs re "catching
announced t at the ally 16.
rt
of the Anti-
Brigade,
possible last
ation of a
in Lebanon
acks on U.S.
ambassies in
ilitary frogated a suspire from a Veneng a further avy security nit city. detailed to osx as harm reportedly or an unexnine uncon- an aban
23
bomb debris
mit leaders
us of interna-
dged to halt
am countries
in hijacking
ches of avia-
nue to moni's of airlines lems," they
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms,
high will be 80 degrees, the low will be 66 degrees.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid, high of
85 degrees, low will be 66 degrees.
Weekend: There will be a chance of thunder-
storms daily, with highs in the low 90s, lows about 65
DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP
FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
Wednesday June 10,1987
Vol. 97, No.146 (USPS650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
By PAUL BELDEN
Staff writer
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations.
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towers find the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
He had one vice, however: he smoked quite a bit. . . like a chimney,
in fact.
But University officials didn't need him anymore, so they hired a team of hit men to rub him out.
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus. Chunk by chunk, the KU smokestack is dying a slow death.
Richard Perkins, associate director of utility management for KU
facilities and operation began Ijenn contractors, w weeks, week should I completely tors weak, depends two Smokestrikes to replace the 245 has been a KU he said.
Tom Andersen ties and operatitl planned to hat the internal wof first, then demo But, he said coordinate the than originally Part of the r more likely tha completed and on line before Anderson said.
"It's easier to
Pa sta
The parkin pay for a multilevel I said.
WH
By STORMY Staff write
Enjoy the parking. It wi
Starting At everyone a l
campus, sa assistant d
services.
Residence housing pe lowest incre Blue zone pe
Perm
Blue Zone
Red Zone
Yellow Za
Dorm.
& Campus
Red Mute
Blue Mute
Meter Pa
Parking
Parking V if paid wit of receipe
ing than heating," he said.
Parking if paid af of recipient
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct. 15, depending on the weather.
Group 1 v not parkir the wrong Group 2 v permit, pl. (Note: Gr within se and correct parking s
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
A 1930s photograph of the damaged fuselage of a German aircraft. The nose is intact, but the cockpit and tail are severely damaged.
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up to full operational capabilities, and sometimes a third," he said.
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-feet-square sections of the smokestack, cutting in reinforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down. Perkins said, as but the stack gets
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the candidates, said Del Shankel, chairwoman of the vice chancellor search committee.
New vice chancellor selected
When Ramaley begins her duties Aug. 1, she will be the second-highest ranking administrator on campus
Staff writer
By CARLA PATINO
Craft writer
She will replace Shankel, who has been the acting executive vice chancellor for the KU campus since January, when the resignation of
Palace
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"I don't have a style bold enough for some people."
At 10 p.m., Sunday through Thursday, Bill Thomas seats himself in front of a Mycro-Comp computer and begins styling copy for University Daily Kansan ads. The student advertising staff has input the copy earlier in the day. It's Bill's job to study their advertising layouts and enter key commands so that the finished product presents a harmony of type and graphics that's perfectly balanced.
He sets a lot of bold type. In fact, he sets a lot of type. He's been working on Kansan ads for over 20 years and he's developed a sixth sense for fine tuning ad copy so that it looks just right. That means making some judgement calls
about how much bold type will enhance the ideas presented in an ad and how much bold type will enhance the ideas presented in an ad.
If you want to know about the ads in the Kansan, ask Bill. He knows them all. If you want to know how the Jayhawks are doing, you can ask Bill about that, too. He's one of the Jayhawk's biggest fans and he follows them every day in the sports pages of the University Daily Kansan.
Bill's job may sound like a lot of late night typing to you but it's a skill to him. He cares about it. He cares about the rules of the game, he cares about doing a good job for you.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Nobody else speaks your language.
ey had the candidates d variety of skills and m about KU. et academic from 1982 to as been the ice president the has also strative positiy, the Uni of the Universal Center the original 55 committee and Rama-
re presented alphabetical committee did it choice, but er was the
n. Neb., gra-
arch committi-
valy was an
tant to the
reh commi-
tations of the
qualified to
udig for his
24
ociate vice affairs and a amber, said, a woman did ittee's selec-
mous understudent needs are "catching
impressed by of Ramaley's bany told in how sorry
announced t at the ally 16.
of the Anti-
Brigade,
possible last
station of a
in Lebanon
acks on U.S.
embassies in
ort
KANSAN MAGAZINE/May 1, 1987
ilitary frogated a suspip from a Venge a further security nit city. d detailed to ox as harm reportedly er an unexamine uncon- an aban
bomb debris
amit leaders
as of interned
ed to halt
amn countries
in hijacking
ches of avia-
nue to monis of airlines plems," they
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms high will be 80 degrees,the low will be 66 degrees.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid,high of 85 degrees,low will be 66 degrees.
Weekend: There will be a chance of thunderstorms daily,with highs in the low 90s,lows about 65
DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP
FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
Wednesday June 10,1987
Vol. 97, No.146 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
Staff writer
By PAUL BELDEN
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations.
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towers find the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
He had one vice, however: he
sucked quite a bit, like a chimney,
in snaked form.
But University officials didn't need him anymore; they hired a team of high-level analysts.
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus. Chunk by chunk, the KU smokestack is dying a slow death.
Richard Perkins, associate director of utility management for KU facilities and operations, said demolition began Jj contractors, w week, should I completely tori weeks, dependi
Two smokest,
above the roof or
replace the 245
has been a KU
he said.
he said.
Tom Anderson ties and operates planned to hat the internal wow first, then demo But, he said coordinate the than originally Part of the re more likely than completed and on line before Anderson said.
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
Judith A Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the job from 55 candidates, said Del Shankel, chairman of the executive vice chancellor search committee.
When Ramaley begins her duties Aug. 1, she will be the second-highest ranking administrator on campus.
She will replace Shankel, who has been the acting executive vice chancellor for the KU campus since January, when the resignation of Robert Cohen, a professor of English
"It's easier to
New vice chancellor selected
Pa sta
By STORMY Staff writer
parking. It w
Starting At
everyone a l
campus, s
assistant d
services.
The parkin pay for a multilevel said.
Residence housing pe lowest incre Blue zone pe
By CARLA PATINO Staff writer
WH Perm
Perm
Blue Zone
Red Zone
Yellow Zi
Dorm.
& Campus
Red Mot
Blue Mot
Meter Pa
ing than heating," he said.
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct. 15, depending on the weather.
Parking
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up and working all day, tasks, and sometimes a third," he said.
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-feet-square sections of the smokestack, cutting reinforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down, Perkins said, but as the stack gets smaller, progress will slow because
Parking V if paid afl of reciept
Parking V if paid will of receipe
Group 1 v not parkin the wrong Group 2 v permit, pl. (Note: Gro within sev and correct parking se
TRIP
Continued from p. 18
materially poor, for the most part.
But what we found were people who know how to love, and how to communicate with each other. They didn't seem quite as mixed up about what was important in life as so many people back home. And they were happy, too.
Except maybe for Nona. Our last task for the week was to clear away the debris from the fire.
"There's no way he could've started that fire," she said.
Just before the fire, Nona's grandson had been playing with matches in her sewing room. But she refused to blame him.
As I began digging through the rubble that was once Nona's home, Mary, another member of the group, innocently picked up a small metal box about 3 inches around. She took the lid off and found, amidst the ashes, a little piece of gold jewelry.
She showed her find to Letendre, who advised her to set it aside with a few pots and pans that Nona would salvage from the fire. They didn't think much of it. After all, in the middle of all the rubble, it didn't look too important.
Nona came down from her daughter's house next door to help us. She got right to work digging up some shrubs she would replant when her new house was built.
She accepted her loss saying without much visible remorse, "Well, I guess I'll just have to start over."
The only other possession she was sorry to lose was a gold four-leaf clover pin with a diamond in the center. Her son had sent the charm home to her while he was in Vietnam.
As Nona described the object that had meant so much to her, Mary looked up. "A little four-leaf clover with a stone in the middle?" I saw that," she said. "I put it over there."
She did mention missing some family pictures, pictures she had only copies of and could never replace.
Mary didn't think she had done anything special, but she had. She had unintentionally brought joy to a woman she had known only a few hours.
This miracle occurred near the end of our stay in Maysel, and it left Nona with an indelible memory of our visit.
Nona was so happy. Crying,
she hugged Mary and ran next
door to show the pin to her
daughter.
Nona Carte experienced a miracle when Mary found her gold four-leaf clover. But I experienced a miracle in the people I met and worked with in Clay County.
But for me, it was simply the finale to a spring break I would never forget.
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KANSAN MAGAZINE/May 1, 1987
ley had the candidates ad variety of skills and am about KU iac academy from 1982 to has been the vice president She has also positive positivity, the Uni d the Universal Center. he original 55 h committee and Rama-
stant to the arch committations of the qualified to judig for his
are presented alphabetical committee did it choice, but either was the
ociate vice
affairs and a
amber, said,
a woman did
teee's selec
impressed by of Ramaley's bany told in how sorry
n, Neb., graurch committaley was an
mous under- student needs re "catching
announced t at the ally 16.
ort
of the Anti-
Brigade,
possible last
lation of
a in Lebanon
acks on U.S.
embassies in
ulitary frogated a suspire from a Veneng a further avy security nit city. detailed to ox as harmed reportedly er an unexamine uncon- an aban
bomb disbris
mit leaders
of internad-
ege to hattm
in court
in hijacking
of avia
25
nue to monis of airlines poems," they
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms,
high will be 80 degrees, the low will be 66 degrees.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid, high of
85 degrees, low will be 66 degrees.
Weekend: There will be a chance of thunder-
storms daily, with highs in the low 90s, lows about 65
DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP
FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
Wednesday June 10,1987
Vol. 97, No. 146 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
By PAUL BELDEN
Staff writer
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations.
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towers find the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
He had one vice, however: he smoked quite a bit . . like a chimney,
in fact.
But University officials didn't need him anymore, so they hired a team of hit men to rub him out.
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus. Chunk by chunk, the KU smokestack is dying a slow death.
Richard Perkins, associate direc tion
tor of utility facilities and ition began contractors, week, should completely t weeks, deeper Two smok above the ro replace the has been a b he said. Tom Ande ties and open planned to the internal first, then de But, he so coordinate than original Part of the more likely completed at on line before Anderson sa "It's easy
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the job from 55 candidates, said Del Shankel, chairman of the executive vice chancellor search committee
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
图 14-15
When Ramaley begins her duties Aug. 1, she will be the second-highest ranking administrator on campus.
She will replace Shankel, who has been the acting executive vice chancellor for the KU campus since January, when the resignation of
New vice chancellor selected
Pa st
By CARLA PATINO Staff writing
By STOR
Staff write!
Enjoy parking.
Startim everyone campus,
assistant services.
The pa pay for mulleive said.
Reside housing lowest in Blue zone
ing than heating," he said.
W Pa
Staff writer
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct. 15, depending on the weather.
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
Blue 2
Red Z
Yellow
Dorm
Camp
Red M
Blue J
Meter
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up to full operational capabilities, and sometimes a third," he said.
Parkin if paid of rec
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-feet-square sections of the smokestack, cutting reinforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
Parkin if paid of reci
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down.
Group not pat the wre Group permit (Note: within and ce parkli
PERSONALS
Continued from p. 7
"A Private Gentleman, aged 24, entirely independent, whose disposition is not to be exceeded, has lately lost the chief of his family by the hand of Providence, which has occasioned discord among the remainder, under circumstances most disagreeable to relate . . ."
Corder didn't relate those circumstances to the new bride he chose from the ad's replies either, and they already were married when he was accused, convicted and executed for the murder of his first wife.
The Kansan, the Lawrence Daily Journal-World and the Topeka Capital-Journal will refuse questionable ads or take them on a conditional basis and review them by the staff.
Snyder said that the two probably wouldn't have met if she hadn't placed the personal.
Generally, personal ads follow the same standards as other types of advertising. Libelous and discriminatory ads, ads that violate University regulations or government laws, or ads that identify a person without consent are not acceptable.
Any risks that may exist don't bother Snyder, the "Fellow Blondie" who sought the elusive John. She said she would place another ad or answer an ad, and she said the cost and the risks of her ad were worthwhile. Although "a lot of heavy breathers and some real creepy callers" responded to her ad, she did John.
"He's so shy. We didn't have much to say in person."
Snyder isn't sure whether she'll ever see John again.
When Snyder's roommate told her that the John she had written the ad to had called, Snyder didn't believe her. She called him and found out that he was the same John she was seeking, and the two met on campus and talked for the first time.
"I don't think it clicked," she said. "But he could have been the man of my dreams. Who knows?"
And John.
"All these Johns called, and I felt so bad telling them they were the wrong ones," she said.
"He said he was flattered when he saw the ad. He had a pretty good idea of who I was," Snyder said.
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The KU FEDERAL CREDIT UNION wishes you much success.
KANSAN MAGAZINE/May 1, 1987
26
ley had the candidates and variety of skills and am about KU.ief academic from 1982 to has been the vice president She has also inertia posisity, the Uni der the Universal Center. the original 55 h committee and Rama-
stant to the arch communications of the qualified to 3edg for his
e presented
alphabetical
committee did
st choice,
but her was the
ociate vice affairs and a member, said, a woman did iteer the selec-
impressed by of Ramaley's ubany told in as how sorry
In, Neb., gra-
arch commitm-
maley was an
rk of the Antimal Brigade responsible last iteration of a be in Lebanon stacks on U.S. embassies in
ormous understudent needs were "catching
; announced nt at the allay 16.
military frog-anted a suspik from a Vene-
gur a further heavy security nunit city.
its detailed to
box as harmice
reportedly
an the unex-
mine unco-
s or an aban-
ort
ie bomb bdeb
ummit leaders
ms of interna-
pledged to halt
from countries
te in hijacking
aves of avi-a
ontinue to moni-
ties of airlines
'oblems,' they
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms, high will be 80 degrees, the low will be 66 degrees.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid, high of 85 degrees, low will be 66 degrees.
Weekend: There will be a chance of thunderstorms daily, with highs in the low 90s, lows about 65
DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP
FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
Wednesday June 10,1987
Vol.97,No.146 (USPS650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
By PAUL BELDEN
Staff writer
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations.
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towners find the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
He had one vice, however; he
snailed quite a bit, like a chimney,
too.
But University officials didn't need him anymore, so they hired a team of hit men to rub him out.
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus. Chunk by chunk, the KU smokestack is dying a slow death.
Richard Perkins, associate director of utility management for KU facilities and operations, said demolition began Jj contractors, w week, should I completely tori weeks, dependi
Two smokest above the roof of replace the 245 has been a KU he said
But, he said coordinate the than originally
Tom Anderss
ties and operati-
planned to have
the internal wo
first, then dem
[Image of a ship]
Part of the more likely completed and on line before Anderson said.
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
"It's easier to
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the chairmanship of the Joint Shankel, chairman of the executive vice chancellor search committee.
When Ramaley begins her duties Aug. 1, she will be the second-highest ranking administrator on campus.
She will replace Shankel, who has been the acting executive vice chancellor for the KU campus since January, when the resignation of Robert Cobb, professor of English, took office.
New vice chancellor selected
Enjoy the parking. It w
Starting Ar everyone a l
campus, ssa
assistant d
services
Pa Sta
By STORMY Staff writer
By CARLA PATINO
The parkin pay for a multilevel I said.
WH Perm
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-feet-square sections of the smokestack, cutting renforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
ing than heating," he said.
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down, Perkins said, but as the stack gets smaller, progress will slow because
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct. 15, depending on the weather.
Residence housing pe lowest incree Blue zone pe
Parking V if paid will of recipe t
Parking
Blue Zone
Red Zone
Yellow Zi
Dorm.
& Campus
Red Mot
Blue Mot
Meter Pa
Parking V if paid_aff of reciept
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
Group 1 v not parkin the wrong Group 2 v permit, pl. (Note: Gro within sev and corres parking se
Staff writer
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up to full operational capabilities, and sometimes a third," he said.
Perm
RIVER
Continued from p. 19
River," Hallgren said. "It's an awfully dangerous river, too."
Before 1930, when the river was straightened out by some engineers, the river traveled only three to four miles an hour.
Now, the Missouri is always at least nine feet deep with currents strong enough to stir up the bottom and give the river its infamous muddy-brown color.
Hallgren said the river's current was so strong that it had eroded away whole farms, including one that was 360 acres.
The Missouri also was known for its abundance of quicksand, Hallgren said.
“There’s a lot of quicksand on the Missouri,” she said. “When we were kids we used to go out to the sandbars by jumping on pieces of driftwood in the quicksand.”
Andrew and Jeremy Wilson, on vacation with their parents from Middleton, Conn., said they thought the river was too dangerous.
Jeremy, 8, said that he'd much rather ride his bike in the street than ride on a raft as Tom Sawyer did on the Mississippi.
However, Jeremy said that he'd ridden on a riverboat in Florida and that he liked the big boats.
Erin Brown, a 5-year-old from Kansas City, Kan., said that she had ridden on the River Queen before.
Brown said her class had taken a field trip on a River Queen daytime cruise to learn about the river and the city.
But this time, Brown was with her mother and grandmother on the cruise just to sit, relax and get a taste of days gone by.
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- On The Hill, a photographic history
- Papermate, and Parker.
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KANSAN MAGAZINE/May 1, 1987
ley had the candidates and variety of skills and sm about KUief academic from 1982 to has been the vice president She has also isitative posiity, the Unid the Universal Center. The original 55 h committee and Rama-
stant to the arch committations of the qualified to 3udig for his
are presented
alphabetical
committee did
st choice, but
her was the
ociate vice affairs and aember, said, a woman did wife'site selec.
In, Neb., graarch committaley was an
impressed by of Ramaley's ubany told in is how sorry
ormous under student needs ere "catching
announced n at the allay 16.
ort
rk of the Anti-
Brigade,
responsible last
nation of a be
in Lebanon
tracks on U.S.
e embassies in
military frogged a suspik from a Veninga a further security heavy nunit city. its detailed to box as harms reportedly her an unexe mine uncon- or an aban-
to bomb debris
umil leaders
ms of interna-
pledged to hail
from countries
in hi jacking
eaches of avia-
attinue to moni-
ties of airlines
'oblegs,' they
27
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms,
high will be 80 degrees, the low will be 66 degrees.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid, high of
85 degrees, low will be 66 degrees.
Weekend: There will be a chance of thunder-
storms daily, with highs in the low 90s, lows about 65
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP
DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION
FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMONY
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
Wednesday June 10,1987
Vol. 97, No.146 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
Staff writer
By PAUL BELDEN
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations.
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towers find the University. He did these chores unfailingly, seven days a week.
He had one vice, however; he smoked quite a bit . . like a chimney, in fact.
But University officials didn't need him anymore and were a team of him, the carpenter, the carpenter, the carpenter.
The work of this gang of tanned assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus. Chunk by chunk, the KU smokestack is dying a slow death.
Richard Perkins, associate director of utility management for KU
ition began contractor week, she completely weeks, dep. Two sm above the replace that has been a he said. Tom An ties and op planned to the interna first, then o But, he coordinate than origin Part of l more likely completed on line be Anderson s 's easy
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the job from 55 candidates, said Del Shankel, chairman of the executive vice chancellor search committee.
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
When Ramaley begins her duties Aug. 1, she will be the second-highest ranking administrator on campus
New vice chancellor selected
She will replace Shankel, who has been the acting executive vice chancellor for the KU campus since January, when the resignation of
By CARLA PATINO Staff writer
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As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down, Perkins said, but as the stack gets
ing than heating," he said.
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct. 15, depending on the weather.
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-feet-square sections of the smokestack, cutting reinforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Ferkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up in our house," he said, and sometimes a third," he said.
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HOTEL
Continued from p. 21
one of the hotel's 48 suites. And many people come to celebrate their amiliversary.
"People like nostalgia. People like the fact that the Eldridge Investors took something that could have been torn down and redid it," said Linda Spinner, owner of Prairiewind Traditions, a gift store in the lobby.
"They had the guts to do it," she said.
With the help of the city of Lawrence, which issued bonds to help pay for the renovation, the transformation is nearly complete.
Phillips said it was a risk to renovate the hotel, which is on the National Register of Historic Places. "I started with really no background in hotels. It was scary," he said.
The money was raised and Longhurst left her job at the Lawrence Holiday Inn to begin researching the hotel's history and searching for makers of traditional furniture and other fixtures.
"You have to look for those people." she said.
Longhurst, whose husband is former city commissioner David Longhurst, also searched for someone to repair the hotel's original terrazzo floors.
"That's an art all in itself," she said.
Last week, workers were finishing the hotel's basement, transforming it from a dusty storage area into three stores, the hotel's health club and the Big Six room, named for the Big Eight conference in its younger days.
And on Monday night, a ribbon was cut to officially welcome the Eldridge back.
"We had thought, 'Why wouldn't a hotel work downtown? There had been one there we knew. And think it's the nicest hotel in town.'
One wonders what Gov. Blanchard would think
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hamaley had the other candidates vel and variety of tive skills and musiasm about KU chief academic ibany from 1982 to she has been the live vice president irs. She has also imministrative positivity, the Uni a and the Univer- medical Center. t of the original 55 search committee men and Rama-
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A
WEATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy, chance of thunderstorms,
high will be 80 degrees, the low will be 66 degrees.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and humid, high of
85 degrees, low will be 66 degrees.
Weekend: There will be a chance of thunder-
storms daily, with highs in the low 90s, lows about 65
COMPLETE ROYALS ROUNDUP DETAILS ON THE UNION RENOVATION FAWN HALL'S IRAN-CONTRA TESTIMON
PAGE 11
PAGE 5
PAGE 2
Wednesday June 10,1987 Vol. 97, No. 146 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Old smokey will be a missed KU landmark
Staff writer
By PAUL BELDEN
For more than a half-century the tall, slim sexagenarian has worked for the University of Kansas department of facilities and operations.
His job was to remove waste from the number 7 and 8 boilers at the KU power plant. He also helped many out-of-towners find the University. He did these chores unfairly, seven days a week.
He had one vice, however: he smoked quite a bit. . like a chimney, in fact.
But University officials didn't need him anymore. They were a team of hikers, both gosh. goh. goh.
Dale Fulkerson/KANSAN
The work of this gang of tannee assassins can be seen or heard from almost anywhere on campus. Chunk by chunk, the KU smokestack is dying a slow death.
Richard Perkins, associate director of utility management for KU facilities and operations, said demolition began June 3 and that the contractors, working six days a week, should have the smokestack completely torn down in about seven weeks, depending on the weather.
Two smokestacks reaching 15 feet above the roof of the power plant will replace the 245-foot tail stack, which is a KU landmark since 1923, he said.
But, he said, "We were able to coordinate the efforts differently than originally planned."
Part of the reason was to make it more likely that all the work will be completed and all the boilers will be on line before cold weather comes, Anderson said.
Tom Anderson, director of facilities and operations, said he originally planned to have contractors finish the internal work on the two boilers.
ing than heating," he said.
"It's easier to reduce air condition-
Perkins said that the two boilers receiving new smokestacks should be operable by Oct.15,depending on the weather.
Until then, the two boilers now on line should have no problems handling the work load this summer and fall, he said.
"One of the boilers can handle most of the summer heat. In winter, however, we'll have both of them up to full operational capabilities, and sometimes a third," he said.
Workers are proceeding by digging out 4-feet-square sections of the smokestack, cutting reinforcing steel bars imbedded in the concrete, then letting the sections fall into the smokestack, Perkins said. The rubble is being dumped at the KU landfill west of Iowa Street.
As of yesterday, about 40 feet of the smokestack had been torn down, Perkins said, but as the stack gets higher, it is likely to cause the base is thicker than the top.
Jim Modig, associate director of construction administration, said that the new, shorter stokestakks would increase the boilers' efficient-
"We don't have to force that air up that extra 100 or 200 feet," he said.
He said people on campus would not have to worry about breathing in pesticides.
"There has been a series of computer models run by the Department of Health," he said. "The stack heights are well within the limits that the department set. There should not be any adverse environmental effects."
Workers from the Gerrard Chimney Co., St. Louis, remove bricks from atop the 245-foot smokestack. The smokestack, which was built in 1923, will be replaced by two smaller smokestacks.
But the smokestack's razing will have at least one unfavorable effect, and Anderson knows it.
After the smokestack is gone, he said, "I don't know how I'm going to be telling people how to get to my office."
Parking costs rise starting August 1
Staff writer
By STORMY WYLIE
price jump, from $52 to $70,
Hultine said.
Enjoy the low cost of campus parking. It won't last much longer.
parking. It's longer than
Starting Aug. 1, it's going to cost
everyone a little more to park on
campus, said Donna Hultine,
assistant director of parking
services.
The parking increases will help pay for a proposed $5 million multilevel parking garage, she said.
Residence hall and university housing permits received the lowest increase, from $20 to $23. Blue zone permits took the biggest
Yellow zone permits will be $40,
red zone permits will be $55, and a
campus pass will be $30.
The price for motorcycle permits went to $25 for red and $30 for blue. Service permits will be $100. Parking fines for group one and group two violations will increase from $7.50 to $10, and meter parking fee will increase from 25 cents to 75 cents for three hours. Only the car pool and moped permits will remain unchanged at $.
See PARKING, p. 10, col. 1
Permits 1980 1986 1987
Blue Zone Permits $42 $52 $70
Red Zone Permits $42 $45 $55
Yellow Zone Permits $38 $35 $40
Dorm. & Univ. Housing $20 $20 $23
Campus Pass $15 $17 $30
Red Motercycle Permits $22 $20 $25
Blue Motercycle Permits $22 $25 $30
Meter Parking (3 hour ) N/A 25c 75c
Prank caller conducts false survey
WHAT WENT UP ?
Parking Violations, Group 1 & 2
if paid after 15 days $10.00 $12.50 $15.00
of receipt of violation
Parking Violations 1977 1986 1987
Parking Violations, Group 1 & 2
if paid within 15 days $5.00 $7.50 $10.00
of receipt of violation
Richard Stewart/Kanaan graphic
Group 1 violations include not having a valid parking permit, not parking within the boundries of marked stalls, parking in the wrong permit area or within a restricted area. Group 2 violations include having a damaged or mutilated permit, placing the permit in the wrong area of vehicle. (Note: Group 2 violations can be cancelled if it is corrected within seven calendar days after the violation was issued, and correction is verified by a campus parking officer or K.U. parking services personnel.)
By KRISTEN HAYS
Staff writer
A woman identifying herself as a nurse at Lawrence Memorial Hospital has been phoning Lawrence residents and asking them about their genitals.
Judith Heffley, director of community relations for the hospital, said the caller was not affiliated with the hospital in any way and that victims of the calls should report them to the police.
Lynn Ross, Lawrence graduate student, said she received a call June 2 from a woman who said she was conducting a survey for the hospital.
"I asked about the purpose of the "survey, and she stumbled and said it would be put on file for future reference." Ross said when I asked so-called information interested in, she said information about height, weight and genitals."
Ross said, "I was positive something was wrong andug up."She then called the hospital and discovered no such survey was in progress.
Heffey said, "The woman asks extremely inappropriate questions. We have already been called eight to 10 times with complaints."
Because the caller hasn't called the hospital, tracing the calls would be difficult. Heffley said.
"These are nuisance-type calls that are embarrassing to the hospital," he said. "It's a female caller individual, who is nurse with course one of the hospital's labs."
Lawrence Police Sgt. Don Dalquest said no calls had been reported to police, but he had spoken with Helflev about the problem.
Dave Nichols, community relations manager of the Southwestern Bell business office in Lawrence, said, "Last year, more than 100 such arrests and convictions were made in Kansas in cooperation with Southwestern Bell security officers.
"I haven't heard a call myself, but I know they aren't threatening but just a crank." Hefflev said.
New vice chancellor selected
"Violations of the law are serious, and we want to do our best to help law enforcement to protect customers against telephone abuse." Nichols said.
Making obscene or indecent telephone calls with the intent to harass is a misdemeanor, punishable by a possible fine of $2500, up to one year imprisonment in the county jail or both, Dalquest said.
Dalquest said the woman told victims that her name was Nurse Jennings, but Heffley said there was not a nurse by that name at the hospital.
By CARLA PATINO
For the first time, a woman will be the executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
Judith A. Ramaley, acting executive vice president for academic affairs at the State University of New York at Albany, was selected for the job from 55 candidates, said Del Shankel, chairman of the executive vice chancellor search committee.
Dalquest advises anyone receiving the harassing phone calls to hang up.
Staff writer
When Ramaley begins her duties Aug. 1, she will be the second-highest ranking administrator on campus.
Chancellor Budig announced Ramaley's appointment at the all-University supper May 16.
She will repiase Shankel, who has been the acting executive vice chancellor for the KU campus since January, when the resignation of Robert Cobb, professor of English, took effect.
Vaggalis said her enormous understanding of faculty and student needs and her enthusiasm were "catching and inspiring."
Smith said she was impressed by the fact that several of Ramaley's colleagues at SUNY-Albany told in their recommendations how sorry they were to lose her.
Ted Vaggaila, Lincoln, Neb., graduate student and a search committee member, said Ramaley was an outstanding person.
Shankel said Ramaley had the edge over the other candidates because of the level and variety of her administrative skills and because of her enthusiasm about KU.
Ramaley was the chief academic officer at SUNY-Albany from 1982 to 1985. Since then she has been the university's executive vice president for academic affairs. She has also held faculty and administrative positions in the University of Nebraska and the University of Nebraska Medical Center.
Shankel said that of the original 55 applicants, the search committee interviewed six, five men and Ramaley.
Caryl Smith, associate vice chancellor for student affairs and a search committee member, said, "The fact that she was a woman did not affect the committee's selection."
"The applications were presented to the chancellor in an alphabetical order," he said. "The committee did not list her as their first choice, but their evaluation of her was the strongest."
James Scaly, assistant to the chancellor, said the search committee submitted the applications of the three it deemed best qualified to Chancellor Gene A. Budig for his final decision.
Reagan policies win summit support
Bombs rock U.S. and British embassies in Rome
VENICE, Italy (AP) — As bombas rocked U.S. and British embassies in Rome, President Reagan won summit support yesterday for a tough stand against terrorism and a fresh diplomatic initiative to counter threats against Persian Gulf shipping.
The United States and its six most powerful trading partners also hailed the growing momentum of arms control talks but agreed to remain vigilant in dealing with a changing Soviet leadership.
Reagan said he was "delighted" with his six summit partners' largely symbolic declaration of support for the free passage of oil tankers through gulf shipping lanes. For the first time, they embraced Reagan's policy of refusing to make concessions to terrorists.
Although one U.S. official pronounced the summit "very successful from our standpoint," discord surfaced over the next step in U.S.-Soviet arms control negotiations, with West Germany questioning U.S. strategy in dealing with Moscow.
Reagan's summit partners did not condemn arms sales to Iran, which U.S. officials cite as the principal obstacle to stability in the region, nor
did they offer military assistance for U.S. efforts to keep vital oil shipping lanes open.
But Secretary of State George P. Shultz insisted that "we will be able to take care of ourselves well" in the gulf, where British and French warships also provide armed patrols and shipping escorts. "The states that are capable of providing are doing it," he said.
Shultz said the United States got the principal thing it wanted, with unanimous support for a U.N. Security Council resolution calling for a cease-fire in the Iran-Iraq war and imposing a mandatory arms embargo on either side that persisted in fighting.
On the face of it, Reagan and leaders of Britain, West Germany, France, Italy, Canada and Japan were united on the arms control issue, too, as they issued a flurry of resolutions midway through their 13th annual summit.
The allies expressed approval of the quickening pace of negotiations that have led the superpowers closer to signing a treaty that would eliminate hundreds of nuclear missiles in Europe and Asia and said more favorable prospects have emerged
Since last year's summit in Tokyo, they said, opportunities also have opened for progress in improving East-West relations.
for the reduction of nuclear forces.
"We are encouraged by these de-
velopments," their joint statement said.
"Each of us must remain vigilantly alert in responding to all aspects of Soviet policy," the statement said.
The allied leaders said they hoped that liberalizing changes under Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev would prove to be of great significance but noted that profound difference persisted between East and West.
An anonymous caller linked the attacks to the Venice summit. and
Summit concerns about terrorism were reinforced shortly before Reagan met British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher over breakfast, when small bombs rocked the U.S. and British embassy compounds in Rome, 340 miles to the southwest. No injuries were reported in the blasts.
Finance ministers of the seven main industrial democracies, mean-while, vowed to strengthen efforts to raise domestic aid more closely on monetary polls.
Two hours earlier, military frogmen retrieved and detonated a suspicious-looking metal box from a Venetian lagoon, prompting a further tightening of already heavy security precautions in this summit city.
said they were the work of the Anti- Imperialist International Brigade, the same group held responsible last year for the assassination of a French military attach in Lebanon and bomb and rocket attacks on U.S., Canadian and Japanese embassies in Indonesia.
Secret Service agents detailed to Reagan dismissed the box as harmless, and Italian police reportedly speculated it was either an unexploded World War II mine unconnected with terrorists or an abandoned water heater.
By the time the Rome bomb bribed was cleaned up, the summit leaders had condemned all forms of international terrorism, and pledged to halt all air travel to and from countries that refuse to cooperate in hijacking incidents and other breaches of aviation security.
"Each of us will continue to monitor closely the activities of airlines that raise security problems," they said.
34
2
Wednesday, June 10, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
Around the World
U.S. may escort Kuwaiti tankers in Persian Gulf without allies aid
WASHINGTON — U.S. Navy ships will begin escorting Kuwaiti tankers in the Persian Gulf early next month and must do the job alone if American allies won't help, Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger told Congress yesterday.
Weinberger's comments, which were made hours after President Reagan's meeting with other western leaders at the Venice summit, gained diplomatic and symbolic allied support for his goal of protecting ships in the vital waterway.
Weinberger told the House Armed Services Committee that later this month, the Coast Guard would finish the paperwork needed to place 11 Kuwaiti tankers under the American flag. The Navy will begin escorting the ships when that administrative task is complete, he said.
Pressed by legislators about
when the U.S. escort role would actually begin, Weinberger declined to be specific, and said it would be "very shortly" after the end of this month.
Kuwait is an ally of Iraq in the nearly 7-year-old Iran-Iraq war and Iran has threatened to continue to target the Kuwaiti tankers.
Congressional fears about U.S. policy in the Persian Gulf have risen in the wake of last month's Iraqi missile attack on the frigate USS Stark that killed 37 sailors and Reagan's pledge to protect the Kuwaiti tankers.
A key concern in Congress has been the role of U.S. allies in Western Europe and Japan, which receive a higher percentage of their oil from the gulf than does the United States. Legislators have complained that allies of the United States should carry more of the burden of protecting the gulf.
Around the Nation
Crews clean up from train-truck accident
VINITA, Okla. — Salvage crews yesterday continued to clean up from a train-truck accident that killed one man, left 28 freight cars derailed and caused some of the first people at the scene to complain of skin and throat irritation from escaping fumes.
Area residents were allowed to return to their homes yesterday morning.
"We believe it's all safe out there now except right there at the scene," Craig County Sheriff Jess Walker said. He said crews continued to clean up methyl ethyl ketone that had leaked from overturned tanker cars.
an overturned car.
Residents from six nearby homes were temporarily evacuated.
The sheriff said the railroad brought in tanker trucks, and the tanker cars were emptied of the chemical.
"Some of the cars are still torn up." Walker said. "Three engines and two to three cars are still off the track out there. But the hazardous material we were concerned about. They have it all pretty well under control on that part."
Teen kills best friend in Russian roulette
BATON ROUGE, La. — A 14-year-old boy was charged with negligent homicide in the shooting of his best friend in a game of Russian roulette.
The 14-year-old, who was not
identified because he is a juvenile, began playing with the pistol, aiming at Nixon and pulling the trigger, police said.
Michael Nixon, 15, was killed Monday by a single shot from a 38-caliber pistol. He and another 15-year-old were spending the day at the home of his 14-year-old friend, police said.
Officer Jeff Wesley said the pistol did not fire the first time the youngster triggered the trigger. So, the boy spun the cylinder, put the barrel against Nixon's left arm and pulled the trigger again. The gun fired and sent a slug through Nixon's arm and into his chest.
Engineer found negligent in Hyatt collapse
TOPEKA — The Kansas licensing board for engineers has revoked the license of Jack D. Gillum, lead engineer during construction of Kansas City's Hyatt Regency Hotel where skywalks collapsed killing 114 persons.
incident.
Licensing officials have found Gillum negligent in the design of the Regency's suspended skywalks that fell July 17, 1981 during a tea dance. The incident also injured over 200 other persons.
Gillum, of St. Louis, voluntarily surrendered his license to avoid a disciplinary hearing before the Kansas State Board of Technical Professions, according to an order filed by the licensing board. As part of the action, Gillum agreed not to perform any engineering work in Kansas that would require a license.
Licensing officials in Missouri and several other states have taken similar action since the
In January 1986, the Missouri Board for Architects, Professional Engineers and Land Surveyors revoked the engineering licenses of Gillum, associate Daniel M. Duncan and their firm, GCE International Inc., for their part in designing the flawed support system that held the skywalks aloft in the hotel lobby.
Complaints by the board were upheld in November 1985 by a Missouri administrative law judge who found that the two engineers had shown "conscious indifference" to the welfare of the public through their work on the Hvatt.
Gillum and Duncan appealed the administrative judge's order in circuit court in St. Louis County, but the appeal was rejected late last year. Gillum and Duncan are appealing that circuit court finding.
Vietnam War deserter surrenders in L.A.
Douglas Beane, 39, a native of Rochester, VT, arrived from Sydney, Australia, at Los Angeles International Airport to voluntarily turn himself in. He was met by military guards who took him out a private exit.
LOS ANGELES — A Vietnam War deserter, who spent 17 years on the run in Australia, was taken into custody Monday when he returned to the United States to surrender, hoping to visit his sick father in Vermont.
Penny Verner, an attendant on the United Airlines flight, said Beane sat calmly and chatted with flight attendants.
"He said that when he went AWOL he lived in a village in Vietnam for a while before going to Australia," she said. "He seemed to be friendly. He was a
nice guy."
Beane, a private first class in the Marines, was to go to Quantico Marine Base in northern Virginia. There, authorities would decide the disposition of his case, which could range from discharge to court-martial, a U.S. Marine Corps spokesman said.
In a telephone interview with a Vermont television station Monday night, the younger Beane said he hoped the Marines will look kindly on the passage of time since he fled and allow him to see his parents.
"My hopes are that they will take into consideration the time," said Beane. "I want to see my family. I would like to see my parents, at least."
He said he wanted to obtain Australian citizenship.
Nation and World North's former secretary testifies
WASHINGTON (AP) — Fawn Hall, Oliver North's former White House secretary, told congressional committees Monday that she helped him shred a stack of documents until the shredding machine jammed, then walked out of the White House with other papers hidden in her clothing.
Hall said she took internal office notes past White House guards in her boots and behind her back in her clothes on Nov. 25, the day President Reagan fired North as a national security aide. She said she gave the documents to North's attorney at the time, Thomas Green.
Testifying under a grant of immunity from prosecution, she also described altering documents at the direction of North.
years, spoke of unquestioning loyalty to him and said she didn't object or ask for explanation when he ordered her to alter memos.
"I was just purely doing my job," Hall said.
The 27-year-old part-time model, who was secretary to North for four
She said North had earlier emptied his office safe of documents while she put "maybe a foot and a half" of them into the shredding machine. She said when the machine jammed, she called the White House's crisis management center, and a repairman made a quick repair.
"I believe in Colonel North, and I know there must have been a good reason why he was asking me to do this," Hall said. "I did as I was told."
One alteration she described concerned a 1985 memo from North that
The shredded documents included copies of North's telephone logs and computerized interoffice memos that National Security Council officials used to communicate with one another.
referred to the possible sinking or seizure of a ship carrying weapons to Nicaragua. The alteration was made obvious, she acknowledged, because the NSC letterhead paper used for the altered version was new and did not exist when the original was written
Hall described putting through a call from Reagan to North at a hotel shortly after North had been fired. She talked to North later and recalled, "He said the president called him an American hero, and he just didn't know." She said North didn't explain the last part of that comment.
Hall defended her former boss as hardworking and loyal to his nation and president, and she also defended her own actions.
"I was a dedicated and loyal secretary and performed my duties in an exemplary manner," she said.
Under questioning, Hall said she did not recall ever hearing North say that proceeds from the sale of arms to Iran were going to aid the contra.
She added, "I can type."
However, she described retying several drafts of a memo that mentioned the diversion of profits. She said she could not recall if a final report was anyone other than herself, North and South. A security Adviser John Poplexter.
"He said, 'Make sure you pay back the money; it's not mine,''' Hall said.
At another point, Hall told ot asking North for a small loan for a weekend trip to the beach in June 1985 and said he gave her three $20 traveler's checks, totaling $60, drawn on a Central American bank.
She said she found it unusual that the checks were Central American, but said she didn't ask North why, and he didn't volunteer an explanation.
Discontent aimed at farm aid lender
WASHINGTON (AP) — Democratic senators accused the Farmers Home Administration in stern terms Tuesday of providing insufficient aid to debt-ridden growers while the head of the agency replied that the lawmakers were attempting to fan discontent.
"Either we've been lied to in South Dakota or we're being lied to here." Sen. Duschel, D-S.D., declared. He swiftly added he felt certain that the root of the problem must lie in Washington and not his home state.
The dispute with Farmers Home Administrator Vance Clark erupted over the degree of discontent among farmers over recent policies of the
agency, which for decades has been known as the lender of last resort in U.S. agriculture.
FmHa said earlier this year that he would revamp its rules as part of a fiscal tightening, setting off a storm of criticism from lawmakers who said the move would wipe out many of their farm constituents. The agency is currently reviewing ways to modify the plan.
Daschle and Sen. Kent Conrad, D.N.D., said that in all of their visits to our home states they are beset by counterfeits from farmers about the agency.
greater at such home-state meetings than it really is because farmers who are content with the agency's performance stay home.
Clark contended that a spark of discontent with the agency appears
"It's more than a spark," Daschle said.
gasoline on that spark," Vance said. Vance expressed opposition to legislation sponsored by Conrad that would enable the Agriculture Department to reduce farm operating and ownership loans to the market value of the collateral.
He called the bill a $7.6 billion giveaway of public funds.
Conrad objected that the loss to the government under such a program
"We've already lost that money," Conrad said. "We've just never admitted to ourselves that we've lost it."
"That's correct." Clark said.
Conrad then asked why, since much of the money was already lost, the amount could not be reduced. Clark said the legislation carried an implication that the government would continue to lend money to those in arrears.
Biden joins Democratic presidential field
"I'm saying that we cannot go on with the farmers who are four years or more delinquent," Clark said.
WILMINGTON, Del. — Sen.
Joseph R. Biden Jr. on Monday
officially entered the race for the 1988
Democratic presidential nomination.
Talking of bitter truths and hard choices but promising to rekindle the fire of idealism in our society, Biden, 44, echoed the words of John F. Kennedy. He said his generation was ready to reclaim its general legacy
and lead the country.
The Delaware Democrat said the overriding issue was what kind of nation the children would inherit. He said policies could be made that would lead to quick but false prosperity and consume the future of the country's children, or a more difficult path could be taken that would guarantee the future for children.
Biden was introduced by Sen. Daniel Inouye, D-Hawaii, chairman of the Senate Iran-Contra Committee.
"We are going to call on Biden to lead this nation, to restore our honor," Inouye said to the crowd of about 2,000.
Other Democrats who have announced their candidacy for the
presidential nomination are: Rep. Richard Gephardt of Missouri, former Gov. Bruce Babbitt of Arizona, Gov. Michael Dukakis of Massachusetts and Sen. Paul Simon of Illinois. Sen. Albert Gore Jr. of Tennessee will announce his candidacy June 29, an aide said yesterday.
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Kansan Summer WeeklyWednesday, June 10, 1987
3
Local Briefs
New director named to KU's office of affirmative action
James A. Turner has been named director of the KU office of affirmative action
Turner joined the office as associate director in 1984.
Turner succeeds Roberta A. Ferron, who resigned in the spring. Turner has been acting director of affirmative action since April 20. His permanent appointment took effect June 3.
He also works as a management consultant for public and private employers, agencies and communities. This fall he will teach an opportunity seminar through the OU division of continuing education.
Turner has a bachelor's degree in political science from Howard University in Washington, D.C. He did graduate work in educational and personnel administration at Howard University, the University of Maryland and Central Michigan University.
Chamber appoints KU dean to board
Max Lucas, dean of architecture and urban design, was one of two people recently appointed to the Board of Trustees at Lawrence Chamber of Commerce.
A KU faculty member since 1962. Lucas served as assistant to the chancellor and director of facilities planning before becoming dean in 1980.
Lucas served on the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission for 12 years, two years as chairman, and also was a member of the Lawrence Board of Building Code Appeals. Lucas is now a member of the Kansas State Building Commission.
Roger Pine, a member of the Chamber's Agriculture Committee, and a recent graduate of the Douglas County Leadership Agriculture Program, also was appointed to the board.
Red Cross to hold 5K run for blood
The American Red Cross will hold its 5-kilometer Blood Run/Walk for Life at 9 a.m. on June 20th.
The run will begin at Holcom Park, 26th Street and Lawrence Avenue to benefit the Lawrence Blood Center.
Those who would like to participate in the run may pick up entry forms at the Lawrence Community Building, 11th and Vermont streets.
Entrants must either pay a $7 entry fee and secure two blood donors, or secure 10 blood donors to have the entry fee waived.
New planning chief begins work July 1
Jim Modig will become facilities planning director for the Lawrence campus on July 1, a KU official announced last week.
Modig, a 1973 University of Kansas graduate in environmental design, has been a member of the university facilities planning staff for eight years.
As campus director for facilities planning, he will be responsible for long-range planning for the Lawrence campus, as well as all capital improvements, major remodeling, repairs and maintenance projects on campus.
Modig said, "I just hope I'm able to fill the shoes of the guy here before me."
Campus and Area
He will replace James C. Canole, who held the job for five years before he retired this spring.
"Hands-on" style foundation for active prof
By KEITH ROBISON
Staff writer
Dan Rockhill, associate professor of architecture and urban design favors a hands-on style of teaching.
Proof of that is behind Marvin Hall. There, in a courtyard enclosed by a brick wall, his students conduct experiments in construction design. Small arches, towers, a brick throne and a number of other strangely shaped structures are inspirations created under Rockhill's guidance.
"A lot of people come to KU from suburban Johnson County and their only experience with architecture is through the magazines, I teach hands-on stuff."
Rockhill, 39, has experience in hands-on construction.
He remodeled his house near Clinton Lake when he moved to Lawrence in 1980, then he began a building and remodeling business.
He also is the newest member of the Douglas County planning commission, the president of the Atchison-Jefferson Educational Cooperative, the vice president of the Perry-Lecompton school board and a magazine writer.
He said that he has only been to one county planning commission meeting, but that was before he was asked to be a member.
"I went to oppose an anti-zoning bill." he said.
The selection of new members is made by the county commissioners, he said, and he made no effort to be chosen.
"Some guy just called me and asked me if I wanted to do it, and I should."
Warren Rhodes, a Douglas County commissioner, said past and present
"The outgoing rural representative, Paul Bahnmaier, recommended Dan." Rhodes said. "I wanted somebody from the rural area because we try to split it between rural and urban representatives. I think with his background, he should really have some ideas on planning."
planning commission members convinced him to select Rockhill for the planning commission.
Rockhill said, "Douglas County is one of the fastest growing counties in the nation, if not the fastest. Unless we are careful, we could up being as sorry as other parts of the country — mainly the East, where I came from.
Rockhill lives in a two-story farmhouse down a long, dusty, country road west of Lawrence. His yard is full of trees, barns and sheds. Behind the farmhouse, about 20 feet, is a swimming pool surrounded by a white picket fence.
"I'm constantly amazed people can afford to put up apartment complexes and fill them. There's a lot that the planning commission can do to control that. You can't deny someone the use of their land.
Not the kind of swimming pool seen behind some farms — a converted cattle trough — but a city-type, concrete swimming pool that Rockhill built. Three geese roam the yard and two horses stand behind the main barn. The sounds and smells of 80 sheen fill the air.
"I favor controlled growth," he said.
"We used to have 40 chickens running around, but wild dogs ate them all. That used to be a real problem," he said.
and construction, Rockhill came to the University in 1980 from the Finger Lakes region of New York state.
Rockhill said he came to KU because the University wanted someone with his special interest in construction.
Because of his interest in design
Lou Thackston, Lawrence resident, just finished his master's thesis in architecture and is doing construction work for Rockhill this summer.
"Some days it's fun, some days it's not. It's a little bit of everything. Yesterday, we shot hoops," Thackston said.
Rockhill said he employed architecture students almost exclusively in his building and remodeling business.
"It's more of a hobby. I do all right at it. I don't advertise or look for work. My heart is in my work, and school is kind of a second. I'd rather go out and do the work that complain about being underpaid," he said.
Rockhill also contributes articles to "Ie Homebuilding, an architec" [F]
"I write on my own designs, things that correlate, and techniques. I've got an article coming out on concrete foundations, one on model building, one on a project I did last summer and one on levels."
He said that his election to the Perry-Lecompont school board came about like his selection to the Douglas County planning commission.
G. G.
Dan Rockhill, associate professor of architecture, demonstrates the forkkitt he uses in his home-building business.
Boulder-bound man organizes concert
P. M. BERGROV
Dale Fulkerson/KANSAN
By KEITH ROBISON
Jon Harper watches Full Circle perform Monday night at a benefit concert in his behalf. Harper, who has cerebral palsy, was raising money for his move to Boulder, Colo.
According to the Bible, the Lord hels those who help themselves.
Jon Harper, Lawrence resident, helped himself by organizing a benefit concert Monday night at The Jazzhaus. 92% Massachusetts sts.
Harper, 38, has cerebral palsy and is in a wheelchair. The benefit concert would help pay for his move from Lawrence to Boulder, Colo.
"I think it's not so much Boulder itself, although it's a neat little college town like Lawrence, but it's a good medium — Denver being too big and some other place being too small and also just simply because I always knew I'd live somewhere besides Kansas.
"I've been working on this thing for about two years and have wanted to move for 12 years. This money will help me get residency. The Boulder
Housing Authority said I have to be a resident to get subsidized housing. I'm going to use the money to help with a couple months' rent. I hope to be there by Sept. 1, if not sooner," he said.
Judy Eyerly, Lawrence, said that she went to see the show and give her support.
More than 100 people attended the benefit, which featured the bands Full Circle, New Grange, and Marvin and Kelley Hunt with Gary Macken-
"I just thought it was creative, and I support the ingenuity involved," she said. "Besides, I was told the bands were good."
The Road to Boulder
Dale Fulkerson/KANSAN
The band Full Circle performs at a benefit Monday night for Lawrence resident Jon Harper at the Jazzhaus.
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Harper said, "I wanted this thing to be as classy as possible, with as much integrity as possible, and have people feel it's a worthwhile thing to help me realize a dream I've had for a long time.
"I want everybody to have a good time and come away saying, 'Wow, what a good concert. Jon put on a good show. Let's support him because he put on a good show,' rather than, 'Let's support him because we feel sorry for him.'" he said
Harper said he thought the concert was a "resounding success."
Harper said that he planned to raise additional funds through T-shirt sales.
"There had to be well over 140 people there. We raised around $700. It was great. It was really great," he said.
"I want to use the design of the banner and put it on T-shirts, if I can find someone to donate the shirts," he said.
The banner Harper referred to was designed by Laura Ramberg, Lawrence, and hung behind the stage during the concert. It featured a large sunflower backed by the Rocky Mountains, with "The Road to Boulder" written at the top.
"Also, I want to open an art gallery in Boulder that will showcase the artwork of disabled people from all over the country," he said.
Marvin Hunt, guitarist with the Mackender-Hunt band, said, "I've never lived in a wheelchair, and I don't know what it's like to raise money for someone who what I understand, the facilities in Boulder for the disabled are good.
"I was in the grocery store the other day and ran into a friend. I told him about this thing. I said, 'This guy's in a wheelchair and needs money to move.' My friend said, 'Shoot, I need money too,' I said, 'Yeah, but do you need a wheelchair?'."
Staff writer
Summer schedule changes
By CARLA PATINO
Some of the courses the University of Kansas is offering this summer are not typical of a KU summer semester.
Joe VanZandt, coordinator of the Advising Support Center, said last week that some classes usually offered in summer, such as intermediate mathematics and algebra, are not being offered this summer.
However, some classes that are not usually offered in the summer, such as elementary and intermediate Spanish, are being offered now to ease fall enrollment, which is expected to be high, he said.
Financial cutbacks made earlier this year were to blame for the fewer courses offered this summer, Vanzand said. The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences was most affected, he said.
"The college did not have enough flexibility to cope with budget cuts," VanZandt said. "I believe the college is the place where we are offering three-fourths of the classes being offered last summer."
Brower Burchill, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, said the University always had less money available for summer semesters compared to fall and spring, but this summer was worse than usual.
Enrollment figures for summer were not yet available, but Burchill said he expected this summer's enrollment to be lower than enrolments in past summers because fewer courses were offered.
Robert D. Adams, associate dean of the college, said some students who needed to take courses to satisfy general graduation requirements would be allowed to take the courses at other schools if the University did not offer them this summer.
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Wednesday, June 10, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekiv
Opinions and Editorials
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
This summer's Kansan will have a slightly different look but will continue to devote most of its space to the coverage of campus news and happenings. We will try to concentrate on the issues that are of interest to summer students.
The role of the Kansan
Last semester we began, in earnest, to play with our new computer graphics system. We hope that, despite our reduced staff, we will be able to bring you graphics (no color, sorry) that help to illustrate otherwise confusing or statistic-laden stories.
The Summer Kansan, as most readers have already deduced, will be published weekly on Wednesdays. Because this is so, our coverage will include more stories that summarize recent events and trends.
Because we cannot afford it, we will not be carrying "Bloom County" or "The Far Side." For this, we must express our deepest regrets. Do not despair; those cartoons will remain their rightful places in the fall. In the meantime, please enjoy the hometown humor of A.D. Long's "Mr. Badger" on this page.
Weekly publication will allow us to expand our summary of the escapades of the Kansas City Royals. Statistic hounds will appreciate the expanded major league standings and the wrap-up of the Royals past week.
This summer, we will continue to print a calendar of events. This summer's calendar will include more of the happenings about town and will list the bands playing at your favorite bar, as well as listing other important summertime amusements.
If we take an outrageous editorial stance or print a column that seems to be narrow-minded, please call or write to us. We want to know what you think about it. You read some of what we think in every issue.
Pre-marital AIDS testing
After listening to 1,238 scientific reports at the Third International Conference on AIDS, doctors were optimistic that scientific advances would soon lead to a cure. In the same week, President Reagan outlined an unworkable program to curb the spread of AIDS.
The largest conference to date on AIDS ended last week
Also remember that the Kansan is the voice of all the students of KU. It is not just a publication put out by the somewhat strange journalism students in Stauffer-Flint Hall. Remember that $3 of each student's activity fee bill each semester helps to keep this newspaper going.
To contain the spread of the infectious disease, President Reagan last week said that the federal government would require testing for prisoners, immigrants and aliens seeking permanent residence. Premarital testing would also be available for couples, though they would have the option to forgo the test without threat of penalty.
As always, please look to the Kansan as a vehicle for announcing meetings and events. Please be sure to get them to us early because of our Wednesday publication schedule. Our deadline for announcements will be two days before each issue, but information delivered to us a week in advance will be greatly appreciated.
Fear of the disease is inhibiting travel to and from foreign countries. This fear has also led to a worldwide rumor that the United States invented AIDS as a biological warfare experiment.
Most people agree that premarital testing is rational under certain circumstances, for example, to protect infants. Cases of AIDS are increasing nationwide. More
Even though victims of the disease are principally homosexuals and intravenous drug users, federal officials are discovering that the disease is spreading to all sections of society. It is therefore not just a concern to homosexuals and drug users. It's everyone's concern.
infants are contracting the disease, black infants 25 times more likely than white infants to be victims. Continued good health and concern for the safety of offspring are humane and persuasive reasons to accept testing before the issuance of a marriage license. Tests for veneral diseases were accepted for similar reasons.
Tests for AIDS patients, however, must remain confidential and guarantee them fair treatment. There is always the possibility of error. Even the most careful laboratories can make mistakes.
It is irrational to think that all prisoners,immigrants and aliens seeking residency can be tested.The idea is noble but unrealistic.
The massive testing Reagan is advocating will be ineffective in stopping the spread of AIDS. The tests might also set a precedent for other groups to be tested.
Unfortunately for all those afflicted, AIDS has become a political toy for this administration. The problem has only recently begun to get the attention due to it.
Politicians are not paying enough attention to health experts in forming a policy. Leadership has been absent in educating the public and in funding research. For now, Reagan's stance will quiet internal turmoil.
We hope it will not be simply hot air to AIDS sufferers.
News staff
John Benner ... Editor
Dawn O Malley ... Managing editor
Jane Zachman ... News editor
Pam Miller ... Campus editor
Tim Hamilton ... Sports editor
Darry Chang ... Photo editor
Connie Sheridan ... Graphics editor
Tom Ebler ... General manager
Business staff
Lisa Weems...Business manager
Lisa Osment...Retail sales manager
Sally Depew...Campus sales manager
Dan Krumpton...Classified manager
Greg Knupp...Production manager
Chuck Rotblut...National sales manager
Jeanne Hines...Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and less than 200 words and must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University of Kansas, please include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
Guest shots should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom. 111 Staffer/FiLL Hall.
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letters, guest shots and columns are the opinion of the writer and do not
Letters, guest shots and columns are the opinion of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University Daily Kansas. Editorials are the opinions of the authors.
The University Dailly Kansas (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stairwater-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $27 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months and $35 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student activity fee.
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Bakker and Elvis: slices of Americana
Jim and Tammy Bakker not only sell God, they sell news pretty darn well, too. Twice in two months they're been on the cover of Newsweek.
Why is it a good thing that the press continues to expose the PTL ministry? To avoid sounding less than objective, it seems that reporters collect the information from these facts will eventually add up to something.
Reporters only guess why the PTL stories are important. They're pretty good at answering how, what, and when where. But the importance to everyone of the trend toward TV evangelism is not made as clear.
Editorialists are at a slight advantage, roughly skimming the "why" question, skipping straight to what ought to be done about the PTL scandal. For the most part, journalism waves its wands through an air of facts. The myth is that as the public becomes more aware, a certain seductress will magically disappear. This should work for networks dealing in God, teenage pregnancy, cocaine, you name it. The illusion is that these problems disappear. Actually, they don't.
The press has worked itself into an objective corner. This means that responsible treatment of a complex issue requires the advice of psychologists and political analysts, people with the proper credentials, to do the tough thinking for us.
It's odd. In a country that prides itself on the right to free speech for all people, we still must be backed by an expert's opinion in order to be heard. As the says giving, "hitch your wagon to a star . . ." When that star has a Ph.D., and he or she agrees with us, then we're sure our thoughts are legitimate. When that star is named Bakker or Swaggart, we're suddenly aware that following religious leaders has its consequences.
It has been said that most PTL followers are uneducated. In response to a number of national problems, in fact, we have heightened our campaign for education. People say that four years of college is good, but that even higher education is 10 times as good.
Ilsabe
Edlingensiepen
Ilsabe
Schlingensiepen
Staff
Columnist
.
--to approach it from different angles. More than any words do, pictures in last week's Newsweek go a step beyond mere facts. One in particular shows Jessica Hahn. Its caption is straightforward enough, reading "Hahn at Home." It isn't really about her, though. It's instead about the life-size Elvis portrait above her living room sofa. This, to me, is the most sympathetic piece of journalism Hahn and others like her have received. Everyone needs a hero. Hahn's heroes, Elvis and Bakker, have both died, more or less.
I'm not so sure that this education multiplies a person's intelligence by the same factor. It does.
Higher education also allows two other things. First, it allows simple things to emerge as complex, making for either enrichment or frustration. Second, higher education can allow a person the choice of specializing in one field. Specialization can make a person be thorough, but also can considerably limit the field itself. Often, it seems, when we campaign in the interest of enriching our knowledge of the "heart and soul" of the United States, we cut out the heart, find out how it works, and leave the rest.
Fundamentalists and others are now insisting with a vengeance that they have a soul. They also insist on being heard and are backed by their own expert. Unfortunately, their experts, while preaching about values, spit out their own facts supposedly leading to values. Like their secular counterparts, they are no better at addressing tough questions. No wonder fundamentalists despise the press, and vice versa. Both are playing on the same turf of objectivity.
As the PTL scandal unfolds, the press does seem
Not everyone worships Elvis, but he is a part of good 'ol' Americana. Let's look at that instead of education, the thing that seems to separate people more than it brings them to a level of equality.
America doesn't make us equal, but it can be unifying, nonetheless. Why? Because it's part of our history and lacks, well, taste, though only by European standards. As citizens, we can be as tasteless as we please and not be embarrassed by it. That's what was really meant by "home of the brave."
A lot of us are embarrassed now. So much so that we tell ourselves that God wants us to be rich and gaudy and flamboyant. We take good o'l Americana too seriously. We become, like the Bakkers, more Elvis impersonators.
The real tragedy of PTL isn't that millions were spending themselves poor at Heritage USA Amusement Park. It's that they chose to spend it in the parking lot, and that they had no better heroes than the Bakkies.
Yet, the Bakkers weren't intimidated by facts. They ignored objectivity. Just a little of that audacity might be a good thing, if we all had some. On touch issues, we wouldn't hide behind experts.
Danny should have chosen L.A., not KU
We'd produce heroes with more soul than the Bakkers, with more soul than, let's say, Phil Donahue.
Many people in Lawrence, at KU and all over the state of Kansas chewed their nails down to the quick while agonizing about the fate of Danny, Larry and about the Jayhawks' chances for a national championship next season.
The media did little but fuel the ridiculous soap opera that finally and mercifully ended when both Larry and Danny decided to stay and grace us for a while longer.
This incident is just another in a long, long line of occasions when the perceived fame of big-time college athletics has underservedly hogged the limelight that ought to shine on the academic world.
A.
Certainly, I am not surprised that once again the press and the public have begged for sports news above other news, but I can't help but hope that some day the community can get as riled about important things such as summer school offerings and about legitimate job opportunities for graduates who care about their studies more than they care about the Jayhawks' chance for a national championship.
Before you think I'm slamming a genuine American hero and putting down a sport that brings spirit and dollars to the University, let's look at the facts of the matter.
John Benner
Editor
John Benner
Editor
Danny said he wanted to stay here because another year of college ball would allow him to beef up before he enters the NBA draft.
Last week Danny answered some questions put to him by the press about his reasons for staying. I was very interested in her story.
Let's look at Danny's reasons for staying.
Something has gone terribly awry with this plan. Since Danny has been at KU, he has actually shrunk. Yes, he's shrunk. When Danny first arrived at KU he was listed at 6-11. Recently at the Pan American Games trials, he was measured at
6-9 1/4. Perhaps he was an overrated freshman.
Danny said he wanted to get a look at the incoming freshmen to see if the team, with him, could be considered a national contender.
Presumably, if the new recruits were totally inert. Danny would hit the road.
However, he said he thought Marvin Branch and Joe Young would be able to help out the team. I suppose that means he thought they would be skilled enough to pass to him.
Danny said one of his concerns was that Larry would not stay at KU. I thought it was interesting that Danny would wait to see what Coach Brown did before making his choice. I don't think I'd want advice about this particular matter from a man who probably still receives magazines that have been forwarded to him from four addresses back.
Danny also said he was confused by advice foisted off on him by his friends and by anonymous fans. He said their advice centered on their opinions of whether he should stay here and get his degree or go directly to the NBA.
He should have taken the money.
Let's face facts. Unless Danny has been buying insurance from Lloyd's of London, he had better be very careful next season. If he were to be injured, he could miss out on millions of dollars, and
money's the most important thing. isn't it?
If he ever gets a job outside of professional basketball, it will be because of his past as a ball player, not because of his grades. Even if he does receive a degree, a GPA that hovers just below 2.0 doesn't go far unless the package includes some other surprises.
Lastly, Danny said he would like to play college basketball for one more year in hopes of being the top draft choice in next year's NBA selections. I've heard of padding a resume, but this strains belief.
Danny said he would not want to enter this year's draft because he didn't want to play for the inept Los Angeles Clippers, who lost an astounding 70 games.
I fail to see how being the top pick in next year's draft could guarantee that he wouldn't end up just as bad off. Perhaps the Clippers can lose 75 games next year. In any case, it's more than likely that the team that gets the top pick in next year's draft will be a pushover as well.
Danny bellyaches that he would not want to be stuck with a team mired in the muck at the bottom of the NBA, though many young men would give everything they have to get a chance to play in the big leagues.
Furthermore, who says Danny has to sign a contract that lasts longer than one year? Instead of treading water here for free, he could take a gamble, sign a one-year contract for an astronomical sum, and later move to a team that could elevate him to the true star status be seeks.
Though it would have been in Danny Manning's best interest to leave KU this year, the next chapter of the Danny Manning Story will be written with the adoring hometown fans in attendance.
Don't look for me at the games
Euphemisms make the world go... wrong
Getting the word: Discussing his decision (or somebody's) to ransom American hostages in Lebanon, Ronald Reagan again conceded that he might have had a conversation about getting the hostages out, but said, "I would suggest that never it would be termed 'ransom.'" Of course. The trick to doing something one doesn't want to admit, especially to one's self, is to call it something else.
American society has developed a vast vocabulary of euphemisms to disguise and therefore permit what goes on in American society: dirty money is "laudered," victims aren't assassinated but "neutralized," public officials who don't want to take responsibility for their acts are assured "deniability," secret warms are "covert operations," and endlessly on. To quote the Senate Intelligence Committee a few years back when it was investigating the CIA, "failing to call dirty business by its rightful name may have increased the risk of dirty business being done." The beginning and perhaps the end of wisdom is to call things by their right names.
John W. Dean III, who ought to know how these things are done, usually by calling them something else, put it this way in explaining how Watergate grew from little euphemisms to giant scandal. He said, "If... Richard Nixon had said to me, 'John, I want you to do a little crime for me. I want you to obstruct justice.' I would have told him he was crazy and disappeared from sight. Nobody thought about the Watergate cover-up in those terms, not
PAUL
GREENBERG
Columnist
P. B. SELMENKO
Columnist
at first anyway. Rather, it was 'containing' Watergate or keeping the defendants 'on the reservation' or coming up with the right public relations 'scenario' and the like. . . "The recipe for national scandal is to let your "aye" be a possible affirmation and your "nay" a less than favorable response.
That is how a president who is opposed to paying ransom, at least in principle, winds up authorizing one. "I don't recall ever anything being suggested in the line of ransom." Reagan said the other day. "I do know that we were constantly receiving ideas and exploring ways (to) get our hostages back." He pointed out that Mr. Bush's employed is the appearance of long circumlocutions to replace simple concepts — like ransom.
The plural executive: It happened when Michael Dukakis, the governor of Massachusetts who would like to be president of the United States, announced his candidacy. This time he didn't misquote the poetry of Robert Frost, an offense that so far has been the only distinctive aspect of his speaking style. Instead, he parodied John F.
Ask more than what kind of president we will be?
Is that the royal we or the editorial we? It's probably just the gratitudous we, unless these days candidates run for president as a couple. It's enough to make one nostalgic for Adlai Stevenson, a presidential candidate who was divorced safely.
Kennedy's inaugural address, "Ask more than what kind of president we will be. Ask what kind of people we are and what kind of people we will have around us."
Refined Rococo: Bob Teague, a state representative from Roland, Ark., had a point when he complained about the outrageously inflated salaries paid to members of his state's Transportation Commission. It's just that it was hard to see Mr. Teague's point being his lush prose. "I will never support tax increase in Arkansas," he warned, "until the Administration cleans up their act and gets rid of people like this who are on the proverbal sugar breast, feeding at the public trough of the state."
That mixed metaphor would challenge even the most florid of Renaissance painters. (Try to picture someone on a sugar breast feeding at the public trough.) And his bowdlerization — sugar breast for sugar tit — makes Bob Teague's populist impulses sound semi-genteel, which is about the worst thing you can do to poplust impulses. Pour it on, Mr. Teague, don't just sprinkle.
MR. BADGER by A.D. long
FAWNING OVER THE WITNESS
Mr. Sciaroni, there are two
definitions of "oversight" One
is watchful, responsible care,
the other is omission or error
...
Clearly, your performance falls under the latter definition.
6-8-87
Hey! Move over.
I thought you said that the Iran-contra hearings were boring
Please call the next witness. Not today!!
Ms. Hall. Where was it on your person that you hid the documents you smuggled out of the White House?
The camera's zooming in!!
Oh, no.
0
4
Wednesday, June 10, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
Opinions and Editorials
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The role of the Kansan
This summer's Kansan will have a slightly different look but will continue to devote most of its space to the coverage of campus news and happenings. We will try to concentrate on the issues that are of interest to summer students.
Because we cannot afford it, we will not be carrying "Bloom County" or "The Far Side." For this, we must express our deepest regrets. Do not despair; those cartoons will regain their rightful places in the fall. In the meantime, please enjoy the hometown humor of A.D. Long's "Mr. Badger" on this page.
Last semester we began, in earnest, to play with our new computer graphics system. We hope that, despite our reduced staff, we will be able to bring you graphics (no color, sorry) that help to illustrate otherwise confusing or statistic-laden stories.
The Summer Kansan, as most readers have already deduced, will be published weekly on Wednesdays. Because this is so, our coverage will include more stories that summarize recent events and trends.
Weekly publication will allow us to expand our summary of the escapades of the Kansas City Royals. Statistic hounds will appreciate the expanded major league standings and the wrap-up of the Royals past week.
This summer, we will continue to print a calendar of events. This summer's calendar will include more of the happenings about town and will list the bands playing at your favorite bar, as well as listing other important summertime amusements.
Also remember that the Kansan is the voice of all the students of KU. It is not just a publication put out by the somewhat strange journalism students in Stauffer-Flint Hall. Remember that $3 of each student's activity fee bill each semester helps to keep this newspaper going.
Pre-marital AIDS testing
If we take an outrageous editorial stance or print a column that seems to be narrow-minded, please call or write to us. We want to know what you think about it. You read some of what we think in every issue.
As always, please look to the Kansan as a vehicle for announcing meetings and events. Please be sure to get them to us early because of our Wednesday publication schedule. Our deadline for announcements will be two days before each issue, but information delivered to us a week in advance will be greatly appreciated.
After listening to 1,238 scientific reports at the Third International Conference on AIDS, doctors were optimistic that scientific advances would soon lead to a cure. In the same week, President Reagan outlined an unworkable program to curb the spread of AIDS.
The largest conference to date on AIDS ended last week
To contain the spread of the infectious disease, President Reagan last week said that the federal government would require testing for prisoners, immigrants and aliens seeking permanent residence. Premarital testing would also be available for couples, though they would have the option to forgo the test without threat of penalty.
Fear of the disease is inhibiting travel to and from foreign countries. This fear has also led to a worldwide rumor that the United States invented AIDS as a biological warfare experiment.
Even though victims of the disease are principally homosexuals and intravenous drug users, federal officials are discovering that the disease is spreading to all sections of society. It is therefore not just a concern to homosexuals and drug users. It's everyone's concern.
Most people agree that premarital testing is rational under certain circumstances, for example, to protect infants. Cases of AIDS are increasing nationwide. More
Tests for AIDS patients, however, must remain confidential and guarantee them fair treatment. There is always the possibility of error. Even the most careful laboratories can make mistakes.
It is irrational to think that all prisoners,immigrants and aliens seeking residency can be tested. The idea is noble but unrealistic.
The massive testing Reagan is advocating will be ineffective in stopping the spread of AIDS. The tests might also set a precedent for other groups to be tested.
Unfortunately for all those afflicted, AIDS has become a political toy for this administration. The problem has only recently begun to get the attention due to it.
We hope it will not be simply hot air to AIDS sufferers.
Politicians are not paying enough attention to health experts in forming a policy. Leadership has been absent in educating the public and in funding research. For now, Reagan's stance will quiet internal turmoil.
News staff
John Benner...Editor
Dawn O'Malley...Managing editor
Jane Zachman...News editor
Ram Miller...Campaign editor
Tim Hamilton...Sports editor
Darcy Chang...Photo editor
Connor Sheridan...Graphics editor
Tom Ellison...General manager
Business staff
Lisa Weems ... Business manager
Lisa Osment ... Retail sales manager
Sally Depew ... Campus sales manager
Dan Pennington ... Classified manager
Greg Knight ... Production manager
Chuck Robbtbust ... National sales manager
Jeanne Hines ... Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and less than 200 words and must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University of Kansas, please include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Guest shots should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
Letters, guest shots and columns are the opinion of the writer and do not represent the views of University Diversity Kansan. Editorialists are the opinion of the Kansas editorial board.
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The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stairer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $27 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months and $35 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student activity fee.
Bakker and Elvis: slices of Americana
Jim and Tammy Bakker not only sell God, they sell news pretty darn well, too. Twice in two months they're been on the cover of Newsweek.
Why is it a good thing that the press continues to expose the PTL ministry? To avoid sounding less than objective, it seems that reporters collect the facts, but these facts will eventually add up to something.
Reporters only guess why the PTL stories are important. They're pretty good at answering how, what, when and where. But the importance to everyone of the trend toward TV evangelism is not made as clear.
The press has worked itself into an objective corner. This means that responsible treatment of a complex issue requires the advice of psychologists and clinicians, who provide proper credentials, to do the tough thinking for us.
It's odd. In a country that prides itself on the right to free speech for all people, we still must be backed by an expert's opinion in order to be heard. As the saying goes, "hitch your wagon to a star." When that star has a Ph.D., and he or she agrees with us, then we're sure our thoughts are intended to influence Bakker or Swaggart, we're suddenly aware of the following religious leaders its consequences.
It has been said that most PTL followers are uneducated. In response to a number of national problems, in fact, we have heightened our campaign for education. People say that four years of college is good, but that even higher education is 10 times as good.
PENN JEANNE
Iloabe
Ehlungempi
Illsabe
Schlingensiepen
Staff
Columnist
I'm not so sure that this education multiplies a person's intelligence by the same factor. It does seem to make a person more likely to be heard.
Higher education also allows two other things. First, it allows simple things to emerge as complex, making for either enrichment or frustration. Second, higher education can allow a person the choice of specializing in one field. Specialization can make a person be thorough, but also can considerably limit the field itself. Often, it seems, when we campaign in the interest of enriching our knowledge of the "heart and soul" of the United States, we cut out the heart, find out how it works, and leave the rest.
Fundamentalists and others are now insisting with a vengeance that they have a soul. They also insist on being heard and are backed by their own expert. Unfortunately, their experts, while preaching about values, spit out their own facts supposedly leading to values. Like their secular counterparts, they are no better at addressing tough questions. No wonder fundamentalists despise the press, and vice versa. Both are playing on the same turf of objectivity.
As the PTL scandal unfolds, the press does seem
to approach it from different angles. More than any words do, pictures in last week's newsweek go a step beyond mere facts. One in particular shows Jessica Hahn. Its caption is straightforward enough, reading "Hahn at Home." It isn't really about her, though. It's instead about the life-size Elvis portrait above her living room sofa. This, to me, is the most sympathetic piece of journalism Hahn and others like her have received. Everyone needs a hero. Hahn's heroes, Elvis and Bakker, have both died, more or less.
Americana doesn't make us equal, but it can be unifying, nonetheless. Why? Because it's part of our history and lacks, well, taste, though only by European standards. As citizens, we can be asässes as we please and we can be embarrassed by it. That what was really meant by "home of the brave."
Not everyone worships Elvis, but he is a part of good of 'Americana'. Let's look at that instead of education, the thing that seems to separate people more than it brings them to a level of equality.
A lot of us are embarrassed now. So much so that we tell ourselves that God wants us to be rich and gaudy and flamboyant. We take good of America, like the Bakkers, mere Elvis impersonators.
The real tragedy of PTL isn't that millions were spending themselves poor at Heritage USA Amusement Park. It's that they chose to spend it there instead of Graceland, and that they had no better heroes than the Bakkers.
Yet, the Bakkers weren't intimidated by facts.
They ignored objectivity. Just a little of that audacity might be a good thing, if we all had some.
On tough issues, we wouldn't hide behind experts.
We'd produce heroes with more soul than the Bakers, with more soul than, let's say, Phil Donald.
Danny should have chosen L.A., not KU
Many people in Lawrence, at KU and all over the state of Kansas chewed their nails down to the quick while agonizing about the fate of Danny, Larry and about the Jayhawks' chances for a national championship next season.
The media did little but fuel the ridiculous soap opera that finally and mercifully ended when both Larry and Danny decided to stay and grace us for a while longer.
This incident is just another in a long, long line of occasions when the perceived fame of big-time college athletics has underservedly hogged the limelight that ought to shine on the academic world.
Certainly, I am not surprised that once again the press and the public have begged for sports news above other news, but I can't help but hope that some day the community can get as riled about important things such as summer school offerings and about legitimate job opportunities for graduates who care about their studies more than they care about the Jayhawks' chance for a national championship.
PARKER
Before you think I'm slamming a genuine American hero and putting down a sport that brings spirit and dollars to the University, let's look at the facts of the matter.
John Benner
Editor
--money's the most important thing, isn't it?
Danny said he wanted to stay here because another year of college ball would allow him to beef up before he enters the NBA draft.
Let's look at Danny's reasons for staying.
Something has gone terribly awry with this plan. Since Danny has been at KU, he has actually shrunk. Yes, he's shrunk. When Danny first arrived at KU he was listed at 6-11. Recently at the Pan American Games trials, he was measured at
Last week Danny answered some questions put to him by the press about his reasons for staying. I thank you.
6-914 Perhans he was an overrated freshman
Danny said he wanted to get a look at the incoming freshmen to see if the team, with him, could be considered a national contender.
Presumably, if the new recruits were totally inept, Danny would hit the road.
However, he said he thought Marvin Branch and Joe Young would be able to help out the team. I suppose that means he thought they would be skilled enough to pass to him.
Danny said one of his concerns was that Larry would not stay at KU. I thought it was interesting that Danny would wait to see what Coach Brown did before making his choice. I don't think I'd want advice about this particular matter from a man who probably still receives magazines that have been forwarded to him from four addresses back.
Danny also said he was confused by advice foised on him by his friends and by anonymous fans. He said their advice centered on their opinions of whether he should stay here and get his degree or go directly to the NBA.
He'd swami have tatuhl in India. He has been buying insurance from Lloyd's of London, he had better be very careful next season. If he were to be injured, he could miss out on millions of dollars, and
If he ever gets a job outside of professional basketball, it will be because of his past as a ball player, not because of his grades. Even if he does receive a degree, a GPA that hovers just below 2.0 doesn't go far unless the package includes some other surprises.
Lastly, Danny said he would like to play college basketball for one more year in hopes of being the top draft choice in next year's NBA selections. I've heard of padding a resume, but this strain benefits.
Danny said he would not want to enter this year's draft because he didn't want to play for the 70 Los Angeles Clippers, who lost an astounding 170 games.
I fail to see how being the top pick in next year's draft could guarantee that he wouldn't end up just as bad off. Perhaps the Clippers can lose 75 games next year. In any case, it's more than likely that the team that gets the top pick in next year's draft will be a pusher as well.
Danny bellyaches that he would not want to be stuck with a team mired in the muck at the bottom of the NBA, though many young men would give them they have to get a chance to play in the big leagues.
Furthermore, who says Danny has to sign a contract that lasts longer than one year? Instead of treading water here for free, he could take a gamble, sign a one-year contract for an astronomical sum, and later move to a team that could elevate him to the true star status he seeks.
Though it would have been in Danny Manning's best interest to leave KU this year, the next chapter of the Danny Manning Story will be written with the adoring hometown fans in attendance.
Don't look for me at the games.
Euphemisms make the world go... wrong
Getting the word: Discussing his decision (to somebody's) to ransom American hostages in Lebanon, Ronald Reagan again conceded that he might have had a conversation about getting the hostages out, but said, "I would suggest that never it would be termed 'ransom'." Of course. The trick to doing something one doesn't want to admit, especially to one's self, is to call it something else.
American society has developed a vast vocabulary of euphimisms to disguise and therefore permit what goes on in American society: dirty money is "launered," victims aren't assassinated but "neutralized," public officials who don't want to take responsibility for their acts are assured "deniability," secret wars are "covert operations," and endlessly on. To quote the Senate Intelligence Committee a few years back when it was investigating the CIA, "failing to call dirty business by its rightful name may have increased the risk of dirty business being done." The beginning and perhaps the end of wisdom is to call things by their right names.
John W. Dean III, who ought to know how these things are done, usually by calling them something else, put it this way in explaining how Watergate grew from little euphemisms to giant scandal. He said, "If... Richard Nixon had said to me, 'John, I want you to do a little crime for me. I want you to obstruct justice' I would have told him he was crazy and disappeared from sight. Nobody thought about the Watergate cover-up in those terms, not
PAUL
GREENBERG
Columnist
at first anyway. Rather, it was 'containing' Watergate or keeping the defendants' on the reservation' or coming up with the right public relations 'scenario' and the like. . . "The recipe for national scandal is to let your "aye" be a possible affirmation and your "nay" a less than favorable response.
That is how a president who is opposed to paying ransom, at least in principle, winds up authorizing one. "I don't recall ever anything being suggested in the line of ransom." Reagan said the other day. "I do know that we were constantly receiving ideas and exploring ways (to) get our hostages back." He added that Mr. Trump employed is the appearance of long circumlocutions to replace simple concepts — like ransom.
The plural executive: It happened when Michael Dukakis, the governor of Massachusetts who would like to be president of the United States, announced his candidacy. This time he didn't misquote the poetry of Robert Frost, an offense that so far has been the only distinctive aspect of his speaking style. Instead, he parodied John F.
Kennedy's inaugural address, "Ask more than what kind of president we will be. Ask what kind of people we are and what kind of people we will have around us."
Ask more than what kind of president we will be?
Is that the royal we or the editorial we? It's probably just the gratuous we, unless these days candidates run for president as a couple. It's enough to make one nostalgic for Adlai Stevenson, a presidential candidate who was divorced safely.
Refined Rococo: Bob Teague, a state representative from Roland, Ark., had a point when he complained about the outrageously inflated salaries paid to members of his state's Transportation Commission. It's just that it was hard to see Mr. Teague's point being his lush prose. "I will never support tax increase in Arkansas," he warned, "until the Administration cleans up their act and gets rid of people like this who are on the proverbial sugar breast, feeding at the public trough of the state."
That mixed metaphor would challenge even the most florid of Renaissance painters. (Try to picture someone on a sugar breast feeding at the public trough.) His and bowdlerization — sugar breast for sugar tit — makes Bob Teague's populist impulses sound semi-genteel, which is about the worst thing you can do to poplister impulses. Pour it on, Mr. Teague, don't just sprinkle.
MR. BADGER by A.D. long
FAWNING OVER THE WITNESS
Mr. Sciaroni, there are two definitions of "oversight. One is watchful, responsible care; the other is omission or error.
I think it's a computer.
Clearly, your performance falls under the latter definition.
6-8-87
Hey! Move over.
I thought you said that the Iran-contra hearings were boring
Please call the next witness.
Not today!!
Ms. Hall. Where was it on your person that you hid the documents you smuggled out of the White House?
The camera's zooming in!!
Oh, no.
Kansan Summer Weekly/Wednesday, June 10, 1987
5
Union renovations are on schedule
By STORMY WYLIE
Staff writer
This summer the third floor of the Kansas Union is just a skeleton of its former self.
James Long, director of the Kansas Union, said that while renovations have long been underway, the floor is completely gutted now. Eventually, the third floor will be one large restaurant, he said.
The renovations, which began in February, are on schedule, he said. The third floor construction is the first sequence in the first phase of the renovation project. It should be completed by January 1988.
in different locations."
"At this point we on schedule," he said. "We're watching it very closely because we have to remain in operation. The food service areas, bookstores and administrative offices are operating, but they're just
Long said the ongoing renovations shouldn't affect summer students in
"It it'd even affect the spring semester students that much," Long said. "There will be some inconveniences because some services are not where they were, but we will continue to offer them."
"We're just trying to take advantage of certain periods that will occur within the 23-to-24-month construction. The peak period is summertime."
Planning for the Union's $9.6 million renovation project began about two and a half years ago, Long said.
"The facility is 60 years old," he said. "It's one of the oldest in the nation of college union-type operations and the oldest in the Big Eight."
Long said the Union's mechanical
systems hadn't been improved since the 1920s and the food service areas hadn't been improved since the 1950s.
The second sequence of the first phase will involve renovations to the Union's second and fourth floors. This sequence is scheduled to be completed by August 1988, Long said.
Eventually, all of the bookstores will be located on level two. The Kansas Union Bookstore is currently located on level two and the Oread Book Shop is on level four.
The third sequence will involve moving the students' organizations and activities centers to where the Oread Book Shop is now, Long said. This sequence is expected to be completed by December 1988.
The second phase of the project will involve renovating several other service areas on level four.
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6
Wednesday, June 10, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
Controversy surrounds zoning of Oread
By KRISTEN HAYS
Staff writer
Controversy surrounding the proposed downzoning of part of the Oread neighborhood is heating up, as residents and landowners call for.
Some Oread residents have requested that the 900 and 1000 blocks of Indiana, Louisiana, Ohio, and Tennessee streets be rezoned from RD, residential dormitory, a higher density housing zone, to RM-1, multi-family residential, which permits fewer housing units per lot.
The Oread neighborhood now is zoned RD, the densest zoning allowable in Lawrence. RD zoning permits one housing unit per 800 square feet of lot, and up to six units on a typical Oread lot, which is 5,800 square feet.
Fred Sack, 936 Ohio St., Oread Neighborhood Association board member, said recently that residents in the area favored less dense RM-1 zoning, which would allow one living unit per 3,500 square feet. RM-1 zoning allows duplexes, but not triplexes.
Richard Zinn, Lawrence, a lawyer representing several landowners who oppose the downzoning, said, "Zoning districts are determined to create compatibility and predictability, so purchasers of property will know what they can do with their land after it's purchased. The takings
of land is wrong under the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution and imposes penalties
Zinn said further that tension was brought about by the difference between the regulation of property use and the taking of property use.
"The city's appropriation of a property right is not just zoning, but taking of buildings that provide an economic benefit to the property owner," he said.
Henry Hess, who owns property at 936 and 939 Louisiana St., said, "The way I understand it, if one of my places burned down, another house would have to be built. Those houses are owned for apartments and if developers buy them, it would be to my benefit. I'm retired and if I sell, I want to sell for the most money I can."
Zinn said, "The area in question was built for high density and has been so zoned since 1960. Purchases and investments have been based on clear awareness of existing zoning. Measures to change that zoning frustrates the predictability that the zoning is supposed to provide."
Zinn said the Oread neighborhood had been mostly student housing since the end of World War I, a trend that accelerated in the 1960s and 1970s.
pus," he said. "Lawrence has a severe traffic congestion problem, and if students have to live farther away, it would create a worse dislocation problem because they have to drive to school and find parking."
"It's an ideal location for students, right between downtown and cam-
Harlane Papanek, 1003 Tennessee St., said the push for downzoning was not meant to be antagonistic to students living in the area.
"The issue isn't against students at all," Papanek said. "Absentee landlords aren't keeping up their property. For them, it's just as profitable to take rent, do as little maintenance as possible, then sell the lot to developers for $30,000, who tear the house down to put up a fourplex.
"This isn't about rental property. It's about the preservation and restoration of the neighborhood, bringing back the glory it once had."
Papnek also said, "It's important to keep in mind that we're talking about six blocks out of approximately 10 blocks on the entire Oread neighborhood."
Sack said, "Downzoning wouldn't ensure preservation of the old houses, but it would encourage developers to make good what's there, approximately three to four apartments per house.
"We want to keep the neighborhood for mixed use, not just for students. If the developers keep up at the rate they're going, in 20 years this will be
exclusively a student neighborhood.
"It's an aesthetic question too. I have nothing against students, and I like the vitality of students, but they're more compatible in small packages."
Sack said the threat was that owners would let dilapidated buildings deteriorate until the lots were worth more than the houses, then the owners would sell.
"There's no incentive to keep them up." he said.
Zinn said statistics contradicted the assertion that many old houses had been demolished.
"There have been moderate demolitions in the Oread neighborhood because buildings had become uninhabitable," he said.
Sack didn't know what kind of compensation landowners expected if the proposed areas were down-zone.
"I'm a property owner myself, and I feel my property will be worth more money because families will move in and keep it up," he said.
Papanek said, "The problem is that the interests of homeowners are overlooked, whereas rental property owners have more voice."
The Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission is conducting a study to evaluate the interests of residents and landowners.
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Kansan Summer Weekly/Wednesday, June 10, 1987
Arts and Entertainment Downtown reacts to artworks
PETER HARRY BURTON
James Patti, founder and executive director of the Kansas Sculptors Association, is one of twelve artists displaying works in downtown Lawrence. His untitled work is on display at Ninth and Massachusetts streets.
Outdoor exhibitions observed by Lawrence shoppers
Arts editor
By Caroline Reddick
Viewer reactions to the outdoor sculptures that were recently installed downtown are almost as varied in opinion as the sculptures are in style.
"Most of them, I don't think much of," Michelle Babcock, 845 Maine, said. "Some of them look all right from one angle, but when you move around, they kind of fall apart."
The twelve sculptures, distributed between the 600 and 1200 blocks of Massachusetts Street, are part of the first yearlong outdoor art exhibition jointly sponsored by the Lawrence Commission and the Kansas Sculpture Foundation. The sculpture, scheduled for display in June will complete this year's exhibit.
Victor Palacios, Columbian graduate student, said he liked the sculptures.
"I thought it was really interesting but a shame that most people don't notice," he said. "It seems to me they pass by and don't look."
Babcock said she noticed one person looking closely at the wind-powered untitled piece on the east side of the 600 block of Massachusetts Street.
"He was walking around and really looking at it when a gust of wind came along, and it swung around and knocked him down," she said. "It said you were surprised. But he got a good look at her and you shouldn't stand that close to it."
"I noticed the red one on 8th street and wondered what it was before I read about it in the paper," said Sharon Mathews, 118 Museum St.
One Lawrence resident was puzzled by the exhibit.
tion was provided by the sponsors, the city of Lawrence, the Downtown Lawrence Association, the Lawrence Convention and Visitors Bureau and the Kansas Arts Commission. The Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department provided trucks and drivers to move the sculptures.
Elden Tefft, KU professor of art, was on the three-member selection committee that chose the sculptures from 41 entries submitted by 17 artists. He said that some of the pieces were chosen for their unusual design.
Financial support for installation and insurance for this year's exhibi-
He said that the artists had to live in Kansas or be a member of the Kansas Sculptors Association to be eligible to submit sculptures for the exhibition.
"The committee's intent was to make a selection of varied approaches and materials so it would be a more interesting exhibit," Teftt said. "Also, the material that was available was widely varied."
The sculptures are on loan to the city for a year by the artists. The sculptures are for sale, they are under contract to remain on exhibit for a year.
James Patti, executive director of the Kansas Sculptors Association, said that the association would help raise $50,000 for pieces on loan for a second year.
"We'd like to expand the exhibit," Patti said. "If we can keep some of these pieces a second year, we can spend our money on expansion instead of replacement."
He said that the Lawrence Arts Commission had asked area businesses to buy a sculpture and donate it to the city.
Patti is the creator of the united figure in front of the First National Bank of Lawrence, 900 Massachusetts Street.
"The main point in a figure like mine was to attain movement and tension in a motionless figure," he said.
"I don't have a name for it. It could be male or female."
Arlie Regier, Overland Park sculptor, said that his piece. Programmed Rectangles, located on the east side of the 800 block, represented computerized machines like car engines, typewriters and robots.
"It is intended to reflect the ever- programmed aspects of our living."
Olate the sculptor Ron Hicks has two works on display. His Arrow Through Sunflower is located on the west side of the 600 block and his Totem Pole is on the east side of the 700 block. He said he used materials he found in the country.
"I like going to these old Kansas farms that are dead or dying and finding an old piece of rusted steel that becomes the origin of the piece." he said. "I also use Kansas sandstone and a lot of the clays that are abundant in this area."
Hicks said he thought that the artists and city residents benefited from the exhibit.
"It's nice to have your work out in a public place," he said. "They're so heavy that you don't just carry them and submit them to every show.
"You can go downstreet and watch the people. Whether they like it or not, they're stopping and looking, and I think that's healthy."
Patti said the exhibition would continue on an annual basis as long as funding was available.
Everybody just cooperated so well and that's what it takes," he said.
New York museum of glass buys KU graduate's mosaic panel
Arts editor
A University of Kansas graduate in ceramics and glass recently sold a glass mosaic panel to the internationally renowned Corning Museum of Glass in New York.
Paul Lucas, a December 1986 graduate and Topeka artist, sold the panel while it was on exhibit in March at a student show sponsored by the Glass Art Society Conference in Philadelphia. The work is a 20-by-24-inch transparent glass mosaic titled "Nazia."
By Caroline Reddick
Jon Havener, associate professor of design, said it was an honor for an artist to have work on exhibit in the Corning Museum.
"It's the glass museum in the United States," Havener says. They go to most extensive collections of the United States of international glass artists."
Lucas said he was shocked when he heard Corning Museum was interested in buying the piece.
"They had to scrape me off the floor," he said. "I didn't expect anything like this so soon in my
Paul Lucas KU graduate
They had to scrape me off the floor. I didn't expect anything like this so soon in my career. Some artists never have a piece in a museum.'
career. Some artists never have a piece in a museum."
Lucas said the panel's design came from photographs of a friend's face.
"I usually use a series of photographs to do a person because I can't get anyone to sit that long." Lucas said. "It can take weeks.
"My impressions at the time that the photos were taken also go into it."
seemed that the time was right. I had gained enough control over my medium, and I felt I was ready to try it in glass."
He cut colored glass into three-eighth-inch squares, applied epoxy and glued the individual squares to a sheet of clear glass.
Lucas said he worked with acrylics, oil paints, stained glass and metals before he became interested in glass mosaics.
"It wasn't an idea that popped into my head immediately," he said. "It
"It needs to hang where light can flow through it," Lucas said. "I never think of my pieces as windows, but they need a strong light source."
The mosaic was completed while Lucas was a KU student. During that period, he enrolled in several metal classes taught by Havener.
"He was a great student who was really hardworking and had a lot of good ideas," Havener said. "I think he's a real good craftsmans who can put it all together, a really talented guy."
Lucas said the title "Nazia", "pro-
tection of mausae," could have different implica-
tion.
"The panel suggests to me the feeling that one gets when a catastrophe is just about to happen," he said. "Anxious and immediate are words that relate to it."
Calendar Today
9 a.m. — "Introduction to Word Perfect." a microcomputer workshop at the Academic Computer Center. Call 884-4291 for more information.
Call 864-2921 for more information.
hours vary — "Cheyenne Bottoms: Biology of a large marsh," an exhibit presently shown at the Museum of Natural History.
7 p.m. - "Anatomy of a Murder" watch this 1959 film starring Jimmy Stewart and George C. Scott in Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union. Admission is $2. Tickets are the SUA office on level 4 of the Union.
Tomorrow
9 p.m. — The Ebeling Bros. live music at the Rock Chalk Bar, 618 W. 12th St. $1 cover charge
'Nazia' a glass mosaic by KU graduate Paul Lucas
10:30 p.m. — Salem 68 live music at Bottleneck m.'s, 737 New Hampshire St. Absolute Ceiling, a band from Boston. At 9:30 p.m. there is a cover charge.
9 p.m. — Random Azttec
music at the Rock Chalk Bar, 618 W.
12th St. No cover charge.
7 p.m. — "The Apartment," an SUA film in Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union. Tickets are $2 at the office on the fourth floor of the Union.
Friday
8-10 p.m. — Full Circle live folk music at the Glass Onion, 624 W. 12th St. No cover.
9:30 p.m. — Screaming Lee & the Rock Tones live rock and music at the Jazhuz, 9216th Massachusetts. Cover charge is $3.
9:30 p.m. — Dow Jones and the industries Lawrence band plays live music at Bottleneck's, 737 New Hampshire St. $2 cover charge.
9 p.m. — Lonesome Hounddogs live music at the Rock Chalk Bar, 618 W. 12th St. No Cover charge
Saturdays
3 p.m. — First Annual Science Fiction Club Picnic. Bring food and refreshments to eat while listening to four local plays play at Burcham Park, Second and Indiana streets. Music begins at 5 a.m.
Sunday
9 p.m. — Darrell Lea live music at the Rock Chalk Bar, 618 W. 12th St.
no cover charge
Monday
■ Noon. — "All Seasons and Every Light: 19th-Century American Landscapes." An exhibition opens through July 28 at the Spence Museum of Art in the Kress Gallery. Henry Adams of the Nelson-Akins Museum of Art in Kansas City, Mo., will speak.
1:30-3:30 p.m. - Study Skills for Summer School. Attend a workshop to improve academic skills. The program will be held in 4034 Wescoe. No registration or fee. For more information call the Student Assistance center at 864-4064.
Tuesday
9 p.m. — Open Micat the Rock Chalk Bar. Come show off your talents in front of an audience at 618 W. 12th St.
Interested in playing Cricket? Join the
KU CRICKET CLUB Open to all KU Students
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For more information.
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Wednesday. June 10, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
Lawrence city commission defeats Oread construction site proposal
By KRISTEN HAYS
Staff writer
Neighborhood opposition prompted Lawrence city commissioners last night to defeat a proposal to construct a five-apartment unit in the Oread neighborhood.
Several Lawrence residents who opposed the site plan for 1132 Ohio St., said at last night's city commission meeting that the housing unit would cause parking and safety problems. The site plan was defeated 5.0
THE SITE plan was increased 90
Marci Francisco, 1008 Ohio St.
,said, "Our major concern is allowing
parking in the front yard. This site
plan will likely be promoted for students, and if each has a car, it will add to the parking demand.
"Many of us walk in the Oread neighborhood. We like the line of trees and houses, and this plan devotes half the front yard for parking. There should be a sufficient mix of grass and pavement, which gives a pleasing appearance and promotes property values."
In other business, Carol Shankel presented a proposal for a sister city organization.
Shankel said she had considered cities in Japan and France as possible sister cities for Lawrence.
"The ordinance would provide a seven-member advisory board, appointed by the city commissioners, guests and organize exchanges.
"The board would also raise funds for educational exchanges through the city," she said. "There's a lot of interest in a program such as this, and it would add a wonderful dimension to the city."
The commissioners agreed to appoint an advisory board at her request.
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Kansan Summer WeeklyWednesday. June 10, 1987
KU student recovers with hopes,plans
By STORMY WYLIE
Staff writer
Last month, a KU student was severely injured when his legs were crushed between two parked cars.
The left leg of John Buzbee, 21, Hutchinson junior, was amputated below the knee after it was severed in the accident. The right leg was crushed, but it did not require amputation.
Buzbee is now recuperating at his home in Hutchinson. He is undergoing physical therapy and waiting for the right leg to heal. Buzbee said he hoped to be walking with crutches by July.
The accident occurred at the end of last semester. Members of the University Daily Kansan staff had been having a party to celebrate the end of the semester. Buzbee, a journalism major, said he had joined in the celebration.
About 2 a.m. on May 5, Buzbee and two other KU students, Kjersti Moen, 22, Lier, Norway, junior, and Brian Pyle, 20, Hutchinson sophomore, left a party at the Alpha KappaLambda fraternity house, 2021 Stewart Avenue, to eat an early breakfast.
As the three friends walked along Stewart Avenue toward Pyle's car, Buzbee said he first heard and then saw a car swerving around the corner.
As he stepped between two parked
cars, Buzbee said, he saw the car sideswipe a parked car just behind him. He heard Moen scream, and he tried to get out of the way.
The car glanced off the first of three cars parked along the street, then crashed into the second car, which was pushed into the third car. Buzbee was pinned between the second and third parked cars.
"I don't remember a thing about the impact," he said. "I remember lying on the ground afterwards, but I really didn't feel any pain, and I didn't see any blood. Even though I heard the paramedic said I had a severed leg, I didn't really realize then how bad it was."
According to a Lawrence police report, the car that lost control was driven by Eldon Alldritt, 19, Wichita junior.
Two passengers in Aldritt's car, John Gorman, 21, Prairie Village freshman, and Randall Jackson, 21, Fredonia junior, also suffered bumps and cuts. They were treated at the scene.
Pyle suffered a broken nose, and Moen suffered bruises to her left leg and right hip as they were getting out of the way of Aldritt's car. Aldritt received a scratch to the eye and cuts and bruises. All three were treated and released from Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
Buzbee was flown to the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., by a Life Flight medical emergency helicopter.
After about an hour at the hospital.
Immediately after arriving at the Med Center, Buzbee's left leg was amputated below the knee during a four-hour surgery in which he lost six pints of blood. For several days, doctors were uncertain whether Buzbee would be able to keep his right leg.
Six steel pins are now holding the bones of his right leg together until it heals enough to be put in a cast sometime this summer.
Buzbee's parents, Richard and Marie Buzbee, Hutchinson, flew from a New York City convention to Kansas City as soon as they heard about the accident. Richard Buzbee is editor and publisher of the Hutchinson News.
Buzbee said that he didn't realize the extent of his injury until a surgeon at the Med Center told him his left leg was attached only by some skin.
"At first I was horrified." Burbee said. "I thought, 'I'm going to be a cripple the rest of my life!' I broke down a couple of times.
"But that's the great thing with prosthesis, it will not affect my career. I don't have any pro football aspirations. It won't be any great inconvenience."
A prosthesis is an artificial limb. Buzbee was recently elected president of the KU Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists, Sigma Delta Chi. He had been co-winner of the John Chandler award for outstanding student reporter for the spring semester.
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He said he planned to be back at the University for the fall semester.
A prosthesis is an artificial limb.
Buzbee said he did not harbor any anger toward Aldritt.
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"There's no point in being angry or bitter," he said. "It will take a lot more than anger to get me through this."
Once the skin graft on his left leg has healed enough, it will be fitted with an artificial limb. He said he should get a permanent prosthesis in six months to a year.
Alldritt was charged last month in Lawrence Municipal Court with driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs. Police administered a blood-alcohol test to Alldritt but have not released the results.
Although no open containers of beer or liquor were found at the scene of the accident, police said that the skid marks indicated that Alldritt was driving at an unsafe speed.
Alldritt was not present at his arraignment May 26, but his lawyer pleaded not guilty to the charge. Alldritt's trial date has been set for July 17.
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2:50 7:25
4:30 9:20
Daily
2:15 7:15
4:40 9:40
Cinema Twin
HARRY and the Daily
2:50 7:10
HENDERIONS 5:00 9:15
Ernest Daily
2:45 7:00
Goes to Camp PGY
4:30 9:00
10
Wednesday, June 10, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
Parking
Continued from p. 1
These prices reflect the cost of a yearly sticker, which is valid from the beginning of the fall semester to the end of the next summer semester.
"We've got a whole new parking program that includes more meters and a new parking garage. The users, whether they park at the dorm or in other sections, will pay for the garage." Hultine said.
The last time the cost of parking was raised was in 1980.
"We get complaints about parking every year." Hultine said. "We're just about at a saturation point."
She said one problem was that more people were driving to campus rather than riding the bus. Because a single semester bus pass costs as much as a yearly yellow parking permit, it's more attractive to drive, she said.
About 10,000 parking permits are issued on campus each fall. Hultine said there were about 850 blue permits, 1,300 red, 4,400 yellow and 2,680 residence hall and university housing permits.
According to a report by Jean Keneipse of Barton Aschman Associates, Evanston, Ill., the University would need about 1,000 more parking spaces by 1988 and 3,600 more by 1992.
Keneipp studied the University parking situation for about eight months last year, Hultine said.
Keneipp's report said the University's permit parking prices were quite low when compared with other universities.
His report suggested building a new parking garage to hold the needed additional spaces. The proposed three-level garage would hold 650 to 700 spaces, Hultine said.
Rodger Orok, KU director of support services, said the University would set the conditions for bidding, then take bids from various architectural firms. Construction on the garage should begin early next year.
The Kansas Legislature recently authorized the Board of Regents to issue $5 million in revenue bonds for the construction of the University's parking garage. The Regents also approved the issuance of $3.5 million in revenue bonds for a new parking garage at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
The chancellor's office is now seeking proposals from potential bond counsels, Oroke said. The bond counsel is responsible for issuing the proper notices and documents for the revenue bonds.
Proposed sites for the garage are the grass field east of Robinson Center and the two parking lots north of Allen Field House. The architects will include a site proposal in their bids, Oroke said.
Parking spaces on existing lots will also be rearranged sometime this summer. The spaces will be angled to make it easier on the driver. Also additional parking spaces will be created by making smaller spaces for compact cars, Huline said.
Parking services also plans to add 250 meters to the lots east and northeast of Memorial Stadium and to remove the two toll booths there. Hultine said the department will save money by not having to man the booths.
The hours that motorists can drive through campus also will be extended an hour during weekdays.
Weekday campus traffic is currently restricted from 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
The hours will be changed in the fall to 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., Hultine said.
COPIES 4¢
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1987
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Remember Father's Day is June 21st
Kansan Summer WeeklyWednesday, June 10, 1987
ROYALS REPORT
compiled by Tim Hamilton
Sports editor
Monday: Royals 3, Twins 5
Minnesota Twins pinch hitter Gene Larkin hit a bases loaded triple in the seventh inning leading the Twins 5-3 over the Kansas City Royals Monday night in Minnesota.
Rovals 3. Twins 5
Royals 011 000 001-3 9 0
Twins 011 000 30x-5 7 0
Gubicza, Quisenberry, Quirk and Nieman (Frazier) 2 and Reardon W.-Nieman (1-0).
L-Gubicza (3-7), SV-Reardon (11), 2Bs-Seitzer (3B-White, Larkin, HRS-Puckett.
Sunday: Royals 9, Mariners 1
Bo Jackson and Willie Wilson led the Kansas City Royals in a 9-1 rout over the Seattle Mariners Sunday afternoon at Seattle.
000 311 301-9 13 0
000 000 010-1 5 2
000 311 301:9 13 0
Marmers
Black (7) Farr, (2) and Owen; Moore (6½), Trujo (1½), Wilkinson (1), and Kenaway;
W-Black (3-2) L-Moore (2-8). SV-None. 2Bs-Tarttallbull 2, Bradley 2, Ramso 3Bs-brantley,
Tarttallbull. HJS-Hackson 2, Wilson 2.
Saturday: Royals 5, Mariners 2
Steve Balboni saved the day for the Kansas City Royals by hitting in all five runs for the Royals in Saturday's game in Seattle against the Mariners. Balboni hit a two-run homer and three-run double, giving him five runs batted in for the second time in his major league career.
Royals 5, Mariners 2
Moyas 000 023 005-5 0 2
Managers 001
Leibrandt (9%), Quisemberry (1%) and Quirk, Bankhead (6-4), Kearney, W Leibrandt (7-4), L-Bankhead (6-4), SV-Quisenberry (7-2), B2s-Bosley, Balton, BHIs-Balboni.
Friday: Royals 2, Mariners 7
Lee Guetterman won his third consecutive game since being called from the Seattle Mariners farm team in Calgary, Alberta. He pitched a seven-hitter and Mickey Brantley drove in four runs as the Mariners ended a three game losing streak with a 7-2 victory over the Kansas City Royals Friday night in Seattle.
Royals 2, Mariners 7
Royals 100 000 1010-2 7 1
Mariners 100 000 102x-7 9 1
Djackson (6%), Farr (1½) and LOwen; Gutterman (7), Shields (2) and Valle. W. Gutterman (3-4); L-DJJackson (2-7). SV-Shields (3), 2Bs-Vaile 2, Orta Hrs-Brantley.
Thursday: Royals 6, Mariners 1
Bret Saberhagen became the first 10-game winner in the major leagues this season by pitching a seven-hitter Thursday night in Seattle as the Kansas City Royals defeated the Mariners 6-1.
Sports
Royals 000 012 021-6 12 0
Marmers 100 000 7 1 7
Sabberhagen and Quirk; Margan (7%₁) Reed (1%₁) and Bradley. W-Saberhagen (10-1).
L-Morgan (5-6). SV-None. B2s-Balboni. HRS-Tartabull, Seitzer, Balboni.
Wednesday: Royals 2, Brewers 4
Kansas City pitcher Mark Gubieza's record fell to 3-6 as the Royals lost to the Brewers 4-2 in Milwaukee. Royals left fielder Bo Jackson struck out in all four of his at-bats, and center fielder Willie Wilson also went 0-4.
**eWrewers**
040 000 000-4 8 1
Gubicaz (6½), Gleaton (1½) and Quirk; Barker (5), Bosio (3), Plesac (1)
and Surhoff, W-Barker (1-0), L-Gubicaz (3-6), SV-Plesac (13), 2Bs-Manning, Cooper,
Salazar, Quirk.
ON DECK
Today
Royals vs. Minnesota
7:05 p.m. at Minnesota
Today
Friday
Royals vs. California
7:35 p.m. at Royals Stadium
Tomorrow No game
Saturday
Royals vs. California 7:05 p.m.at Royals Stadium
Sunday
Monday
LAST NIGHT
Royals vs. California 1:35 p.m.at Royals Stadium
Monday
Royals vs. Oakland
7:35 p.m. at Royals Stadium
Tuesday
Royals vs. Oakland
7:35 p.m. at Royals Stadium
Royals ab r h rb
Wilson cf 5 0 2 1
Seitzer 3b 4 1 1 0
Trtabllrf 4 0 2 0
Bosley dh 4 0 0 1
FWhite 2b 4 0 0 0
Balboni lb 2 0 1 0
BJacksn lf 4 0 1 0
ASalazr ss 3 0 0 0
Orta ph 1 0 0 0
Bianclnss 0 0 0 0
Quirk c 4 1 2 0
Totals 35 2 9 2
Twins ab r h rbr
Newmn ss 3 0 1 0
Bush ph 1 0 1 0
Gagne ss 0 0 0 0
Gladden lf 5 0 3 0
Puckett cf 4 1 2 1
Gaetti 3b 4 1 1 0
Larkin 1b 4 0 1 1
Brnsk dh 2 1 1 1
Lmbrdz 2b 4 0 0 0
Laudner c 4 1 1 2
Davidsn rf 2 1 1 0
Totals 33 5 12 5
Tuesday
Twins ab r h rbi
Kansas City 100 000 100 -2
Minnesota 002 020 011 -5
002 020 015 -5
Major League Standings
W J-Niekro (44). L DJakson (28). S-Neone. W仁师 BRI-Bankey (3). E Q琳. QPK - Minnesota L LOB-Kansas City 9. Minnesota 12. 2 bPucket Brankey, Quirk, Wilson 1B. 3 bPucket Brankey, Quirk, Wilson 3. berzerer (3). Wilson (15). Wilson (4). Glidden (10). None SF-Brankey. Puckett A. 18-563 T: 3-00
East | W | L | Pct. | GB | West | W | L | Pct. | GB
Toronto | 35 | 20 | .636 | — | Kansas City | 30 | 25 | .644 | —
New York | 35 | 23 | .603 | 1½ | Minnesota | 31 | 26 | .544 | —
Milwaukee | 29 | 24 | .547 | 5 | Oakland | 29 | 27 | .518 | 1½
Detroit | 29 | 25 | .537 | 5½ | Seattle | 29 | 29 | .500 | 2½
Baltimore | 29 | 30 | .474 | 9 | California | 26 | 32 | .448 | 2½
Boston | 27 | 31 | .466 | 9½ | Texas | 23 | 31 | .426 | 6½
Cleveland | 27 | 31 | .351 | 16 | Chicago | 22 | 32 | .407 | 6½
American League
National League
| East | W | L | Pct. | Gb | West | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| St. Louis | 34 | 21 | .618 | — | Cincinnati | 33 | 24 | .579 | — |
| Chicago | 33 | 24 | .579 | 2 | San Francisco | 31 | 26 | .549 | 2 |
| Montreal | 29 | 27 | .518 | 5½ | Houston | 28 | 28 | .500 | 4½ |
| New York | 28 | 27 | .518 | 6½ | Los Angeles | 28 | 28 | .491 | 6 |
| Philadelphia | 27 | 27 | .500 | 6½ | Atlanta | 27 | 30 | .474 | 5 |
| Pittsburgh | 27 | 30 | .455 | 9 | San Diego | 15 | 44 | .254 | 19 |
K.C. drops second straight to Twins, Joe Niekro gets win with knuckleball
The Associated Press
"That's my bread-and-butter pitch. I'd say I threw it more than 80 percent."
MINNEAPOLIS — Joe Niekro is the first knuckleball pitcher in the Minnesota Twins' 26-year history
Judging by his debut last night, they should have gotten one a lot sooner.
The 42-year-old Niekro allowed two runs in six $ \frac{1}{3} $ innings in his first start since being acquired Sunday from the New York Yankees, helping Minnesota to its fourth straight victory, 5-2 over the Kansas City Royals.
"I had a good knuckler tonight. I hated to get away from it," he said.
Tim Laudner, catching a knuckle-baller for the first time in his career, also hit a two-run homer to cap his satisfying night.
Niekro, 4-4, allowed nine hits in beating the Royals for the first time since April 26, 1971. Keith Atherton, who relieved Niekro in the seventh with runners at first and third, allowed no hits in two $ \frac{3}{2} $ innings for his first save.
"Everybody had tips. Everybody did. Somebody left a laundry basket in my locker," he said. "I had a lot of fun. I just made up my mind I was going to have fun. As a catcher, I was pleased with the challenge."
Laudner dropped Niekro's very first pitch of the game and also had a pass ball in the first inning, when run on Thad Bosley's BRI brouder.
trimmed to .001.
Kansas City's lead over the Twins in the American League West was
Otherwise, he handled Nikro flawlessly. And at the plate, Laudner put
the Twins ahead 4-1 with a fifth-
inning homer off Danny Jackson, 2-8.
His fifth homer of the year came in a 3-0 pitch and scored Tom Brunansky,
who had doubled.
Kirby Puckett hit a bases-loaded sacrifice fly in the eighth for the Twins' final run.
L.A.'s Magic lifts Lakers past Boston 107-106
The Royals added a seventh-inning run on doubles by Jamie Quirk and Willie Wilson before Atherton entered the game.
Jackson allowed nine hits and four walks in five innings.
The Associated Press
BOSTON — Magic Johnson drove into the lane and sank a hook shot with two seconds remaining last night, giving the Los Angeles Lakers a 107-106 victory over the Boston Celtics and a 3-1 lead in the NBA championship series.
Game 5 will be tomorrow night at Boston Garden, but even if the Celtics win, the Lakers have the next two games at home and the Celtics get six straight road playoff games by an average of nearly 16 points.
The Lakers, who trailed 103-95 with three minutes 30 seconds remaining, rallied with a 9-0 spurt to take their first lead of the game since early in the first quarter.
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's dunk made it 104-103 with 29 seconds left, but Larry Bird gave the Celtics a three-point shot (top, center) on a two-point shot (bottom, corner).
Abdul-Jabbar, who scored 10 of his 16 points in the fourth quarter, made one free throw with eight seconds left, then missed the second, but Boston's Kevin McHale knocked the ball out of bounds. After a timeout, Johnson, who finished with 29 points, calmly dribbed away several seconds in the corner before driving into the middle for the game-winner.
Bird then missed a long jump at the buzer, leaving the Lakers with the victory they needed to put them in complete control in the series.
the Lakers in six of the seven previous playoff games, broke free of the Boston defense that had held him to four points in four consecutive quarters, finished with 21 points. Reserve Mychal Thompson and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar each had 16.
Mhale Leped Boston with 25 points, Danny Ainge added 23 and Bird had 21, despite missing 11 of his first 17 shots.
The first three games of the series were played without incident but tempers flared for the first time in the series.
Compiled column in the serves
James Worthy, leading scorer for
The first incident came late in the first half. Worthy, who had scored five straight Los Angeles points in the previous 90 seconds for his first points of the game, was fouled by
Dennis Johnson as Worthy drove to the basket with 15 seconds remaining.
Worthy, who was knocked to the floor, got up and punched Celtics center Greg Kite. Although Kite never got back to Worthy, both players were charged with technical fouls, and Worthy followed with two free throws as a result of the foul by Johnson.
It was at the end of the third period when the second scuffle broke out, this time between McHale and Byron Scott. After Scott was fouled by Bird with 38 seconds remaining in the quarter, McHale and A.C. Green exchanged shoves, then Scott shoved McHale, McHale and Scott were both assessed technicals.
KU places 3rd and 6th at NCAA track meet
Ry Tim Hamilton
Sports editor
The University of Kansas track team last week ended its season with two athletes placing in the finals of the 1987 NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships in Baton Rouge, La.
All-American shot-putter Denise Buchanan took sixth place and pole vaulter Pat Manson finished third in the finals Friday night.
Buchanan, the only KU woman to qualify for the NCAA Outdoor championships, finished sixth in the best and school record of 52-31.
Buchanan, who earned All-America status with a fifth place finish in the 1987 NCAA Indoor meet, broke the former school record, 51-1114, which she set earlier in the year at the Texas Relays.
Preliminary heats for the women's shot-put were not held because only eleven women qualified for the NCAA championships.
Usually, the field is pared to twelve or thirteen athletes for the finals in field events. Nine qualify for finals in sprinting events and twelve in distance events.
Women's track coach Carla Coffey said that Buchanan finished a superb season in fine form.
"She wanted to do better, of course," Coffey said. "She was competing with the best in the nation."
Buchanan said she had been frustrated with her performances after gaining All-American status at the NCAA Indoor Championships.
"My indoor performance was exceptional but after a week of expec-
tion, I was struck by Rusch's music."
Two weeks before the NCAA Outdoor, Buchanan did well in a meet in Tennessee and regained her confidence.
Manson, a sophomore who took second at the 1987 Big Eight Outdoor Championships, vaulted $17-9\frac{3}{4}$ to capture third place in the pole vault. Doug Fraley, Fresno State University, won the event with a mark of 18-5.
"I threw better than I had in a long time and I knew I was coming back," she said.
Out of the three KU pole vaulters who qualified for the NCAA Championships, only Manson qualified for the finals.
Junior Scott Huffman and sophomore Chris Bohanan both failed to
clear the opening height of 17-13%
Both were All-Americans last year, Bohanan won the 1987 conference title with a jump of $ 18-3^{\frac{1}{4}}$, and Huffman cleared 18-4 at the 1987 Kansas Relays. The two finished seventh and eighth, respectively, at this year's national indoor meet.
Assistant track coach Rick Attig, who works with the pole vaulters and jumpers, said that the meet was a bit disappointing for the trio, despite Manson's showing.
Kansas is only the second school in NCAA history to have three pole vaulters over the 18-0 mark.
Attig said Huffman's performance was hampered by an ankle injury which he underwent surgery for early in the year.
"Atround Big Eight time Outdoors it started bothering him again," Attig said. "He hadn't been able to practice since the Big Eight conference meet."
He said Bohanan misjudged which poles to use.
Attig said Manson's performance suprised him because injuries had limited his training. Attig said that the team's swimming was spent biking and swimming.
"Jumping was not something he was really able to work a lot on," Attig said. "He's not in as good a shape as he could be."
"Pat is a really steady jumper. He jumps around his best every meet. He's going to be a great humper."
Hurdlers Courtney Hawkins, sophomore, and Ricky Mays, freshman, who both made strong showings this season, also didn't advance to the finals of their events.
Mays' hot streak going into the championships included a second place finish at the 1987 conference and then an all-time personal and season best of 25-11%.
In the championships, Mays' jump of $ 23.8_{1/2} $ was one inch short of the qualifying distance of $ 23.9_{1/4}. $
Hawkins was the 110-meter hurdles champion at the 1987 conference outdoor championships and also won the 60-yard hurdles at the 1987 indoor meet. But his time of 13.91 seconds in the 110-meter hurdles was .17 seconds slower than the qualifying time of 13.74 seconds.
Athletic director at Illinois State named as successor to Johnson
Sophomore triple jumper David Bond qualified for NCAA Championships but broke his foot and did not compete.
Sports editor
By Tim Hamilton
The Kansas University Athletic Corporation recently named Bob Frederick, athletic director at Illinois State University since 1985, as the University's new athletic director.
Frederick, 47, will become KU's 12th athletic director on June 15 when he takes over from Monte Johnson who is resigning.
Frederick is no stranger to KU.
In a 26-year relationship with the University, Frederick has been a KU student, an assistant coach and an administrator.
In 1959, as a freshman, Frederick was a walk-on on the basketball team and played for coach Dick Harp. That was only two years after the legendary 1956-57 team, with a player named Monte Johnson, went to the NCAA Final Four tournament.
Frederick earned his undergraduate degree in education and stayed at KU as a graduate assistant under Harp while he completed his master's degree.
Then for 13 years Frederick coached in the high school and junior college ranks in Kansas and Illinois before returning to KU in the 1971-72 season as an assistant basketball coach under Ted Owens.
Frederick left Lawrence again for five years to serve as assistant basketball coach at Brigham Young University and Stanford University
In 1977, Frederick began working for Lawrence High School. He taught basketball, coached the basketball team and served as coach of sports for Lawrence High School.
Max Rife, LHS assistant principal who has been with the school since 1956, said Frederick had his hands full fulfilling his LHS responsibilities and pursuing his doctorate degree in education at the same time. Rife said Frederick even had the responsibility for monitoring the cafeteria.
"Bob was an excellent teacher." Rife said. "He used the same method in school as we did in coaching. He had rules and abided by them and the kids did too."
"He was one of the finest basketball coaches we've had here. He produced a program we could be very, very proud of."
In 1881, Frederick was named the director of the Williams Educational Fund, which handles athletic scholarships.
While working in administration, Frederick finished his doctorate. He left KU and the Big Eight in 1985 to go to North Carolina (NU) in the Missouri Valley Conference.
Lew Perkins, former athletic director at Wichita State University, said Frederick had given a lot of direction to the ISU program.
"Bob is an excellent administrator and athletic director." Perkins said. "At ISU he provided a lot of good direction, had objectives and set goals. KU couldn't have done better."
Perkins said he couldn't make any comparison between Johnson and Eddie.
"They have two different administration styles." Perkins said. "What might work for one might not work for the other."
Although they may operate differently, Frederick and Johnson seem to have similar backgrounds.
Both are Midwesterners. Frederick hails from near St. Louis, Johnson from Kansas City, Kan.
Both did their undergraduate work at KU and were walk-ons on the varsity basketball team.
Now, both have earned reputations
After graduating, both men returned to KU for their graduate studies and both held several differences within the athletic department.
Frederick and Johnson were even brothers in the Phi Delta Theta fraternity during their collegiate days.
as hard-working, successful, basketball-oriented athletic directors, albeit not at the same university.
Frederick agreed that there were similarities.
Johnson's business experience helped him to be more successful as director of the Williams Educational Fund than Frederick had been.
but, Temple said, he was most interested Frederick's loyalty to the University.
Floyd Temple, assistant athletic director, said Frederick did a good job as director, raising the fund's revenue every year at a time when the department's revenue was down.
"His loyalty was very important to me," he said, "His relationship with the University will be excellent. He's going to send here, and I consider myself one."
"The general state of the department is very healthy because a long-range plan has been developed," Frederick said.
He said his top priorities would include reviewing the athletes'
He said Frederick's friendships with many people within the department, such as men's basketball coach Larry Brown, wouldn't interfere with his performance as athletic director.
Of course, things will be a lot easier for Frederick if he doesn't make many changes, and he said he didn't plan to.
"It doesn't hurt having close friends working for you or having a good friend be your boss." Temple said.
FRED R. COOK
Bob Frederick
academic support program, meeting with alumni leaders across the state and increasing the visibility of the non-revenue sports program.
KU's struggling football program also is at the top of Frederick's list of priorities.
He said he was very interested in raising the gate revenue at the football games, especially through student ticket sales.
"My first plan is to sit down with any students as I can enlist their support. With any major institution with two major revenue sports, the enthusiasm starts with the students. That's obvious in Allen Field House."
Frederick also said promotion of the tradition and social aspects of the football games would increase revenue.
"The social aspect of college football has taken on much greater proportions," he said. "I think you have to promote the event and not just the game."
Obviously, the quickest way to bigger gate revenues is a better football team.
Last year, the Jayhawks finished 3-8, with a dismal 0-7 record in the Big Eight, last in the conference.
KU's last winning season was 1980-81.
12
Wednesday, June 10, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
Sports
Kansas athletes end spring seasons after finals
Men's tennis and track teams compete in the NCAA Championships, win honors
By Tim Hamilton Sports editor
Men's Tennis
Although spring finals were over on May 15, for many University of Kansas athletes, the spring semester ended long after most students had left Lawrence for the summer.
The KU men's tennis team completed its historic season in mid-May with a loss to Clemson, 6-1, in the opening round of the Jayhawks' first NCAA Championship tournament. The Jayhawks qualified for their first ever NCAA berth after they won the Big Eight Conference title.
Senior Mike Wolf and freshman Craig Wilde also qualified for NCAA Championship individual competition. Wolf reached the final 32 in singles by defeating Royce Deppe of Texas, 2-6, 6-3, 6-3. Wolf was eliminated by Trevor Kroneman of the University of California-Irvine, 6-3, 6-4. In doubles, Wolf and Wildley were defeated by the team of Shelby Cannon and Byron Talbot from the University of Tennessee.
The KU men's and women's track teams finished their seasons last week at the NCAA Outdoor Track
Track
and Field Championships in Baton Rouge, La. Five KU men and one KU woman qualified for the meet. Long jumper Ricky Mays was suffering from a broken foot and didn't attend the meet.
Friday night, pole vaulter Pat Manson took third with a vault of 17.4¹⁾ in the finals. Spot-putter Denise Buchanan finished sixth in the finals with a personal best and school record of 52.3¹⁾.
Clubs
The University's club teams were also active after the end of the spring semester. KU Cre competed in the Dad Vail Regatta, May 8-9, on the Schuylkill River in Philadelphia. More than 3,000 men and women from 77 different programs gathered for one of the largest competitions in the country. KU took three women's and two men's teams.
"The women's varsity heavyweight four-man boat, the women's novice eight-man boat and the men's six-person boat all did really well," Felland said.
The women's varsity heavyweight four-man boat finished seventh out of 34. The women's novice heavyweight eight-man boat took eighth place out of 39. The men's novice heavyweight
eight-man finished sixth out of 31
The KU Frisbee Club men's and women's teams traveled to Pennsylvania to compete in the 4th annual National Collegiate Ultimate Championships, May 23-25, at Penn State University. The tournament was composed of the top 14 men's and top seven women's teams in the country.
The KU women's team won the first women's national championship, defeating Humboldt State University in Richmond, Ind., and the University of California-Davis on the last day of the tournament. The women's team finished with a record of 5-3.
The men's team finished in the top 12 with a record of 2-4, defeating East Carolina and Cornell, both of which made the final four. They lost to Princeton and the State University of New York at Purchase by three points. The KU club is the only club other than the University of Texas to qualify for the tournament all four years.
Sports Festival on July 23, in Chapel Hill, N.C. Coffey will work with the North squad's sprinters and hurdlers.
Several KU athletes and coaches received awards and honors at the completion of the 1987 spring semester.
Women's track head coach Carla Coffey will be the manager of the North's track team at the National
Senior Mike Wolf and junior Larry Pascal were named to the Academic All-Big Eight men's tennis team.
Men's tennis coach Scott Perelman was named Big Eight Conference Coach of the Year. Perelman guided the Jayhawks to their first conference title in 23 years and their first NCAa burin in the school's history. Since coming to the school five years ago, Perelman has taken KU from fifth to first.
All-American senior forward Danny Manning was selected to compete on the U.S. Team at the Pan American Games, coached by Louisville head coach Denny Crum, Louisville assistant coach Jerry Jones and Michigan State head coach Jud Heathcoe. The Pan American Games will run August 9-23 in Indianapolis, Ind.
Junior Brian McGreevy received an invitation to compete in the NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championships, June 10-13, at Columbus, Ohio. According to KU coaches, McGreevy's qualification is the first for any Jayhawk since 1956 when Bob
Richards and Gene Elstun both qualified.
In women's softball, senior Sheila Connolly was named an NCAA firstteam All-American outfielder this season despite playing more than twenty games at shortstop.
Connolly led the conference the past season in hits, runs, triples, batting average and stolen bases. She was also on the All-Big Eight first team, All-Big Eight Academic team and the All-Big Eight Tournament team.
Seniors John Byrn and Hugh Stanfield also received Big Eight commendations. Byrn, a first baseman who set a new KU career batting average record of 374, was named to the Big Eight All-Academic team. Stanfield, an outfielder who set several individual records, received a Big Eight All-Conference Honorable Mention. Stanfield set KU career records for number of hits, runs scored, triples, stolen bases, games played and attempts at the plate.
Sophomores Kevin Pritchard and Mark Randall have been selected to participate in the National Sports Festival this summer in Chapel Hill, N.C.
Haack named softball coach
By a Kansan reporter
University of Kansas athletic director Bob Frederick announced yesterday that Kalum Haack would be the Jayhawks' new softball coach.
"We were tremendously proud of the job Bob Stancilf did during tenure. Temple said, "We're sure that we are making excellence that Stancilf attained."
Haack, 29, replaces Bob Stance-
lift who resigned after his 11th
season at KU with a career record
of 359-175, a 572 winning percentage.
Floyd Temple, chairman of the search committee to replace Stanclift, said the University made a tough choice among a fine group of candidates.
"He was an assistant coach under one of the best coaches in the nation at Nebraska under Wayne Daigle.
Haack recently completed his first season as head softball coach at Sam Houston State University in Texas, Texas. His alma mater.
In its first year as an NCAA Division I program, the Sam Houston squad finished with a 36-24 record and earned a berth in the first NIT softball tournament.
Guide to Good Dining
Whether it's a celebration, a quiet dinner for two or an afternoon lunch date. Nabil's is your perfect choice. Do it the right way with good friends, a warm atmosphere, and an excellent choice of food and drink. At Nabil's you receive the finest personalized service. Experience Nabil's today. For parties of five or more call 841-7226.
fifi's NABIL'S
Restaurant
Open
M-F 11 a.m.-2 p.m.
Tu-Sa 5 p.m.-10 p.m.
Sun-Mon 5 p.m.-9 p.m.
9th & Iowa
Hillcrest Shopping
Center
People Make the Difference!
WELCOME BACK KU for summer session!
Kaw Valley Management is currently offering studio, one, two, and three bedroom apartments for immediate or fall occupancy!
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Sports
Kansan Summer Weekly/Wednesday, June 10, 1987
KU women win national college ultimate title
By Tim Hamilton
Sports editor
National championships aren't easy to come by.
Sports editor
Just ask any member of the KU Frisbie Club's women's ultimate team.
The KU club's team, known as Betty, recently won the first annual National Collegiate Women's Ultimate Championships held May 23-25 at Penn State University in State College, Penn.
The tournament featured the top seven women's and 14 men's teams from schools around the country.
Betty defeated the University of California at Davis, 18-17, in the finals to bring the first national collegiate women's crown home to
Lawrence.
"We weren't that much better than any of the teams. We just wanted it more," said junior team captain Yvonne Lathrop.
Betty finished with an overall tournament record of 5-3, originally losing to the teams that they would later beat in the semi-finals and finals.
"I really didn't think we could win after round robin play." Lathrop said. "I thought we might get second."
But in the semi-finals Monday morning, Betty advanced to the finals by defeating Humboldt State University, 15-14, in a contest that tested both teams' desire and endurance.
"I was a little scared because we were playing two California teams," senior Patty Wicker said. "After we beat Humboldt, I figured we had a good chance."
team believe they had a shot at winning the championship.
Only after the semi-finals did the
In the finals, underdog Betty battled an experienced team from the University of California at Davis in front of a partisan Kansas crowd of more than 250 ultimate players and fans.
Cal-Davis jumped out to an early lead, but Betty quickly fought back and led at halftime by one point. 9-8
CalDavis fought back to tie the game 15-15 before Betty sealed the win.
In the second half, Betty's tough defense cut off Cal-Davis' sideline passes and Betty gained the lead, 14-10.
"We were so scrappy on defense, and they had so few substitutes that we tired them out," graduate student Diana Pinkston said. "The lesson we learned there was how to suck it up and not give up.
"We pulled our heads together and had a certain connection on the field." Lathrop said.
Ruth Jacobson said the two games on the third day were the toughest games she had ever played in.
"Every step on the last day was painful," Jacobson said. "But we were able to keep our defense going."
THE HEAT IS ON!
STUDY SKILLS for Summer School
Basketball
- getting organized * study techniques
* time management * review strategies
Coming in July... WHAT'S OUR NAME
CARLISLE LOUIS
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Friday: ($2 Cover)
All You Can Eat Tacos
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$1 Well Drinks
Thursday: ($2 Cover)
$.75 Pitchers
MON — THURS
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With This Coupon
Expiration Date: June 25, 1987
Monday, June 15
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Wednesday: ($1 Cover)
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$1.25 Import Night
Tuesday: ($2 Cover)
$.75 Pitchers
Across From The Hillcrest Theatres 842-0526
Select Swimwear
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Hours
Mon.-Sat. 9:30-5:30
Thursday 9:30-8:30
Sunday 12:30-5:00
835 Mass • 843-4833 • Lawrence, Kans. 66044
Jay SHOPPE
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FREE/NO REGISTRATION REQUIRED
Presented by the Student Assistance Center
Minsky's PIZZA
Escape the Summer Heat and Enjoy our Summer Savings.
COUPON GOOD FOR $.50 OFF LARGE PIZZA
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KU on Wheels Proudly Presents "Summer Routes '87'"
Leave 25th & Melrose (Gatehouse Apt) to Campus On the hour—First bus 7:00 a.m., Last bus 6:00 p.m.
Leave 24th & Ridge Court to Campus and Downtown
5 minutes past hour—First bus 7:05 a.m., Last bus 6:05 p.m.
Leave Oliver Hall to Campus and Downtown
10 minutes past hour—First bus 7:10 a.m., Last bus 6:10 p.m.
Leave Union to 9th & Massachusetts (Downtown)
25 minutes past hour—First bus 7:25 a.m., Last bus 6:25 p.m.
Leave 9th & Massachusetts to Campus and 24th & Ridge Court
30 minutes past hour—First bus 7:30 a.m., Last bus 5:30 p.m.
Leave Union to 24th & Ridge court via Malls Shopping Center
40 minutes past hour—First bus 7:40 a.m., Last bus 5:40 p.m.
Leave 23rd & Louisiana to Campus and Downtown
50 minutes past hour—First bus 6:50 a.m., Last bus 5:50 p.m.
Meadowbrook/Trailridge
Leave Union to Meadowbrook
55 minutes past hour—First bus 6:55 a.m., Last bus 4:55 p.m.
Leave Meadowbrook to Campus
5 minutes past hour—First bus 7:05 a.m., Last bus 5:05 p.m. Leave Iowa & Harvard to Campus
10 minutes past hour—First bus 7:10 a.m., Last bus 5:10 p.m. Leave 9th & Avalon to Campus
13 minutes past hour—First bus 7:13 a.m., Last bus 5:13 p.m. Leave West Hills Apts to Campus
25 minutes past hour—First bus 7:25 a.m., Last bus 5:25 p.m.
Leave 7th & Michigan to Trailbridge Apts
43 minutes past hour-First bus 7:43 a.m., Last bus 5:43 p.m. Leave 7th & Florida to Campus
40 minutes past hour-First bus 7:40 a.m., Last bus 5:40 p.m. Leave Trailridge Apts to Campus
Subsidized by Student Senate All Rides 50° No Passes
18 minutes past hour—First bus 7:18 a.m., Last bus 5:18 p.m. Leave Union to Trailridge Apts, Frontier and Mesa Way 25 minutes past hour. First bus 7:05 a.m.
30 minutes past hour—First bus 7:30 a.m., Last bus 5:30 p.m. Leave Frontier and Mesa Way to Campus
47 minutes past hour—First bus 7:47 a.m., Last bus 5:47 p.m.
18 minutes past hour----First bus 7:18 a.m., Last bus 5:18 p.m.
Summer Fun for Everyone!
AQUA-AEROBICS
DATES: Monday June 8 - Wednesday July 29
TIMES: 5.00 p.m. - 7.00 p.m. on Mondays and Wednesdays
PLACE: Robinson Center, New Pool
COST: $14.00
Tennis
"Lip-Down-Jump---"
TENNIS
ENTRIES DUE: Thursday, June 11 at 5:00 p.m.
in Rm. 208 Robinson
COST: $2.00/Participant $4.00/Doubles Team
LEAGUES: Singles, Doubles
PLACE: Robinson Tennis Courts
TENNIS
SOFTBALL
MANAGER'S MEETINGS
MEETINGS
(Rosters and Entry Fees due at this time.)
SLOW PITCH: Wednesday, June 17, 6:00 p.m. in Rm. 202 Robinson
CO REC: Wednesday, June 17, 6:30 p.m. in Rm. 202 Robinson
FAST PITCH: Wednesday, June 17, 7:00 p.m. in Rm. 202 Robinson
OFFICIAL'S MEETING Thursday, June 18, 6:00 p.m. in Rm.
202 Robinson
COST: CO REC and SLOW PITCH - $10.00
FAST PITCH: $20.00
COST: CO REC and SLOW PITCH - $10.00
FAST PITCH - $20.00
游泳
CHILDREN'S SWIM PROGRAM
SESSION I
SESSION
TEST DATE: Tuesday June 2; 1:30 - 2:30 p.m.
CLASSES: Monday June 8 - Thursday June 25
COST: $18.00
SESSION II
TEST DATE: Tuesday June 30; 1:30 - 2:30 p.m.
CLASSES: Monday July 6 - Thursday July 23
COST: $18.00
RECREATION SERVICES ___
107238432649
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... 2019-03-27 ... 2019-03-28 ...
14
Wednesday, June 10, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
Three KU students, two others charged in license fraud scam
By CARLA PATINO
Staff writer
Staff writer
Three KU students and two Missourians have been charged in Douglas County District Court with felonies in connection with an operation that sold false drivers' licenses from a room in Oliver Hall.
Pamela A. Trouttetter, Overland Park freshman, and her roommate Leigh Ann Dennert, Overland Park freshman, were each charged May 11 with one count of fraud in false identifications, a class E felony. The two were residents of Oliver Hall last semester.
Julie Rebeka Breuer, Basehor freshman, was charged May 15 with one count of aiding and abetting a dealing in false documents, also a class E felony. Breuer also lived in Oliver Hall last semester.
The two Missourians, Steven Carl Dean, Osage Beach, Mo., and Keri Lee Dickerson, Camdenton, Mo., were each charged May 11 with one count of dealing in false identifications and possession of forgery devices. The charges are class E felonies.
Class E felonies are punishable by up to five years in prison and a $10,000 fine.
Jeanne Longaker, KU police spokesman, said KU police also issued notices-to-appear to six KU students who are believed to have purchased the false identifications. A notice-to-appear is similar to a traffic ticket. The recipient must answer to the charge in municipal court.
The six students are believed to have paid about $50 each for the false drivers' licenses, Longaker said. She
would not release their names.
Longaker said KU police received an anonymous call May 6 that alerted them of the false identification operation at Oliver Hall. Troutfetter, Dennert, Dean and Dickerson were arrested about 7 p.m. on May 6 at the hall, Longker said.
Breuer was arrested May 11 at KU police headquarters and then charged May 15, she said.
The bonds for Trouttetter, Dennert and Breuer were all set at $1,000, and bonds for Dean and Dickerson were set at $2,000, according to court records.
The three KU students and two Missourians are to have their preliminary hearings at 9:30 a.m., June 17, in division 1 of the district court.
Police boat rams Greenpeace ship
BRISBANE, Australia (AP) — A police launch rammed a Greenpeace vessel trying to block the path of an U.S. warship yesterday during an anti-nuclear protest by the environmental group.
Police justified their actions, saying they were forced to ram the boat, named the Vega.
"The Vega could have been sliced in half if we hadn't pushed it out of the way," a police spokesman said. "They were endangering the lives of
everyone on board, as well as the Americans."
The episode began when the Greenpeace boat, protesting the arrival of what it said was a nuclear-armed vessel, spread an anchor chain across the entrance of the Brisbane River.
Greenpeace hoped the chain would deter the U.S.-guided missile frigate USS Ramsey from entering Brisbane harbor, but the warship did not give way.
Police arrested three people, including the captain of the Vega.
A spokesman for Greenpeace, Sandy Scheltema, said the Ramsey plowed through the chain at 15 knots.
"Police were madly trying to cut the chain and then pushed the boat out of the way," she said.
The USS Ramsey is one of seven U.S. warships visiting Australia in connection with the 45th anniversary of the battle of Midway. The battle stopped the Japanese advance in the Pacific during World War II.
Computerark
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Canadian Brass Christmas Show
Wednesday, December 2, 1987
8 p.m. Hoch Auditorium
The University of Kansas 1987-88 Concert Chamber Music, and New Directions Series
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BEFORE YOU BUY Check the KANSAN.
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Koyaanisqatsi/Philip Glass**
Tuesday, November 10, 1987
8 p.m. Hock Auditorium
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Colorado String Quartet Sunday, January 17, 1988 8 p.m.
Guarneri String Quartet with Claude Frank, Pianist Sunday, November 15, 1987 3:30 p.m.
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Kansan Summer WeeklyWednesday, June 10, 1987
Pope arrives for visit in Polish homeland
WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Pope John Paul II yesterday started his third pilgrimage to his communist homeland with a promise to serve fellow Poles, and he recalled the "joy and suffering" of the Polish people.
"Oh, land of Poland, land so sorely tried," the pontiff said in his arrival speech.
The Roman Catholic Church and the Communist leadership both hope to benefit from the seven-day tour, which for the first time will take the pontiff to Gdansk, birthplace of Solidarity.
Polish leader Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski said in his welcoming remarks at Warsaw's military airport that he hoped the visit would lead to strong national agreement.
He apparently referred to the nationwide calm the Communist leaders hoped to foster after the turbulent era of the Solidarity free trade union movement. Solidarity was outlawed under 1981-1983 martial law.
The pope's week-long tour of eight cities will include a meeting with Lech Walesa, a Solidarity founder. It also will include the pope's second meeting this year with Jaruzelski, who led the martial law crackdown.
Roman Catholic bishops see the visit as a way to fight pessimism and passivity and to consolidate spiritual values linking the people of the overwhelmingly Roman Catholic nation.
In an address to cloistered men in the 14th century St. John's Cathedral in Warsaw's historic Old City, John Paul today emphasized "the Polish
reality."
"You know well that this reality is difficult, full of painful tensions, full of uncertainty and human crisis, made worse by sin, which at times, is the consequence of human weakness, but not only that," the pontif said.
The pope's Alitalia DC-9 jeteller arrived at 10:40 a.m. Jauzelski and Cardinal Jozef Glemp, primate of Poland, led the official greetings.
Hundreds of thousands of people waved and cheered as he passed along the motorcade route from the airport to the city center.
Red-and-white Polish flags, yellow-and-white Vatican flags and portraits of the pope hung from windows, sides of buildings and lamp roots.
In the audience was Mother Teresa, who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1979 for her work with the poor.
Hundreds of Poles pressed against police street barricades to hear the pope's remarks over loudspeakers.
The pope waved to the crowd but did not acknowledge the chanting.
Police made no attempt to break up the group.
As the pontifex got out at Visitation Church, about 60 people in the crowd unfurled Solidarity banners and chanted, "Democracy!" and "There is no freedom without Solidarity!"
However, a banner carried by supporters of Freedom and Peace, an illegal peace and ecology movement, was torn down by plainclothes police in a brief scuffle, according to Jacek Czaputyczw, a leader of the group. He said no one was held, but one member was slightly injured.
STATE CONTRACT PRICES
Tandon has contracted with the State of Kansas for the AT-compatible personal computers. These computers and others are now available through Computer Outlet to students and faculty at low prices such as:
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TANDON PCX-2
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TANDON PCX-20
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A SUBSIDIARY OF ENTERTAINMENT PUBLICATIONS. INC
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8:00 to 4:00 Mon. thru Friday
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Call or drop by to make an appointment. Funded by student activity fee.
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
MEET THE ACADEMIC CHALLENGES OF
the faster-paced summer course in mind. Topics
include time management, getting organized,
new technique Monday, June 15,
1:30-3:00 p.m., REGISTRATION REQUIRED. Presented by the
Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall.
∆
CAMPUS CHRISTIANS
Campus Christians will meet on Wednesday nights in the Kansas Union, Parlor A at 6:30 p.m. We will study in Lif
If you have any questions please call the Campus Christians Office at 842-6592.
A ministry to the University of Kansas
Tonight! Dance beneath the Summer stars. on the patio at Dos Hombres, 815 New Hampshire from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Music provided by Sound. (841-783) Feel the rhythm! on the night!
646 MASS 7491912
ENTERTAINMENT
WILDLIFE
SOCIAL
SERVICES
LIBERTY HALL VIDEO
Check Us Out First!
Mr. Hurk, Jones & Co. £1.00
Lt.-Sus. Jones & Co. £2.50
Part many of all lines on line.
I must get
to Liberty
Hall video
SPECIAL! SPECIAL!
2 tapes for the price of 11
Good All Day
Thursday, June 11
In Limit Must Present Coupon
MUSEUM SHOP
Museum of Natural History
M-S10-5/Sun. 1-5 864-4450
KU Campus 14th & Jayhawk
FOR RENT
International student in new remodeled building
at Stanford University, Berkeley, CA.
a. Summer $130 1/2. Prefer grad. student call
phone.
IF YOU LIKE SPACE & QUIET
WE HAVE IT AND YOU
CAN STAY WALK TO CAMPUS
CAN STILL WALK TO CAMPUS
Spacious 2 bedroom
Laundry facilities
Waterbed pool
Swimming pool
10 bathrooms
VILLAGE SQUARE
--apartments--all near KU!
MASTERCRAFT
offers..
Completely furnished
- Custom furnishings
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY
- Variety of floorplans
- Designed for privacy
- Energy efficient
- Affordable rates
CAMPUS PLACE—1145 Louisiana
841-5255
- Affordable rates
- TANGLEWOOD----10th & Arkansas
- Professional management
HANOVER PLACE—14th & Mass.
Berkley FLATS
A FEW 1 & 2 BDRM. APTS.
STILL AVAILABLE
SUNDANCE----7th & Florida
OPEN DAILY 1-5
- Designed for privacy
- Many great locations
Call or stop by
843-2116
11th & Mississippi
- Laundry facilities
- On KU Bus Route
- Great location
- walk anywhere
- Furnished Units
LEASING NOW & FOR FALL
- Over 40 New Units
FLEXIBLE LEASING
- On KU Bus Route
- Lowest utility bills in town
1123 Indiana
VALLEY
Furnished by
'hompson-Crawle'
- Gas heat, C-A, D-W
- FF refrig, Disposal
- For more info. call between 843-4754
- Quiet location
TRAILRIDGE
STUDIOS APARTMENTS TOWNHOUSES
- STUDIO—lrg, closets, kitchenette, laundry bldg. next door, water paid.
- 1 BR APT -walk in closet laundry in bldg, gas & water paid, balcony or patio.
- 2 BR townhouse-
- 2 BR townhouse—woodburning fireplace, carport with extra storage, W/D hookups, patios.
- 4 BR townhouse—fireplace, carport, W/D hookups, patio.
swimming pools, tennis courts,
basketball courts, excellent
maintenance, KU bus
2500 W. 6th St. 843-7333
EDDINGHAM PLACE
PLACE
singham (next to)
24th & Eddingham (next to Gammons)
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
- 10 or 12 month
- contract
* swimming pool
- Swimming pool
* Free Showtime
- Laundry room
- Free Snowtime Satellite T.V.
- Exercise Weightroom
- On-Site Management
X
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Professionally managed by Kau Valley Management, Inc.
---
FOR SALE
thouse, etc. 811 New Hampshire
*** MOTHALL BOLD GOOD USED FURNITURE.
Monday Friday 10:5:30 p.m., Saturday 10:2 p.m.
312 E.9h 749-4961
AUTO SALES
Is It True You Can Buy Jeep for $44 through the U. S. government? Get the facts today! Call (800) 327-6921.
HELP WANTED
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16,040-$230.390. Now
Hire Call 855-679-6007. R-7958 for
designers.
Graduate student for summer tutoring in French. Call Lori at 843-396-8192 or by June 17 to apply. Immediate opening for Student Senate Executive Secretary. Part time position, 20 hrs. per week Applications available in Senate office, basement building. Apply online for a month. Position runs through school year
Great Neighborhood Assoc. Coordinator 20
College of Art, University of Chicago
DNA Board of Directors, 1000 Ohio Lawrence
OVERSEAS JOBS Alissa Crusso Listings
Now Hiring: To $94k, 808-657-6000 U.S. JG-9738.
System Programmer Intern Academic Computing Services. Deadline: June 21, 2007, **50%** student monthly position. $500-$800 per mo. Dates: May-June. Operate system and utility software; evaluate and test proposed system software upgrades. Requirements: demonstrated ability in one or more of the following competencies: experience or an undergraduate degree in a computer-related discipline; competence in one or more of the following requirements: KU enrollment. Send resume to: Richard Kershner Baheim, Academic Computing Services, Computer Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KC. **6604/8** EAIS
BUS. PERSONAL
Ballet, jazz, more dance, folk dancing and special stretch classes. Bleg-Adv. Lawrence
HEADACHE, BAKACHIE, ARM PAIN, LEG PAIN? Student and most insurance accepted. For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark Johnson 843-9797
Midlife Crisis. Ballet and Jazz for the body that has lived in law. Lawrence School of Ballet
Kare and Used Records. Buy, Sell, or Trade.
Quantum's 811 New Hampshire.
THA! LANGUAGEU MACHET WANTED Call
LANGUAGEU after 4:30 p.m. call M-843-7989 Call
M-843-7989
GREENS PARTY SUPPLY
808 W.23rd
Weekly Beer Specials
June 10-16
Bud 12 pk. $5.42
Old Style 12 pk. $4.26
Wiedemann 12 pk. $3.49
SERVICES OFFERED
Sailboard Lessons
Every weekend thru summer
9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.
$60.00 for 7 hour course
Class size limited to four people
Reduced prices
SPEEDWATER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841.2316
IMMIGRATION LAW CLINIC - Green Cards, Armney, Departement, Appeals. Work Comp. Founded 1970. Call for appl. 310 Armour, NKC. 491,140 (74 Hz).
SUNFLOWER
for groups of four
804 Massachusetts
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
913-843-5000
The College of Liberal Arts offers tutoring in math and English courses through Supportive services. Reasonable Rates. Apply at SES Building. 864-3971
- Hourly Classes
$25 per month
SUMMER
MEMBERSHIP
Toning Programs
- Air Conditioned
- Individualized Weight and Toning Programs
- Body Toning Classes
- Shower Facilities
- Tanning
- Exclusively For Women
- Certified Instructors IDEA/RHYTHMIC AEROBICS
- Shower Facilities
- Membership Transferable to 2500 Clubs
FITNESS CLUB
BodyShapes
Hours:
Wed. 9:30-10:30
Sat. 9:00-10:30
Sun. 10:00-12:00
Sun. 1:00-4:00
601 Kasold Westridge Shopping Ctr. 843-4040
VOLUNTEER NEEDED Headquarters Counseling Center. Training provided (mainly on Sun and Wed, evelednes). info meetings. Wed, June to or Sun, June 14, 8-9 p.m., 1419 Mass, 841-234.
TYPING
-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large.
-250 pages. No typing or wordprocessing work.
-882,745 rows.
AAA WORDPROCESSING quality workweek
Wednesday, April 23rd from 8:00 to 10:00.
weekends. Campus pick up, drop off available.
ACU 'NOW' NOV. 2015 writing #139
WRITING LIFELINE 841-3469
DISSERTATIONS. THESES. LAW
DISSERTATIONS. THESES. LAW
will be return. KEEP WATCHING THIS AD
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Donna has 30 years of experience with
applications, mailings lists, Letter qual
formatting and mailing services.
*Experienced (typist) tissues, dissections, termina*
*upharses* 842-310 after 6:15 p.m. or *Fal/Sal/Sun*
*upharses*
Experienced Typist at reasonable rate: Call Holly at 843-0111
For professional typing/word processing, call Myra 81-4986 Summer special $12.50/page.
Go to the beach while we print your papers! Come
to the beach and welcome us!
TRANSCRIPTION
We will transcribe what you say.
Quality typing, excellent spelling, punctuation,
grammar and syntax. Available online
service. Buses: 8459230
www.delivery-buses.com
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing, manuscript resumes, theses, letter resumes.
TYPNING PLUS assistance with composition, edgar, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes. HAVE M.S. Degree. 841-6254
Word Processing Typiist. Academic Computing Services. Deadline at 5 p.m., June 18, 1987. Student hourly and work study pay per day during summer. Duties: Entering and editing text using a word processor (trained provided) and data entry. Required Qualification: demonstrated ability to use a word processing program. Roberts, Computer Center, 864-289 to fill out application. EO/AA Employer.
WANTED
Female Roommate. Old house, upstairs, partially furnished, garden, patio, quiet neighborhood near campus. Summer, possibly Fall. $145 / 1rc utilities. Non-smoker call #81-4675.
16
Wednesday, June 10, 1987/Kansan Summer Weeklv
Stop signs installed at train crossing site
By KEITH ROBISON
Staff writer
Two months after four KU students were killed at a train crossing north of Lawrence, Douglas County officials have had stop signs installed at the site.
Frank Hempen, Douglas County public works director, said, "It takes some time to get things through the bureaucracy in Topeka, but we put the stop signs up. We've got railroad crossing signs in the works.
"It took us two days to do it after we got permission from the secretary of transportation. I'd like to make that very clear."
The four students were killed instantly when a Union Pacific train
going about 65 mph smashed into their car broadside as it attempted to cross the tracks of the crossing. The crossing is about one mile north of the Lawrence city limits and about 75 yards west of U.S. Highway 24-59 on county road 1900N.
The students killed were Daniel J. McDevitt, 19, Salina sophomore; Joel D. Granham, 20, Overland Park sophomore; Jennifer L. Jones, 19, St. Louis freshman; and Elizabeth A. Dunlap, 21, Salina junior.
Douglas County commissioners and representatives from the Kansas Department of Transportation and Union Pacific railroad inspected the crossing in early May and recommended active signals for the crossing at the site, known as Lapad t's Corner, as well as three other Douglas County railroad crossings. The other three crossings are: township road 417, a half-mile west of the Leavenworth County line; township road 64, north of the East Lawrence interchange of the Kansas Turnpike; and township road 58, close to the Jefferson County line, south of U.S. Highway 24-59.
Active crossings include gates, lights, lights, a motion detector system and a back-up system. They cost between $90,000 and $100,000 each and require six to nine months for installation, said Edward Trandahl, director of special projects for Union Pacific.
"It takes six to nine months to get the material ordered, get the stuff in place, and get the job done. This stuff isn't just lying around waiting for us to use it," Trandahl said.
He said the U.S. government would subsidize 90 percent of the cost if 10 percent in matching funds could be found.
Hempen said that he recently asked Union Pacific to split the 10 percent, about $9,000 to $10,000, with the county. He said the railroad had not replied vet.
"Santa Fe has participated in the past and in the preliminary talks Union Pacific has seemed receptive. I don't know if it (the sharing of costs) works for other counties, but I always asked," Hempen said.
Paola junior is first Dyck scholarship recipient
A University of Kansas student from Paola is the first recipient of a scholarship honoring a former KU administrator in education.
ory of her late husband, Gil Dyck.
Gil Dyck, former dean of educational services, died of cancer in December 1985.
Diahn Sharp, Paola junior,
received the scholarship, established
by Norma Dyck, Lawrence, in mem-
He received a doctorate in school administration from KU in 1967. In 1968, he became the assistant registrar in the office of admissions and records. He became director of admissions in 1972, dean of admissions and records in 1973 and dean of educational services in 1982.
Education.
The scholarship was established for students in the KU School of
Suzanne Collins, assistant to the dean of the school, said, "It's a scholarship for an outstanding student. That is the only stipulation. This year we used grade point average."
STUDENT GETA 28% GROUPS:
WHEN YOU ADVERTISE IN THE KANSAN!
DISCOUNT,
Date: 06/01/87 ** THE UNIVERSITY OF GAMMONS **
20-00-00 PARTY SCHEDULE FOR SUMMER 1987
343336 McKenzie, Spud A.
DEPT CRS TITLF
page 1
A4
| CRS | TITLE | INSTRUCTOR | HRS | TIME | DAYS | BLDG |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| THMA 280 | ADVANCED COMFEDY | NASTER | 6.0 | 10:00-12:00 | T | GAMMONS |
PSYC 574 ALTERED STATES OF CONSCIOUS (5* DRAWS & 50* WELL DRINKS)
HPER 180 INTERPERSONAL RELATIONS & DANCING
SW 303 HUMAN SEXUALITY HOLLANDER 6.0 8:00-2:00A S GAMMONS IN EVERYDAY LIFE TOTAL 24.0
(TUFF SCHEDULE)
GAMES SNOWS
We're drivin' hard bargains on the car stereo winners!
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The Audio Video Hi-Fi Grand Prix Awards are
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For contestants:
25. 000 watts. Up to 150 cars. They'll be coming to Car Audio Nationals in a nationwide challenge to find the best sound on wheels.
--SUNDAY, JUNE 14th
And this is the PRELIMS
Give your ears a day they'll never forget.
Experience Car Audio Nationals Preliminary Competition.
--12:01 p.m.- 5:00 p.m.
Muscular Dystrophy Association
~25th and Iowa, Lawrence,Ks.
BIGGARD DESIGN
WIDA
ASSOCIATION
SPONSORED BY
--Pre-registration donation to MDA $5 in advance
$10 on day of event
FREE event T-shirt
for contestants
Judging Sound systems will be judged on "event day by independent representatives from the stereo industry. The general criteria will be sound quality, installation quality, attention to installation detail, frequency response, loudness (in each of 3 separate power categories) and overall design.
Judging:
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from
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CAR STEREO
25th and IOWA LAWRENCE, KS
LAWRENCE TAE-KWON-DO SCHOOL
842.1438
66046
• Self-Defense
• Self-Confidence
• Self-Discipline
• Self-Esteem
Announcing the new school at THE MALLS SHOPPING CENTER Factor-E Aerobics 842-1983 or 841-5661
711 W. 23rd
Classes: Mon., thru Fr.
Chief Instructor:
Master Ki-June Park
• Special student rate
• Lower than the lowest price in town
Self Defense • Physical Wellness
Self-Confidence • Men and women of all
Self-Discipline ages (4 to 80 yrs.)
Self-Esteem
711 W. 23rd
Class
Chief Instructor:
Master Ki-June Park
• Special study
• Lower than the price in town
MILK MILK
BACK TO KINKO'S
- High quality copies
- Low cost
- Open early, open late, open weekends
- Close to campus
kinko's®
843-8019 749-5392
Kinko's Downtown Kinko's 23rd. St.
9th & Vermont 23rd & iowa
841-6177
Kinko's Campus
12th & Oroad Ave.
Sizzlin' Summer Savings
or or
BUY YOUR SUMMER SCHOOL BOOKS/
SUPPLIES BY JUNE 11
and receive a
ALPINE • NAKAMICHI • DENON • YAMAHA • BOSTON ACOUSTICS
FREE
PUBLIC SCHOOL OF ELEGANCE
OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
MUSIC
Battery
checkbook cover w/calculator
with any $50.00 purchase
walkman AM/FM radio w/headphones
with any $75.00 or more purchase
jogger's cassette player w/ headset
with any $100 or more purchase
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd. Lawrence, Ks. 66044
$2.00 Off
Any Backpack
EASTPAK*
Choose from any Eastpak or
KU Imprinted Backpack
Jayhawk
Bookstore
CAMERA
S
layhawk
Bookstore
AT THE TOP OF NORWICH HILL
"At the top of Naismith Hill"
50¢ OFF
CLIFFS NOTES
Choose from 350
Cliff Notes titles
NO LIMIT
Cliffs
NOTES"
Cliffs NOTES"
S
ayhawk Bookstore
At the top of Neesmith Hill. 843-3828
1
1
2.OO OFF
Any garment purchases
of ten dollars or more!
(Limit one coupon per customer.)
Expires June 30
Jayhawk Bookstore
10
WEATHER
Today: Mostly sunny, high about 95 degrees, overnight low about 70 degrees. Chance of thunderstorms is 20 percent.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy with a 30 percent chance of thunderstorms. Highs about 93, overnight lows about 70 degrees.
Weekend: Slight chance of thunderstorms Friday and Saturday, weekend highs 85 to 90 degrees, lows 68 to 70 degrees.
weekend highs 85 to 90 degrees, lows 68 to 70 degrees.
Meet KU's new baseball coach Jury returns verdict in Goetz case Review of Witches of Eastwick
Page 11
Page 2
Page 7
Wednesday June 17,1987
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Vol. 97, No.147 (USPS 650-640)
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Plans for reactor site activate approval, concern
By STORMY WYLIE
Staff writer
Plans for storing KU's hazardous waste in the nuclear reactor building on campus have sparked premature concern, a University official said earlier this week.
The official, Steven Cater, KU environmental health and safety officer, said, "Let me emphasize this. We are just trying to get approval right now. If we get it, then we find the money. But even if we do get approval, we may not do it.
"There're really a lot of 'it's involved here—if we get approval, if we find the money, if we can do what we want and if there's not a lot of opposition."
The University is seeking approval from the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission to remodel the reactor building into a hazardous waste temporary storage area.
Residents react to hazardous waste storage
By STORMY WYLIE Staff writer
Mention the words "hazardous waste," and people tend to become uneasy. Tell them it might be stored next door to where they live, and they become concerned
Residents of Phi Kappa Psifraternity house, 1602 W. 15th St. and the Jayhawk Towers Apartments, 1603 W. 15th St., expressed obvious concern about the plans to remodel the nuclear reactor center to house hazardous waste
The building is located on West 15th street, across the street from the Towers and just east of the fraternity.
Harold Rosson, associate de engineering, wrote the NRC week to ask for permission to rel the reactor building.
John Montgomery, Junction City junior and vice president of the fraternity, said he wanted to know more about the plans.
The University seeks approval of its plans from the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
"I'm a little uneasy about this," he said. "I would want to know more about it. When they took the nuclear stuff out a year and a half ago, it was a little scary."
The radioactive fuel from the nuclear reactor was taken out Jan. 28 and Feb. 2, 1966, in two loads. The reactor began operating in 1961 and was used by the School of Engineering and department of
radiation physics
Sue Reborn, housemother at the fraternity, said she also was uneasy about the plans for storing the waste.
"I have mixed feelings about it," she said. "My personal opinion is: I don't like it, but what can I do about it? How safe is it, that's the question."
Tina Lux, Kansas City, Kan.
senior, and Terry Tucker, Houston
senior, said they wouldn't be
concerned unless the hazardous waste
was nuclear waste.
Tucker said, "I think a lot of people here will be unhappy about it if they do put it over there, but I don't think anyone will move over it. There will be some concern but not panic."
Lisa Carlsten, Lawrence junior,
said she would just wait and see
what happened. She also lives at
the Towers.
"I don't like the idea of it being within a 50-mile radius of Lawrence," she said. "Anything that is hazardous is dangerous. The problem is, I wouldn't want it all in one spot. If there's a chance any of those chemicals could mix . . ."
"I don't really want it across the street," Lux said. "I don't want it anywhere."
"The trailer itself is not unsafe, but is not in the best condition," Cater said.
He said the trailer was quite a distance from the main campus and had no electricity, heating, cooling or phone. Many of the chemicals need to be kept at a fixed temperature.
the KANU tower, Cater said. The waste is transferred every four months to out-of-state storage facilities.
Although the reactor was em of all radioactive fuel last year still licensed by the NRC, and it approve any plans to the rea said Robert Bearse, associate chancellor for research, grad
and just east of the Phi Kappa Psi
f studies and public service
ticides, Drano or Liquid Plumber,
"Sure they are hazardous, but so is
Cater said the University had two options other than remodeling the reactor building: to fix up the trailer or to build a new facility to store the waste. However, the federal government denied a request from the University for money to build a new storage building last year.
Tentative plans to remodel the reactor building call for the addition of a room on each side of the reactor vessel, located on the south side of the building, Cater said. The rooms would be partitioned to separate the
When You Want This Great Taste...
Summer provides
BY KEITH ROBISON
off writer
or potential KU student parents, summer orientation than just enrollment at know the campus.
ad of it being an enrol an admission prop a transition pro Ulmer, coordina If you can h the first y ups off a lot. separation ts at ori e transit and their f
"One thing we want to stress this is a transition for the f she said. "As the students away from home, they be come defined in terms of their egonationalities and cognitive ciment."
the
con
in
bo
g
or
till
the
like
the
long
as
in
look
the
sec-
ili-
he
load
BAN
Call The "Pizza Experts"At Pizza Hut Delivery.
her staff talked with parents about the changes in values and beliefs that students go through while at school.
the orientation program this summer.
See ORIENT, p. 8, col. 1
percentage in offerings, he said James Carothers, associate dean of liberal arts, said he was surprised that the enrollment had
Totals 8625 8584 8607 8797 7972
Cynnise Sheridan Matt Walton/KANSAN GRAND
WEATHER
Today: Mostly sunny, high about 95 degrees, overnight low about 70 degrees. Chance of thunderstorms is 20 percent.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy with a 30 percent chance of thunderstorms. Highs about 93, overnight lows about 70 degrees.
Weekend: Slight chance of thunderstorms Friday and Saturday, weekend highs 85 to 90 degrees, lows 68 to 70 degrees.
Meet KU's new baseball coach Jury returns verdict in Goetz case Review of Witches of Eastwick
Page 11
Page 2
Page 7
Wednesday June 17, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 147 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Plans for reactor site activate approval, concern
By STORMY WYLIE
Staff writer
Plans for storing KU's hazardous waste in the nuclear reactor building on campus have sparked premature concern, a University official said earlier this week.
The official, Steven Cater, KU environmental health and safety officer, said, "Let me emphasize this. We are just trying to get approval right now. If we get it, then we find the money. But even if we do get approval, we may not do it.
"There's really a lot of 'its' involved here — if we get approval, if we find the money, if we can do what we want and if there's not a lot of opposition."
The University is seeking approval from the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission to remodel the reactor building into a hazardous waste temporary storage area.
Harold Rosson, associate dean of engineering, wrote the NRC last week to ask for permission to remodel the reactor building
Although the reactor was e of all radioactive fuel last ye still licensed by the NRC, and approve any plans to the r said Robert Bearse, associa chancellor for research, g
Residents react to hazardous waste storage
By STORMY WYLIE Staff writer
Mention the words "hazardous waste," and people tend to become uneasy. Tell them it might be stored next door to where they live, and they become concerned
Residents of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity house, 1602 W. 15th St., and the Jayhawker Towers Apartments, 1603 W. 15th St., expressed obvious concern about the plans to remodel the nuclear reactor center to house hazardous waste
The building is located on West 15th Street, across the street from the Towers and just east of the fraternity.
John Montgomery, Junction City junior and vice president of the fraternity, said he wanted to know more about the plans.
The University seeks approval of its plans from the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
"I'm a little uneasy about this," he said. "I would want to know more about it. When they took the nuclear stuff out a year and a half ago, it was a little scary."
The radioactive fuel from the nuclear reactor was taken out Jan. 28 and Feb. 2, 1986, in two loads. The reactor began operating in 1961 and was used by the School of Engineering and department of
studies and public service.
radiation physics.
Bearse said that he hoped to hear from the NRC in July, and that it
Sue Rehorn, housemother at the fraternity, said she also was uneasy about the plans for storing the waste.
"I have mixed feelings about it," she said. "My personal opinion is: I don't like it, but what can I do about it? How safe is it, that's the question."
Tina Lux, Kansas City, Kan. senior, and Terry Tucker, Houston senior, said they wouldn't be concerned unless the hazardous waste was nuclear waste.
Tucker said, "I think a lot of people here will be unhappy about it if they do put it over there, but I don't think anyone will move over it. There will be some concern but not panic."
"I don't really want it across the street," Lux said. "I don't want it anywhere."
Lisa Carlsten, Lawrence junior,
said she would just wait and see
what happened. She also lives at
the Towers.
"I don't like the idea of it being within a 50-mile radius of Lawrence," she said. "Anything that is hazardous is dangerous. The problem is, I wouldn't want it all in one spot. If there's a chance any of those chemicals could mix . . ."
the KANU tower, Cater said. The waste is transferred every four months to out-of-state storage facilities.
"The trailer itself is not unsafe, but is not in the best condition," Cater said.
He said the trailer was quite a distance from the main campus and had no electricity, heating, cooling or phone. Many of the chemicals need to be kept at a fixed temperature.
ticides, Drano or Liquid Plumber,
household ammonia, paint solvents,
or even a broken mercury thermometer or lead shotgun shells," he
Cater said the University had two options other than remodeling the reactor building: to fix up the trailer or to build a new facility to store the waste. However, the federal government denied a request from the University for money to build a new storage building last year.
and just east of the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity house, 1602 W. 15th St.
The proposed facility would house
Tentative plans to remodel the reactor building call for the addition of a room on each side of the reactor vessel, located on the south side of the building, Cater said. The rooms would be partitioned to separate the various kinds of hazardous materials.
"Sure they are hazardous, but so is life," Bearse said. "People are not going to start dying like flies, but their victims could be treated with
PAGE 20
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"One thing we want to this is a transition for t she said. "As the stu away from home, they be defined in terms of their sonalities and cognitition."
She said that at oriety her staff talked with p the changes in values and students go through while
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Pizza Hut DELIVERY
So give us a call, Pizza Hut! Delivery is going all out to bring our great taste—home to you.
Hours: 11:00 AM-12:00 Midnight Sunday-Thursday 11:00 AM-2:00 AM Friday-Saturday
Ulmer said the separat students from parents at was important to the trieess that students and th go through.
By KEITH ROBISON
For Fast Delivery Call:
"Instead of it being an program or an admission should be a transition said Lovely Ulmer, coor student through the first attrition rate drops off a.
Staff writer
For potential KU stu their parents, summer or more than just enrolle ment to know the campus.
In Lawrence Call: 843-2211 In Kansas City Call: 648-8888
1987 Pizza Hut Inc
DOUBLE DEAL!
$2 OFF Any Large Pizza
DOUBLE COUPON VALUE if used between 11AM and 4PM!
Order Any Large Pizza Between 11AM and 4PM and we'll
Double Your Discount From $5.00
PLEASE MENTION COUPON WHEN ORDERING. VALID FOR DELIVERY ONLY. NOT VALID IN CONNECTION WITH ANY OTHER PIZZA HIT! YOU OWNER. The coupon per pie per pet delivery at participating Pizza Hut® (formerly Osservato) Offer good offer. Offer good offer. LIMITED UNTIL DEMAND AREA $10.00 Charge ALL Return Checks. Our drivers can charge more than $10.00.
Limited delivery area
Pizza Hut
In Lawrence
Call: 843-2211
In Kansas City Call: 648-8888
CALL FOR LUNCH—OPEN AT 11 AM!
DELIVERY limited delivery area
$3.00 OFF Any Large Super Supreme Pizza or $2.00 OFF Any Medium Super Supreme Pizza
---
CALL FOR LUNCH-OPEN AT 11 AM:
'1987' Pizza Hut, Inc.
PLEASE MENTION COUPON WHILE OWNING. VALID FOR DELIVERY ONLY. NOT VALID IN CONNECTION WITH ANY OTHER PIZZA HUFT® U17™. One coupon per pizza per delivery of Pizza Hut® Delivery units, offer good on regular prices through June 28, **10%** (1-20) daily reimbursable for delivery area AIRA. **$10** Charge on All Returned Cheeses. Our drivers no more than $10
© 1987 Pizza Hut, Inc.
In Lawrence
Pizza Hut
DELIVERY
Call: 843-2211
Any Large Pizza For A Medium Pizza Price
CALL FOR LUNCH-OPEN AT 11 AM
Call: 843-2211 In Kanya Gurga College
PEASE MENTION COUPON WHEN ORDERING. VALID FOR DELIVERY ONLY. NOT VALID IN
PLEASE MENTION WITH ANY OTHER HILT HUFF. OFFER one coupon per delivery at
participating Plaza & other stores. Other good offers on regular packages through the
20 cent red card reduction limit. LIMITED AREA. AREA 15. $0 Change if ALL Returned Chips. Our
duty only on more than $20
Fire ng in
In Lawrence
Call:
Pizza Hut
DELIVERY
SEE ORIENT, p. e., col. In Kangaroo City, Calif. 85828
Limited delivery area
LUNCH SPECIAL FREE 6 Pack of Pepsi-Cola® With The Purchase of Any Large Pizza
CALL FOR LUNCH-OOPEN AT 11 AM!
iversities.
as of June
1,266, or 40.
IAIAA
PLEASE MENTION COUPON WHEN ORDERING. VALID FOR DELIVERY ONLY. VALID IN CONNECTION WITH ANY OTHER PIZZA HUFT® HOT! One coupon per party per delivery of Pizza Huff® Delivery items. Offer good only on regular prices through June 28, 1978. $10 (at rent) + Limited DELIVERY AREA. AIR$ 10 (Charge on All Returned Chips). Our cars carry no more than $250.
veway would
Call: 843-2211
In Rancho City Call: 654-9999
1987 Pizza Hut, Inc.
In Lawrence
as of June
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KANSAN off in upper it. The
Pizza Hut
DELIVERY
limited delivery area
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GRAPHIC
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WEATHER
Today: Mostly sunny, high about 95 degrees, overnight low about 70 degrees. Chance of thunderstorms is 20 percent.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy with a 30 percent chance of thunderstorms. Highs about 93, overnight lows about 70 degrees.
Weekend: Slight chance of thunderstorms Friday and Saturday, weekend highs 85 to 90 degrees, lows 68 to 70 degrees.
Meet KU's new baseball coach Jury returns verdict in Goetz case Review of Witches of Eastwick
Page 11
Page 2
Page 7
Wednesday June 17,1987
Vol. 97, No. 147 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Plans for reactor site activate approval, concern
By STORMY WYLIE
Staff writer
Plans for storing KU's hazardous waste in the nuclear reactor building on campus have sparked premature concern, a University official said earlier this week.
The official, Steven Cater, KU environmental health and safety officer, said, "Let me emphasize this. We are just trying to get approval right now. If we get it, then we find the money. But even if we do get approval, we may not do it.
Residents react to hazardous waste storage
"There're really a lot of 'ifs' involved here — if we get approval, if we find the money, if we can do what we want and if there's not a lot of opposition."
The University is seeking approval from the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission to remodel the reactor building into a hazardous waste temporary storage area.
Harold Rosson, associate dean of engineering, wrote the NRC last week to ask for permission to remodel the reactor building.
Although the reactor was emptied of all radioactive fuel last year, it is still licensed by the NRC, and it must approve any plans to the reactor, said Robert Bearse, associate vice chancellor for research, graduate
By STORMY WYLIE
Staff writer
Residents of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity house, 1602 W. 15th St., and the Jayhawker Towers Apartments, 1603 W. 15th St., expressed obvious concern about the plans to remodel the nuclear reactor center to house hazardous waste
The building is located on West 15th Street, across the street from the Towers and just east of the fraternity.
The University seeks approval of its plans from the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission
John Montgomery, Junction City junior and vice president of the fraternity, said he wanted to know more about the plans.
"I'm a little uneasy about this," he said. "I would want to know more about it. When they took the child, we had both, and a half ago, it was a little scary."
The radioactive fuel from the nuclear reactor was taken out Jan. 28 and Feb. 2, 1986, in two loads. The reactor began operating in 1961 and was used by the School of Engineering and department of
Sue Reburn, housemother at the fraternity, said she also was uneasy about the plans for storing the waste.
radiation physics.
"I have mixed feelings about it," she said. "My personal opinion is: I don't like it, but what can I do? How safe is it, that's the question."
Tina Lux, Kansas City, Kan. senior, and Terry Tucker, Houston senior, said they wouldn't be concerned unless the hazardous waste was nuclear waste.
"I don't really want it across the street," Lux said. "I don't want it anywhere."
Tucker said, "I think a lot of people here will be unhappy about it if they do put it over there, but I don't think anyone will move over it. There will be some concern but not panic."
Lisa Carsten, Lawrence junior,
said she would just wait and see
what happened. She also lives at the
Towers.
"I don't like the idea of it being within a 50-mile radius of Lawrence," she said. "Anything that is hazardous is dangerous. The problem is, I wouldn't want it all in one spot. If there's a chance any of those chemicals could mix . . ."
studies and public service.
Bearse said that he hoped to hear from the NRC in July, and that it would be several months after that before remodeling could begin. He said it would cost about $40,000 to remodel.
The nuclear reactor building is across the street from Jayhawker TowerS Apartments, 1603 W. 15th St..
and just east of the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity house, 1602 W. 15th St.
The proposed facility would house chemicals, acids, bases, oil-based paints, paint solvents, gasoline, used fuel oil, herbicides, pesticides and other wastes, Cater said.
Bearse said none of these materials were dangerous as long as they were properly disposed.
"Sure they are hazardous, but so is life," Bearse said. "People are not going to start dying like flies, but these materials must be treated with the right amount of respect."
Cater said several types of hazardous waste could be found in most homes.
ticides, Drano or Liquid Plumber, household ammonia, paint solvents, or even a broken mercury thermometer or lead shotgun shells," he said. "These are all what we consider hazardous wastes and have to deal with at the University."
"A typical home will have some oil-based paints, herbicides and pes-
Presently, the University stores its hazardous waste in a semitrailer west of Iowa Street and just north of
the KANU tower, Cater said. The waste is transferred every four months to out-of-state storage facilities.
"The trailer itself is not unsafe, but is not in the best condition," Cater said.
He said the trailer was quite a distance from the main campus and had no electricity, heating, cooling or phone. Many of the chemicals need to be kept at a fixed temperature.
Cater said the University had two options other than remodeling the reactor building: to fix up the trailer or to build a new facility to store the waste. However, the federal government denied a request from the University for money to build a new storage building last year.
Tentative plans to remodel the reactor building call for the addition of a room on each side of the reactor vessel, located on the south side of the building, Cater said. The rooms would be partitioned to separate the various kinds of hazardous materials.
He also said the Lawrence Fire Department suggested putting in several safety factors.
Bearse said rerouting the driveway to accommodate heavy trucks would cost the most.
THE WATER IS ALL AROUND.
Cooler weekend forecast for city
By CARLA PATINO
Staff writer
It should be easier to breathe this weekend.
Richard McNulty, deputy meteorologist at the National Weather Service in Topeka, said temperatures should fall by the weekend.
"The moisture should also decrease," he said. "The uncomfortableness that the humidity levels bring would be less."
Bill Hibbert, Liverpool, N.Y. senior studying meteorology, said the heat wave that broke over Lawrence this week was caused by a very persistent high pressure system. The system, he said, was not allowing fronts to come through and lower the temperature.
Hibbert said that at this time last summer Lawrence was as hot as it is now, but the nights were cooler.
"By June 1986, we had temperatures in the higher 90%, but we had cooler nights with temperatures in the higher 60%," he said. "Lately, night temperatures are in the mid-
to upper 70s, due to the higher humidity."
Sarah Eiesland, Topeka junior and a cashier at the Kansas Union, said it took some time for the air conditioner at the Union to cool down the building in the morning.
"The air conditioner is turned on around seven in the morning, and it doesn't cool the building until eight," she said. "But it gets pretty cool around noon."
"It is a shock after being here during the day to go out. It is like walking into a blast furnace," she said.
"It is uncomfortable to work in these conditions," he said. "I look forward to 3:30 p.m. That is the time I quit."
Terry Nash, a plumber working outside the Union on renovations, said he tried to cope with the heat by drinking a lot of water.
Robert Porter, associate director of the physical plant for facilities and operations, said that the team has designed the strain of cooling the campus.
"We don't have any more load than in winter time." he said.
Jennifer jameson, tett, and Abbe Schrager, Chicago juniors, cool off in the Chi Omega fountain. High humidity and temperatures in the upper 90s have area residents seeking ways to cope with the heat. The students stopped at the fountain on their way home from class.
Summer orientation provides transitions
By KFITH ROBISON
Staff writer
For potential KU students and their parents, summer orientation is more than just enrollment and getting to know the campus.
"Instead of it being an enrollment program or an admission program, it should be a transition program," said Lovely Ulmer, coordinator for orientation. "If you can get the student through the first year, the attrition rate drops on a lot."
"One thing we want to stress is that this is a transition for the family," she said. "As the students break away from home, they become more in terms of their egos, personalities and cognitive development."
Ulmer said the separation of students from parents at orientation was important to the transition process that students and their families go through.
She said that at orientation she and her staff talked with parents about the changes in values and beliefs that students go through at school.
"If students come home and announce that they've changed religions, or if a student was a Republican when he went to school and comes home a Democrat, that's normal."
Ulmer and her staff usually begin preparing for the summer orientation sessions in February, when student and staff members are selected to help with the program.
"The kind of staff I like to put together is the kind of staff that represents diversification of the University. I want it to be balanced so that a new student can identify with at least one of the staff members," she said.
Ulmer said that between 4,000 and 5,000 new students would go through the orientation program this summer.
KU summer enrollment down 10 percent
"Hopefully, by the time they graduate, they will have returned to the values they came here with," Ulmer said.
"We had 120 applications for 10 positions. It's very competitive," she said.
See ORIENT, p. 8, col. 1
By CARLA PATINO
Staff writer
A University official provided figures Monday that show enrollment at the University of Kansas this summer semester is down about 10 percent.
Sally Bryant, assistant to the dean of educational services, said that a total of 7,972 students were enrolled at KU campuses as of June 9, the first day of the summer session.
First day enrollment figures for summer 1986 show that 8,797 students were enrolled. 825 more students than this summer. The official total, computed at the end of the session, jumped to 9,482 last year, an increase of 685 students from the first day count.
According to University figures, Lawrence campus enrollment was 6,390, compared with 7,273 in 1986. However, enrollment climbed at the University of Kansas Medical Center, where 1,582 students were enrolled, compared with 1,524 in summer 1986.
As of Tuesday, officials at the Med Center were unable to provide figures of an increase or decrease in summer course offerings.
Del Brinkman, vice chancellor of academic affairs, said he had expected summer enrollment to decline because of fewer courses being offered this summer.
"The percentage of the decrease is less than the percentage in offerings." he said.
James Carothers, associate dean of liberal arts, said he was surprised that the enrollment had
declined by only about 10 percent when course offerings had been cut by about 25 percent.
"I thought that summer would probably be proportional with the budget cuts," he said.
Don Foster, registrar at Kansas State University, and Myrre Roe, director of communications at Wichita State.
enrollment was up at their respective universities.
Foster said the tentative enrollment, as of June 8, for on-campus classes at K-State was 4,266, or 40 more students than last year.
Roe said enrollment at Wichita State, as of June 12, was 7,771.
University of Kansas Enrollment
Summer Session - First Day
1983-1987
1983 1984 1985 1986 1987
7050
7058
7103
7273
Campus and off-campus courses
1575
1526
1504
1524
1582
Kansas University Medical Center
Totals 8625 8584 8607 8797 7972
2
Wednesday, June 17, 1987
Around the World
Parents allowed to visit teen-ager imprisoned for flight into Moscow
MOSCOW — The parents of a West German teen-ager jailed for flying a plane onto Red Square spent three hours at Lefortovpo prison yesterday, visiting their son for the first time since his May 28 arrest and talking with Soviet investigators.
In a prepared statement issued by Karl Heinz and Maria Kurt, they said their son, Mathias, “is feeling well, and according to him, he also is being treated well.”
The Rusts said their conversation with Mathias was agreeable, but they declined to answer any questions about the meeting.
West Germany's Stern magazine paid the couple's expenses for the Moscow visit in return for exclusive access to their commentaries, said an embassy official who wished to remain anonymous.
A West German Embassy spokesman confirmed that the Rusts met with their 19-year-old son for one hour and then with the investigator overseeing the case.
Gerhard Enver Schroembengens, embassy chief for legal and consular affairs, sat in on the meeting between the Rusts and their son, but only the embassy translator knew of the discussions with the investigators.
She declined to answer other questions about the Rust case.
Tuesday's meetings were only the second between the jailed pilot and West German officials since the incident on May 28. Schreibemgens spent 30 minutes with Rust on June 1, when he described the young pilot as calm about his detention.
West German diplomats are trying to arrange another visit between the Ruts and Mathias, the spokesman said.
No formal charges have been filed against Rust, and Soviet law allows investigators to take up to two months before issuing an indictment against an imprisoned suspect.
Contra air force chief hurt in plane crash
MANAGUA, Nicaragua — The chief of the contra guerrilla air force was seriously wounded in the crash of a rebel aircraft that was hit by army ground fire, a Defense Ministry spokesman said yesterday.
Capt. Rosa Pasos said Juan Gomez, chief of the Nicaragua Democratic Force's air force, and two other contras were seriously wounded when the twin-engine Beechcraft Baron crashed and burned after being hit Monday in northern Nicaragua.
Pasos said the others aboard were Gomez's son, Juan Jr. the co-pilot, and Alvaro Carrasco, the gunner, Capt. Pasos said the information came from intelligence sources that she did not identify
The Nicaraguan Democratic Force is the main fighting force of the U.S. - backed rebels.
Pasos said the plane fired a rocket at a Sandinista army command post four miles north of Murra, 108 miles north of Managua, before it was hit. She said the rocket missed.
She said the aircraft limped across the Honduran border, 15 miles from the command post, and crashed about four miles inside Honduras. Sandinista soldiers at a hilltop border observation post could see smoke and flames coming from the crash site, the ministry spokesman said.
President Daniel Ortega said the incident "shows once again that the mercenary forces are operating with airplanes supplied by the North American government in operations directed by the CIA."
In Tegucigalpa, Honduras,
spokesman Aristides Sanchez of
the Nicaraguan Resistance rebel
coalition said Monday night that
the plane crashed inside Nicaragua and that the pilot and co-pilot were rescued by other rebels.
Around the Nation
Church leaders choose Louisville over KC
BILOXI, Miss. — Presbyterian leaders narrowly voted yesterday to relocate their headquarters to Louisville, Ky., accepting a businessman's offer of free office space overlooking the Ohio River
pick Louisville over Kansas City, Mo.
The 199th General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (USA), after a two-minute silent prayer, rejected two committee recommendations and voted 332-309 to
John Mulder, president of Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary and a leader in the effort to bring in the headquarters now jointly in New York and Atlanta, old the commissioners, "This is a gift. It isn't a traditional business deal. It comes with one condition. You must accept it."
Testimonies differ about shredded records
WASHINGTON — Two assistants to retired Maj. Gen Richard V. Secord told House and Senate investigators that they shredded records in December after public exposure of the tran-confair affair, according to depositions released yesterday.
But one of the office workers later changed her testimony, telling the congressional Iran-corra committee in a sworn affidavit that the shredding more likely took place in November.
The two employees' original testimony appeared to conflict with Second's sworn testimony, which he gave last month.
Secord, the operational chief of the Iran arms shipments and the private effort to resupply Nicaragua's rebels, contended the documents had been destroyed in November.
because any destruction of documents after the launching of an official Department of Justice investigation might constitute obstruction of justice.
Joan Corbin, a secretary for Secord's firm. Stanford Technology Trading Group International, said shredding occurred on several days in early December.
Investigators suggest the dates of the shredding are important
According to the transcript of her deposition, the documents destroyed included "telexes and shorthand notebooks and old phone book message pages and just a couple of Rolodex cards."
In another development yesterday, The Wall Street Journal quoted Lt. Col. Robert Earl, who formerly worked with North, saying that North was told of the Justice Department's decision to investigate House involvement in the Iran-contra affair by Attorney General Edwin Meese III.
Dole Foundation raises almost $1 million
At its second annual $1,000-aperson reception, the foundation honored International Business Machines Corp. for providing employment opportunities for the disabled in its company.
Dole, who lost most of the use of his right arm and hand because of wounds in World War II, formed the nonprofit, non-political foundation in 1983.
WASHINGTON — The Dole Foundation, established by Sen Bob Dole, R-Kan., to aid the disabled, collected nearly $1 million at a fund-raiser yesterday and honored a corporation and several individuals for efforts to help the handicapped.
The foundation presented special tributes to:
It has raised almost $3 million, including Tuesday's receipts, and has awarded grants of nearly $1.2 million in 21 states.
- The Postal Service for what Dole calls a "top-notch disability employment program that sets a standard for other public agencies and for private companies as well." It has about 100,000 disabled people in its work force of 800,000.
- Hal Harallson, an Austin, Texas lawyer, for counseling people with mental illness and "his willingness to share his experiences with manic depression."
—John Kemp of Chicago, director of the national Easter Seal fund-raising campaign. Dole described Kemp, a quadruple congenital amputee, as a vigorous disability rights advocate.
—Paul Scher of Chicago, a corporate manager at Sears Roebuck & Co. Dole praised Scher, who is blind, for a lifelong dedication to the cause of disability employment.
Nation and World Study says risks to U.S. in gulf are low
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Reagan's Persian Gulf policy came under renewed attack yesterday from congressmen, while an administration study given to Congress said risks were low for U.S. naval forces in the gulf.
cans over it and the administration needs to do a better job of explaining."
Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd, D-Wa., in his sharpest criticism yet, called Reagan's plan to protect Kuwait oil tankers by placing them under American flags "half-baked, poorly developed."
Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., and other Republicans meet with Reagan for lunch and Dole said later, "I think there's some confusion about the Persian Gulf policy. There isn't any consensus among Republi-
Congressional fears have been raised in the wake of last month's Iraq missile attack on the frigate Jake, a tank which killed 37 U.S. seamen, an Iraqi attack was a mistake, an explanation accepted by the United States.
Iran has threatened to attack the kuwait tankers which Reagan says is a threat to Iran.
Defense Secretary Casper Weinberger and Adm. William Crower Jr., chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, met behind closed doors with the House Foreign Affairs Committee to discuss the policy.
student sent to Congress in answer to Capitol Hill demands for an assessment of specific military threats to U.S. forces.
Weinberger made public a declassified version of an administration
"The risks to U.S. naval forces in the gulf from these threats are low," it said. "The risks involved in protecting U.S.flagged vessels are moderate."
Three more Navy ships will be added to the gulf task force to help out, the report said.
It warned that there are some risks, particularly from unconventional threats, such as Iranian terrorism or sabotage.
The report made clear that while the administration has talked about protecting shipping in the gulf and keeping the waterway open, the Kuwaiti protection plan is more limited.
The report spelled out the "rules of engagement," a military term detailing when weapons may be fired. Those operating practices have been questioned after the attack on the Stark because the ship did not fire any of its defensive weapons.
The new rules permit a ship's captain to fire if he perceives hostile intent. They define hostile intent as when any aircraft or ship maneuvers into a pattern from which it could launch a weapon, or if a potential attacker's radar engages a U.S. target.
But the new rules authorize only a very narrow use of force.
Students, police clash in South Korea
SEOUL, South Korea — Waves of students beating drums and shouting "Revolution!" pelt riot police with bricks and firebombs in Seoul and other cities yesterday, which was the seventh day of violent anti-government protest.
Many people showed support for the protesters by booing the outnumbered police and sometimes joining in the attacks.
Officers with helmets and shields fired thousands of tear gas grenades in Seoul and in at least eight other cities. The officers used multiple tear gas launchers set up in streets to drive back charging crowds of students and their supporters.
Chants of "People's revolution!" and "Destroy the military dictatorship!" accompanied gasoline bombs that exploded in bursts of flame among police who were sent into the streets by President Chun Doo-Hwan's government.
Students stormed at least four police stations and set fire to police vehicles. They forced officers out of the streets around at least two universities in Seoul.
The news agency Yenghap reported clashes and anti-government demonstrations in Seoul, Pusan, Kwangju, Haeung, Chonji, Wonju, Taeon and Taqug.
About 6,000 protesters cheered by
bystanders battled riot police in the
southern port of Pusan, burned a police bus and set up barricades.
was assaulted four police stations in the central city of Chinju. A fire started by gasoline bombs heavily damaged one of them.
Crowds again gathered in front of Seoul's Myongdong Roman Catholic cathedral demanding the ouster of Chun's government. Assembled at the cathedral were prosperous families and elderly people, some of whom knelt and prayed as others shouted, "We want democracy!"
Riot police used tear gas grenades to disperse the crowds when some people tried to march to the city hall, but downtown Seoul was free of major street battles for the first time
in a week.
Anti-government protests began a week ago, promoted by a new coalition of political, religious and human rights leaders. The nationwide campaign was timed to coincide with a convention of the ruling Democratic Justice Party that endorsed Chun's choice of fellow ex-general Roh Taewo to succeed him as president in February.
The National Police announced yesterday that 7,004 people were detained from Wednesday through Monday, including 910 Monday. Officials said 1,937 were being held and the rest had been released.
Jury verdict frees Goetz of murder charge
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — A jury found Bernhard Goetz innocent yesterday of attempted murder for shooting four young men he said were about to rob him on a subway car. The jury convicted him only of carrying an unlicensed handgun.
Goetz, who claimed he fired in self-defense, showed no emotion as jury foreman James Hurley read the
verdicts, which ended a case that ignited a nationwide debate over urban violence and vigilantism.
The 39-year-old electronics technician could be sentenced to no time in prison or receive any term up to a maximum of seven years. State Supreme Court Justice Stephen Crane set sentence for Sept. 4 and allowed Goetz to remain free on $50,000 bail until then.
In all, Goetz was acquitted of 12 charges, including second-degree attempted murder, first-degree assault and reckless endangerment. He was found guilty of third-degree weapons possession, a Class D felony, for using the unlicensed 38 revolver in the Dec. 22, 1984 shootings.
Crane pronounced the case "one of the most difficult of our time" and
told the jurors that there has been and will be "faction and criticism, but you have been seen to do justice. You have attended to your duties in the way that the American court system was meant to operate."
Assistant District Attorney Gregory Waples, who prosecuted the case, refused to comment on the verdict, saying only: "My thoughts on the case are my own.
LUR
A Sincere "Thank You"
CINDY BROWN
URR
to Everyone for Helping Make Our Grand Opening a Big Success!! Congratulations to the Following Winners of $10 Gift Certificates for ICBIY Frozen Yogurt
Amelia Aldrich, Lawrence
Sabrina Bailey, Lawrence
Beth Brady, Lawrence
Sharon Coffman, Lawrence
Mandy Dolezal, Lawrence
D. Farney, Kansas City, Mo.
Mary Beth Green, Lawrence
Kathy Hadl, Eudora
Bonnie Haney, Lawrence
Mary Hanson, Eudora
Patty Hayden, Lawrence
C. Henderson, Lawrence
Norma Hohn, Lawrence
Gary Howard, Lawrence
Paul Kerstetter, Lawrence
Ted Kummer, Lawrence
Sue Kong, Lawrence
Mark Lehmann, Lawrence
Kathy Lisbon, Lawrence
Joshua Michaels, Lawrence
Mary Neis, Eudora
Bonnie Powell, Lawrence
Don Richardson, Eudora
Mary Rodriguez, Lawrence
Vanessa Russell, Lawrence
Catherine Ryan, Lawrence
Mary Ann Strong, Baldwin
Sue Vance, Lawrence
Mary Ann Watts, Eudora
Cann Wiser
A Personal Message . . .
I would like to express my appreciation to each and every one of you who visited us during the Grand Opening. It was a true pleasure to have you in our store and we hope to see you all again soon.
If you did not have a chance to stop by and taste our frozen yogurt, I would like to personally invite you to do so.
Also, a special thanks to Magician Rex Getz and my employees, Julie Adam, Matt Rankin, Mary Lingwall, Karlun Richards, Beth Brown and Martha Eddy, who made sure that everyone had a delightful experience while in our store.
Sincerely,
I Can't Believe It's YOGURT! Frozen Yogurt Stores
Nine Flavors Served Daily Seating for 56 People Cones-Shakes-Parfaits-Sundaees Mr. and Mrs. Dick Boyd, Owners
Kent Johnson
OPEN: 11 A.M.-11 P.M. Daily;
Noon-11 P.M. Sundays
Manager
Louisiana Purchase Shopping Center 23rd and Louisiana, Lawrence Phone (913) 843-5500 Kent Johnson, Manager
Kansan Summer Weekly
Wednesday, June 17, 1987
3
Local Briefs
Social activist to lecture at KU on 'new poverty'
Michael Harrington, social activist and author of 14 books of social criticism, is scheduled to speak on "The New American Poverty" at 1 p.m. Friday at the Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
Harrington, a professor of political science at Queens College in Flushing, New York State, was a consultant to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and has been an adviser to several U.S. trade unions.
He is co-chairman of the Democratic Socialists of America and a regular political commentator on National Public Radio.
Harrington's KU visit is sponsored by the College Honors Program, the School of Social Welfare, the sociology department and the Kansas University National Education Association.
Veterans' families meet alumna artist
Performance artist and KU alumna Barbara O'Brien will be in Lawrence Thursday, June 25, to do research for two performances to be given in Lawrence this fall.
O'Brien will be at the reception room of the Spencer Museum of Art from 9 a.m. to noon and 1 to 4 p.m., Thursday, to talk with families of deceased veterans buried in the Veterans Circle in Bonner Springs Cemetery, where her father also is buried.
Her performances, which will be presented at the art museum in October, combine body motions and photographic images and are
Campus and Area
Any families interested in meeting with O'Brien should call the museum at 864-4710 to schedule appointments.
Women and success topics of workshop
Women and success will be the joint subjects next week of a workshop moderated by Barbara Ballard, director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center.
The workshop will be held from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m., June 23, in the International Room in the Kansas Union.
Elizabeth Blanchard, graduate assistant of the center, said the workshop would stress economic achievement.
Students in classics honored at reception
Five KU students received awards at a department of classics honors recognition reception May 3 in the Kansas Union.
Jenat Anderson-S story, Baldwin jian, received the Austin Lash brook Memorial Award, which is outstanding on an outstanding classics major.
Eleanor M. Hardin, Lawrence senior, won the Mildred Lord Greef Award. The award is presented to a junior, senior or graduate student for the best classics paper.
Marc Richard Alterman, Nortonville senior, won the undergraduate Sterling Walker Prize for "Greek studies and Mark Ira Milne, Kansas City Mo., graduate study." Walter Walker, Sterling-Walker Prize in Greek.
Joseph Andrew Johnston III, Columbia, Mo., sophomore, received the Hannah Oliver Latin Prize. This award recognizes an undergraduate major in classics.
New KU phones spark+ and—responses
Benefits seen down the road
By KEITH ROBISON
Staff writer
The new KU phone system will be an exercise in patience.
According to Dewey Allaire, KU director of telecommunications, the phones eventually will save the University money.
"Unfortunately for us, initially we won't save money," he said. "It will be two years before we'll have savings, but, over eight years, the University is expected to save $3 million."
Although the phones were installed in the spring, the state decided to install a new phone system four years ago, Allaure said. It took the state that long to plan a phone system for the largest Regents schools and for the Topeka government buildings.
The waiting isn't over. Some KU staff members will need more time to learn the new telephone technology, and the system will not be completed until January 1988.
"Basically it works well, but there are so many features on it, it's confusing," said Jean Wetzel. Lawrence graduate student and a part-time secretary in the department of art history.
Johnell Fendley, secretary for the department of facilities operations, said it took some time for her to get used to the new phones.
“They're all right; nothing spectacular. They're not what they were beat up to be. The lightning took out three of them yesterday,” she said.
Alaire said the main reason for the new phone system was rising costs.
"Costs are going to be a little higher this year than last, and this has forced a little budget squeeze in some departments.
"Cost containment is what we want," he said.
"Without our own phone system, we would be at the mercy of regulatory commissions and FCC (Federal Communications Commission) and KCK (Kansas Corporation Commission), or at the mercy of an unregulated company that would change prices at its own discretion.
"The second largest consideration was the use of this system for the transmission of data and, in the future, video. We'll have capability for use for high-speed data or most grades of video; all grades of video except full broadcast grade." Allaire said.
"That could have some large ramifications in the teaching area and certainly some large ramifications in the information area," he said.
The third major consideration was to link four of the largest Regents schools and the Topeka government buildings in one state-operated network, he said.
Besides the Lawrence KU campus and the Topeka buildings, the network will include the University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas University, Wichita State University and Fort Hays State University.
"Most of the lines are in the dorss. The dorms contain almost 2,600 lines," Allaire said.
There are about 5,000 telephone lines at the Lawrence KU campus and about 6,400 telephones.
This fall, KU students living in residence halls will have to furnish their own telephones, Allaire said. Residents in the eight scholarship halls have had to provide their own phones since fall 1986.
Students may purchase one of the University's used telephones for $15 when they check in for the fall.
New telephone system allows computer hookup
By KEITH ROBISON
Staff writer
University housing residents will eventually be able to connect their computers to the KU's mainframe through the new telephone system being installed on campus, a housing official said.
Kenneth Stoner, director of student housing, said, "The new phone lines are essentially computer-ready. You can access the University mainframe."
The old telephone jacks in the rooms have been replaced with bigger ones. The new jacks will allow both computers and telephones to use telephone lines simultaneously. The old jacks only allowed for one or the other.
"This is something most people can't do in their homes. Before, the kids could use the phone or the computer. Now they can use the phone and the computer simultaneously with an adapterack. Stoner said."
The adapter jacket fits into the wall jack. It splits into two outlets of different sizes.
the phone can be plugged in at the same time.
It will be some time before the system is ready.
Jerry Niebaum, director of computing services, said, "There are a number of dominoes that have to fall before we can start announcing and advertising this service."
He said that he hoped to have more of the essential equipment by late July or early August.
Stoner said the computer hookups would be optional in residence hall rooms.
Niebium said that residents would have to pay a fee of about $60 for the computer access and a $10 monthly service charge.
Stoner said the potential for video transmission also existed with the new phone system. He said it possibly could be used for posting announcements and coming campus events.
CHIEF R.R. STANWIX
Police chief Stanwix retires after 34 years
"It's low-grade video, like the information screen on cable Channel 6. I don't believe we're talking movies or TV images or anything like that." Stoner said.
Staff writer
By KRISTEN HAYS
Richard Stanwix, Lawrence police chief, will officially retire June 20 after 34 years of service.
In 34 years with the Lawrence police, Richard Stanwix fired his gun at someone one time, in self-defense.
"I can remember it as plain as day," he said. "I held my gun, and he said. Stand still and don't move, or kill you. It was him or me, and I saw him, enough to get out of that situation. I wounded him, but didn't kill him."
Stanwix's chances of having to go through something like that again, at least as a public servant, will soon be gone.
Darcv Chana/KANSAN
Stanwix, 56. Lawrence police chief since 1970, said he would retire from the force June 20.
But, he said he would never lose his interest in police work
"It's a profession a lot of people really don't care for or care about," the Lawrence native said. "It has some good times, some trying times, but I hate to leave. I work with good people. We have a good relationship with the sheriff's department, and I miss police work."
Stanwick said he's known he wanted to work in law enforcement since he toured the police department on career day at Lawrence High School.
Stanwix was further encouraged to become a police officer when he served for three years with the U.S. Army in the Korean War. When he arrived home, he was hired as a patrolman in Lawrence and began climbing up the department ranks.
Stanwix said that as a detective, he endured a particularly difficult time.
"I was here during all the unrest during the late '60s and early '70s," he said.
Lawrence police were forced to seek the National Guard's help in patrolling the city during a time when students rioted and the Kansas Union was burned.
In 1970, after only four years on the force, Stanwix was promoted from captain to chief of police.
"Going up through the ranks has been difficult during these times, from the fifties to 1987." Stanwix said. "With society changing, people are different, so the police department must change with society."
Sgt Don Dalquest, Lawrence police, said he had worked with Stanxin since 1965, the year Dalquest joined the force.
"We've had a good relationship. We've had our differences, but we've always been able to work them out. He's a good chief, and I'm going to miss him," he said.
Stanwix said he prided himself on being fair.
"I've been a believer in equality and fairness," he said. "Especially as chief, I always listen to stories and problems.
"Policemen are only as good as their informants. It would be hard to be a policeman without friends. We've got to be honest. If I give a person a minor traffic offense, that person might come back with information."
Stanwix will officially retire June 20, but he will rejoin the department July 2 and stay until City Manager Buford Watson can hire a replacement, Stanwix said.
"After staying for 34 years, I have the best plan pension I know of.
"With a maximum of 35 years, I can get 70 percent of my salary. Under the current (retirement) plan, policemen and firemen get 13 checks a year, one a month and an extra."
"As of July 1, though, I only get 12 a year, so this was the main thing behind my decision to retire in June."
Ladonna Laing, Stanwix's secretary for 10 years, said. "I've really enjoyed working for him, and I'll miss him." Laing said she hoped Watson would take until January to replace Stanwix.
Jim Denney, director of KU police on the Lawrence campus, said, "Over the years, I have become aware of the frequent rivalry
between law enforcement agencies. In Douglas County, this doesn't and hasn't existed, due largely to Dick Stanwix and his attitude about law enforcement. He set the tone for cooperative law enforcement in this county.
"The relationship between the campus police force and the Lawrence police force has been outstanding, again largely due to Dick Stanwix."
Stanwix said. "I like the city, I like the University, too. I go to the basketball games and enjoy myself."
Commission talks about sidewalks
He said he would always have a policeman's mentality. "I'm not a carpenter, I'm not a plumber, and police work stays with me."
Staff writer
By KRISTEN HAYS
most of last night's Lawrence City Commission meeting was spent on "sidewalk talk."
Tim Miller, chairman of the Lawrence Traffic Safety Commission, asked the commission to commit $50,000 for sidewalks for bicyclists and pedestrians. Mayor Mike Amyx, however, was reluctant to allot a definite amount of money.
Miller did not state any specific location for the placement of the sidewalk.
Commissioner Dennis Constance said, "In comparison to what we spend on various projects around the city, $50,000 is a modest sum."
Amyx wanted to defer a decision until July 14, after he could see the city's proposed budget, so the commission agreed to have the city staff draft a resolution that would leave the dollar amount blank.
Miller said the proposed sidewalks would be high yield investments, not just expenditures, because the more sidewalks are built, the more they are used.
Carol Bowen, 411 Nebraska St., said, "We've forgotten what a pedestrian needs, and we have a lot of catching up to do." She suggested a public campaign to support the construction of more sidewalks.
The commissioners agreed that the resolution would say they would put 'X' amount of dollars in the fund, and that Amyx would insert the amount when the resolution was drafted.
In other business, the commission approved a change in zoning for a lot at 508 Locust St., from an intensive industrial zone to a general commercial zone, so that the Los Amigos Saloon, located on that lot, could change from a tavern to a private club.
The commissioners also said goodbye to City Clerk Vera Mercer, who will retire June 19 after 21 years of service.
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Wednesday, June 17, 1987
Kansan Summer Weekly
Opinions and Editorials
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
SUMMER
WEEKLY
EDITION
No Oread downzoning
Some Oread neighborhood residents and members of the Oread Neighborhood Association have asked the city to downzone six blocks from "residential dormitory" to "multi-family residential." The residents of the 900 and 1000 blocks of Indiana, Louisiana, Ohio and Tennessee streets have said that through downzoning, they hope to preserve the neighborhood by saving old homes in good condition. This may be a noble venture, but the city should refuse the request.
Although limiting construction in the neighborhood in order to prevent overcrowding might preferable, the issue runs deeper than that.
Many property owners in the disputed six-block area purchased their land with the understanding that they would be able to realize its full value, possibly through the construction of apartments.
"Residential dormitory," or RD zoning allows construction as dense as an apartment building with six units on a typical lot in the neighborhood. Downzoning to "multi-family residential," or RM-1 zoning, allows construction only as dense as a duplex on a typical lot.
Last week the U.S. Supreme Court ruled, in a California case, that property owners must be compensated when new zoning restrictions prevent all uses of their land.
Oread property owners might use the Supreme Court ruling to challenge rezoning, but even if they are unsuccessful in that venture, Lawrence should respect property owners' rights under the Fifth Amendment and should not downzone the neighborhoods.
Instead, the residents of the six blocks should seek other measures to preserve the beauty and the neighborhood atmosphere of the blocks in question. At last week's city commission meeting, residents successfully defeated a proposed five-unit apartment building at 1132 Ohio St., a site near the requested area for downzoning.
Stiffer DUI sentences
Largely through the efforts of members of the Oread Neighborhood Association and the Lawrence Preservation Alliance, the apartment site plan, which had been approved by the city staff, was rejected by the city commission. Neighborhood residents and city commission members opposed the proposed street-front parking lot that would be necessary if the apartment building were to be built.
The residents of the Oread neighborhood should continue to devote their time to preserving the beauty of their streets. But they should not continue to seek to downzone property and deprive some owners of their right to develop the land as the law permits.
It happens every day; people get behind the wheel of a car and drive away. But sometimes the driver is drunk. Every year an estimated 23,000 people are killed by drunk drivers, and 700,000 more people are injured. The roadways are becoming graveyards for drunk drivers and their victims.
Kansas is known to have some of the country's toughest laws against driving under the influence, but these laws are
Driving is not a right; it is a privilege. If this privilege is abused, it should be taken away until the offender proves he is responsible enough to drive.
In 1986 in Kansas, 4,759 alcohol-related accidents occurred. In these accidents, 224 people were killed, and 4,234 people were injured. In Kansas, 11,000 to 12,000 arrests are documented each year for driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs. These statistics are sobering enough to justify stiffer penalties than those in the Kansas law books today.
No one should blame the alcohol and automobile industries. These industries rightly assume that those people 21 or older should be responsible enough not to abuse their privileges of driving and of drinking. Accidents are the results of consumer abuse of the product.
not stiff enough.
A first-time offender can be sentenced to up to six months in prison and fined up to $500. A second-time offender faces from 90 days to one year in jail and a fine of as much as $1,000. The third-time offender faces up to one year in jail and can be fined no more than $2,500. This is Russian roulette; the law is giving the offender three chances to kill himself or kill someone else.
Although these sentences may sound tough, many first-time offenders obtain diversions which allow them to complete their sentences by attending rehabilitation programs. They therefore serve no time in jail. A third-time offender may spend as few as 90 days in jail.
Rehabilitation programs can help, but they are not enough. Unacceptable behavior should be punished by more than just a few classes. A first-time offender should spend a minimum of seven days in jail and should have his license suspended for one year. A second-time offender should spend a minimum of 90 days in jail and should have his license suspended for an additional year.
Third-time offenders whose three convictions are within two years are beyond short-term help. A year in prison with no probation is the only answer.
News staff
John Benner...Editor
Dawn O'Malley...Managing editor
Jane Zachman...News editor
Pam Miller...Campus editor
Tim Hamilton...Sports editor
Darry Chang...Photo editor
Connie Sheridan...Graphics editor
Tom Eblen...General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Lisa Weems...Business manager
Lisa Osment...Retail sales manager
Sally Depow...Campus sales manager
Dan Pennington...Classified manager
Jay Krieger...Production manager
Chuck Roulbut...National sales manager
Jeanne Hines...Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and less than 200 words and must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University of Kansas, please include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
Guest shots should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer Flight Hall.
can be made of dough to the Kansan Newborn. F. H. Stalter and Kate Letters, guest shots and columns are the opinion of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University Daily Kansan. Editorials are the opinion of the Kansan editorial board.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stairwater-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $27 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months and $35 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student activity fee.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
Father's Day might be a time to forget
"P.S. Your grandfather died on your father's birthday."
That was the postscript to a note that was neatly tucked, along with a check, inside a birthday card that my parents sent me last week. I discovered when sending me the usual funny card and removing the check.
I stood in the kitchen thinking about how I had written off my grandfather so many years ago, and feeling a little sad that my mother had summed up his death in a short sentence at the end of a note that I could have accidentally thrown away unread
My father was born on May 30 during the Depression. I was born two weeks after his 26th birthday, and one week before Father's Day. When I was young, this three-week period each year was a time when he and I alternated celebrating and being celebrated. I remember I was puzzled when I asked him the date of his father's birthday. He said he couldn't remember.
When I was 4 years old, we loaded the family's luggage into the Volkswagen van and took the 12-hour drive from Washington, D.C. to Ypsilanti, Michigan to see my grandparents during the Thanksgiving holiday. I don't remember the trip very well, but I do remember meeting my grandparents. I had seen them when I was an infant, but this was the first time I could remember them.
My father and my grandfather didn't talk to each other very much. My mother said that was just the way they were.
My grandfather told me to call him "grandpa" and said he'd like to take me fishing on Lake Jordan in the summer. I talked about nothing else during the rest of the visit.
IRELAND
The next summer, I got the chance to go to Ypsilantia for a week. I listened to the Tigers' baseball games on the radio with grandpa each day until he fell asleep on the couch in the middle of the afternoon. Grandma fed me and told me not to wake him. I couldn't imagine any kid being more contented than I was.
Finally, on Friday, grandpa said he wanted to go fishing the next morning. I went to bed early because grandpa said we'd have to get up at five o'clock. When he awakened me the next morning, I was surprised to find that grandma was up, too.
The three of us ate quickly and all during breakfast, I wondered if grandma was going to come with us. I felt a little better when she explained that she would be driving us to the lake because grandpa had hurt his leg in a car accident a few years earlier. She said she had no intention of going out on the boat with us. I remember I felt a little guilty, but I also felt a little relieved.
He and I spent several hours out on the boat and caught a dozen fish. When we rowed back to the dock and tied up the boat, grandma was waiting to take us home.
John Benner
Editor
Four years later, when my family moved back to the United States after living in Europe, we again made the Thanksgiving trip to Ypsilanti from Washington.
I had seen my grandparents only once during the four-year period, and they looked the same to me. Grandpa was watching Michigan play football on television when we came in the door. We got settled in time for me to join him for the second half.
Sometimes in the third quarter, a Michigan player, whose name I have long since forgotten, intercepted a pass and ran 70 yards for a touchdown. Grandpa rose to his feet and cheered loudly enough to bring one of my aunts running from the kitchen. After she left, grandpa leaned over to me and said earnestly, "Boy, those niggers sure can run!"
That day I realized that I didn't know my grandfather at all, but instead had formed a picture of him based on all the good things grandfathers were supposed to be. That day I
I didn't know what to say, so I said nothing.
stopped dreaming and started asking questions.
Two years later, we went back to Ypsiilan for Thanksgiving. Between the two visits, I had asked a few questions and had looked at a few old pictures and letters. I had discovered that grandma had been supporting the family since my father had been a very small child. Later, my father had worked hard to help support his three sisters. Along the way, he had lost his love for his alcoholic
Along the way, he had lost his love for his alcoholic father.
When we arrived at my grandparents' home, the one my grandfather had not worked a day to help provide, I went straight to his room, eager to grind my nose in the truth. There, almost as if he had wished me to discover it, I found proof in the form of three empty vodka flasks in the trash can. It was 6 p.m., and grandpa was still drinking.
I was too naive to know that alcoholism is
was a sure sign of nothing else, that my
grandfather had done it.
A few years later my grandmother died. I heard that my grandfather was getting worse. I was told that his cherished dog had died, and later, through the painfully slow family grapevine, was let in on the secret that he had run over the dog himself. The dog had been sleeping on the lawn, several feet from the driveway.
Every two years or so, I would hear something about grandpa. He spent time in a hospital, and later suffered from a complete and permanent loss of memory. I stopped asking my father how grandpa was doing. I could see that he was trying to forget his disappointment, the disappointment I had experienced in so much smaller proportions.
Finally, grandpa died three weeks ago on my father's birthday. I say "finally" only because I have considered him dead for a long time. My father would love to see him last thing he would ever have to do for his father.
I stood in the kitchen, holding the note from my mother, and wished that grandpa had been able to hold on for a few more days so that my father wouldn't have had to celebrate his own birthday beside the grave of a man who had confounded him for more than 50 years. I knew that this ending, though it was not a happy one, was the proper one.
Coffee and Religion at Bobby Joe's Cafe
This Sunday, on Fathers' Day, I am going to be sure that I tell my father that I love him.
Where ya been, stranger?'' said Bobby Joe,
owner and sole proprietor of Bobby Joe's Cafe and
Radiator Shoppe.
"Why, Mister Bobby Joe," said the slim, stooped figure slouching up to the counter. "I need me some more of your coffee to get through the rest of the mornin'. Would you put it on the tab? Breakfast done cleaned me out."
"Sure thing, Slick. I know how them cash-flow problems are. I made this fresh batch without any radiator fluid, so it might not have all the kick you wanted."
The coffee simmered in the cup. It looked a little green to Slick. He sat there sipping and reading the beer sign. Then he began to hum, louder with each sip, until he reached the part of the song where he just had to sing the words out loud:
Can you tell me, would Jesus wear a Rolex on His television show?
... If He came back tomorrow, there's some-
thing I'd like to know.
Would Jesus be political if He came back to Earth?
Bobby Joe looked up from the country-fried steak he had on the grill and cocked an ear. Slim took another sip and continued;
Have His second home in Palm Springs and try to hide his worth?
Take money from those poor folks when He comes back again?
And admit He's talked to all those preachers who say they've talked to Him?
PAUL
GREENBERG
Columnist
"Don't rightly know if we allow singin' in here," said Bobby Joe, "specially songs that poke fun at religion. Some things still deserve a little respect, 'specially from credit customers.'
"Why, Bobby Joe, ain't nothing in that song disrespectful. I'm all for religion — think everybody ought to have some. That song's about television preachers, and that's about as far from religion as you can get."
"Well you cut that out, Slim, or I'm gonna have to whup some knots on your head faster'n you can rub 'em."
"Aw, Bobby Joe. I didn't mean nothin'. 'That song isn't about real preachers. I'm talkin' about television religion, Bobby Joe, about haircuts that look like they came straight from the beauty bootie, and limos and Lear tears. By the way, you still sendin' Jim and Tammey Fake a little somechin' every month? Why, they're down to their last two or three mansions. What you gonna do about 'em now?"
'Why, I'm gonna pray for 'em, Slick, like I would for any other sinner What're you doin' for 'em, or anybody else, 'cept肝gan, and singin'
mean little songs? You think I gonna quit 'em now when they need me the most?"
The country-fried steak was slowly turning into a glowing briquette. Bobby Joe came around the table.
"You see. Slick, I still feel the same way about what they said even if I think a little less of ol' Jim these days. . . ."
"I reckon you would think less of him after all this business about that little of' church secretary in New York and payin' to keep her quiet and . . "
"Naw, I don't hold that agin' him. Any man can get in a fix that look. Like at David slipsh*n' around with that Bathsheeba girl. Naw, what got to me was the big bucks. Down deep I just know you can't drive a Mercedes through the pearly gates. But that don't mean I'm ready to kick 'em when they're way down. That's why I'd like you to save them songs of yours for somebody who ain't got no better sense than to laugh at his fellow sinner, even if what he done ain't funny."
"I said I was prayin' for 'em, Slick I reckon that's about as much as I can afford just now. I'm a Christian, but I try not to be a damfool."
"I preciate you, Bobby Joe, but I think the coffee could use less antifreeze, what with summer comin' on and all. I ain't complainin', you understand, not at these prices."
"Hurry back, Slick. Long's I got a biscuit, you got half. But no more."
Letters to the editor
More than just books
I guess Benner's logic is that basketball isn't important to him and academics are, so it should be that way for everyone. Another source of Benner's frustration might be that he compares his level of success in his field to Danny Manning's level of success in his. That would shake up just about anyone. Take heart, Mr. Benner.
I don't understand Benner's problems with Manning's reasons for staying at KU. Why do journalists, or any other students for that manner, take internships or summer jobs? To make them more marketable and valuable when they get out of school. Why is it different for Manning? That's
what he's trying to do also
Benner's speculation on why Manning took a look at next year's recruits almost knocked me off my chair. I somehow doubt Manning was concerned with whether the recruits would be talented enough to feed him the ball. Anyone who thinks Manning is selfish, anything less than a consumate team player, must be thinking of some other Danny Manning.
Granted, it is a shame that KU's academic programs don't get the notoriety that they probably should. However, I firmly believe KU's fine graduates and faculty do more to reflect positively on the quality of KU's academic programs than any editorial or series of articles.
Some of us find more to college but burying our noses in books and staring at computer terminals. Benner tells us, "Don't look at the games." Believe me.
Manning, Larry Brown, the rest of the team and their thousands of fans will somehow survive without him.
Jim Williamson
2522 S.W. Fairwain Road
Tupela
1986 KU graduate
Outstanding Manning
It is unclear whether John Benner's editorial on Danny Manning was a clever attempt to measure summer readership by the degree of outrage generated or was simply an unfortunate example of his skill in training. In other case, it was both disappointing and irresponsible.
Each person devotes his life to a pursuit of goals and achievements. In that, Manning is no different from Benner, I trust. There are troublesome obstacles along the
way, whatever your field. Most aborrent are the cheap shots taken against talent of any kind.
Please learn quickly that journalists have the power to hurt deeply, to turn away good people or to squelch a positive atmosphere. That power is a trust as well. Be more careful with it, whether the issue is sports or academics. Spoof or serious, Benner is way off base with his diatribe on Manning.
Manning need not apologize for being an outstanding athlete, nor for bringing so much positive attention to KU and Lawrence, nor for wanting to be on the Olympic Team, nor for dedication to his and his parents' desire for his college education, nor for displaying loyalty to a fine coach, who, thankfully, also is staying here.
Donald A. Johnston
1540 Alvamar Drive
1966 KU law school graduate
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Kansan Summer WeeklyWednesday, June 17, 1987
5
PETER MCCARTHY
Yuri Korolev, left, director of the Tretyakov Gallery, and Yuri Pishchulin, editor of Soviet Museum Magazine, tour the Spencer Museum of Art Thursday. They are on a two-week tour of U.S. museums.
Spencer art attracts Soviet investigation
Bv STORMY WYLIF
Staff writer
Two museum experts from the Soviet Union came to Lawrence last week to learn about the art and history of America's heartland.
Yuri Korolev, director of the Tretyakov Gallery in Moscow, and Yuri Pishchulin, editor of Soviet Museum Magazine, toured the Spencer Museum of Art on June 10 during a stop in Lawrence.
The two said it was their first trip to the Midwest, although they previously had toured U.S. museums on the East Coast.
They came to the United States for a meeting of the Association of Art Museum Directors in Boston, and their stay included a two-week tour of U.S. museums.
As the Soviets toured the museum, they asked Doug Tilgh-
man, acting director of the museum, about the problems he faced in his work.
"They asked a lot of technical questions about how artworks are displayed and handled and about detection management." Typhlah
"It was fascinating to talk with them. We both learned something about the other."
Korolev said through an interpreter that the trip could improve discussion and exchange between U.S. and Soviet museums.
Pishchulin, who also spoke through an interpreter, said that after this trip, he and Korolev would be able to talk to the Soviet people about U.S. art museums.
Korolev said, "We wanted to meet with American museum directors to see if they were carrying on the same type of work as Soviet museums."
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6
Wednesday, June 17, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
New vice chancellor impressed with KU
Bv CARLA PATINO
Staff writer
The University of Kansas' new executive vice chancellor said last week that she would come here excited about the University's high levels of both teaching and research.
Judith A. Ramley said finding an institution with such high levels in her degree
Ramaley will leave her position as executive vice president for academic affairs at State University of New York at Albany and will take up her new duties Aug. 1.
"I am looking forward to getting to know more about the University," she said. "I am already thinking of getting started."
Ramaley was in Lawrence on June 10 and 11 to look for a home and to get acquainted with KU.
"I don't have an agenda yet, but I can assure you that I like strong research, creative people, and I have an individual concern in staff and in students," she said.
(4)
Ramaley's colleagues there, said she was a very systematic and fair person.
Walter Gibson, professor of physics at SUNY-Albany and one of
Joe Wilkins IKANSAN
Judith A. Ramaley will be the new executive vice chancellor for the University of Kansas, Lawrence campus starting Aug. 1.
"Judith has gained the respect of the faculty and administration across the university," he said. "KU has got a real gem."
Joe Wilkins III/KANSAN
She said she considered her move to Lawrence a trip back home. She was born in Vincennes, Ind., but considers Lawrenceville, Ill., her hometown.
Ramaley said it didn't matter that she was the first woman to hold the second-highest administrative position on campus.
"I like the Midwest, its people and values," she said.
But Neva Entrikin, administrative assistant of art history and a member the search committee, said, "I am not delighted just because she is a woman, but I think it is a step forward for the University to have a woman at a higher administrative level."
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Kansan Summer Weekly
Arts and Entertainment
.
Wednesday, June 17, 1987
THE BOYS
Jay Joyce, Emma, Jeff Boggs
The Interview Jay Joyce of 'In Pursuit'
By DAWN O'MALLEY
Managing editor
Mention Nashville, Tenn., and people might think of country music and the Grand Ole Oryp, not a band that plays rock 'n' roll. But In Pursuit has made its home in Nashville and is doing quite well.
The band consists of Jeff Boggs on drums, Jay Joyce on guitar and vocals and Emma, on bass and vocals.
The band just completed its first LP, Standing In Your Shadow. The album begins with a sizzling title track, which is upbeat and is a refreshing change from the recycled top 40 sound. Joyce and Emmma brilliantly interplay their vocales and neither seems to be fighting to be heard. The 10-cut album was written by the same group who is known for his work with The Pretenders, INXS and Slouxie & the Banshees.
Until recently, the trio successfully managed themselves. Now Josh Zieman of the New York-based Side One Management company handles the band's affairs. The company also represents Modern English, Icicle Works, Steve Earle and Rosanne Cash.
In *Pursuit* has headlined in cities including Chicago, New Orleans, and New York. They also opened shows for *Crowded House*, a.ha, and *Pseudo Echo*. And now *In Pursuit* will play this Saturday at the Jazzhaus, 92%c Massachusetts St.
Recently I talked with Joyce, the band's guitarist and vocalist.
Q: How did the band meet?
A: Emma, the singer and bass player, and I, we got together. We went to high school together in Cleveland, Ohio. Then we got in this scene, and found Jeff, the drummer. The rest is history.
Q: Why Nashville, Tennessee?
A: There is a lot more happening here than people think. It’s a really big music town, not just country music like everyone thinks. There is a lot of good rock 'n' roll down here. The only reason we are interested in the record company. It's our home for now. There are four million bands in Athens, Georgia. Besides, I think when we moved it was before that period. I think so.
I was surprised by the band's success. We've been working really hard at it. It's not a freak me-out-success. We don't consider ourselves there at all. We still have a long way to go.
Q: How did the band survive without a manager?
A: I took care of all the arranging in the music end of it. We got the record on our own. We did a demo tape in my living room and someone heard it and took it into the president of the company. Two to three weeks later we got signed. In a matter of a month we had recorded our first record, the EP When Dandelion Falls). This one is written for a special time and we got a good producer. Q: What purpose did Steve Churchyard serve and what were the advantages in using him?
A: He was wonderful. We called him because he engineered a lot of records that as a group we collectively liked. We wanted someone to get the sound. He drew a remix of it. Do you see it sound like another? Or do you test to sound like another?
Q: Do you try to sound like another band?
A: We try to avoid that. I think the way we sing our vocals is different than other bands.
Q: Recently the band opened for the Norwegian band a-ha and the Australian band Pseudo Echo. Your band stole the show from Pseudo Echo.
A: We just do our gig, it's just a vehicle to get out and play. It's a good chance to get out in front of a large group of people. We were playing the best we could.
Q: What's on the road like?
A: It is hunky dorey, I don't mind it a bit. I look forward to it — driving a van, don't sleep much and all that crap.
Q: How has the exposure on MTV
4: How has the exposure on MTV helped the group?
A: It helped because when we toured people would come up and see us. In that respect, it helps. Being a band that isn't megastars, I think every bit helps. We just want people to like our music. You have to eat, it's not like we're making lots of money.
Q: What have you heard about Lawrence?
A: That's where they did The Day After. I really haven't heard about it. I'm looking forward to coming down and getting the hell out of here. I like being on the road. I don't like being in the same place too long.
Q: Do you have any favorite songs?
A: I wrote them all. After I finish a song, I like it for about 20 minutes, then I don't want to hear it for a while. But I'm proud of everything we've done.
Witches brew up comedic little devil
By JOHN BENNER
Editor
The Witches of Eastwick is the story of three unmarried women residents of a fictional New England town who are looking for Mr. Right but find Mr. Raspin.
The three women meet regularly on Thursday nights for cocktails and to discuss their search for the perfect man. They previously had been experimenting with "Chinese aphrodisiac cooking," but soon expand their horizons when they conjure up the devil.
The film, based loosely on the John Updike novel of the same name, stars Jack Nicholson as the devilish Daryl Van Horne, Cher as Alexandra Medford. Susan Sarandon as Jane Spoeth Pleicher as Melanie Pieffer as Suikie Ridgement.
Van Horne mysteriously appears in the town of Eastwick after the three women simultaneously fantasize about the man of their dreams. This melding of the minds apparently to summon the Evil One to Eastwick
Nicholson, who gets ample opportunities to use his patented satanic smile, buys a mansion, which has a history of haunting, at the edge of the puritan village. He seeks out and seduces the three women. The group's actions create a scandal that warps the mind of Felicia Gabriel, played by Veronica Cartwright, the wife of the local newspaper publisher, and provides hours of gossip for the people of Eastwick.
The Witches of Eastwick is a horror-comedy battle of the sexes as well as a battle for the possession of souls. Van Horne first meets and seduces Alexandra Medford, a young widow who sculpts fertility statues.
Van Horne soon beds down with Jane Spofford, an elementary school music teacher who recently has been divorced after a childless marriage. He woes her after going to her house to play a duet, she on cello and he on violin.
At first, Alexandra is repulsed by Van Horne, but eventually she falls victim to his spell.
Alexandra and Jane take Suki Ridgemont, a reporter for the town newspaper, over to the mansion to meet Van Horne. When he makes a play for Suki, after she boasts about her abnormal high rate of fertility, the audience is given a hint at Van Horne's master plan.
The Witches of Eastwich is filled with special effects, some of which are more believable than others. It is directed by Australian George Miller, director of the Mad Max trilogy, who has a definite flair for action and for the sinister. Combine Miller's talent for speed with Vilmos Zsigmond's photography direction, and the result is some action scenes that rival the three Mad Max films and Zigmond's The Sugarland Express and Close Encounters of the Third Kind.
THE AMPHONIES
The Witches of Eastwick is an entertaining movie that requires the audience to use its imagination in order to be a success. Although this is not Nicholson's best job to date, he is more than adequate at bringing out the devil in himself.
The music, which was composed by John Williams, is quite good.
Cher, Susan Sarandon, Michelle Pteiffer and Jack Nicholson.
P. S. I noticed that the annoying practice of showing commercials at the movies has been adopted on a grand scale by the Commonwealth Theatres. Before the movie began, the audience was subjected to ads for
Kodak Film, Cherry 7-Up, Sunbloc, and the Jim Ellena automobile dealership. Each of these ads are a full minute long and precede three ads for coming films.
after the seventh consecutive commercial. Many people go to the movies instead of staying home because of television advertising. Asking moviegoers to pay $4 to sit and watch ads is an insult.
I wish Commonwealth would pay attention to the people who booed
Darcy Chang/KANSAN
(1)
Darcy Schild, left, and Eric Anderson, Lawrence residents, rehearse their roles as Krojack and the chef in Don't Drink the Water, which opens tomorrow night. Roni Cunningham, Lawrence senior, background, plays Kilroy.
KU senior directs play; spy spoof is quencher
Rv KRISTEN HAYS
Staff writer
Performances will be tomorrow, Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 2:30 p.m.
Get a taste of a Woody Allen play in Don't Drink the Water, produced by the Lawrence Community Theater.
The play, directed by Paul Jackson, Derby senior, is about a family of tourists, the Hollanders, accused of spying and chased by police in a nondescript communist country.
The embassy's ambassador goes back to the United States and leaves his clumsy axi Axel Male in charge, who does his best to get them home.
"It's not a political show," Jackson said. "It makes fun of the United States and a communist countries equally, which is why we don't use real flags but represent us."
The play has a large cast, with four leading roles: Axel, played by Brad Knauss; the Hollanders, played by Mike and Shirley Cormack; and their daughter Susan, played by Robin Lent.
Assistant director Linda Bybee said the supporting actors were so good that the audience would notice everyone. At auditions, Jackson guaranteed every cast member at least one laugh.
"It's a funny show, and I wanted it detailed so that the actors are doing so much on stage there's no way the audience can catch all of it." Jackson said.
much on stage there's no way the audience can coach all of it. Jackson said Don't Drink the Water is the only play LCT will produce this summer. Jackson said auditions would be held for the next play, *Pippin*, at the end of August.
Jackson was assistant director for *The Marriage of Figaro* last semester, but he said this was his first play outside school. He played Pirelli, a barber who marketed "miracle elixer," in KU's production of *Sweeney Todd* in the spring of 1985.
In 1984, he was musical director for Laffite. "It was so off-Broadway it was in Pennsylvania," he said.
Design prof exhibits tapestries in Spencer Museum
Staff writer
By ELIZABETH KELLY
One can almost hear the seagulls and the peaceful swishing of the reeds when looking down the beaches of the North Shore. And whether it's the icy, quiet solitude of Winter Dream, or the cool melting of blue in Lake Crossing, something inside the viewer may stir when he sees a tapestry created by Cynthia Schira
Schira, a KU professor of design, has a special exhibit, entitled New
Work, now showing in the White Gallery of the Spencer Museum of Art. The show will run until July 26 and is definitely worth battling the heat and humidity to see.
Schira manages to conquer the intricate and the delicate and brings about a touching response in all who view her work. As an oil painter myself, I was immediately drawn to her tapestries because of the painted-like quality they possess, something for which she has been
striving.
She referred to her husband, Dick Schira, KU professor of painting, when she said, "Living with a painter. I've wanted to get closer to the mark-making and spontaneity that I see him encounter working on the canvas."
An added difficulty, that is not found in oil painting or other art forms, is inherent in weaving. As the artist weaves, the tapestry is wound around a large spool underneath the
loom's breast beam, leaving only a foot of the work visible at one time
Shira began her career in weaving at the Rhode Island School of Design where she was awarded a scholarship. After completing her bachelor of fine arts degree there, she accepted a Texton Fellowship to apprentice at L'Ecole des Arts Decoratifs in Aubusson, France. She has had her work displayed in numerous public collections all over the United States.
Calendar
Today
9 a.m. — "Intermediate Word-
star," a microcomputer workshop at the Academic Computer Center. Call 684-4291 for more information. The registration fee for University students, staff and faculty is $35, general public fee is $65.
1 p.m. — "WS Propak," a microcomputer workshop at the Academic Computer Center. Call 684-4291 for more information. The registration fee for University students, staff and faculty is $35, general public fee is $65.
6 p.m. - Softball managers meeting in 2021 Robinson Center - Slow-pitch begins at 6 p.m. - co-rec at 6:30 p.m. - fast-pitch at 7 p.m. - teams register at team fee for slow-pitch and co-team fees for slow-pitch and co-team teams is $10, and the fee for fast-pitch is $20
7 p.m. — "Suddenly Last Summer," SUA film shown in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Admission is $2 and on Sundays. The SUA office on level 4 of the Union.
8 p.m. — Richard Reber. Piano recital in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
9 p.m. — The Ebling Brothers. Live music at the Rock Chalk Bar, 618 W.
12th Floor. Cover price is $1
9:30 p.m. - Jayhawk Jazz Quintet.
Live music in the Jazzhaus, 926%
Tomorrow
10:30 p.m. — Absolute Ceiling. Live music at Bottleneck's, 737 New Hampshire St.
All day — Orientation for entering engineering students in the Kansas Union.
10 a.m. "Preventing Sexual Harassment" an affirmative action statement
6 p.m. - Softball officials meeting in 202 Robinson Center.
7 p.m. — "My Favorite Year" and
"Who's On First." SUA films shown in
Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas
Union. Admission is $2. Tickets are sold at the SUA office on level 4 of the Union.
7 p.m. "The American Past,"
Pickett Listen to history on KANU FM 325.
9 p.m. — Dashboard Buddha. Live music at the Rock Chalk Bar, 618 W. 12th St.
Friday
9 a.m. — "Intermediate MS-DOS"
a microcomputer workshop at the Academic Computer Center. For more information call 864-4291.
7 p.m. — "Opera is my Hobby," with James Seaver. KANU FM91.5.
7:30 p.m. Midwestern Music
12:45 p.m. The Museum
without Restore Hall in Murphy Hall
9 p.m. - Observatory open house, weather permitting, at the Clyde W. Tombaugh Observatory, 500 Lindley Hall. Call 864-3166 for more information.
9 p.m. - Todd Newman. Live music at the Rock Chalk Bar, 618 W. 12th St.
9:30 p.m. — Homeestead Grays.Live music at the Jazzhaus, 926½ Massachusetts St. Cover charge is $2.
10:30 p.m. — The Sons. Live music at Bottleneck's, 737 New Hampshire St.
There is a cover charge.
Saturdav
All day — Orientation for students entering the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences in the Kansas Union.
Michael Maher, host on tpcc.MU-FRM-815.5.
9:30 a.m. — Midwestern Music Camp Piano Recital in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murhvah Hall.
2 p.m. - Midwestern Music Camp Major Concert Listen to chorus, orchestra and bands in Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall.
8 p.m.-11 p.m. — Bely Scatterl. Live
music at the Glass Onion 624. W12
9 a.m.-5 p.m. — Bely Scatterl. Live
9:30 p.m. - Red Zone. Live music at Bogars, 611 Vermont St.
10:30 p.m. — The Sons. Live music at Bottleneck's, 737 New Hampshire St.
There is a cover charge.
9:30 p.m. — In Pursuit Live music at the Jazzhaus, 926% Massachusetts.
Cover charge is $3.
9 p.m. — Homestead Grays. Live music at the Rock Chalk Bar, 618 W. 12th St.
Sunday
3 p.m. — The KU Concerts on KANU-FM 91.5. Continues each Sunday at 3 p.m.
Monday
8 p.m. — Evaline Campbell. Student organ recital, Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
9 a.m. — Microcomputer Workshop.
Attend a programming in dBase III at the Academic Computer Center. There is a fee. Call 864-4291 for more information.
All day — Orientation for Liberal Arts and Science students in the Kansas Union.
8 p.m. - Carol Wilson. Student recital in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
8 p.m. — Open Mic at the Rock Chalk Bar. Come show off your talents in front of an audience at 618 W. 12th St.
Tuesdav
Art Briefs Horsing around
The Sunflower Benefit Horse Show will be at the Douglas County Fairgrounds this weekend. There are shows at 7 p.m. tomorrow, Friday and Saturday, and at 9 a.m., Friday and Saturday. The proceeds will go to the O'Connell Youth Ranch.
Local art in K.C.
Two former KU students are among 61 artists who have work on display in the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art's Mid-Fourth 1987 exhibition in Kansas City, Mo. Jerry Smith, McLouth artist, and Louis Copt, Lawrence artist, had work chosen for the juried exhibition, which runs until June 28. More than 100 artists submitted entries.
8
Wednesday, June 17, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
Orient
Continued from p. 1
Linea Sundstrom, advising assistant, said that about 300 students went through each session, and that there were about 13 sessions altogether. The first orientation session was June 11.
In a typical day of orientation, the students meet between 8 a.m. and 9 a.m. in woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. At 9 a.m., the chancellor or a vice chancellor greets them, after which they hear a KU professor's presentation, called "Academic Conventions for a KU Student."
Between 9:30 a.m. and 10:20 a.m., the students meet with staff members of student affairs.
"At the student affairs meetings, we are trying to get students to tell us
about what they're uncomfortable about at KU. It's also just answering questions; an informal, free flow of information," Ulmer said.
She said parents and students had different concerns, and that parents had the more practical, day-to-day concerns.
"Student concerns are more like, 'Am I going to like it here?' or, 'What's college all about?' or, 'When do I meet my roommate?' " she said. "I know of the day-to-day things that the student will have to work out."
In the afternoon, students meet with academic advisers from the schools in which they are interested. Bill Sharp, coordinator for
academic advising, said this gives the students a chance to meet with KU professors and to select their own schedules.
Ulmer said, "We want the student to make the class schedule decision alone."
Hal Stein, a future KU student from Chicago, had just finished filling out his enrollment card at Saturday's session.
"The best thing about this is the students helping out, making sure I know where I'm going," he said.
STUDENT
GROUPS:
• SAVE 28% WHEN YOU ADVERTISE IN THE KANSAN
MOLLY'S
Try our new Steak Fajitas.
We start with juicy steak cut into strips. Then we smother them with grilled onions. Real cheddar cheese. Crisp lettuce. Cover them with a zesty pico sauce.And wrap them in a soft, flour tortilla. They're so good,and...
You can get them now at Taco Bell in Lawrence!
1220 West 6th Street 1408 West 23rd Street
Hello Taco Bell.
LECTURE
MICHAEL HARRINGTON of Queens College
LECTURE
LECTURE
June 19, Friday 1:00 p.m.
"THE NEW AMERICAN POVERTY"
Woodruff Auditorium Kansas Union
Michael Harrington, Professor of Political Science, is the author of fourteen books on social criticism. His books include The Other America, the book generally credited with sparking the War on Poverty; The Vast Majority, a study of the Third World which was one of the three finalists for the National Book Award, and more recently, The New American Poverty. His newest book is The Next Left.
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Naismith Place Apartments
A woman relaxes in a hot tub.
Two-Person Jacuzzi in Each Unit!
Fully Equipped Kitchen, Laundry Facility Ample Parking, Two Bedrooms Satellite Available
Park-like Setting MICROWAVE IN APARTMENTS RENTED PRIOR TO AUG.1 1501 S.W.25th Ct. 841-1815
841-1815
Kansan Summer WeeklyWednesday, June 17, 1987
9
Job's perks keep KU students on line
By KRISTEN HAYS
Staff writer
Don't hang up on the idea of telephone sales.
This career may sound boring, but Entertul, Inc., a Lawrence telemarketing firm, contradicts that image by offering employee incentives that make the job more attractive.
Kris Krause, a personnel assistant for Entertel, said that she liked the company so much that even though she graduated from KU in May, she still wants to stay with Entertel.
"I love it, honest to God. Everyone's my age. They're enthusiastic, just like a family," she said. "If you want to help them they help you out. It's very personal."
Even so, the turnover rate for salesmen at Entertel has been traditionally high.
Entertel salesmen, also called TSRs, for telephone sales representatives, call people at night and try to sell them various products and services. They start on the East Coast and work through the country to the West Coast because of time zones.
Krause said the tedious nature of the job made it difficult for telephone salesmen.
"It's not easy work," she said.
"It's not manual labor, where you're out there sweating. But, it's stressful. You have to overcome rejection, but once you overcome it, it's great."
Mike Boyer, vice president of operations at Entertel, said that when he arrived in Lawrence in September to work for Entertel, he learned that the company's had a poor reputation, among students in particular.
"Everyone, especially people on the Hill, were saying, 'Oh, don't work at Entertal.' We decided to change that, and contrary to what people think, we don't yell at TSRs, and this isn't the typical boiler room," Boyer said.
Janet Asmus, Fort Collins, Colo., senior, lived in McColum Hall a year ago and heard that Entertiel wasn't an ideal place to work.
"I heard it was pushy, really forceful to make sales, and that the supervisors there were slave drivers. I've been looking for a job, and I remembered that when I thought of Entertel."
Krause said that since Boyer instituted incentive programs and cash bonuses for salesmen, the turnover rate has decreased. Entertel now employs about 200 people and is at full capacity, which is rare.
Boyer said there were four ways salesmen made money at Entertal: the hourly wage, bonuses for added hours, incentives based on performance and cash prizes.
"Before Mike was here, we didn't have these contests and monthly meetings with awards for people," she said.
"All this means some people can make $10 an hour here," Boyer said.
Most Entertain employees, including management, are students, or recent graduates. Boyer said most of his clients were students and were promoted from there.
Monthly staff meetings are social occasions at which employees have free pizza and soda. Awards for salesman, staff member and supervisor of the month are presented at the meetings.
Krause said, "Last May, we had an auction. Several weeks before that, supervisors had been giving away enterbus, like Monopoly money, for any reason they saw fit. TSRs might get money for a good sale, a smile or any reason whatsoever.
"At the auction, they could buy summer-type things, like a ten speed, color TVs, dinner on the Plaza or five free 15-minute breaks."
Entertel, a subsidiary of Entertainment Publications, Inc., performs telemarketing across the country for several different companies, such as Hyatt Legal Services, Players Club International and Special Olympics International
Saturday marked Entertel's third year as a company. Boy invited all his employees, their families and guests to a birthday party. He said 300 people attended.
Paula Goulden, Arkansas City sophomore and salesman, was the great friend of her.
"They had a whole pig and tons of other food. There was a Coors beer truck, a deejay, frisbee and volleyball, and everyone from TSRs to management hung out together."
Goulden said, "The managers don't act like they're above you. When they criticize your work, they don't criticize you. They play around like everyone else and get the work done too."
Boyer said that because his work force consisted mostly of students, his staff worked around school schedules.
"We let the TSRs make out their own schedules, essentially, and readily give leaves of absence for holidays, summer or final," he said.
Goulden said that during finals, the managers accepted lessened enthusiasm from the salesmen. "but after finals, they said, 'OK, finals are over, now get back to work!' They understand student problems, and when you just can't handle it, if you're having an off day, they help you out."
Boyer said employees who received permission could use the company's videocassette recorders, adding machines and typewriters for classwork.
Krause said she stressed good attendance as much as positive attitudes. According to Entertier's absence policy, one absence without calling results in a reduced salary, to $3.35 an hour. A second unexplained absence is grounds for firing, and a third is considered an abandonment.
"We try to promote their school work, not interfere with it," he said.
"One time at $3.35 usually cures the attendance problem," she said.
Goulden said, "At first, when I started, it was hard. People hang up. Especially now, people won't give their credit card numbers because of all the credit scams, even if they want what we sell.
"I plan to go to school in Poland next fall, but if I don't go, I will stick with it. It's not easy, but all the other stuff they do for us makes it fun."
JUNKYARD'S
JYM
SUMMER RATE $50 University Students
Need
money for school?
flexible work hours?
excellent wages?
cash bonuses?
incentives?
Relaxed atmosphere?
vening-Weekend hours?
No Experience required?
JUNKYARD'S JYM
535 Gateway
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
842-4966
YOUNG BROTHERS
wet cuts $8! any service over $20 gets a free manicure.
ENTERTEL
skinning for men and women
1017½ MASS. 841-8276
841-1200 E.O.E.M/F/H
We've got it all! Call today.
SUMMER STYLE
hair lords
kLZR 106 day ★★★
Today: Burger King 1301 W.23rd 1107 W.6th
Thurs. : Jennings Daylight Donuts
&
King of Jeans
A week of 106 days continues:
LISTEN TO KLZR FOR MORE DETAILS!
Fri. : Perkins
★★★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
WE KNOW WHY YOU RIDE
2
FOR
2 SALE
FOR
DOUBLE
CHEESEBURGERS
Double the meat!
Double the cheese!
Double the taste!
2
FOR
$1.99
1548 E 23rd STREET
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
Phone: 843-3333
2 FOR Peanut Parfaits 1.99 Good thru Sunday, June 21
Bucky's
2 SALE
come as you are ... hungry 2120 WEST NINTH
HORIZONS
HONDA
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A Little Independence Goes A Long Way
HOURS
MONDAY - FRIDAY 9 to 6
SATURDAY 9 to 4
THURSDAY til 8
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With push-button starting and no
dishing the Elite 50 is easy to abbreviate, it's the new Elite 50. Elite styling with such sleek styling and great performance, you wouldn't think it would be so affordable. But it is.
So come and see the new Elite 50.
It will show you what independence is in the world.
Go your own way with the new Honda Elite"150.
SCOOTER
HONDA kooten
FILM EDITOR
BEN JONES
allow us to introduce ourselves
Aside from having been here for thirty-seven years, which would indicate that we must be doing something right, we're a shop that's full of the most exciting men's clothing and sportswear you've ever seen. You'll enjoy stopping in . . the atmosphere is easy and comfortable . . the fashions are fresh and fun. We invite you to make us your home for men's clothing in Lawrence. Stop in and get acquainted. You'll be most welcome.
WHITENIGHT'S
the men's shop * 839 massachusetts * lawrence, kansas 60444 * 843-7756
Remember Father's Day is June 21st
10
Wednesday, June 17, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
Double Coupons Dillons
Double Your Savings On All Manufacturer's "Cents Off" Coupons Up To And Including 50¢ In Value.
Dillons FOOD STORES
图12-36
-Bonus Special-
"Pick Of The Crop"
California Head
Lettuce
Additional Purchases ... 390
Super Coupon!
Limited One Hour With This Coupon
Limited One Coupon per Customer
Coupon Good Lunat 11/12/18 1987
In Discount Coupon
In Discount Coupon
"Pick Of The Crop"
California
Head Lettuce
K.U.
K.U.
-Bonus Special-
Food Club
U.S.D.A. Large A
Eggs
Dozen
FRESH EGGS
LARGE GRADE A
non-damaged white
Rallous
29¢ Head
41376009845
Limit One With Coupon
39C
"ROCK
CHALK
JAYHAWK"
KU
-Bonus Special-
FRESH EGGS
free from eggs
LARGE GRADE A
NET WT 14.75 OZ (423 g)
Additional Purchases . . . $1.09
Ohse Meat Bologna
Regular or Garlic 16 oz. Pkg.
OhSe
BOLOGNA
ONLY POUNDS
79¢ 0 41260 09814
91072345678901
Super Coupon!
16 oz. Pkg. Ohse
Meat Bologna
Regular or Garlic
79¢
Limit One Pkg With This Coupon
Limit One Coupon Per Customer
Coupon Good June 17-23, 2017
Super Coupons Not Included in Double Coupon Program
Limit One With Coupon
0 41260 09814 7
Prices Effective June 17-23, 1987 Limit Rights Reserved
KU
Super Coupon!
Lim. Dog Car With The Coupon
One Coupon Per Customer
Coupon Good June 12, 738
Coupon Good July 16, 738
Coupon Good August 25, 738
Coupon Discount Program
---
Food Club U.S.D.A. Large Eggs
39¢
Food Club
PURE
SUGAR
GRANULATED
NET WT 5 LB = 2.22 KG
Sugar 5 Lb. Bag
Bonus Special Food Club
Additional Purchases . . . $1.39
Super Coupon!
Limited Mileage With 14 Coupon
Limited Coupon With Customer
Coupon Gold June 17 - 19 1988
Coupon Silver June 17 - 1989
Discount Coupon Warranty
Food Club Granulated. 5 Lb. Bag Sugar
1260 09014
99¢
Limit One With Coupon
Deli & Cheese
Shop
—Bonus Special—
Fried Chicken One Whole 8 Piece Golden $3.99
Whole WondeRoast One Ea.
Potato Salad Dillon Old Fashioned 4 Lb. $3.39 or Mustard Carton
Dillon Cole Slaw 4 Lb. $3.39
Macaroni & Cheese Salad Dillon 4 Lb. $3.39
Alma Cheddar Cheese Mild Lb. $2.19
Delit Items Available Only In Stores With Delis. Not Available In These Towns: Pratt, Arkansas City, Greensburg, B辽orado, Windoite, Larned, Derby, Mulvane, St. John or Sterling.
Ready-To-Eat Fully Cooked
Hot Dogs, Polish Sausage or Hot Links Ea
TREASURES
35¢ or 3/$1
Seafood Shoppe
—Bonus Specials—
Bonus Specials
Sole Fillets Fresh Dover ... Lb. $359
Rainbow Trout Fresh Boned, 8-9 oz. Avg.
"Great On The Grill" ... Lb. $289
Shell On Shrimp Uncooked Head-
less, 26-30 ct. ... Lb. $839
Orange Roughy Fillets ... Lb. $479
Look For Our Recipes At Our Seafood Counter.
Lobster and Shrimp Admited and Steamed Free.
No Seafood Shoppers 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.
Fruit & Salad Bar...
SALAD BAR HOURS
Salad Bar
799
Fruit & Salad Bar...Our in-season fresh fruit bar is now open. Enjoy the sweet natural taste of sunripened cantaloupe, honeydews & watermelon...all in addition to our same variety filled salad bar!
(Available Only In Stools With Salad Bars. Sandwiches Not In These Stools. Salma, Dodge City, Emporia, Wellington, August, Prairie, Arkansas City, Greenburg, Belfort, Dearborn, Laredo, Derby, Murale, St. John or Sterling; )
From Our
Plant Dept... Bonus Special Assorted 3" Tropical Plants
Each 89¢
-Bonus Special-
Decoy Planter
$989
(Not Availabe In All Stores.)
From Our Flower Shop...
Bonus Special
Father's Day
Mug Arrangement
$899
Cash & Carry
NO FLOWER SHOPS In These Towns: Hays, Augusta,
Pratt, Arkansas City, Greensburg, El Dorado, Winfield,
Larned, Mulvane, St. John or Sterling
Floral Deliveries Twice Daily, Morning & Afternoon. Sunday, Afternoon Only.
Kansan Summer Weekly/Wednesday, June 17, 1987
11
Sports
ROYALS REPORT
compiled by Dawn O'Malley Managing editor
Monday: Royals 6, A's 7
In the top of the ninth inning, Tony Phillips hit a two-run home run lifting the Oakland A's 7-6 past Kansas City in Monday night's game in Royals Stadium. The Royals threatened in the bottom of the ninth, but Danny Tartullab was thrown out at homeplate.
Royals 000 131 101-6 15 2
Twips. 001 102 102-7 10 0
Lebrnd (7), Flar (19), Gleaton (10), Quisenby and Quirk; Cyoung (55), Eckersley (25)
Lepper (15), Jhowlwell (1) and Glennbach, W. Laird (20), Laird (22), Wairy (24),
Wairy (26), Ploegen (33). Philips, Phillips, Philip, Phillips, Phillips, Phillips,
Philips, Phillips, Phillips, Phillips, Phillips, Phillips, Phillips, Phillips, Phillips,
Sunday: Royals 0. Angels 12
George Hendrick drove in four runs, Dick Schofield hit a home run and Don Sutton pitched seven scoreless innings as the Angels destroyed the Royals 12-0. In the weekend series against the Angels, the Royals scored only one run. This was the 10th game this season in which Kansas City was scoreless.
Royals 0, Angeles 12
Royals 000 000 000 0 7 1
Angels 301 300 114 13 13
DJackson (4), Fair (3), Shiney (2) and Sutton (7), Minton (2) and Boone, W-Sutton (7), L-DJackson (29), SV-Neile (28), ZBsBoone, Downing, JMellon, McLe堂
Kansas City pitcher Mark Gubicaz continued his losing steak as the Royals were shutout by the Angels 4-0. He gave up all four Angel runs. Gubicaz has not won a game since May 18. For California, Willie Fraser pitched his first major league shutout, allowing just four hits.
Saturday: Royals 0, Angels 4
Royals 0, Angels 4
Hoylands of Angleside
000 000 000-0 4 0
000 220 000-4 9 0
Angels
Gubicza (6), Gleaton (2), Quisnbry (1) and Owen; Fraser (9) and Boone, W-Fraser (3-4). L.
Gubicza (3-8). SV-None. 2Bs-Downing, DWhite, Blackson, Ryal, Brett.
Kansas City pitcher Bret Saberhagen boosted his record to 11-1 in the Royals 10- victory over the Angels. Saberhagen has won his last five games, his only loss came May 14 at Baltimore. George Brett came off the disabled list and hit a RBI double.
Friday: Royals 1, Angels 0
Royals 1, Angels 0
Royals 000 100 00x1-3 0
Angels 000 000 000-0 3 1
Saberhagen (9) and Quirk, MWitt (8) and Fimple. W-Saberhagen (11-1). L-MWitt (7-5). SV-
None, 2R-Fwhite, Brett and Jowner.
Thursday: No game
Wednesday: Royals 3, Twins 4
It took the Minnesota Twins ten innings to defeat the Kansas City Royals 4-3 in Minnesota. Charlie Leibrandt allowed three hits in 7½ innings, becoming the American League's strongest pitcher with a 2.12 ERA. The lose put the Rovals a game out of first place.
Royals 3, Twins 4
Royals 101 001 00003 7 2
Twins 000 000 03014 7 1
Lebrout (3.7), Gleason (1.4) and Buterla; Byeleven (8.2), Reardon (8.2), Sunoff, W.Gleason (3.4). L.lebrantri (3.6). SV-None, 2Bs-Ota, Gladden, HR. Blackson.
Today
ON DECK
Tomorrow
Royals vs. Oakland 7:05 p.m.at Royals Stadium
Royals vs. California 9:35 p.m. at California
Fridav
Royals vs. California 9:35 p.m. at California
Saturday
Royals vs. California 9:05 p.m. at California
Sunday
Royals vs. California 4:05 p.m. at California
Royals vs. Oakland
9:35 p.m.at Oakland
Monday
Monday ___
Canseco led off the third with a homer to left-center. He hit his 11th of the season with two outs in the sixth.
Tuesday
LAST NIGHT
A's ab r h rbi
Polonia cf 4 2 2 0
MDavis rf 5 1 2 4
LeMstr ss 0 0 0 0
Lansford 3b 4 2 2 2
Lamp p 0 0 0 0
McGwir 1b 5 0 0 0
Canseco lf 5 2 2 3
RJcksn c 3 1 1 2
Steinbch c 3 0 0 0
Tettelc t 2 0 0 0
Phillips 2b 4 1 1 0
Griffin ss 3 2 2 0
Javier rf 1 0 0 0
Totals 39 11 13 11
Royals ab r h rbi
Wilson cf 4 0 2 0
Seitzer 3b 4 1 2 0
Brett dh 5 0 0 0
Trtabil rf 4 0 1 0
FWhite 2b 3 0 1 0
Pecota 2b 1 0 0 0
BJacksn lf 3 0 1 0
Balboni 1b 4 0 1 1
ASalazr ss 4 0 0 0
Quirk c 3 0 1 0
Lowan c 1 0 0 0
Totals 36 1 9 1
Royals vs. Oakland 9:35 p.m. at Oakland
Royals 000 001 000 - 1
A's 211 401 200 - 11
W- Ontario (31). L- Randonde (2). S-None. L-nuneing BRI Bangladesh (5). O-nnone. L-nuneing N.A. Indonesia (4). D-nnone. HR- Caneco, MDavia, RJackson. SB- Palomia (11). Canecey (7). Griffin (10). S-None. W- Canada (6).
Major League Standings
East W 4 L 2 Pct. GB
Toronto 40 12 .645
New York 39 25 .609 2
Milwaukee 32 27 .649 6
Detroit 33 28 .581 6
Boston 38 25 .541 6½
Baltimore 28 36 .438 13
Cleveland 23 39 .371 17
Luis Polonia singled leading off the fourth and Davis, who drove in four runs, followed with his 16th home run into the right field seats for a 6-0 Oakland lead. Davis also had a two-run single in the seventh.
American League
East W L Pct. GB
St. Louis 39 22 .639 -
Chicago 34 29 .540 -
Montreal 33 29 .530
Minneapolis 32 32 .61%
Philadelphia 29 31 .483
Pittsburgh 29 31 .483
91%
West W 36 L 27 Pct. GB —
Minnesota W 36 L 27 Pct. GB —
Oakland 33 28 28411 2 1
Kansas City 31 29 5411 2½
Seattle 31 29 492 5
California 29 32 492 7
Texas 26 33 441 8
Chicago 23 37 383 11½
National League
West W L Pct. GB
Cincinnati 35 29 .547 -
Houston 34 39 .540 1½
San Francisco 33 29 .524 1½
Atlanta 30 30 .544 1½
Boston 29 19 .460 5½
San Diego 19 34 .460 1½
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Mike Davis and Reggie Jackson each hit two-run home runs in the fourth inning as the Oakland Athletics romped past the Kansas City Royals 11-1 last night for their seventh victory in eight games.
A's crush Royals with four home runs
Jose Cancseh hit two solo home runs as Oakland, 34-28, went six games above .500 for the first time since Aug. 30, 1985.
Royals on two hits for five innings and struck out a career-high six batters in his first start in 100 major league appearances.
Gene Nelson relieved Ontiveros in the sixth and gave up Kansas City's only run when Steve Balboni's bases-loaded grounder hit the third base bag and bounced away from three baselman Carney Lansford.
The Associated Press
Steve Ontiveros, 3-1, shut out the
Lansford walked and Jackson hit a towering drive to right-center for his seventh homer later in the fourth.
Kansas City starter Rick Anderson,
0-2, gave up four runs in 25%
innings as the Royals lost their fourth in a row. They also allowed 34 runs in
Lansford and Canseco each drove in runs in the first inning with singles. Oakland took a 3-0 lead in the second when Alfredo Griffin singled, stole second and scored on Lansford's single.
The Royals are now 4*5 games on
games behind second
place Oakland.
Bingham successor to Pattin
Emporia State coach plans to win with recuiting, discipline
By JOHN MONTGOMERY
Staff writer
Winning is most important to Dave Bingham, and winning is something the University of Kansas baseball team hasn't seen much of in recent years.
"I think the biggest challenge is to develop an atmosphere of winning. There wasn't a commitment before," said Bingham, KU's new baseball coach who guided Emporia State University to five NAIA World Series appearances in his 14 years as coach.
"Once you have the atmosphere, people will feel it is a privilege to play baseball for the University of Kansas," he said.
Bingham, 38, who was named to the position last month, succeeds Marty Pattin, whose contract was not renewed. Bingham compiled a 555-271 record at Emporia. This year, he played in seven games for Lewis Clark State in the NAIA finals.
Bingham hopes to bring his winning ways to Kansas, a team with a 15-39-1 record last season.
"I am so optimistic," Bingham said. "I believe so much in the University and the program."
Bingham said he would be able to recruit the best players, especially those here in Kansas, once he establishes a winning program.
"If we can get a program that's respectable, we will win recruiting-wise," he said.
Bingham, a native of Tucson, Ariz., did a great deal of recruiting for Emporia from high schools and junior colleges in Arizona.
Kansas players to play here.
He said Arizona would still be a source, but ultimately he hoped to get
Next season 17 players will return
to Bingham and Bingham said he had
capidipd.
Floyd Temple, baseball coach for 28 years before assuming his present job as assistant athletic director, was optimistic about the team's future under Bingham.
"I always felt when we played Emporia State that we were playing a well-coached team," Temple said. "We came to do challenges to do and hopes to do is excellent."
"He certainly has the support of the University and the whole athletic family."
Temple also said Bingham was a strict disciplinarian, which was similar to his own.
Discipline is necessary in a winning program, Bingham said, and he was hopeful the players could develop it themselves.
"He'll be there everyday to run the show," Roell said. "The change will be drastic. He's a winner. He will turn it around, no doubt in my mind."
Randy Rozell, Overland Park junior, played for Bingham before transferring to KU after his freshman year. Rozell said that physical conditioning was an important part of Bingham's coaching and that Bingham would push his players to succeed.
Bingham has already gone to work in rebuilding the program. He is in the process of hiring two assistant coaches and is trying to schedule challenging teams, including more Division I teams.
"Yes, we're short in the budget." Bingham said. "They will listen more when we show we can win. The responsibility is on everyone, players and coaches. I'm accepting the challenge."
Bingham doesn't foresee a low budget as being any obstacle.
Bingham said he hoped to have the program where he wanted it within a few months.
If Bingham's list of accomplishments are any indication, his coaching philosophy seems to have worked
He was the NAIA Coach of the Year in 1976, 1984 and 1986. He has been NAIA District 10 Coach of the Year 11 times and Area III Coach of the Year five times.
In addition to five NAIA World Series appearances and a national championship in 1978, he has coached Emporia State to 11 district titles, eight conference titles and five regional crowns.
In addition to coaching at Emporia State, he also played there while in college. He left Arizona to go to college in Emporia and had been there almost ever since.
Fifteen of Bingham's players have signed contracts with professional baseball teams.
He graduated in 1972 and tried one year of minor league baseball with the Washington Senators before returning to Emporia State as a graduate assistant. He became head coach soon after, when the position became available.
Bingham and his wife, Janet, have two children, Brianna, and Bran-
Bingham said he had enjoyed his lengthy stay at Emporia, but he
C. B. ROGERS
Dave Bingham
wasn't looking back.
"Emperor State provided me a lot of opportunities," he said. "It is with mixed emotions that I leave. But I am proud to be a leader to Kansas is a great opportunity."
Bingham was one of the applicants when the coaching job became available in 1981 after Temple's retirement, but Pattin, a former major league pitcher, was hired.
Besides his success at Emporia State, Bingham has other coaching experience. He was an assistant coach for the 1984 U.S. Olympic team, which won a silver medal in Los Angeles. The same year, he was the head coach for the national team that won a bronze medal at the World Baseball Championships in Havana, Cuba.
Bingham was an assistant coach on the U.S. national teams in the 1979 and 1983 Friendship Series. He was also an assistant in 1981 for the national teams that won gold medals at the World Games in San Jose, Calif., and the International Cup in Canada.
P
Dale Fulkerson-KANSAN
Surveying the shot
Pellock's eligibility questionable
Jon Broz, Lawrence resident, seeks the advice of his caddy John Catinn, Lawrence resident, on a long putt. Broz sixth in the opening round of the Kansas Junior Bov's Golf Tournament in the 16 to 17-year-old division.
By a Kansan reporter
KU basketball center Mark Pellock was listed under the "letterman lost" section of a preseason Jayhawk roster recently received at the Big Eight Conference office.
Last year, Pellick started 25 out of 38 games and averaged 2.7 points and 2.9 rebounds a game. Pellick, who was red-shirted the 1985-86 season,
has two years of eligibility remaining.
Assistant athletic director Richard Lee said Pellock's eligibility depended on his academic standing, which was questionable at the end of last semester.
He said that if Pellock took the appropriate summer school classes, he "would have very little problem
But, he said, "I'm sure he has made steeds to do that."
being reinstated into the institution with the possibility of playing again."
However, Lee said he didn't know if Pellock was enrolled in summer school at the present time.
Pellock could not be reached for comment
By TIM HAMILTON
4 golf pros raise bucks for charity
Sports editor
Four assistant golf professionals from Alvamar Country Club recently raised money for the March of Dimes by playing as much golf as they could in one day.
The group solicited sponsors who pledged a donation for every hole the group could play. Those participating from both Alvamar courses were Brad Demo, Josh Meredith, Mike Osborn and Paul Vobach.
At 5:20 a.m. on Monday, the group was on the first tree at Alvamar.
When the foursome finally put down their clubs at 5 p.m., they had played 150 holes and raised over $2,500 for the charity that helps fight birth defects.
They lasted more than twelve hours on a day where the mercury soared to 96 degrees with 50 percent humidity.
It wasn't easy.
"It was pretty hot and humid, but we were riding golf carts," said Vobach, assistant golf pro on Alvamar's private course. "We always had a wind in our face because of the carts. And we were prepared with ice water and gatorade.
"It was a mental strain like doing anything else for 12 hours."
Osborne, assistant golf pro on Alvamar's public course, said he was very tired and sore.
1 "started cramping on the last
holes. He will glad it'll be
a week before he'll be on one."
The group maintained a steady pace and averaged 18 holes in one hour and ten minutes.
Vobach said the group was concerned more with speed than accrual.
"It was kind of like perpetual motion," he said. "We'd just drive up and hit it."
"Our longest break was probably 15 minutes," said Demo, assistant on Alvamar's private course. "We had a lot of people coming out to support us."
Randy Hunt, head golf pro at Alvamar, said the event was a fundraiser sponsored by the Kansas City chapter of the March of Dimes and the Midwest Region of the Professional Golf Association.
"It was a year ago that the KC chapter and the Midwest Chapter of the PGA started this marathoning," said Hunt, who is chairman of the fund-raising marathons in the Midwest region.
12
Wednesday, June 17, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
Minnesota Twins continue hot streak with 4 Gaqne runs
Twins 7
Brewers 3
MILWAUKEE — Greg Gagne had two doubles and a triple and knocked in four runs, leading the red-hot Minnesota Twins to a 7-3 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers last night.
Minnesota has won 10 of their last 11 games and 16 of their last 21. With the win, they have over 500 for the first time since July 24, 1979, when they were 53-43.
Frank Viola, 6-5, won his fourth straight game. He allowed four hits in $ \frac{1}{2} $ innings and struck out six.
Viola retired the first eight batters to double to Dale Seymour in the third.
Keith Atherton relieved Viola with one out in the seventh and allowed RBI singles by Bill Schroeder and Jim Gantner in the ninth. Jeff Reardon then came on for his 13th save.
Indians 8
Red Sox 7
The loss went to Chuck Crim, 3-4.
CLEVELAND — Brett Butler singled, doubled, tripled and scored three runs as the Cleveland Indians
American League
defeated the Boston Red Sox 8-7 last night.
Mark Huismann, 2-3, pitched $3\frac{1}{2}$ innings of two-hit relief, struck out one and walked one in place of Ken Schrom. Mike Armstrong got the final out, retiring Jim Rice on a line out to right field, for his first save. Rice stranded nine runners in going 0-for-5.
Al Nipper, 5-6, took the loss, which was Boston's fourth straight. He
allowed four runs in the first 2% innings.
Boston's Wade Boggs had four singles and a walk in five plate appearances as he extended his hitting streak to 17 games. He is hitting .359.
Orioles 5
Yankees 6
NEW YORK — Willie Randolph broke a 4-4 tie with a two-out, two-run single in the sixth inning, and Dave Winfield hit two home runs, lifting the New York Yankees to 6-5
victory over the Baltimore Orioles last night.
It was the Orioles' 12th loss in their last 13 games. Baltimore opponents have scored six or more runs in 16 of the last 20 games.
Rich Bordi, in relief of starter Charles Hudson, allowed two runs in 3% innings, raising his record to 3-0. He matched three innings for his 14th save.
The Yankees, trailing 4-2 after Cal Ripken's two-run single in the sixth, sent nine men to the plate in the bottom of the inning off starter Ken Dixon and Mark Williamson, 2-4.
Blue Javs 10
Tigers 4
TORONTO — Tony Fernandez and Jesse Barfield led a 16-hit attack with four hits each as the Toronto Blue Jays routed the Detroit Tigers 10-4 last night.
Gary Lavelle, 1-0, pitched two innings of two-hit, no-run relief for his first win since September 1985.
The loss snapped the Tigers' winning streak at four and ended the Blue Jays' losing skid at two. Toronto has not lost more than two straight games this season.
Braves' Alexander pitches five-hitter, S.F. loses fourth straight
Braves 7
Braves 7 Giants 2
ATLANTA — Ken Griffey and Ozzie Virgil hit home runs and Doyle Alexander pitched a five-hitter last night, pacing the Atlanta Braves over the San Francisco Giants 7-2.
It was the fourth loss in a row and the sixth in nine games for the Giants.
Griffey's three-run home run was Atlanta's fourth consecutive hit in the fourth inning off Kelly Downs,
Alexander improved to 3-1.
Astros 4
Reds 1
HOUSTON — Glenn Davis hit a home run and a run-scorning single and Jim Deshies pitched a five-hit over eight innings, giving Houston a 4-1 victory over Cincinnati last night. The victory moved the Astros
National League
within a half game of the West Division-leading Reds.
Dave Smith pitched the final inning for his 13th saye.
Deshaies, 6-2, struck out nine and walked one for his fourth straight victory and second complete game.
Ted Power, 5-3, went six innings,
allowing four runs on 10 bits, while
striking out six and walking none.
Phillies 2
Cubs 7
CHICAGO — Steve Trout, backed by home runs by Jerry Mumphrey and Dave Martinez, came off the disabled list yesterday and pitched the Chicago Cubs to 7-2 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies.
Trout, 3-1, allowed six hits over $8\frac{2}{9}$ innings as the injury-riddled Cubs snapped a five-game losing streak. It was his first start since going on the disabled list May 4.
Cardinals 11
Pirates 1
ST. LOUIS — Jack Clark hit a three-run home run and John Morris had a pinch-hit, bases-loaded triple to highlight a nine-run sixth inning last night, powering the St. Louis Cardinals to an 11-1 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates.
The runs were a season high for St. Louis, which won for the ninth time in its last 12 games. The victory gave the Cardinals a six-game lead over
Chicago in the National League East
Mets 7
Expos 3
MONTREAL — Terry Leach pitched a seven-hitter over eight plus innings and Kevin McReynolds and Darryl Strawberry hit home runs last night, powering the New York Mets to a 7-3 victory over the Montreal Expos.
Bob Sebra, 3-7, struck out nine in five innings but allowed five runs on eight hits.
KU CRICKET CLUB vs.
TULSA C.C.
(Defending Champions of the Southwest Cricket Conference)
Saturday, June 20
Sunday, June 21 beginning at 10:30 a.m.
Shenk Park at 23rd and Iowa
--corner of 9th and Avalon· 842-3040
Tuesday: OPEN MIC NIGHT (Every Tuesday!)
Wednsday: The Ebeling Brothers ($1 Cover)
Thursday: Dashboard Budda (No Cover)
Friday: Todd Neman (No Cover)
Saturday: The HomesteadGreys ($1 Cover)
The
ROCK CHALK BAR
12th & Indiana 842-9469
IF YOU NEED COPIES YOU NEED kinko's
Summer Hours
843-8019 kinko's Downtown 9th & Vermont
841-6177 & kinko's Campus 12th & Oread
Monday : 7:30 a.m. to 10:00 p.m.
Friday : 7:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
Saturday : 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
Sunday : Noon to 10:00 p.m.
749-5392
kinko's 23rd
23rd & Iowa
Thursday; 7:30 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.
Friday; 7:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
Saturday; 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Sunday; Noon to 5:00 p.m.
MIFELCREST
RANEY
DRUG STORES
FREE PRESCRIPTION DELIVERY
41st & Maine
- Pharmacy
Some of our services:
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Raney's Welcome The Summer Students
- Sun tan products - Candy
- Batteries
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843-3521 843-9012 842-3379
921 Mass. 9th & Iowa 4th & Maine
Legal Services for Students
- film
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
- Many other services available
8:00 to 4:00 Mon. thru Friday
148 Burge (Satellite) Union 864-5665
- Preparation & review of legal
- Preparation & review of legal documents
- Notarization of legal documents
Call or drop by to make an appointment.
- Spacious 2 Bedroom Apartments
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Funded by student activity fee.
A Great Place To Live!
AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
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---
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9th & Indiana
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PC PURCHASE POWER EXTENDED TO STUDENTS/STAFF!
The State of Kansas has contracted with Tandon for AT-compatible personal computers. These computers and others are now available through Computer Outlet to KU students, faculty and staff at low prices such as:
TANDON PCX-2
$895*
This PC-compatible has 640K RAM, two floppy disk drives, serial/parallel ports, DOS 3.1 and one full year warranty.
TANDON PCX-20
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COMPUTER OUTLET
- Monitor not included
Our computer
connection at
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Lawrence, Kansas
Kansan Summer WeeklyWednesday, June 17, 1987
13
Sports Briefs
SMU tailback signs with KU
Darryl Terrell, a tailback from probation-riddled Southern Methodist University, signed a scholarship agreement with KU, football coach Bob Valesente said Monday.
Terrell, a 5-11, 180-pound junior, will be eligible this fall because SMU's 1987 football season was suspended in February after the NCAA uncovered continuing rules violations.
Terrell, from Dallas High, was the second-leading rusher for the Mustangs last season. He gained 284 yards in 74 carries. His best game was a 94-yard effort in a 13-7 win over Texas Tech.
He played sparingly as a freshman in 1985. He was red-shirted in 1984.
Terrell's transfer does not become final until he enrolls at the University this fall.
Owens leaves ORU
Three months after he was replaced as athletic director, Oral Roberts University basketball coach Ted Owens resigned Thursday in a move he said was best for his family and basketball players
Owens announced his resignation during a brief and emotional meeting with his players Thursday night.
In his two seasons with the Titans, Owens' teams went 10-18 and 11-17. He had four or five years left on his contract, depending on the interpretation of a rollover clause.
The Tulsa Tribune reported Friday that Owens resigned after a partial payoff of his $1 million
contract. Neither Owens nor ORU would comment on the terms of any settlement.
Golfer ends season
KU golfer Brian McGreey finished his season last week at the NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championships in Columbus, Ohio.
After the second day of preliminary competition, McGreevy, the only Jayhawk to receive an invitation, had a 36-hole total of 153, 82 and 109 shots off the lead of 143. McGreevy's total put him in 74th place.
On the third day, McGreevy shot an 80 and didn't qualify for the final rounds of competition.
McGreevy was the first Jayhawk to compete in the NCAA Division I Championships since 1956.
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REMEMBER DAD ON HIS DAY WITH CLOTHING FROM MISTER GUY OF LAWRENCE'S FATHERS DAY SALE!!!
Contemporary clothing for MEN and WOMEN!
Huge savings on spring and summer clothing just in time for Dad's special day...Exclusively from Mister Guy of Lawrence
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Th 9:30-8:30
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MENS & WOMENS TRADITIONAL CLOTHING
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Open 8 a.m. - midnight
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Offer good with this ad
expires 7/30/87
12th & Oread • 841-2310 • Above Yello Sub
Starts Tomorrow 9 A.M.!
ARENSBERG'S SHOE SALE WOMEN'S SPRING & SUMMER STYLES
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Were to 72.00
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- Not included year, round patterns are not included
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ARENSBERG'S SHOES
Quality Footwear for the whole family since 1958.
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843 3470
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14
Wednesday, June 17, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
(3)
Man injured in cycle crash
By a Kansan reporter
A 19-year-old Lawrence man was seriously injured in a car-motorcycle collision Saturday night at 12th and Tennessee streets.
The man, Kevin Colebank, 1417 Kentucky St. was listed in serious but stable condition last night at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Lawrence police reports indicate that Colebank was driving a motorcycle southbound on Tennessee Street at about midnight Saturday when he struck an eastbound car that was crossing Tennessee Street on 12th Street.
The car's driver, Hunter Graham,
a Wichita salesman, told police he
had stopped at the stop sign, then pulled into the intersection. He hadn't realized how fast Colebank was driving, he said, and he thought he could clear the intersection before Colebank got there.
Six witnesses concurred that Coleba-
ha was driving fast, the police re-
ported.
The impact threw Colebank from his motorcycle. He was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital, then transferred by ambulance to the Med Center. Graham was treated at the time of the accident for slight injuries.
Sgt. Don Dalquest, Lawrence police spokesman, said Colebank was not wearing a helmet.
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The Etc. Shop
- Military pins of the USA, USSR
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and Bow
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1008 F. 12TH
1008 E. 12TH
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Student/Faculty/Staff Price:
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Mon.-Thur. 10-7 Lawrence's Oldest Independent Computer Store and Operated by John and Joan Joinz Fri. & Sat. 10-5
841-0094 Corner of 23rd and Iowa
Great Daily Specials
STRICK'S RESTAURANT only $3.50 DAILY SPECIALS
Today...Ranchwagon
Thursday...Swiss Steak
Friday...Roast Beef
Saturday...Chicken Fried Steak
Monday...Fresh Pork Tenderloin
Tuesday...Chopped Cheep
with green peppers and onion
Wendnesday...Pork Chops and Dressing
includes salad, mashed potatoes & gravy, vegetable, & Texas toast
Friday and Saturday Special 4-11:30 p.m.
2 Ribeye Steak Dinners $9.95
Served with Baked Potato or French Fries, Salad and Texas Toast
Friday and Saturday Special 4-11:30 p.m.
OPEN Mon.-Thurs. 6:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m.
Fri. and Sat. 6:00 a.m.-11:30 p.m.
Breakfast served Anytime
723 North 2nd
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100
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OPEN 8am-9pm M-F, 8am-2pm Sat.
842-9533
V
A Thoroughbred Season
The University of Kansas 1987-88 Concert, Chamber Music, and New Directions Series
Concert Series
Yo Yo Ma, Cellist *
Tuesday, September 22, 1987
TELL THE TOWN-CALL THE KANSAN 864-4358
Yo Yo Ma, Cellist *
National Dance Company of Senegal *
Wednesday, October 28, 1987
Central Philharmonic of China*
October 25, 1987
Paul Taylor Dance Company **
Wednesday, January 27, 1988
New York City Opera
National Company
in The Barber of Seville *
Thursday, February 18, 1988
All performances are at 8 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium
Andre Watts, Pianist * Tuesday, April 12, 1988
Special Event
University Arts Festival
Canadian Brass Christmas Show
Wednesday, December 2, 1987
8 p.m. Hoch Auditorium
- Funded in part by the Kansas Arts Commission
Mummenschanz **
Thursday, February 11, 1988
8 p.m. Hoch Auditorium
Chamber Music Series
Yo Yo Ma $ ^{*} $ (See Concert Series)
Amsterdam Guitar Trio Thursday, October 1, 1987 8 p.m.
Guarnee String Quartet with
Claude Frank, Pianist
Sunday, November 15, 1987
3:30 p.m.
Colorado String Quartet
Sunday, January 17, 1988
8 p.m.
Orpheus Ensemble **
Sunday, April 24, 1988
2:30 p.m.
Athemidedes
Sunday, October 18, 1987
8 p.m. Crafton-Preyer
Theatre
New Directions Series
Louisiana Purchase
2223 Louisiana
841-7070
All performances, except for Yo Yo Ma, are in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Koyaanisqatsi/Philip Glass**
Tuesday, November 10, 1987
8 p.m. B. Houdaturm
"Funded in part by the Mid- America Arts Alliance
Nexus
Wednesday, March 2, 1988
8 p.m. Liberty Hall
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, CONTACT THE MURPHY HALL BOX OFFICE 913/864-3982 Season Tickets Now on Sale!!! Buv Today and Save Time and Money
GETTING BETTER ALL THE TIME
Class Times:
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4 p.m. Monday-Sunday Advanced
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842-1983
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SHOP TALK
Summer is in full swing; and with more exposure of your hair to the sun, salt and wind, more frequent reconditioning is in order. To discover what condition your hair is in, HEADMASTERS invites you to visit us for a hair analysis, FREE OF CHARGE. During your analysis the hair will be evaluated for its protein and moisture content. Understanding this knowledge is important during the summer in order to properly and effectively treat dryness and damage caused by summer activities. Don't wait 'til it's too late. Call us TODAY for a complimentary hair analysis!
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SUMMERIZE YOUR HAIR
*Prior to swimming apply Redken Phinal Phase to your hair to provide protection against the harmful effects of unnecessary dryness due to exposure to sun and chlorinated water. Phinal Phase is a creme rinse formulated with protein to ensure proper protection against the harmful rays of the sun and the chemicals in the water.
*If your hair develops a greenish cast, we have an in-salon treatment that only takes a few minutes to restore your hair to its natural color.
*A nice alternative is to take preventative measures against sun damage. Using scarves or material to create fashionable head wraps will insure that the harmful rays of the sun will never harm a hair on your head.
PHINAL PHASE THE SUMMER HAIR SAVER Sale Price $5.00 reg. price $6.00
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809 Vermont
843-8808
Kansan Summer Weekly/Wednesday, June 17, 1987
15
State drafts AIDS education plan
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — The Governor's Task Force on AIDS accepted yesterday draft recommendations on what the state should do to educate the public on the danger of acquired immune deficiency syndrome, including requiring AIDS education in all public and private schools by next January.
The panel, headed by William J. Reals, a Wichita physician, may take final action on its education and workplace recommendations on
AIDS at its next meeting July 7 in Wichita.
A committee headed by Connie Hubbell, a member of the state Board of Education, presented the proposed recommendations on educating Kansans to the problems and prevention of AIDS.
The panel is credited for making suggestions to Gov. Mike Hayden in time for him to present them to the 1988 session of the Legislature.
Here are several recommendations:
- Provide AIDS education in all
- Prepare teachers and other professional school staff members, through programs that would include in-service training, with a basic knowledge of AIDS.
public and private accredited and non-accredited schools by next year.
- Make educational materials about AIDS available in all school districts.
- Require every college and post-secondary school to have a written policy on AIDS,
Video Player
Four Movies Two Days
Patronize Kansan Advertisers.
Commonwealth
Granada
Varsity
EDDIE MURPHY Daily
BEVERLY, HILLS *2·45 7·25
CPI II ☑ *5·00 9·45
MARTIN SHEEH in Daily
The *2:15* 7:10
BELIEVERS **4:40** 9:25
STEVE MARTINI DONALD HANNAH Daily
ROXANNE '2.25' 7.35
PG '4.45' 9.45
THE WITCHES OF EASTWICK Daily
1.20 7:20
1.40 9:40
THE BEST OF MY SUCCESS Daily
*SUCCESS*
*2:40* 7:00
MICHAEL J.
FOX
*4:20* 9:15
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*2:30 7:30
SCHMAZZENGER ** 4:35 9:30
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A Dionn *2·15* 7·25
B De Pointe Film **4·30** 9·45
Cinema Twin
HARRY and the Daily
HENDERONS [EP] *2:50* 7:10
*5:00* 9:15
BEFORE YOU BUY, Check the KANSAN. Our advertisers might save you money.
SAVE YOUR MONEY,
CLIP A COUPON!
All films will be shown at 7:00 p.m. in woodruff Auditorium. Admission is $2.00; tickets are sold at the SUA Office level 4, Kansas Union. No smoking is permitted inside the theatre.
SUA FILMS
Wed., June 17 SUDDENLY LAST SUMMER
Thu., June 16 INFANTHES TENT
Wed., June 24 THE LAST HURRAH
Wed. July 1 THE SEVEN YEAR TOUR
Tim Lilly YANIKE DOOPLE
Thur., July 2 YANKEE DOODLE DANDY
Wed., July 8 IN COLD BLOOD
Thur.. July 9 CASINO ROYALE
Wed., July 15 KEY LARGO
Thur., July 16 SABOTAGE
Wed., July 22 A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S SEX COMEDY
DAYS of THRILLS and LAUGHTER
WITH SUA
Classified Ads
ANNOUNCEMENT
BALLOONS
.N-
MORE
We've Moved!!!
★ Father's Day Balloons
★ Singing Telegrams
Singing Teleight
More Metalics
★ More Metals than you've ever seen!
★ "We Deliver Smiles'
609 Vermont
749-4341/749-0148
What is Success?
Does Personality Determine
Success?
The Role of Personality and Self-Image
How Important is Self-Image?
There are many definitions of success. This workshop will provide opportunities to discuss issues related to personality, self-image, and success.
Tuesday, June 23, 1987
International Room Kansas Union
M
facilitated by Dr. Barbara Ballard
FOR RENT
Sponsored by the Emily Tayler Women's Resource Center, 218 Strong Hall. For more information, call 864-3534 at 864-3534.
Tonight! Dance beneath the Summer stars on the patio at Dose Homes, 815 New Hampshire 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Music provided by Metropolis Mobile Sound. (841-7833) Feel the rhythm of the night.
ENTERTAINMENT
ELEGANT RESTORATION: 853 Tenn. 3 brs. 1/2 baths, dishwasher, refrigerator, laundry center, air, mini-binds, OFF STREET parking, lawn care provided, Available Await $750.00 lowUtilities
A relaxed atmosphere with plenty of space Spacious 2 bedroom Laundry facilities Waterbed fine Swimming pool 10-12 month leases
OPENS THIS SUNDAY!
JUNE 21-JULY 4 7:30 & 9:30
SWIMMING TO CAMBODIA
village squar
VILLAGE SQUARE
842-3040
2040 HEATHERWOOD DR.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
---
Two bedroom kit. for sublease in July with option
mim-bin, mini-bins, new appliance
$200 - 799-0605
A FEW
- Covered Carports
- Swimming Pool
Rent for all bedroom apt close to campus. Rent $190 utilities. 749-2919 or 842-9007.
1 & 2 BDRM. APTS.
STILL AVAILABLE
FOR FALL
- Lowest utility bills in town
- On KU Bus Route
- Gas heat, C-A, D-W
- For more info. call between 9-6,Mon.-Fri.,843-4754
- Quiet location
EDDINGHAM PLACE
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
TRAILRIDGE
- Swimming pool
OFFERING LUXURY
2 RR APARTMENTS
Open Daily 3:00-5:00
Saturday 9:00-12:00
841-5444
STUDIOS APARTMENTS TOWNHOUSES
- 10 or 12 month
We still have a few left for summer and/or fall
contract
* Swimming pool
- Exercise Weightroom
- On-Site Management
- Free Showtime Satellite T.V.
apartments--all near KU!
- STUDIO—lrg, closets, kitchenette, laundry bldg next door, water paid
- Fire place
EDDINGHAM PLACE
MASTERCRAFT
- 1 BR APT—walk in closet laundry in blkg. gas & water paid, balcony or patio.
Kaw Valley Management, Inc
Completely furnished
- 2 BR townhouse
2 BR townhouse
woodburning fireplace,
carport with extra storage
W/D hookups, patio
- Custom furnishings
- Energy efficient
- HANOVER PLACE-14th & Mass.
841.1212
- Custom furnishings
Consider:
Professionally managed by
- Affordable rates
- Variety of floorplar
CAMPUS PLACE—1145 Louisianna
841-1429
- 4 BR townhouse—fireplace, carport, W/D hookups. patio.
- Designed for privacy
- Energy efficient
- Affordable rates
- Professional management
TANGLEWOOD—10th & Arkansas
749-2415
- 4 BR townhouse—
3 swimming pools, tennis courts basketball courts, excellent maintenance, KU bus
)
OPEN DAILY 1-5
SUNDANCE—7th & Florida
841-5255
Call or stop by—
Berkely FLATS
2500 W. 6th St. 843-7333
843-2116
11th & Mississippi
Great location walk anywhere
- Over 40 New Units
* Great location
LEASING NOW & FOR FALL
walk anywhere
Laundry facilities
- Furnished Units
- On KU Bus Route
Available
FOR SALE
FLEXIBLE LEASING
1123 Indiana Furnished by Thompson-Crawley
Livingroom Truckload Sale. Velvet SF & CH $199,
odd lovesets H $399, 6 pc secases $499, velvet
Rkrs $89, wood groups. Make Offers. Open to
6 day 7 days. Mark & Quaint House
Warehouse. 738 New Hamphis, Lawrence
MAX'M COMICS. Comic Books, Playpen,
- * MOTHALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
312 e 9th 749-4891, m. Saturday (1.0 p.m.
312 e 9th 749-4891)
Waterbed Sale. Complete K size $9, Bowcase bed $138, Sheets $11, Heater $29, Padded rail $4, Matt Pad $7, 4 dr chest $3, Condition 2.01, Open door $24, Refreshment $25, Storage Warehouse, 728 New Hampshire, Lawrence
WINDSURFER FOR SALE. Cheap cheap! New
Never been wee! Call 1-583-1368. Dot Soo
Tato
Immediate opening for Student Senate Executive Secretary. Part time position, 20 hours, per week. Applications available in Senate office, basement or room, on a per month. Position runs through school year.
Is It True You Can Buy Jeep for $44 through the
Motor City dealers? Get the fact today! Call
"S12-742-8191 Ext 200."
AUTO SALES
LOST—FOUND
WILDLIFE PARK
FOUND- floppy disc in street by Kansas union-cell 841.4906 to identify
Great Neighborhood Assoc. Coordinator 20
hr.wk $450/mo. Send Application letter, resume:
ONA Board of Directors, 1008 Ohio. Lawrence
Deadline June 24, E.O. E.
MISCELLANEOUS
MUSEUM SHOP
Museum of Natural History
M-S10-5/Sun 1-5-864-4450
KU Campus 14th and Jayhawk
HELP WANTED
GOVERNMENT JOBS 161 $04 - 859.200/jr.yo
GOVERNMENT JOB 857 - 607 - 6001 for current
circuits
status and enrollment for 67.88 academic year students of the institution with communication skills and familiarity with social media, emailing, and other online activities.
PERSONAL
GRADUATE ASSISTANT Division of Student A-
dministration - half-time position from July 1;
1876-June 30; research, administrative assistance, computer,
data collection and analysis; graduate student
debt development program in data analysis required programs in data analysis required Submit resume, letter of application and names of 2 references to: Sheila Immel, Assistant to the Dean of Student Life, 216强华湘.
Girl in Datsun 2006 x F.O. from the M. that hat bird A K-10 in morning, June 10th. M. that hat bird A K-10 in morning, June 10th. BMW wants to see a BMW that hat bird A K-10 in morning, June 10th.
University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff
Computer deadline: June 14, 2017
by 5 p.m. Complete submission below
address: EEO
HEADACHE, BACKACH, ARM PAIN, LEG PAIN? Student and most insurance accepted. For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark Johnson 843-3979
Salesperson/Mgr Trainee . $175/wk guaranteed.
Master & Quinn
Warehouse Furniture. 842-259-6500.
BUS.PERSONAL
808 W.23rd
MEDICAL TRANSPRISSIONIST Lawrence Memorial Hospital has an oak tree on the campus to warrant a bourse of hours. High school diploma or equivalent, knowledge of English and mathematics, applications accepted from 1.4 p.m. at the Personnel Building.
Ballet, jazz modern dance, folk dancing and
music. Ballet graduate Adj-Seg - Lawrence
School of Ballet 829-4090
GREENS PARTY SUPPLY
HELP WANTED: Music student to come to our home to give beginning piano lessons to 4 children. Flexible schedule to fit yours. Call Mr/Mrs Rhyde after 8 p.m. at 843-3114.
Ladies: Take a break form the Books, Pampe-
s. At a Complimentary Facial, call afternoons or on weekdays for Midifine Crisis. Ballet and Jazz for the body that has lived in law. Lawrence School of Ballet.
Weekly Beer Specials
OVERSEAS JOBS. Also Cruise船 Liappings,
Now Hiring To: $944 to $857-600 CDU. J. O'Fraser
JR.
June 17-23
Bud 12 pk. $5.42
Coors Light 12 pk. $5.42
Lite 12 pk. $5.42
Old Style 12 pk. $4.26
Wiedemann 12 pk. $3.49
Rare and Used Records. Buy, Sell, or Trad Quantrill's 811 New Hampshire.
SERVICES OFFERED
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841.7749
Experient tutoring service in STATISTICS AND
COURSEWORK.
EXPLOITATION LAW CLINIC Green Gardens,
Amnesia, Departure, Appeals, Work Comp.
Founded. Call for appl. 310 Armour, NKC
(Hickory).
Joda E Friends
HAIR SALON
- PERMS
- HAIRCUTTING
- COLORING
- FACIALS
- HI -LIGHTING
- FACIALS
- FACIALS
- MANICURES
- MANICURES
- PEDICURES
- EAR PIERCING
Please come by and see us for the best in hair care.
Joda & Friends
841-0337
3009 W. 6th
WRITING LIFELINE
---
Resumes, the Term papers
word processing
call 841-3469
click this ad for 75 cents
per page (answer).
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your
traveling license for a successful completion. Transportation provided
$25 per month
SUMMER
MEMBERSHIP
- Whirlpool
- Sound
- Tanning
- Whirlpool
- Air Conditioned
- Hardly Closes
- Individualized Weight and Toning Programs
- Certified Instructors
- Body Toning Classes
- Air Conditioned
- Hourly Classes
- Tanning
- Exclusively For Women
- Certified Instructors IDEA/RHYTHMIC AEROBICS
- Shower Facilities
Body Shapes
- Individualized Weight and Toning Programs
FTNESS CLUB
Hours:
M-F B 30-6:30
Sat. B 8:30-9:30
Sun. 10:00-4:00
601 Kassid Westridge Shop Ctr. 843-4040
- Membership Transferable to 2500 Clubs
The College of Liberal Arts offers tutoring in Math and English courses through Supportive Educational Services. Reasonable Rates. Apply at SES Building. 864-3971.
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. A
wordprocessing file. 842-794 MB; L81-191I
842-794 MB; L81-191I
TYPING
AAA WORDPROCESSING, work low, prices 912-1492 after 5pm m-f; anytime weekends. Parks pick up/drop off available ACT NOW. Panels $16/row. Resumes $15.
1-1-1 TRIO Word processing: Conscientious,
Responsible, Reliable. Call 842-3111 for service.
24-Hour Typing, 13th semester in Lawrence
University, dissertation papers; campus
campus mail; online course registration.
Accurate, affording typed by former Harvard students, spaced page call. Call Mrs. Nancy Mattila, 841-1219
1
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, maps, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter
quality printing, spelling corrected. 842-7247.
DISSERTATIONS THESES, LAW
DISSERTATIONS will return
will return KEEP WATCHING THAT AD
Experienced Typist at reasonable rate. Call Holly at 843-0111.
Experienced typist - theses, dissertations, term papers 842-310 2:15 p.m. M: F or S/M Sat 8:45 p.m.
Go to the beach while you type your papers! Complete word process, spell check. Students always welcome! TRANSCRIPTION UNLIMITED, 102 Massachusetts, 842-469
Quality typing, excellent spelling, punctuation,
formatting. Quick delivery available.
Fast, reliable service. 843-0497
For professional typing/word processing, call
Professional Summer special $12/50-
double-space pieces.
THE WORD-ORDERS: Legal. Thesis. Office
Why pay for typing? Word processing
981 317-7
981 317-8
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes HAVE M.S. Degree 8416254
- Policy
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional worded service
notch services, theses, letters, good
printing, et al., 843-506.
Policy Words set in ALL CAPS count 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.
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising.
Blind box ads-please add $4.00 service charge.
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.
- 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 on Monday at 4:00pm 2 days prior to publication.
Deadline for cancellation is Monday at 4:00pm 2 days prior to publication.
Classified Rates
Words 1 Insertion 2-3 Insertions 4-5 Insertions 6-8 Insertions
0-15 2.70 4.00 5.70 9.50
16:20 3.20 4.75 6.70 10.75
21:25 3.70 5.50 7.70 12.00
26:30 4.20 6.25 8.70 13.25
31:35 4.70 7.00 9.70 14.50
001 announcements
100 entertainment
200 for rent
Classifications
300 for sale 500 help wanted
310 auto sales 700 personal
400 lost/lost 710 bus personal
Classifications
800 serioices offered
900 typing
990 wanted
Please print your ad one word per box:
ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POI
ADS MUST BE PREP.
Date ad begins
Total days in paper
Amount paid
Deposit
JILLOW KANSAN POLICY
Make checks payable to:
University Dally Kansan
Lawrence, MS 66045
LAWRENCE, MS 66045
16
Wednesday, June 17, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
Hayden's goal is drug-free state
The Associated Press
MANHATTAN — Gov. Mike Hayden told a state citizens' drug conference yesterday that the goal should be to "make Kansas the very worst market for drugs and drug peddlers in America."
"The issue of substance abuse is on the minds of mothers, grandmothers, teachers, parents, school leaders and young people all across this state. It's a statewide problem that is best addressed by every caring Kansan,"
Hayden told participants in the weeklong Kansas School Team Training for Substance Abuse Prevention workshop.
Since 1983, five-member teams from school districts across the state have attended sessions designed to help school and community leaders work together against drug and alcohol problems.
growing threat of chemical abuse by children.
Hayden said the state already had a reputation for community-based prevention programs to counter the
Now a "comprehensive plan of prevention, education, treatment and law enforcement that will target every child, youth and their families in Kansas," is needed, the governor said.
The goal is to protect Kansas from the national threat of drug abuse, Hayden said.
Cake gambling made illegal in KC
are gambling and therefore illegal
gambling and therefore illegal.
Undersheriff Tim Johnson said Quinn would send letters to groups, warning them of the law. An activity is considered gambling if it is a game of chance in which people pay to take participate and winners receive prizes.
take a harder line toward gambling. Quinn was unavailable for comment yesterday.
AUTHOR: JOHN G. RYAN
Quinn's efforts to fight gambling for charity forced once church to alter its plans Saturday. St. Patrick's Catholic Church canceled a cakewalk that was a part of its ice cream social.
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Cakewalkers will be prosecuted.
Johnson said changing community standards had prompted Quinn to
That's the message Wyandotte County Sheriff John Quinn plans to leave with civic, church and charitable organizations. Quinn is warning groups that traditional fund-raising activities, such as raffles and cakewalks, won't be allowed because they
Tuesdays: Comedy Shop
TREE ...a comedian
Appearing June 23
Thursdays: Altered
States of Conscious
5* draws
50* well drinks
Fridays: Did you realize
that Gammons has the
coldest beer in town?
Saturdays: Gammons...
where the only thing hot
is the women.
GAMONS
SNOW
GAMMONS SNOWIES . . . the night club
COUPONS
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
$2.00 OFF
Any 3 or more pizzas
842-1212
---
CHECKERS
PIZZA
16 inch Two Toppings
$6.99 + tax expires 7-31-87
2214 YALE RD.
841-8010
CLIP'N'SAVE
SAVE $400
off
haircuts
coupon expires 7/31/87
reg. $12
Prime Cut Hair Co.
1341 Mass. St.
841-4488
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
$100 OFF
Any 2 or more pizzas
842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
FREE PLANT with this coupon
CHECKERS
PIZZA
16 inch Deluxe
$7.99 + tax
expires 7-31-87
2214 YALE RD.
841-8010
PENCE
Nursery*Garden Center*Greenhouse
15th and New York 843-2004
$1'00 OFF
Any Pizza Ordered
11 a.m.-4 p.m.
842-1212
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST - FREE
DELIVERY
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
Sub & Stuff
Sandwich Shop
FREE MEDIUM SOFT DRINK
with the purchase of any sub
1618 W. 23rd St.
expires 7-7-87 with this coupon only void with other offers
15% off
pre-recorded cassettes
w/coupon
good thru June 19
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS
AUDIO VIDEO
THE CRAMPHONE.COM
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
50¢ OFF
Any 1 pizza
842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
1/2 PRICE MOVIE RENTAL
(expires 6-30-87)
not to be used with any other promotion
VIDEO BIZ
832 Iowa Street
Lawrence, KS 66044
(913) 749-3507
VIDEO BIZ
$1.00 VALUE
$1.00 off Evening Buffet (7 days a week)
50¢ off Luncheon Buffet (7 days a week)
544 W. 23RD
749-4244
FREE DELIVERY
PIZZA LASAGNA SALADS
SPAGHETTI MANICOTTI
Valentino's
Ristorante
Valentino's
Ristorante
10% OFF
Mens' or Womens' Speedo Swimsuits!
with this coupon
SUNFLOWER
804 Massachusetts Lawrence, Ks. 843-5000
Esquire Barber Service
2323 Ridge Court
(just behind Mrs. Winner's)
Special On:
Men's style cut - $8.00
Womens style cut - $11.00
Bring coupon and save
For appointment call 842-3699
Faxes 712/4821
Firestone
24th & Iowa
Lube Oil & Filter $ 1 2^{8 8} $
Please present coupon offer expires 6/30/87
Buy One No. 1
Texas Burrito and
get the second one for 50¢
BORDER
BANDIDO
expires 6/30
Not valid
w/delivery
1528 W. 23rd
842-8861
1820 W. 6th
749-2770
TEXICO CITY
DOUBLE TROUBLE
MEDIUM LARGE
TWO TOPPING or TWO TOPPING
PIZZA PIZZA
Coupon good $5.99 $6.99
thru Dine in • Carry out • Delivery
July 1, 1987
NOW YOU CAN
CHARGE FOR DELIVERY!
Minshy's
2228 IWA
842-0154
Coupon good for purchase of
1 Suntan Product
at
40% Off
Raney Drug Store
843-3521 843-9021
921 Mass. & 9th & Iowa
limit 1 coupon
Minsky's
PIZZA
2228 IOWA
842-0154
25¢ BOWLING
This coupon
entitles bearer
to one 25¢ game
during open bowling
Let It Roll!
On The Jamboree
Level 1 THE KANSAS UNION Call 864-3545 JAYBOWL Expires 6-3
Coupon Special
Fountain XT
Dual Drive
TTL Monitor
MS-DOS3-1
1 Yr. warranty
Free 640K with coupon
MICROTECH
841-9513
Holiday Plaza
With this coupon, ONION RINGS FOR 63¢
Reg. 89'. Exp. July 1, 1987
Not good with other offers.
RUNZA
DRIVE INN
RESTAURANT
10:30 a.m.-10:00 p.m.
2700 Iowa, Lawrence
Coming in July...
WHAT'S OUR NAME
IN THE HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER
MON — THURS
VCR and 2 MOVIES
FOR ONLY
499
With This Coupon
Expiration Date: June 30, 1987
Across From The Hillcrest Theatres 842-0526
Coupon Special
Fountain XT
Dual Drive
TTL Monitor
MS-D053-1
1 Yr. warranty
Free 640K with coupon
MICROTECH
841-9513
Holiday Plaza
With this coupon, ONION RINGS FOR 63°
Reg. 89%. Exp. July 1, 1987
Not good with other offers.
RUNZA.
DRIVE-INN
RESTAURANT
10:30 a.m.-10:00 p.m. 2700 Iowa, Lawrence
Coming in July...
The Color Purple
WHAT'S OUR NAME
IN THE HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER
MON — THURS
VCR and 2 MOVIES
FOR ONLY
499
With This Coupon
Expiration Date: June 30,1987
Across From The Hillcrest Theatres 842-0526
WEATHER
Today: Mostly sunny, high 88. Tonight, 30 percent chance of thunderstorms , low 67.
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy, high 86. Overnight low 55
Weekend:Mild, little or no precipitation. Daily highs 80 to 85, lows 60 to 65.
Texas inmate executed; jury took 6 min. Page 2
Another movie may be filmed in area Page 3
First Wimbledon shutout in 40 years Page 12
Wednesday June 24,1987
Vol. 97, No. 148
(USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1859
TOMMY HARDY
Fire drill
ducted on the University of Kansas campus and in Lawrence. The new ladder truck is jointly owned by the University and the city of Lawrence.
The Lawrence Fire Department practices procedures for fighting high rises fire at McCollium Hall. The drill Thursday was the first of three con-
Painters find profits during hot summers
Bv KRISTEN HAYS
Staff writer
Imagine spending a hot, muggy day perched on a ladder with the sun beating down and a paintbrush in hand.
Then imagine the possibility of earning enough money to purchase a book, or something else. Leslie
This summer several KU students have discovered that painting houses, though often backbreaking and laborious, can be a great education and leave some to spare.
"This is the first summer I've done
the travel. I can and probably
clearly $10,000 to $15,000."
Tim Overlie, Wichita junior, works for American Perma Coatings Co., 1726 W. 28th Street, painting the exterior of houses.
Mark Matthews, Overland Park senior, has painted interiors and
exteriors of houses for the past two summers. This summer his roommate, Brian Jupe, Overland Park junior, is his partner.
Matthews said, "I'll net around $2,000, which is a bad summer, not too busy. Still, it's good money. We can make $400 a week on one house."
To avoid the hottest part of the day,
Matthews and Juppe paint from 6 a.m. to
10 p.m.
"The heat is the worst part of the job. It just makes the hard work feel more difficult."
Matthews and Jupe don't advertise much. Instead, they rely on referrals.
"We put out some fliers, but mostly we let our friends tell people about it."
Sheila Hasenkamp, Circleville senior, has been painting houses during summers for 10 years.
"I started by helping my mom when I was in seventh grade," she said.
Hasenkamp paints in the evenings because she works at Alvamar Country Club, 1809 Crossgate, until 5 p.m. on weekdays.
"This summer, I'll make between $2.00 and $2.50. This is the first summer I haven't painted full time, because three to four hours a night," she said.
When Hasenkamp was painting full
when she would start around 6 a.m.
and return to work.
"I'd do the hard stuff early and then paint the sides of houses that were in the shade later in the day," she said. "Painting houses directly in the sun makes the paint bubble, and it can also be scrape or sand it and start over."
Hasenkamp has paid her way
through college by painting houses in the summer, but she said the best part of the job was the people she worked with
"I work with my mom and one of my best friends, and if they weren't there, it would be unbearable.
"I make about $4.50 an hour, and the going rate is $10 to $15 an hour. My work is cheap, but it's better than minimum."
She recently hired a friend, Janet Asmus, Fort Collins, Colo., senior, to help her finish painting a house that she had been working on.
Like Matthews, Hasenkamp relies on word-of-mouth rather than adverbs. "The truth is that I can't find a
Asmus said, "I've been looking for jobs, and Sheila offered to pay me $4 an hour. Though we painted in the evening, and it was cloudy, it was still hot, but the money is good."
New co-director will share duties
By CARLA PATINO
Staff writer
After twelve years as director of the Center of Latin American Studies, Charles Stansifer will begin sharing his job with a new co-director.
Sonia Fadlala, an administrative assistant at the center, last week said that Stansifer, who also is a professor of history, would share his job at the University of North Carolina as professor of Spanish and Portuguese.
Robert L. Lineberry, dean of liberal arts and sciences, said he was very pleased by Stansifer's decision.
"Both are going to complement each other," he said. "Stansifer's interest is in Central America mainly, and Vincent's is more in South America and Brazil."
Stansifer said he and Vincent would be co-directors of the center.
"For a long time, we had associate directors at the center." he said, "but it didn't seem right to me. It was a good idea, but not a minor member of the faculty,
"I have been making the decisions, but the associate directors and advisory committee have advised me."
Tansifer said that he sent Lineberry a letter on June 9 requesting Vincent's appointment would soon take up his new duties.
Stansifer said his increasing
workload was the main reason he decided to have a co-director share the work.
"There is more need of representation at national as well as at international conferences," he said. "There were times I couldn't go to places I was supposed to be."
Stanisfer's responsibilities will include handling external relations. Vincent will handle internal duties, such as advising graduate students and contributing to the liaison of the center with other departments.
Stansifer said the new position wouldn't cost the center any additional money, because Vincent's summer salary would be paid by money already in the summer budget.
"For the fall semester, his salary will be paid half by the Spanish and Portuguese department and the other half by the center," Stansifer said.
Vincent, who was chairman of the department of Spanish and Portuguese in 1979, said the new job would give him the opportunity to bring a Brazilian perspective to the center.
"I will give the center a less strict Central American orientation," he said.
Vincent said he would continue to teach Portuguese while devoting more of his summer time to the center.
MARK SCHLEPPEY
Darry Chann/KANRAN
Jon S. Vincent, left, professor of Spanish and Portuguese, soon will become a co-director of the Center of Latin American Studies. He will share the duties of Charles Stansifer, right, who has been director of the center for 12 years.
Checkers' customers Old ice house now offers cool new thrills
By KEITH ROBISON
Staff writer
An item, currently getting attention it never had before, is in a Lawrence grocery store check-out line.
Stocked among the lighters, combs, National Enquirers and dental floss, the product looks somewhat out of place.
Because of the widespread attention given to the issue of safe sex, condoms are no longer hidden on the back shelves of the neighborhood drugstore and in the bathrooms of the local bar. They can be found in at least one supermarket check-out line.
Lawrence's newest supermarket,
Checkers, 23rd and Louisiana
streets, stocks condoms in their
check-out area.
The store's owner, Jim Lewis, said,
"When the president of the United States stands up and starts screaming about AIDS and asks us to do all we can, then we should do all we can. Then we should epidemic has to be addressed."
She said some parents might not like the idea of their children having condoms, but, "If a person is sexually active, they should have protection not just from pregnancy but also from unintended pregnancy ormitted diseases. 'It's important for people to be aware of the risks and be able to protect themselves.'"
Barbara Mikkelson, head nurse at the Douglas County Health Department, said she thought it was a good idea.
Lewis said he had talked about the issue with his employees.
Checkers has nine check-out aisles
but condoms are stocked in only aisles seven, eight and nine.
Roger Stumfoll, night manager, said, "We have them mainly on the precedence of the safe sex issue, but we ensure you can make a profit on them."
Rita Burkhard, a daytime manager, said, "We had discussed it and decided that if we got enough complaints, we would put them all in one aisle. I thought we would have some from mothers and older people, but I've only had one. Someone didn't think they belonged there.
Mikkelsen said, "I've never seen them in a store商店, but that should increase their availability and make them more accessible.
Father Frank Horvat, of the Corpus Christi Catholic Church, 1100 Kasold Dr., said, "You don't solve problems by promoting promiscuity, you just create newer problems. They treat society like we don't have any backbone, like we don't have the ability to say, 'No.'
"We've had more people say that we like the idea than have complained."
"Education is very important. We are going to be hearing more and more about AIDS."
"If you look at our society, we don't use our willpower. We just follow through with things and to heck with the consequences."
One local clergyman opposed the idea of increasing the availability of电容
Lewis said, "We're not advertising them. We don't have streamers and banners hanging up. It's in a subtle fashion."
FORD OF CHICAGO
Joe Wilkins III/KANSAN
R. Sam Pepple, proprietor of Everything But Ice, rests against a toy car in the back of his warehouse. The car is one of the many items his store sells.
By DEBRA A. PETERSON Staff writer
Not every store displays an expensive leaded glass lamp next to a plastic toilet seat.
It's not common to see a badminton set and a Thermos jug atop a microwave table next to a vacuum cleaner beside a motorized pump that rests on a clothing catalogue across from a kitchen sink.
And it's not the average store proprietor who says to a hesitant customer, "You gotta gather your rosebuds before they hatch."
But then, not every store is Everything But Ice at Sixth and Vermont Mall.
Everything But Ice is an unclaimed and damaged freight store that stocks everything from truck bumpers to shower stalls. It takes its name from the fact that the truck has a thriving ice business for years.
What's unique about the place is that its proprietor, R. Sam Peepe, never knows from one week to the next what he'll have in stock.
People's approach to sales is unusual. "I try to have sales when other people don't," he said.
That's because Pepple's merchandise comes from a warehouse in Missouri that distributes damaged goods. Pepple said he paid for the goods 10 days in advance and was willing to anything the warehouse truck brings.
In 1980, his first year of business, the truck brought a load of unicycles. Another time, Pepple purchased the remains of a T-shirt company and sold nearly 10,000 shirts in 30 days. Last Thanksgiving he got 1,300 tuxedos from a discontinued line. "I bought 600 and wholesale the rest," he said.
His most recent sale was the "Miss Piggy, George Bush and Queen Elizabeth Sale." Employees wore Miss Piggy ears. Past sales include the Ticket Store, the Red Barn at Timley, Ohio Sales, the "Sixth Anniversary 30th Birthday Sam Sale," and the "Aaron's Going on Vacation Sale." Pepple also celebrates the Lupercalia, an ancient Roman fertility festival, every year with a sale.
"I have a hatred of normal advertising," he said.
Salesman Janey Fisher, self- appointed finder-of-places-for-things, said, "Working for Sam is not like working for a boss."
Pepple's criteria for hiring salesmen are as unique as are his sales "I try to hire people that are fairly electric," he said, "because they're more fun."
On the boss' desk sits a Rolodex card file, an adding machine, a deft china salt shaker, a roll of duct tape, assorted tools and a pair of socks. A cigarette lighter fastened to a long cord is attached to the shelves above the telephone within easy reach of all three workers.
People's wit with customers echoes the casual disorder. One man pointed to a wicker etagere and asked, "Do you happen to know what size this is?"
Despite the mess, salesman Aaron
wrote that he pretty much know
where everything is.
"Yeah," Pepple said, "it's a big one."
"Let's go see it," Pepple said.
They also know how to sell. Fisher gestured to a do-it-yourself porch kit and asked a customer, "Did you see this porch back here?"
See ICE, p. 6, col. 1
2
Wednesday, June 24, 1987
Around the Nation
Texas inmate executed; professed innocence
HUNTSVILLE, Texas (AP) — A 10th grade dropout who blamed his problems on drugs was executed by injection early today for the 1982 murder of a jeweler.
Johnson, who maintained his innocence, was convicted by a jury that deliberated only six minutes.
Elliot Rod Johnson, 28, was pronounced dead at 12:55 a.m. said state Attorney General Jim Mattox
His hand-written appeal had been rejected yesterday by U.S. District Judge Howell Cobb in Beaumont and then by a three-judge panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans.
halt the execution.
The U.S. Supreme Court, which granted him a third stay in February, also refused late yesterday to
Johnson was the fourth Texas inmate executed by lethal injection this year and the 24th, more than half a decade later. Texas resumed executions in 1982.
Johnson was executed for the murder of 67-year-old jeweler Joseph Granado, during a daylight robbery.
"I haven't killed anyone," Johnson said in an interview two weeks ago. "I feel like I'm being rail-leaded."
Johnson and another man, Maurice Andrews, were sentenced to death for the Granado slaying. A third man received a life term and a fourth got 30 years. An execution date has not been set for Andrews.
Medical association calls for AIDS testing
CHICAGO — The American Medical Association yesterday called for mandatory AIDS-virus testing of immigrants and prison inmates to prevent lessons about the deadly disease for elementary school students.
"We hope this is the framework for a national policy," said Robert E. McAfee, an AMA trustee, after the 406-member House of Delegates voted yesterday, the third day of the AMA's annual five-day meeting.
Policymakers for the 271,000 member organization debated less than half an hour before adopting, virtually unchanged, 17 recommendations from an AMA board of voters' report released Saturday.
Most of the recommendations concern testing for presence of the AIDS infection, which the trustees said should be required for prison inmates and would-be immigrants but not for people seeking a marriage license or entering a hospi-
With the delegates' approval, the recommendations became the basis for AMA education and lobbying efforts on acquired immune deficiency syndrome, which has struck more than 35,000 people in this country and killed more than 20,000.
Some of the recommendations the delegates approved were:
- Routine testing of patients at sexually transmitted-disease clinics and drug-abuse clinics, unless subjects raise specific objections.
- Creation of a commission of national, state and local leaders to develop a consensus on how best to fight AIDS.
— More federal funding for AIDS-virus testing, counseling of those found to be infected and research to determine the most effective counseling methods. The trustees said the $1 billion expected to be appropriated by Congress for 1988 will not be enough.
May retail inflation rate slowest yet in '87
WASHINGTON (AP) - Inflation at the retail level rose at a moderate, annual rate of 4 percent in May, the slowest pace this year, as a slowdown in energy costs partially offset higher food prices, the government reported Tuesday.
prospect of spiraling inflation this year.
The 0.3 percent rise in the Labor Department's Consumer Price Index followed 0.4 percent increases in each of the three preceding months and a 0.7 percent rise in January.
For the first five months of 1987, consumer prices have risen at an annual rate of 5.6 percent, far above last year's 1.1 percent rate, but still a far cry from the double-digit inflation at the start of the decade.
Economists said the May figures partly reflected a stabilizing of the dollar on foreign exchange markets that put the brakes on rising import prices and lessened the
Many analysts predicted inflation for the year would stop just under 5 percent and said that the price rise was now behind us.
Despite the recent leveling off,
the value of the dollar now against
other key currencies is about half
what it was two years ago.
Around the World
S. Korean president meets foes, attempts to end two-week protest
SEOUL, South Korea — President Chun Doo-hwan agreed to meet with opposition leaders today in an attempt to end two weeks of anti-government violence, but radical students vowed to continue protesting whatever the result.
Only a few demonstrations were reported yesterday. Relative calm appeared to reign for the first time since the opposition began a campaign June 10 to oust the former general and force democratic elections.
Chun declared an end to debate on political reform in April and had refused to talk with his opponents. He changed his mind yesterday and offered to meet at the Blue House presidential residence with 'Tim Young-sam and others.'
cal opposition. He also appeared to take a softer position, agreeing to meet Chun without the condition that all political detainees be released.
Kim said he would insist on major political reforms, particularly direct presidential elections to replace the existing electoral college system which favors the government.
Kim leads the Reunification Democratic Party, the main politi-
When he announced an end to discussion of reform until after the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, Chun also said the electoral college would choose the man to succeed him in February.
750,000 protest terrorist bombing in Spain
BARCELONA, Spain — Police estimated that 750,000 marched silently through the city Monday night, protesting a bombing by Basque terrorists last week that killed 17 people and wounded 35.
The preside chose fellow ex general Roh Tae-woo as the ruling Democratic Justice Party candidate, and protests began June 10 to coincide with the party convention that endorsed Roh's candidacy.
Two large placards reading "For peace and liberty, Catalonia
Mayor Pasqual Maragall said the size of the march spoke for itself. "These citizens have taken up to protest terrorism," he said.
Families with children, young people and community leaders took part in the demonstration in Barcelona, which has a population of 3.5 million and is Spain's second-largest city.
Silence prevailed until thousands of people reacted to the appearance of a placard in the crowd denouncing ETA, the Basque separatist group that claimed responsibility for the Friday attack in the underground garage of a department store.
Jordi Pujol, president of the Generaltat, the autonomous Catalonian government, and Culture Minister Javier Solana, representing Prime Minister Felipe Gonzalez, led the throng of protesters.
rejects terrorism" and "Popular collaboration against terrorism" were carried at the front of the march.
"To face terrorism is not only a police job but a job of all citizens." Pujol, who said he had never been confronted, said before the march.
Others marching included Miquel Coll, president of the Parliament of Catalonia, who organized the march, and Jesus Eguiguren, president of the Basque Parliament.
Flags with black ribbons of mourning hung from apartment buildings and thousands observed five minutes of silence earlier in the day to protest the bombing.
Nation and World Syria seeks release of U.S. journalist
LEBANON (AP) — Syria and Iranian-backed Shiite Muslim militants yesterday apparently sought to avoid a showdown on the kidnappings of U.S. journalist Charles Glass and the son of Lebanon's defense minister.
Syria denied it had set a deadline of sundown (1:30 p.m. yesterday) for their release, and Hezbollah, or Party of God, said in its first statement on the abductions that it had nothing to do with them.
Sources in the mainstream Shiite Muslim militia, Amal, which is allied with Syria, said Monday that the Syrians threatened violent action unless Glass, Ali Osseiran and Osseiran's driver were freed and the kidnappers surrendered by the deadline.
"We are working to obtain their liberation but a deadline has not been set yet," the state radio station quoted Brig. Gen. Ghazi Kenaan as saying two hours before sundown.
The exchange suggested backstage negotiations were in progress.
Kenaan commands the 7,500 Syrian soldiers deployed in Muslim West Beirut.
Radio stations have said Syrian soldiers might storm South Beirut's Shite slums, where many of the 25 foreigners missing in Lebanon are believed to be held, if Glass and Ossairan were not released quickly.
remarks were broadcast and denied it was involved in Wednesday's kidnappings.
"We do not approve this incident," the statement said. "We fully realize its political and security dimensions. We do not know the culprits and hope efforts to discover them will bear fruit."
Hezbollah, the most militant Shiite Muslim group, issued a statement at about the same time Kenan'a's
Fourteen gunmen seized Glass, 36, Ossisean, 40, and driver Suleiman Salman, a policeman who doubles as a bodyguard, in the seaside district of Ouzai, a Hezbollah stronghold in South Beirut.
Glass is the first foreigner abducted since Syria sent 7,500 soldiers to West Beirut on Feb. 22 to stop a factional war and restore order in the lawless Muslim sector. The kidnapping has embarrassed Syria, which is Lebanon's main power broker and keeps 25,000 troops in the northern and eastern parts of the country.
In March, Kenaan urged foreign diplomats and journalists who had fled West Beirut to return "on my personal responsibility."
Among the 25 foreigners missing and believed kidnapped since March 1985 are nine U.S. citizens, six Frenchmen, two Britons, two West Germans, an Italian, an Irishman, a South Korean, an Indian and two men who have not been identified.
Also missing is Anglican Church envoy Terry Waite, who disappeared Jan. 20 after leaving a West Beirut hotel to meet with kidnappers.
States to adopt 21 drinking age or lose aid
By a 7-2 vote, the justices upheld a 1984 law in which Congress voted to withhold money from states failing to pay taxes. Most states already have complied.
WASHINGTON (AP) — States refusing to adopt a minimum drinking age of 21 can be forced to forfeit some federal highway aid, the Supreme Court ruled yesterday.
The court said the law is a valid use of Congress' spending power to promote public safety by discouraging drunk driving by teen-agers.
In other decisions, the court:
—Ruled, 6.2, that a Washington state manufacturing tax favoring some in-state businesses discriminates against interstate commerce.
The decision could force a major overhaul in the business-tax systems of most states.
—Shut down another potential major source of state revenue by
declaring unconstitutional, 5-4, two successive Pennsylvania "flat taxes" on the interstate trucking industry.
Overturned a Supreme Court ruling that had stood for 126 years as it decided unanimously that federal courts may force states to extradite fugitives to other states.
The minimum drinking age law had been attacked by South Dakota as a violation of the Constitution's 21st Amendment, which in 1933 repealed Prohibition and gave states greater liquor distribution within their borders.
But Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist, writing for the court, said the 21st Amendment does not bar Congress from tying highway money to state passage of such laws.
"Congress found that the differing drinking ages in the states created particular incentives for young persons to combine their desire to drink with their ability to drive, and that this interstate problem required a national solution." Rehnquist said.
"The means it chose to address this dangerous situation were reasonably calculated to advance the general welfare," he added.
According to Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., one of the 1984 law's sponsors, only four states — South Dakota, Colorado, Ohio and Wyoming — still allow people under 21 to drink alcoholic beverages.
The South Dakota Legislature recently adopted a drink-at-21 law to take effect next April, but the law would have been repealed automatically had the state won its court battle yesterday.
The Colorado Legislature voted to raise that state's drinking age to 21 the day its current session ends, expected to be sometime next week.
The drinking age would have been bumped back to 19 in Colorado had South Dakota prevailed it the court test.
According to Colorado officials, those who are 18 and legally drink now will be allowed to continue. The state law phases in the new minimum age for those currently in the 18-21 age group. How that provision affects the state's eligibility for federal highway aid was not immediately clear.
Yesterday's decision is a victory for the federal government and organizations such as the National Safety Council and Mothers Against Drunk Driving that backed the legislation.
It is a defeat for South Dakota and the eight states that supported its Supreme Court effort: Colorado, Hawaii, Louisiana, Montana, Ohio, South Carolina, Vermont and Wyoming.
The Black Experience
in Kansas
CERTIFICATE OF
PERMINTY ENJOYMENT
FOR THE PERSON OF NAMIBIA TO GIVE
CHILDREN OF HIS LOST DAD
TO THE CURATOR OF NAMIBIA
FOR THE PERSON OF NAMIBIA TO GIVE
TO THE CURATOR OF NAMIBIA
The Black History Collection UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LIBRARIES
The Black Experience
In spite of its claim to be "the grandest, greatest, and freest of all the States in the Union," Kansas, in its Wyandotte Constitution, denied Blacks the right to bear arms, serve on juries, or attend integrated schools. But the Civil War enrolled many blacks as soldiers, and the succeeding decade saw "buffalo soldiers" at Forts Larned and Riley. In the late 19th century, Blacks participated in politics and held office—Edward P. McCabe held the office of state auditor for two terms, 1882-87. Changes in education took longer, and it was not until the landmark Supreme Court decision of 1954 that segregation in schools ended.
The first black settlers came to Kansas Territory as slaves. A few, both slave and free, lived there in the days of "Bleeding Kansas" when settlers fought to control territorial and state government and to determine whether Kansas would have slavery or not. Later, black settlers entered Kansas during the Civil War—some attracted by its reputation as a "free" state and some fleeing from slavery. After the War, migration continued, and the trickle became a flood as the "Exodusters" flowed in by the thousands, to establish new towns such as Nicodemus and Dunlap, or to expand the subcommunities of Kansas City, Kansas and Topeka. They founded settlements and colonies which, over the years, dwindled and dispersed. It took two World Wars before the critical issue of black employment in Kansas began to be addressed.
Today there are black judges, legislators, doctors, lawyers, and teachers; men and women who occupy all walks of life in Kansas. The legacy of Tennessee Town, Rattlebone Hollow, Mississippi Town, Nicodemus and Dunlap, and the black communities of the larger cities, lives on in the works of writers such as Langston Hughes and Gordon Parks, and in the major achievements of members of the black community.
Kansas Black History Collection
On Display Now in Special Collections at Spencer Research Library
Kansan Summer Weekly/Wednesday, June 24, 1987
3
Local Briefs
Local Rotarians select women club members
The Lawrence Rotary Club for the first time has nominated four women to join the club
The women nominated were: State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence; Sandra Praeger, city commissioner and former Lawrence mayor; Nancy Longhurst, manager of Eldridge Hotel; and Sandra Shaw, executive director of the Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center.
Branson said the Lawrence Rotarians were "forward-thinking" in admitting women before they were legally obligated to do. John Hill Jr., president of the Lawrence club, said Rotary officials thought women would be canable members.
After a U.S. Supreme Court ruling upheld a California law preventing Rotary International from disbanding local clubs that admitted women, regional Rotary officials said they were certain Kansas law would allow women to join the club.
The four women will join the club officially July 2 if the club's board of directors receives no objections.
Escape artist visits Lawrence this week
Escape artist Mario Manzini will perform in Lawrence this week.
Manzini will attempt to defy death by leaping into the Elks Club swimming pool while heavily shackled and handcuffed.
The performance will take place at 1 p.m. tomorrow at the Lawrence Elks Club swimming pool, 3705 Clinton Parkway.
Admission is free to see the escape attempt.
Manzini said he would attempt to break his Guinness Book of World Records underwater escape.
Manzini will also perform his two-hour stage show, "Mario Manzini's Chamber of Mysteries," at 7 p.m. on Monday at Hoch Auditorium. Tickets are $5 for adults and $4 for children and can be purchased at the door.
Public can view stars Fridays at Lindley Hall
Throughout the summer, the Astronomy Associates of Lawrence will continue to have public telescope observing sessions on clear Friday nights.
This Friday the program will begin at 8:30 p.m. in 412 Lindley Hall with a slide show called "Enjoying the Summer Constellations" July 3 and July 10, the observing sessions will be at 11 p.m. on Broken Arrow Park, 31st and Louisiana.
All other sessions will be from 9 to 10:30 p.m. at the Clyde W. Tombaugh Observatory, 500 Lindley Hall.
If the weather is unfavorable on any Friday night, people may call 864-3186 for information.
Where to call
Readers who have ideas for stories or photographs may call the Kansan 864-4810
For ideas about campus and area coverage, ask for Pam Miller, campus editor, for arts and arts editor, for Caroline Reddick, arts editor.
For sports ask for Tim Hamilton, sports editor, and for photographs ask for Darcy Chang, photo editor.
To report any problems or complaints, ask for John Benner, editor, or Dawn O'Malley, managing editor.
Campus and Area
Lawrence area snags third movie in 5 years
By CAROLINE REDDICK
Art. editoe
Another movie crew will be rolling into Lawrence soon.
The Lawrence area will be the site for the production of the film, Kansas, scheduled to begin July 29.
Arts editor
Kansas will be the third movie produced by the Lawrence area in the last decade.
Art Seidel, unit production manager of the film, said the movie was a contemporary story of two bank robbers, played by Matt Dillon and Andrew McCarthy, who hide from the law in a small Kansas town.
"It's an American tragedy and a lo-er model said. It's a very well-written piece."
"The film is about Kansas life, and it seemed that the locations and atmosphere of the Lawrence area were appropriate for the story." Litto said. "We're trying to make a statement about the uniqueness and beauty of the Midwest.
George Litto, producer of the film, said the Lawrence area was chosen for several reasons.
"The Lawrence area is also very convenient to a major airport, which is always a big consideration," he said.
Seidel said most of the film would be shot outside Lawrence but some scenes involving municipal buildings might be done in Lawrence.
Lawrence," Seidel said. "It's more like Baldwin City or Valley Falls, towns of that size. One of the towns the director likes a lot is Valley Falls."
"The town they're in is not like
The production company, Trans World Entertainment, of Los Angeles, still is negotiating to shoot scenes in area towns and farms, he said. The company headquarters is in Lawrence and will remain here for the duration of filming.
Auditions for most of the roles will be held in a couple of weeks in Lawrence. Seidel said the movie had 50 speaking roles, and about 42 of those would be cast with people from the Kansas City and Lawrence area. The movie will also have crowd
scenes with more than 500 people.
"For the large crowd scenes, we're hoping we could invite people down to participate and then invite them to lunch," he said.
"We would like to do the film for under $10 million, which is a relatively low budget. One way we hope to do it is to hire local help wherever we can."
Judy Billings, director of the Lawrence Convention and Visitors Bureau, said her office estimated that the film would bring about $2 million into the Lawrence area.
"Anytime you have a project of this size in a community, it's bound to have some impact," she said.
"We work really hard with production companies to make sure that everything runs smoothly for them and for local residents. Anytime you do a project of this nature, it takes a lot of effort on everyone's part."
"It's just going to be wonderful,
but the more movies we have,
the better."
Jack Wright, professor of theater and media arts and artistic director for University Theatre, said he thought the movie would benefit the community.
The Day After and Nice Girls Don't Explode were the first two movies filmed here.
France is still hot spot for study abroad
Bv CARLA PATINO
Billings said another movie, Spring Chicken, may be produced in the lawrence area soon.
Staff writer
STUDENTS ABROAD
France has remained, for the last three summers, the favorite study abroad program of KU students.
Laura Rauch, Kansas City, Kan senior, went to Paris last summer. She said her trip gave her a good perspective of another language and different cultural values.
"It was one of the best things I could do," she said. "As soon as I graduate, I'm planning to do some more travelled."
KANSAS UNIVERSITY STUDENTS GOING
ABROAD FOR SUMMER PROGRAMS
Norris Lacy, chairman of the department of French and Italian, said some students go to France for cultural reasons, others to finish their language requirements and the rest to have fun, as well as to study.
1985 1986 1987
FRANCE 36 26 35
GERMANY 16 22 31
GREAT BRITAIN 28 16 26
TALIA 23 8 13
MEXICO 18 15 12
SPAIN 27 19 26
Lacy said more students went abroad this summer than last summer.
The foreign language departments are not the only ones to offer study abroad programs. The departments
"Last summer there was everything from riots in Paris to the Chernobyl incident," he said. "This summer, the number of students is back up. It usually ranges from 35 to 40."
Janis Perkins, adviser of the study abroad program, said her office works closely with the different departments that offer summer language, art, business and humanities-oriented programs in other countries.
of design, history, art history, English and the School of Business also have programs abroad available for students, Perkins said.
The study abroad office's main purpose is to arrange U.S. students' trips abroad and to bring foreign students to KU through an exchange program, she said.
Richard Stewart/Kansan Graphic
Usually 75 percent of the students in the summer program are KU students, she said, while 25 percent are students from other universities. The study abroad program is a nationally advertised program.
To help students pay for the programs, summer scholarships are provided by the departments of French and Italian, Germanic languages and literatures and design.
But Perkins said it wasn't easy to help in the summer from the final round.
available through financial aid for summer." Perkins said. "I suppose the federal government thinks students work during summer."
"There is not a lot of money
She said the study abroad office also has a summer scholarship fund available for students who can prove they need help. The fund provided about $16,000 this summer. she said.
"It was fantastic. The money is nothing for the experience you get," she said. "It was worth taking the loan.
Marienne L. Schaefer, Lenexa
senior, who studied in Paris last
summer, said she received a guaranteed
student loan to pay for the trim.
"Students have the opportunity to live in other countries, see the difference in the academic system and increase their awareness of what is going on in the world."
Ramona Medina, Lawrence graduate student, said she enjoyed the time
she spent in Spain last summer taking Spanish literature classes.
"I learned the need to try and communicate with other people," she said.
Although France has been the country with the highest number of students the last three years, Germany experienced a considerable increase of students this summer.
Last summer, 31 students went to Germany; this summer 43 went, study abroad figures show.
Donald Watkins, chairman of the department of Germanic languages and literatures, said that this summer the number of students increased because the terrorism scare did not influence students' participation in the program.
David Shulenburger, associate dean of business, said the school offered a summer program in Manchester, England, in 1984, 1985 and 1987.
Watkins said several thousand dollars a year are available in scholarship and prize money at the German department. He said these money awards are based on students' merits.
He said international marketing and finance courses were offered.
"The University of Manchester has the advantage of having a similar program to KU's," he said. "The faculty members are specialized in international business. England has a much more open economy than the United States."
By KRISTEN HAYS
Staff writer
Kassebaum stresses need for education
Commission approves BID plans
After more than two years of rigorous debate, the Lawrence city commissioners last night approved a movement District, with an $44.81 billion grant.
Keith Robison/KANSAN
Staff writer
Bv KFITH RORISON
BELL
The BID will assess downtown businesses to pay for its downtown promotions, administrative salaries and maintenance expenses.
years in remarkable fashion.
One of the most important parts of education is learning to appreciate and tolerate the views of others. Sen, Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., said Saturday night at the 1987 Kappa Alpha Theta sorority leadership conference.
Hannes Zacharias, city management analyst, said money would start being collected in January 1988.
"If indeed we learn nothing else, it should be to respect others' views," she said.
U. S. Sen. Nancy Kassebaum speaks to members of the Kappa Alpha Theta Leadership Conference at Oliver Hall. Kassebaum addressed the conference Saturday night.
Commissioners Schumm, Praeger,
Constance and Rundle voted to approve the BID, but Mayor Mike Amyx opposed it. He said administering the BID would be too expensive.
Kassebaum spoke in Oliver Hall to more than 600 women from 112 colleges in the United States and Canada. The conference, titled "Nobler Womanhood: A Lifelong Journey," began Thursday and ended Sunday.
Constitution had been thinking of education when they wrote the document.
Kassebaum, who was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1978, also spoke of her constituents' reactions to her voting record.
"I think it's particularly fitting, at this particular academic excellence gathering, that this is the year of celebration of the 200th anniversary of our Constitution, because in many ways what that celebration means to me is a recognition of the importance of education."
Kassebaum said one of the United States' most important goals was to support education.
"Education teaches how to understand nuances and ambiguities. Most issues aren't black and white. They're, unfortunately, a sort of muddy gray."
Kassebaum said the authors of the
"We talk about competitiveness, about the role of the United States in the future. Are we losing out to other nations around the world? If we are not to lose our standing in the world, it will be because we recognize the importance of education," she said.
"We need to put a lid on the amount of spending, and administration spending is too high. If they would lower the budget by $47,000, I'd vote for it," he said.
She said she had received "bitter mail" after she voted for contra aid in the last legislative session.
"The founding fathers were dedicated to understanding themselves, education, political philosophy," she said. "They wrote for us a flexible document that allows us to expand and differ and debate throughout the
Ellis R. Hayden, representing the merchants of Quarrill's Flea Markets in Joshshsshire St., said the BID would take his independence as a businessman.
"Do you vote the way your constituents feel, or do you vote your own judgment?" she asked. "I think you should vote for your constituents and for your feelings."
Going into politics, she said, “is really a willingness to be involved and to care about the issues and one’s role in particular, particularly have a respect for people.”
She said that U.S. debate about aid to the contras would not achieve democracy in Central America.
'If they would lower the budget by $47,000, I'd vote for it.'
"I it's important to get involved, and I encourage us to examine all sides," she said.
"What is important is how we can help countries in Central America develop economic independence. It takes time and patience to cultivate the right atmosphere in which a democracy can flourish.
Kassebuah was a member of the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority, 1433 Tennessee St., when she attended KU in the early 1950s. She graduated from KU in 1952 with a bachelor's degree in political science.
Lawrence Mayor
-Mike Amyx Lawrence Mayor
"Taxes are going up, and how much more can a billfold stand? When there comes a time when I can't rent or lease a building and pay rising taxes without paying something like this, what's happening in America?" he asked.
Ron Johnson, member of the BID advisory board, said the BID would be a viable entity for the community, with downtown businesses willing to pay for services downtown.
But Eugene Riling, a lawyer whose office is at 808 Massachusetts St., said he thought the downtown area's maintenance was already adequately provided by government services
Mike Vieux, member of the BID advisory board, said, "We are independent business people, and the BID is a chance for us to help ourselves.
"Don't think of the administration; it's a business like a lawyer or a barber, and it provides a service."
Commissioner Sandra Praeger said, "We do have a healthy downtown, and rather than letting it run down before using the BID, we should use it now. It's a service, coordination for getting people to work together."
In other business, a $1,042,000 bid for the construction of Hola Recreation Center was unanimously approved. McPherson Contractors of Topeka submitted the lowest bid out of five contracting companies, including two in Lawrence.
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4
Wednesday, June 24, 1987
---
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Opinions and Editorials Yes, women really can have it all in life
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Mall needed in Lawrence
Statistics don't lie, but they may not tell the whole story.
1986 sales figures compiled by Standard Rate and Data Service show that Lawrence is doing about an average job of keeping its citizens' dollars circulating at home.
Compared to Lawrence, the cities of Salina, Emporia, Manhattan and Hutchinson have "captive audiences." That is, the drive to alternate shopping sources in larger neighboring cities is further than the drive from Lawrence to either Topeka or Overland Park.
That is, statistics show that 56 percent of the income earned by Lawrence residents is spent right here in town. Compared to other Kansas towns, this figure seems just about right. For example, Hutchinson also captures 56 percent of its citizens' income, and Emporia and Salina keep about 54 percent. Manhattan manages to retain 58 percent of its households' spending income.
Some Lawrence residents have cited these statistics as reasons why the city does not need a shopping mall. On the surface, this may seem reasonable, but closer inspection shows it is not.
Therefore, for Lawrence residents to spend 56 percent of their income in town despite our two nearby mall magnets seems impressive.
However, Salina, Emporia,
Manhattan and Hutchinson have shopping malls to draw business into town from their respective metropolitan areas.
For Lawrence to draw a similar percentage of business from out-of-towners is a testimony to the success of its downtown. But, who says average is good?
A mall in town would help to combat the lure of the improved Kansas Highway 10 as a shortcut to Overland Park. Two mall projects have recently been proposed for Olathe, making a day trip to the east even more tempting.
A shopping mall in Lawrence would help the city capture more of its citizens' income, increase county sales tax collection and add jobs. It is time to stop watching this city's income go to support other towns that were able to act in concert and with decisiveness to improve themselves.
A shopping mall in Lawrence would draw even more money from surrounding towns whose residents often travel right past Lawrence on their way to malls.
Why should Lawrence continue to stand still and watch the parade of dollars flow to the Topeka and Kansas City shopping malls? Why can't Lawrence retain more of its own income than our sister cities to the west who suffer more during this time of agricultural depression?
Lawrence no-smoking law
On June 20, the Lawrence nos smoking ordinance went into effect. This new measure bans smoking in enclosed areas open to the public and in enclosed places of employment. The ordinance created three categories: non-smoking areas, locations where smoking areas may be established, and public smoking areas.
Smoke should be the smoker's problem and nobody else's. Consequently, smoking is completely banned in areas such as elevators, public restrooms, polling places,
But most importantly this ordinance strikes "a reasonable balance between the needs of smokers and the needs of non-smokers to breathe smoke-free air, recognizing that, where these needs conflict, the need to breathe smoke-free air shall have priority."
This compromise is the best for everyone. Its intent is "to protect the public health, safety and welfare; to prohibit smoking in public places, except in designated areas; to regulate smoking . . . in places of employment."
checkout and service lines, child care and health care facilities, and buses. Limited smoking is allowed in some areas. Examples include retail tobacco stores, bars or taverns, restaurants with an occupancy of 29 or less people, and many other public places. However, areas exempted in the city ordinance may not be exempted in statewide smoking regulations, which go into effect July 1.
The dangers of smoking cannot be ignored. And secondhand smoke many times risks the health of people who do not smoke. Smoke causes eyes to water, clothes to smell, and general discomfort.
Lawrence finally has adopted a specific ordinance that protects the non-smoker and yet gives the smoker the privilege to smoke in designated areas. This ordinance is beneficial to the sick, those allergic to cigarette smoke, and non-smokers who want their share of clean air. The ordinance is reasonable because it does not cause undue hardship on anyone.
News staff
John Benner ... Editor
Dawn O'Malley ... Managing editor
Jane Zachman ... News editor
Pam Miller ... Campus editor
Tim Hamilton ... Sports editor
Darry Chang ... Photo editor
Cortney Sheldon ... Grapher
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Guest shots should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
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Letters, guest shots and columns are the opinion of the writer and do not reflect the majority Dalkey Kansan. Editorials are the opinion of the Kansas editorial board.
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If you were to accuse me of saying that I want to have my cake and eat it, too. I'd have to say you're absolutely right.
As a young, intelligent woman close to receiving her degree, I have a great deal of confidence in my skills.
I don't buy the idea that women who have high career aspirations must sacrifice the personal side of their lives to reach their full career potential.
But latey, I've been encountering a faction, mostly male, which thinks that a woman who wants to go as far as a man in the professional world has many glimmering spark of a personal relationship.
This faction seems to say, "You've strived for equality, you've got equality, so no way am I going to treat you."
A couple of times in relationships, I've been told by a man that he would resent me if I made any concession in my professional, or rather future-professional, world for our relationship.
So, of course, my professional aspirations win. But do I win?
In my opinion, the ability to care for another person is an innate part of surviving; a part, if healthy nurtured, that can only enhance the other parts of my world.
But do I will:
Only in part.
My faith in my potential to succeed professionally isn't hindered by my desire to devote myself to other passions as well.
1000
And no, I don't think I have to be superwoman to do it. Just human.
"Hello, employment services of the sexually liberated world? I'm a young, talented and ambitious young woman, recently graduated from college, and I'm looking for a job."
Is this phone conversation in the future for women?
The voice at the other end sighs. "I mean, do you want to go all the way to the top, or do you just plan to waver somewhere in the middle, in that mean-
Pam
Miller
Pam
Miller
Campus
Editor
"Certainly, we'll be glad to help. First, please answer some questions. How ambitious are you? How far do you want to go?"
"How ambitious?" I ask "Uh, well . . . I want to go as far as I can, with the considerable talents I honed after four years at the University."
Pam
Miller
Pam
Miller
Campus
Editor
--ingles realm of frustrated mediocre job opportunity . ?"
"To the top," I answer. "The meaningless realm sounds pretty depressing."
"Good," the voice says. "We have your job. It's on the East Coast. Within a year, you'll be in upper management, making $50,000 plus, with your own BMW, a $100,000 home and a health spa membership. We can even throw in your own therapist."
"Well, I say, 'That's pretty heavy stuff. Any app that works like that close to home?' Kind of like a hypothetical game."
"What? You didn't mention that you had other commitments. Let me look again in the meaningless realm category."
"Hey, just because I have a relationship outside of my career doesn't mean I can't go to the top anywhere, here or on the East Coast. It's what I make of it. 'I' say.
"Oh, you are so naive. Either you say 'I do' to your career, or you say I 'do' to your boyfriend. It's one or the other. Until you realize that, I can't help you. Goodbye."
Maybe this won't become reality. But enough of us must stick up for our potential in both the business and the civic spheres.
Some months ago, a writer named Jill Scott wrote a column in the Denver Post titled, "Does a woman need a man?" In it she said:
"The need for an intimate partner is omnipresent and natural for a woman. Judith Vierst says . . . 'Female dependence appears to be less a wish to be protected than a wish to be part of a web of human relationship, a wish not only to get but to give loving care.'"
Scott continues, "I'd like to eliminate the kind of
question that labels women unhealthy if they feel 'less' without a man. In this way, women can stop this ludicrous charade of pretending that partnership with a man isn't really important to their well-being without also carrying the stigma of being failed feminists."
Valid points. I think in today's world, a woman can still be a 'me' as well as part of an 'us'.
Let's tell the men.
My fear is that the faction's "all or nothing" attitude will make capable women choose one thing or the other.
I've been told that two female students, friends of mine, who both possess large amounts of talent and ambition, say that they want nothing more than to get married and have children.
But is that really what they want, or are they just answering a multiple-choice quiz that gives no answer?
A recent University of Illinois study found that female college students were more likely to lower their career goals than male students. The lowered career goals were attributed to "juggling career and family."
But the study also said that the male college students' aspirations have remained the same. I don't doubt it. How many women are telling the men, "I'll resent you if you make any sacrifices in your career for me?" Maybe some do, but I'll bet the number is smaller.
So I'd like to tell this faction that if men, as well as women, can accept the nurturing, mutual benefits of devotion to both career and relation life, whose role is "held back" from going as far as he or she can.
And if the real reason a man tells me not to make any concession on behalf of our relationship is because he simply is looking for a noble excuse to get out of the relationship, then I wish he would just tell me the truth. I will respect an honest man much more than a man who underestimates my ability to make it without — or with — a man by my side.
At least I do know that I don't want to be married to my career. I won't be able to talk my career into taking out the trash or washing my BMW.
I guess that means I'll have to get through life without the therapist threw in.
Some library fines are too small to collect
If the U.S. government wasted money like the University of Kansas library system does, we would double our national deficit. And if KU is under such a budget crunch that parking fines have to be raised, and the libraries have to cut magazine subscriptions as well as book-buying power, why don't they stop funneling useless money into postage and processing fees to get students to pay overdue library fines. Sometimes the school isn't able to break even.
I was in the art library in Spencer Museum of Art, reading a book checked out on reserve. With an art history final the next morning, I had 15 minutes before the book was due, and I still had three more chapters to study. Being a lazy student who owns remote controls for every household appliance, I decided not to check the book out again and avoid a 20-cent-an-hour fine but to continue reading in my plush chair. An hour and 15 minutes later, seeing no librarian in sight, I tipped to the desk and quietly returned the book. Sneaking away like a thief, I thought I had fooled them.
Needless to say, I didn't. Two weeks later, I received a bill from the library for an overdue fine of 40 cents. Later, I found out they spent 22 cents on
Michael Carolan
Guest Columnist
a bill, which I tossed into the trash. I thought the bill was a joke. After the library couldn't collect, it was the infamous Carruth O'Leary Collection that we found. The students were mailed to me at a cost of 13.5 cents each.
If spending a total of 49 cents to collect a 40 cent fine isn't enough, excluding paper and processing costs, I later discovered that the system does one of two things when a student doesn't pay a fine. A hold is put on the student's fee card, or the charge is turned over to a real collection agency. I can just see the collection man at my door, threatening to
take my remote control television set and my microwave if I didn't pay the 40 cents.
The bureaucracy didn't even break even. They wasted at least nine cents on a bill that most students toss in the trash, especially when the fine is under a dollar. And if you multiply a wasted nine cents by, let's say 2,000, the library just spent $18. This meager amount could surely be put back into magazine subscriptions and book-buying. It could even help fund parking services.
Maybe they could really teach me a lesson to insure that I turn in my books on time and at the same time make some money. Perhaps a $10-minute fine would encourage me and other lazy students to return books on time. But then, with my luck, there's the possibility that they would accidentally mail separate bills for every minute late.
Of course, the system won in the end, putting a hold on my fee card. Luckily, I avoided the collection man.
"That'll be 40 cents," she said.
That if he no coins,
I'd forgotten about the fine by then, and as usual,
I had no money. I asked if she'd take a check.
There went another 10 cents.
Mentioning: a trend of imprecise thought
There is a term for the most common form of pseudo-education that mars so many with it textbooks. It is called Mentioning. That is, a great many topics are mentioned superficially but few if any are treated in any depth, which leaves the student with the extensive vocabulary of names and phrases but little understanding of them. Perhaps the worst offenders are history textbooks, as in, "Among the more prominent members of the Constitutional Convention were Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and Gouverneur Morris." Or, "The philosophers of the progressive movement were Henry George, who wrote Progress and Poverty, and Edward Bellamy author of Looking Backward."
Why do textbook editors do that? Largely for commercial reasons. Thanks to Mentionsing, no one's special hero or field is left out when the time
PAUL
GREENBERG
Columnist
POLYVILLE
comes to circulate texts among potential buyers. They can regurgitate the information on multiple-choice or identification tests, and they sound educated if you don't talk to them too long.
Now the practice of Mentoning has been raised to a working definition of literacy. A professor of English at the University of Virginia at Charlottesville has compiled a checklist of 4,500 names, places, phrases, books, events and miscellaneous items (roughly from Astaire, Fred, to Zurich,
Switzerland) that he says culturally literate Americans know, Or, to be more precise, it is a list of what they are able to identify. The title of his book is *Cultural Literacy: What Every American Needs to Know* — which must be the latest debasement of the term Literacy. Spiro Agnew makes the list of knowables; Fyodor Dostoevsky doesn't. The list is mildly interesting — not for what it includes, but for what it omits. The whole exercise amounts to a trivial pursuit.
This list is not so much a remedy as an aggregation of the spotty information and crossword-puzzle phrases that now pass for literate intercourse in American society.
It's clear enough what has inspired this urge to create lists of definite bytes of information: the vagueness and imprecision that has overtaken the country's language and therefore its thought.
Letters to the editor
No-drip Dads' Dav
A few days ago while reading the University Daily Kansan, I came across your Father's Day editorial. Knowing how infrequently one gets positive feedback on such editorials, I am writing to tell you I think you did a great job on it. It takes a great deal of skill to make the reader empathize with the writer even though she or he may not have the same experience to read. You might need training when it comes to Fathers' Day was refreshing to see something other than the usual "drippy" piece to commemorate the occasion. Thanks!
Debi Gilley Lawrence resident
'Yes' to downzoning
As a former homeowner in the Oread neighborhood with many friends who still own homes and live there, I must object to your editorial "No Oread Downonzong" in the June 17 Kansas. The potential financial loss to real estate speculators who buy rental property, fail to maintain it, and then raize it to replace it with cheaply built housing designed to self-destruct in a few years, cannot begin to compare to the financial loss suffered by a family who
suddenly discovers that the desirability of their home has been destroyed by an apartment complex, complete with parking lot, which has sprung up next door. Their property values are at risk right now, and both they and the community at large need protection from the naked, unadulterated greed which is encouraged by the current zoning laws.
And, no, fighting the battle a house at a time is not the answer. If the property has the right curb cuts or alley access, a clever developer can build something that, under current zoning regulations, the city simply has no power over. Much as the city would have no power should you choose to paint your house in purple and yellow strips and paint Garbage Pail Kids' faces on all your windows.
We are not talking about vacant land bought on speculation. We are talking about real homes lived in by real people who need protection. Renters need the protection of knowing that it is in their landlord's financial interest to fix things when they break. Owners need the protection of knowing that the biggest thing they own isn't going to bankrupt them when it's time to move on.
Judith Roitman professor in mathematics
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Kansan Summer Weekly/Wednesday, June 24, 1987
5
KU housing director praises renovation of Battenfeld Hall
By KEITH ROBISON
Staff writer
Ken Stoner, the director of student housing, has a philosophy about his work.
"If you have a gw wrapper you want to get rid of, and you're standing in a yard full of trash, you'll throw the wrapper down," he said.
"If you have a gum wrapper you want to get rid of, and you're standing in a trimmed yard with no trash, you'll probably put the wrapper in your pocket.
"It's a self-fulfilling prophecy. People will treat a facility as they perceive it.
"If the students don't feel that you're meeting their needs and keeping the place up, they'll treat the facility as such."
This summer, Stoner is trying to meet the needs of the students who next year will live in Battiefen Scholarship Hall, 1425 Alumni Place, and the Jayhawker Towers apartments, 1603 W. 15th St.
Money for the project comes from a Kansas University Endowment Association construction fund.
Battelfeld Hall, an all-men's scholarship hall built in 1940, is getting a $450,000 renovation job, he said.
Stoner said that the second floor, previously the scholarship hall's living area, and the third floor were being changed to four-man, tworoom rooms. In each suite, one room will have four study desks, and the other will have four beds and four closets.
"The men didn't care for that too much." Stoner said.
He said the new arrangement would make it easier for the residents to live together.
Before, all Battenfeld residents slept in a large room located on the third floor.
"If someone wants to stay up all night studying, they can do it without bothering anyone else, where before, that was impossible."
Also, Battenfield's kitchen will be converted to use gas instead of electricity. Stoner said.
"We're going to have the entire project done by the time school starts, with one possible exception," he said. "The kitchen might not be done. It has to do with the bringing of power to the building and to have to with removing the existing gas lines and replacing them with electric lines. It all depends on the utility companies.
"It's a trade-off we're willing to make to get the project done on
time."
He said the residents wouldn't have to go hungry.
"If the kitchen isn't done, we can feed them somewhere like GSP (Gertrude Sellars Pearson-Corbin Hall), if they want to eat together. If they don't care about eating together, we will spread out among the different scholarship hall's," he said.
Mike Van Dyke, site foreman for Harris Construction Co., Lawrence, said his crew had been on the job about 10 days.
He said about 20 men were working on the project.
"The heat's been burning them up.
We try to get done early," he said.
"We start at 7 a.m. and quit around
3:30 in the afternoon."
Stoner said, "Our interest is to try to renovate one scholarship hall each summer. Next summer, the summer of '88, we'll work on Pearson Hall."
Miller and Watkins scholarship halls were renovated last summer, and Stoner said he was pleased with the results.
"We put the facilities in excellent condition, and they are keeping them in good shape."
Van Dyke and his crew also did the renovation work on Miller and Watkins scholarship halls.
Work is also being done on the Jayhawker Towers.
"We're spending some money down there, and they're starting to respond," Stoner said.
Three rooms adjacent to the lobby in Tower B will be converted into a vending machine area, a laundry and an equipment check-out desk.
Ken Hopkins, Topeka sophomore, lived in the Towers last year. He said vandalism was an everyday occurrence.
"They ripped the dryers off the walls, they tore the lids off the washers and even urinated in the washers. There were half-eaten popsicles lying on the carpet, melting. There was always urine in the stairwells. I'm not going to live there anymore," he said.
However, Stoner said, "We feel like there is less vandalism there now than there used to be. It went from a private facility with a certain reputation to a University facility with another kind of reputation.
"We want the message made that we intend to keep the facility up and be responsive to student needs and concerns. I think they'll respond to that."
Turning to her classmates, 20-year-old Louise Hirwa says "Good morning" in a deep, melodic voice, pleasantly accented by her native French language.
By IEAN KETTER
They are enrolled at KU this summer in English-as-a-second-language classes offered by the Applied English Center.
They have come here for the tool needed to break down this barrier of silence and to build a future — English.
Coffey said the center received no state or federal funds, contrary to a common misconception. Tuition, equal to out-of-state KU fees, provides the only income.
They respond politely and become silent. These students cannot chat informally before class because they do not share a language.
The center, in a large room on the second floor of Lippincott Hall, is not a high-tech, slick place. Counselor Margaret Coffey's office is one of many formed by white partitions set up in a maze-like fashion. The office walls are peeped with hand-lettered signs explaining waiver options open to students and details of planned parties.
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
All students must take proficiency examinations when they enroll and again when they complete each level
Students whose proficiencies place them in the two lower levels cannot enroll in University classes. Students in the more advanced third and fourth levels may take one to three University courses, depending on each student's proficiency and the course's difficulty.
Staff writer
Although students sometimes are sponsored by corporations or by their governments, most pay for the courses themselves, she said.
The center offers four broad levels of classes year-round. Within those levels are subdivisions of classes to meet the needs of students leading to their proficiencies in English,
English classes break down barriers
Applied English Center helps foreign students make adjustment to new culture
Hirwa currently is taking the most
"You can't learn how to speak English correctly when your teacher has an Arabic accent." he said.
When Alabaddula speaks, his 'v's sound like 'w', and he pronounces the short 'i' in Arabic as a long 'e' sound.
Each nationality has special pronunciation problems, but speaking English is difficult for all beginning center students. English has more than 40 vowel and consonant sounds, many more than most languages
Alabdulla, 19, studied English in Qatar but had an Arabic teacher.
tures and shiny, black, shoulder-length hair tied back in a ponytail, Yokoi never had been out of Japan before she left for the United States three weeks ago. When she speaks, Yokoi raises a fluttering hand to her elbow. Her head in apology and embarrassment what she thinks is poor pronunciation.
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"Please, more slowly," Chikako Yokoi pleaded with her teacher in a high, soft voice as fragile as her appearance.
Nasser Aladubla, from Qatar, a Middle Eastern country near Saudia Arabia, said he would major in communications either at KU or at another U.S. university after he completed his studies at the center.
English has no rules determining stress, said Cindy Pronko, the instructor who teaches the class.
Many of the students have studied English in their own countries, but the emphasis there was on reading and writing rather than speaking and listening.
"You just have to listen." Pronko told her students. "You can't learn it by reading."
Fun t-shirts and jewelry designed and hand made by a graduate of KU's School of Fine Arts.
In the Speaking and Understanding class, Yokoi and her classmates study correct pronunciation carefully. They examine the pitch, clarity and length of the vowels in each syllable of a word to determine which syllable is stressed.
Pronko does not speak any more slowly or loudly in this class than she would in a class of U.S. students, but she checks often for understanding, using her warmth and a sense of humor to encourage her students to speak.
Changing stress in an English word can change its meaning. For example, the word 'record' can be either a noun or a verb, depending on which syllable is stressed.
As part of her instruction for this class, Prono listens to tapes of each student speaking and gives them a prompt to describe their special pronunciation problems.
The students also study non-verbal communication. Gestures vary in meaning from culture to culture, and students could embarrass themselves by misinterpreting or misusing gestures.
A small person with delicate fea-
In Korea, 19-year-old Inki Kim told the class, the wagging-finger gesture that means "Come here" in English and has been used like how you'd call a dog." Kim said
Kim, who plans to major in engineering, attended a U.S. high school in Saipan, a western Pacific island, after moving there from Korea last year.
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advanced of the second level classes. She said she planned to spend five years at KU earning a bachelor's degree in business administration before returning to her home in Rwanda, a central African country.
Beginning instruction for Hirwa and her classmates concentrates on pre-academic skills such as speaking and understanding. The class members also will study U.S., Kansas and KU history to improve their adjustments to a new culture.
I study English four hours a day. I don't like to watch TV because it takes too much time.'
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They will lose their overly precise pronunciation of consonants and will learn to respond in flat, unmusical "yeps," and "uh huhs." Then, they truly will be speakers of English.
"From the classes I've taugh, would say the majority of my students are very motivated and serious students." Coffe said.
Kim shares his classmates' serious attitudes and commitment.
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Coffey said Kim's attitude was typical of an otherwise diverse group.
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If the students are successful, in several months they will chatter comfortably together before class in a shared language.
Students sit erectly in their chairs and keep almost constant eye contact with the teacher. In spite of their embarrassment, they volunteer struggle with finding the correct word and its correct pronunciation.
"I study English four hours a day. I
learn to watch a movie," because it
takes too long.
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The KU Bookstore in the Kansas Union will be closed for inventory June 30 thru July 2
The KU Bookstore in the Burge Union and the Oread Bookshop will be closed for inventory June 26 thru June 30
KUBookstores Kansas Union Burge Union
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LEWENCE KANSAS
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Friday, July 3 RIDERS IN THE SKY and NEW GRASS REVIVAL
HISTORIC CRAFTS
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Saturday, July 4 BANU GIBSON and her NEW ORLEANS HOT JAZZ ORCHESTRA
LAWRENCE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
entertainment production by KANI TM
FIREWORKS EXTRAVAGANZA
production for the Letters ACTOR
Ticket admits you to all events on July 3. 4. 5.
ADULTS: $5.00
CHILDREN (5-12): $3.00
CHILDREN UNDER 5: FREE
Friday 6-10 * Saturday 10-10
* Sunday 10-6
J. L. J. Food Centers
Maupintour
Jayhaw Bookstore
Jay Shopee
The Jay-Shopee
OFFICIAL TICKET OUTLETS:
The Jay Shoppe
7-Eleven
Liberty Hall
Wal-Mart
Parkland Traditional
Gibson's
Weaver's Sunflower Cablevision
Lawrence Arte Center
Adventureland Video
Mister Guy K Mart
For further information contact: Judy Wright, Executive Director, P.O. Box 581, Lawrence, KS 66044, 843-4411
6
Wednesday, June 24, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
Ice
Continued from p. 1
"You won't be traumatized if you see it."
People holds a bachelor's degree in economics from Southwest Missouri State University. Before coming to Lawrence, he was a sales manager for a Kansas City, Mo., building materials supplier. When the building business slumped, People decided to make a move.
"I came to Lawrence," he said,
"because it has good schools for my kids and a low crime rate. I came because of its size, because it's mellow and because of the constant supply of customers."
Pepple's customers are treated well. A list of people who want things and their phone numbers is tacked to a shelf above Pepple's desk.
"Sam remembers stuff that people want," Fisher said. "In fact, one lady said she furnished her whole house from Everything But Ice."
People even makes house calls if a customer is dissatisfied with a purchase.
"Everything in here is new or was brand new," he said. "My buyer tries to get nice, quality merchandise, but most of the stuff has been smashed and mangled."
ase.
Pepple makes enough money to survive because of demand and may be partly because of his rapport with customers. One day he held a customer's baby girl so the man could try some exercise equipment. Pepple joked, "Wanna trade her for something?"
Ice business left a chip of history
By DEBRA A. PETERSON
The history of the building at Sixth and Vermont streets is almost as colorful as its current tenant.
More than 100 years ago, the Lawrence Ice Co. cut ice from the river in winter and stored it for summer use. Sometimes the supply was adequate for the demand. Sometimes it wasn't. And sometimes the storage houses were dangerous.
According to a letter at the Watkins Community Museum written by Fred Smithmeyer, Seattle, to local author Elfriede Fischer Rowe, "The ice houses made spectacular fires when they burned. Layers of ice had to be separated with sawdust or they would have been frozen in a solid mass."
Modernization came in 1894 when A.J. Griffin of Lawrence erected a $13,000 building and installed $9,500 worth of artificial ice-making machinery. The ice was agitated during the freezing process because
it had been observed that ice frozen on a calm lake was opaque, while ice frozen during a brisk wind was clear.
Griffin and another Lawrence ice facility incorporated in 1897 under the directorship of local entrepreneur Roberts who doubled the capacity of the plant.
Despite a flood in 1903 and a tornado that caused $15,000 damage in 1911, the plant continued operations until 1928. In September of that year, the business was bought by the American Service Co. of Atlanta. Ten years later, American Service reemplaced the plant.
The remodeling was completed in eight months mostly by local men at a cost of $75,000. Almost all the old machinery was destroyed. New diesel engines provided electricity for the huge ammonia condensers that made the ice. "Imagine a 1951 Cadillac stood up on its end," Sam Peple, proprietor of Everything But Ice, said. "That's how big the ammonia condensers that made ice."
Ice was big business in the days before air conditioning. Nowadays, $5 buys about 56 pounds of ice. In 1920, $5 bought 1,000 pounds. Housewives would hang a card in their windows that told the ice man how much ice they needed. KU football players were often hired to carry the 25-, 50-, 75- or 100-pound blocks of ice.
The plant was overwhelmed with calls in October 1942 when regular operations shut down because of a strike for higher wages by newly hired men. One company driver, Jack Dillon, sought police protection to return to his job after lunch.
When electric refrigeration became popular in the 1950s, the ice business declined, though the building maintained its cold storage facility.
In 1960, Robert Harrison of the Gill Real Estate Agency purchased the building from the American ServICE Co.
SUA FILMS
Now the building houses Every thing But Ice.
All films will be shown at 7:00 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium.
Admission is $2.00; tickets are sold at the SUA Office level 4, Kansas Union. No smoking is permitted in the theatre.
Wed., June 24 THE LAST HURRAH
Director:
John Ford
Spencer Tracy is the powerful Irish-American mayor, heading a corrupt political machine. A fascinating study of ethics and power, with Pat O'Brien and Basil Rathbone.
Thur., June 25
SEVEN
SAMURAI
Director:
Akira Kurosawa
Kurosawa's classic and most widely acclaimed film is the absorbing tale of seven warriors defending a farming village. Don't miss a masterpiece. (Japanese with subtitles)
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Kansan Summer Weekly
Wednesday, June 24, 1987
7
Arts and Entertainment
Fred Astaire dies, dance profession loses top partner
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Fred Astaire, whose debonair elegance and flowing, graceful style made him the most acclaimed dancer in movie history, died Monday of pneumonia. He was 88.
He died at Century City Hospital at 4:25 a.m., said spokesman Stan Otake. Another spokesman said that Astaire had been admitted June 12.
Astaire enchanted movie-goers for generations, dancing with firecrackers, coat racks and beautiful women from Ginger Rogers to Cyd Charisse with an ease that made ballet stars envious.
In the movies, Astaire was known for wearing white tie and tails, but he disliked wearing the formal attire. He credited his producers and sister, his first dancing partner, with his success.
"I'm not trying to be modest, but I never thought about myself as number one," he told The New York Times when he turned 80. "I'm cold-blooded about dancing. I wanted to make it good, then make it better."
"I never thought a funny-looking guy like me would be suitable for pictures," Astaire once said. A studio executive once dismissed him with the curt words: "Can't act. can't sing . . . balding . . . can dance a little." His only Oscar, in 1949, was honorary.
Rogers, who appeared in 10 films with Astaire, said that he was a *M*, a "first-class" actor.
But ballet choreographer George BALanchain called him "the greatest dancer in the world." Ballet star Mihakh Baryshnikov praised his "perfection," and songwriter Irving Berlin said, "I'd rather have Fred Astaire sing my songs than anyone else."
"I'd like to say I admired and adored Fred very, very much," she said. "I don't think there's another one like him. He'll always have my love and admiration."
"He was the best, the greatest," said George Burns, who appeared with Astaire in the film, "A Damsel in Distress."
Astaire was born Frederic Austerlitz in Omaha, Neb., on May 10, 1899. Their father was a beer salesman, and their mother had ambitions for her two children. She enrolled them in dancing school, then she took the
children to New York for professional training in 1906. Soon the youngsters were touring vaudeville under their new name, Astaire.
In 1917, the dancing pupat graduated to Broadway with Over the Top, and for the next 15 years they starred in New York and London.
In 1931, Adèle announced that she was retiring to marry Lord Charles Cavendish, son of the Duke of Devonshire. So Astaire returned to the stage as a solo act before heading to Hollywood.
A Paramount executive who saw Astaire's 1930 screen test dismissed him, but RKO signed him and loaned him to MGM for his film debut, dancing with Joan Crawford in the 1933 Dancing Lady.
His first film for RKO was *Flying Down to Rio*, and his partner was a dancer named Ginger Rogers. The combination was magical, and they went on to star in a series of musical hits, including the *The Gay Divorcee*, and *Top Hat*.
After starring with Rogers in many movies, Astaire never again had the same movie partner more than twice.
Depression America was entranced by the suave Astaire in his immaculate clothes. But in his autobiography, *Steps in Time*, he confessed, "At the risk of disillusionment, I must admit that I don't like top hats, white ties and tails. I am always arriving at dinner parties not wearing a dinner jacket when I should, or vice versa ... The carefree, the dressed-dress, the debonair Fred Astaire! What a myth!"
Although he and Rogers parted in 1939 except for a 1949 reunion, The Barkleys of Broadway, they were a team forever in the public mind. Rogers went on to serious roles and won an Oscar, but she complained in 1977, "How would you feel if you divorced a spouse 20 years ago and I gave up? How would you derelful old spouse was? That's how I feel about Fred. We had a wonderful time together, but it was long ago."
He continued his starring with such actresses as Rita Hayworth, Eleanor Powell, Judy Garland, Jane Powell, Cyd Charisier, Leslie Caron and Audrey Hepburn. The films included Holiday Inn, You Were Never Lovelier, Blue Skies, Easter Parade, Three Little Words, Royal Wedding.
With Swimmimg to Cambodia, Spaulding Gray has hit a home run with two strikes against him.
By JOHN BENNER
Editor
Strike one: Gray is not exactly a household name. Strike two: Cambodia is a one-man show, and consists of Gray sitting behind a table and relating his escapades in Thailand during the filming of The Killing Fields.
But Gray delivers in the clutch and provides the audience with 87 minutes of monologue paced at breakneck speed. Although an hour-and-a-half speech might seem like a boring proposition, Gray proves himself to be an enthralling yarn-spinner with insight that, ironically, could come only from a man who describes himself as less than worldly.
Gray wrote the script for this tale and weaves together diverse accounts of getting a very small part in The Killing Fields, of his relationship with his girlfriend, of the dwindling days of the U.S. involvement in Vietnam and of the acrobatics he has witnessed in a Thai bordello.
Somehow, by the end of the show, Gray has combined all of these life-chapters and more into a single story whose title might be "Looking For the Perfect Moment."
Gray's props include only a pointer and two maps. Lighting and the sound effects of war are combined
with a score by fellow performance artist Laurie Anderson to set the mood for the tale. Clips from The Killing Fields are shown to illustrate Gray's recounting of his part in certain scenes.
Gray delivers his monologue with a sometimes contrived naivete that allows the viewer additional insight into the oft-glorified life of the big-time movie actor and world traveler. He describes the Thai people as a civilization that, unlike Jews he says, can enjoy themselves without guilt.
He describes Manhattan as "a nice island off the coast of America." In painstaking detail, he relates the astounding uses Thai women have found for their bodies, all in the name of pleasure.
Snaulding Grav stars in Swimming to Cambodia
However, Gray breaks from his naive mode to get down to the meat of the film: his political views about the U.S. involvement in Vietnam and Cambodia. Even in this more scholarly chapter he injects some of his unique black humor. He describes bombers as "airborne Holiday Inns." He speculates that Khmer Rouge youths were unable to kill civilians with a single blow to the head because they were weakened by a
Gray says he likes the Russian navy because their ships have no electronic intercoms. He likes Soviets because they "talk through toilet paper rolls" in order to communicate.
diet of jungle lizards
He finally finds his "perfect moment" while nearly drowning in the Gulf of Siam. He has sworn to his girlfriend that he will return to New York after he has found his perfect moment, so he bids farewell to the rest of the cast and crew to depart.
last Gray witticism. He says he has been fascinated by Thailand and charmed by its people. Because Thailand has been the stand-in for Cambodia for the filming of The Killing Fields, he describes his longing for Thailand by saying it is "Cambodia, a land beyond imagination, and too far to swim to."
At the end, we are treated to one
Summer Youth Theatre
Showcase for young local talent to produce 'Mame' this weekend
Arts editor
By CAROLINE REDDICK
Art editor
Some junior and senior high school students aren't spending the summer hanging out at the pool or mowing lawns. Instead, they are performing in the Summer Youth Theatre.
Their efforts can be seen in a production of "Mame" at 8 p.m. Saturday and Sunday in Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St. The matinee show starts at 2 p.m. Sunday.
The Summer Youth Theatre is sponsored by the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department and the Lawrence Arts Center. Fred DeVictor, director of Parks and Recreation, left for the theatre 14 years ago. In the first year, nearly 35 children participated in the theatre.
Candi Baker, coordinator for Summer Youth Theatre, said that this summer about 120 students were involved in the program.
“There are so many kids in it that the program is bursting at the seams.” Baker said. “It’s exciting because there are teenagers coming out of the walls all summer.”
This summer, the program was expanded to include a musical, a drama, a touring company, showcase theatres and workshops.
“It’s exciting that everything’s growing,” Baker said. “But on the other hand we have to be creative in our solutions to fit everybody in.”
Students audition for the musical, the drama and the touring show. Those who don't get a part in one of the three productions have a chance to perform on stage in the showcase theatres. Baker said that although the showcase productions weren't advertised, they were attended by many of the students' relatives and friends.
"It gives the kids some good performance experience," she said.
"We're working to build a stronger pool of talent.
quality theatrical and educational experience
Baker said that the budget was increased to $14,000 for this sum.
"This is the first year we've increased the budget considerably." Baker said. "Everytime I work on it, it comes out different. I hope we have enough to meet the direct expenses of the shows and staff involved, let alone have money that goes toward paying the expenses of things like duplicating and postage and advertising."
Students pay $60 to participate in the program for one month, Baker said.
"We also have a scholarship program," she said. "No one is excluded from the program for financial reasons. If the $60 is to high for a
family, we find a way to work it out, either with a work scholarship or a straight scholarship."
Susie Rutledge, who plays the title role in "Mame", said that this was the fourth year she had participated in Summer Youth Theatre.
"The program is really growing this year and it's a very good cast in that they do everything the director tells them to." Rutledge said. "It's a very close and supportive group and they're good at keeping the energy level high.
The touring company will perform at Independence Days. They will also perform in the downtown Brown Bag Lunch series on July 24.
JANUARY 1975
Darcy Chang/KANSAN
Strike up the band
David Neely, Lawrence resident, plays a number on the bartonite sax. Neely played with the Lawrence City Union Band last Wednesday at
South Park during the Concerts in the Park series sponsored by Lawrence Parks and Recreation and Musicians Union Local 512.
KU theatre in the dark lights will shine again
Arts editor
By CAROLINE REDDICK
Even though recent budget cuts forced the University summer theatre program to be canceled, staff members expressed hope for future products.
that was the first time in 39 years
that a theater program had been canceled.
"This is hopefully the only summer we'll have to be in the dark," Kathy Prory, assistant to the director of the University theatre program, said recently. "We don't anticipate this going on every year."
The director of University Theatre and chairman of the theatre and media arts department, Ron Willis, said the program was canceled because of the state's rescission of 3.8 percent of the University's 1987 budget.
"When liberal arts and sciences rescinded the money, there was less for the summer session. The absence of money in the summer budget made it impossible to go forward with our plans for summer theatre." Willis said. "We were another one of the casualties of the cutbacks.
"But I have high hopes for next year. Everyone recognizes the worth and value of having the summer theatre."
He said the usual summer season included two or three costs showing
nearly $32,000. That figure included the costs of royalties, sets, props, costumes, makeup, advertising, programs and personnel. This sum
'It would not be educationally or artistically defensible to try to put on a show with the money we had.'
- Ron Willis
mer, the department had about $4,000 to spend, Willis said.
"It would not be educationally or artistically defensible to try to put on a show with the money we had," Willis said.
Pryor said the theatre department considered options to the summer season before deciding to cancel the entire program.
"We tried to pull it together with what funds we had, but we just couldn't," she said.
The department is spending the $4,000 on remodeling the lobby of Murphy Hall. Willis said. The lobby is being painted and wallpapered, and the staff is building new furniture to go with the new look.
"Some of the stuff that was in there had been here as long as the building," Willis said.
Calendar
Today
8 a.m. — "Negotiations and Impasse,
" an all-day conference. For more information, call Loretta Carraher at 643-3123.
7 p.m. — “The Last Hurrah,” SUA film shown in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas University. Admission is $2. Tickets are sold at the SUA office on level 4 of the building.
8 p.m. — Lawrence Community and Musicians Concert. Live music in South Park, 12th and Massachusetts streets.
8 p.m. in *Randall Walters Knewt*. 8 f.p.m. in *Randall Walters Knewt*. Orga-
nale for the University of California.
8 p.m. — Steven Barnhart. Percussion recital in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
8 p.m. — Mark Holmberg, Carillon recital.
9 p.m. — The Ebeling Brothers. Live music at the Rock Chalk Bar, 618 W.
12th St. Cover charge is $1
Tomorrow
All day — Orientation for all new
students of Liberal Arts and Sciences
students and transfer students in the
Kansas Union.
9:30 p.m. — Lonnie Ray's Blues Jam. Live music at the Jazzhaus. 926½ Massachusetts St. Cover charge is $1
Noon — Chuck Berg performs during the Brown Bag Concert. Concert will be held in front of the First National Bank Building, 9th and Massachusetts streets. 7 p.m. "The American Past with Calder Pickett." KANU FM—91.5.
7 p.m. — "The Seven Samurai." SUA film shown in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Admission is $2. Tickets are sold at the SUA office on level 4 of the Union.
7:30 p.m. — John Linder, will speak at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Building, 12th and Oread streets. He is the brother of Benjamin Linder, the first U.S. volunteer killed in Nicaragua by the contras.
8 p.m. — Randall Wilkens, Organ recital in St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center.
8 p.m. — Steve Allen. Trumpet recital in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
9 p.m. — Kwanzaa. Live music at the Rock Chalk Bar, 618 W. 12th St. No cover charge.
Fridav
v. 30 p.m. — Backsilders. Live music at the Jazzhaus, 92$1/2 Massachusetts St. Cover charge is $1.
7 p.m. — "Opera is My Hobby."
James Seaver, KAF UNM-91.5.
7:30 p.m. Midwestern Music Camp Panorama Hotel, in Swarthout回廊
7:30 p.m. -- Midwestern Music
Camp Jazz Ensemble Concert, in
the Auditorium of the University
of Kentucky
9 p.m. — Observatory open house, weather permitting, at the Clyde W. Tombaugh Observatory, 500 Lindley Hall. Call 864-3166 for more information.
- Name This Band. Live music at the Rock Chalk Bar, 618 W. 12th St.
9:30 p.m. — Mackender-Hunt Band.
Live music at the Jazzhaus, 921%
Massachusetts St. Cover charge is $3
All day - Orientation for student entering the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences in the Kansas Union.
Saturday
10 a.m. — "The Jazz Scene," Dick Wright, KANU FM-91.5
2 p.m. — Midwestern Music Camp Concert in Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall.
9 a.m. — "The Vintage Jazz Show." Michael Maher. KAUN FM-91.5
9:30 p.m. — Mackender Hunt-Band.
Live music at the Jazzhaus. 926½
Massachusetts St. Cover charge is $3
9:30 a.m. Midwestern Music
In swarthout In Swarthout
Hall in Murray Hall
Sunday
3 p.m. — "The KU Concerts," KANLI-JFM 91.5
3 p.m. — Carillon recital. Albert Gorken, University carilloniste.
Monday
6:30 p.m. — Magic show, in Hoech
Auditorium; $5 for adults, $4 for children
Tuesday
9 a.m. — "WordPerfect III," a microcomputer workshop. For more information call 864-4291.
1 p.m. — "Introduction to Macintosh," a microcomputer workshop. For more information 864-4291.
8 p.m. — Midwestern Music Camp, a faculty and staff recital. Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
8
Wednesday, June 24, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
Tax fraud common, KU prof says
By STORMY WYLIE
staff writer
PATRICIA MCKAY
An old cliche tells us that two things are inevitable — death and taxes.
Peggy Hite, assistant professor of business, recently received a $25,000 grant to continue her research on why people cheat on their taxes.
However, a significant number of people in the United States try to escape one inevitability by cheating on their tax returns, a KU assistant professor of business said last week.
The professor, Peggy Hite, has been studying tax compliance for a couple of years at the University of Kansas and before that, at the University of Colorado in Boulder. She recently received a $25,000 grant to continue her research.
"About 30 percent of adults surveyed have admitted to cheating at one time or another, so we assume there are more." Hite said. "The purpose of this research is to identify the major motivations of why they cheat and to find out if the tax system is too complex."
According to Internal Revenue Service statistics, certain groups of people tend to cheat more than others, she said. These groups include young people, men, college graduates, middle-income earners, self-employed people and those who live in the western third of the United States.
"I want to stress that these correlations are not perfect," she said.
"These groups just tend to cheat more than others.
"For instance, the young are more likely to take the risk, and the college-educated cheat more because of the knowledge of how the system works."
Two years ago, Hite experimented with one of her accounting classes at the University of Colorado to see how many students thought cheating was morally wrong.
Hite told her students to grade their own quizzes and that she would check only two percent of the graded quizzes — the same percentage of tax returns audited by the government.
She told them that those who cheated would be penalized, but not expelled, and those who didn't cheat would be rewarded.
Actually, she graded all the tests to see how many had cheated.
Hite said about 70 percent of the class cheated. However, when asked, only about half of the cheaters confessed. Those who hadn't cheated told her they thought cheating was morally wrong.
"This is about what we've found nationally," Hite said. "And once people have cheated, it mushrooms, and they continue to do it."
Even Hite admitted to cheating on her own tax returns.
"But that was before I started doing this research," she said.
Hite compiles her research by sending out questionnaires at random and by conducting personal interviews.
In both types of surveys, the respondents remain anonymous.
Among other things, the survey asks whether respondents have ever cheated on their taxes. It also asks for their opinions on whether income tax laws are fair or too complex, whether the penalties for not complying are severe and whether they pay more than other taxpayers.
She recently conducted a survey of about 900 Kansas residents, but the results haven't been compiled yet, she said. A problem with the mail survey is that response is low — out of 900 questionnaires, only 262 have been returned, she said.
Madhatter
The Madhatter & Bullwinkles are open with nightly summer specials
Thursdays: 50¢ Draws
50¢ Shots
Fridays: $1.50 Well Drinks Saturdays: $1.50 Well Drinks 75¢ Shots
Bullwinkles
Madhatter 8 until? 700 New Hampshire 842-9402
Mon.-Wed.: $1.75 Pitchers
Thursdays: 50¢ Draws
Fri. & Sat.: 75¢ Draws
Bullwinkles 1344 Tennessee 843-9762
Open
M-F 11 a.m.-2 p.m.
Tu-Sa 5 p.m.-10 p.m.
Sun-Mon 5 p.m-9 p.m.
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Guide to Good Dining
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Whether it's a celebration, a quiet dinner for two or an afternoon lunch date, Nabil's is your perfect choice. Do it the right way with good friends, a warm atmosphere, and an excellent choice of food and drink. At Nabil's you receive the finest personalized service Experience Nabil's today. For parties of five or more call 841-7226.
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*World-class stereo and video equipment will be on sale to help us make room in our warehouse for new models.* We are pleased to offer the merger Electron Show. We have committed to hundreds of new models and we are confident that it will enhance floor model demos, immediately!
---
Low Prices On An Impressive Selection of Quality Stereo and Video Components
"This is a once-a-year opportunity to save on a vast selection of speakers, microphones, components, and accessories throughout our store. This is our most important event of the season and your business will be on the best names in stores and video."
Choose the natural sound Yamaha RX-
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19.91
Choose from the finest cassette decks available at the Gramophone Shop. No matter which price level you choose, there are several outstanding decks to choose from.
Denon DCD-700 CD $327 compare at $450
BEGINNER'S GUIDE TO MUSIC
1. Understand the basics of music.
2. Learn how to play different instruments.
3. Explore various musical styles and genres.
4. Practice playing songs together with friends or family.
5. Develop your musical skills through practice and feedback.
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be area's largest selection of compact
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15% Off Our Entire Compact Disc Catalogue excluding all red tagged items already sale priced.
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Kansan Summer Weekly/Wednesdav. June 24, 1987
9
KU student continues recovery from Halloween night shooting
Thompson moved to Texas Institute for specialized therapy
By STORMY WYLIE
Staff writer
Staff writer
When Amy Thompson left for the Texas Institute of Research and Rehabilitation in Houston on June 1, she told her family she would give it five months.
Thompson, 25, a former KU student, was shot in the back of the neck as she walked to a Halloween party in Kansas City, Mo.
The bullet ricocheted up through her neck and into her brain.
During the operation that followed at St. Luke's Hospital in Kansas City, Mo., doctors removed part of her brain to relieve the pressure. They anticipated permanent damage to Thompson's coordination and to her ability to move and think.
Richard L. Scott, 17, 4238 E. 61st St., Kansas City, Mo., has been charged in Jackson County Court with felony criminal assault in connection with the case.
Meanwhile, Thompson struggles to become the person she once was
John O'Connor, Jackson County prosecuting attorney, said last week that Scott's trial would begin July 13 in Division 10 of the court.
Ann Thompson, Amy's sister, said the Texas Institute would be better for Amy because it specialized in physical therapy.
"She's only been there about two weeks, but the people there are very enthusiastic," she said. "They see Amy as a challenge, but they don't want to put boundaries on what she will accomplish."
Jeanne Thompson, Amy's mother, said her daughter was receiving more aggressive treatment at the Texas Institute.
"She is undergoing very programmed physical therapy," she said. "Every movement is choreographed. Each movement is important."
Amy is in therapy about five hours a day. She is able to move all parts of her body now, her mother said, but the movement is often disorganized. She also can sit up on the edge of a chair, and the doctors have been turning her on her stomach.
"She can put herself up on her elbows," Jeanne said. "I told her she looks like she tanning out in the sun, trying to get some rays."
She is undergoing very programmed physical therapy. Every movement is choreographed. Each movement is important.'
- Jeanne Thompson mother
The best news so far is that cognitive tests indicate that Amy understands everything that is going on around her. Jeanne said.
Amy hasn't been able to speak since the accident, but she now can open her mouth slightly, and recent tests have indicated that her vocal cords are intact, her mother said. Amy is being fed through a tube in her stomach.
The family has been using a homemade alphabet board to communicate with Amy. Amy picks out the letters to form words.
Jeanne said that Amy, who had been pursuing a master's degree in
education at the University before she was shot, was still a better speller than the rest of the family.
"I told her, 'See, you're still trying to be the teacher,' " Jeanne said.
Another obstacle Amy must overcome is that she is deaf in her right ear and has only 50 percent hearing in her left. She also is having problems with her eyes, her mother said.
Her left eye won't close all the way, but it can blink. Her right eye opens all the way but has no feeling and does not blink.
"She is so anxious to do well in therapy," Jeanne said. "She goes until she's exhausted, and we have to say, 'no more.' It's going to take time for her muscles to get stronger."
Amy will be at the Texas Institute about four more months. Her mother said Amy was improving a little each day.
"It's hard to see Amy in the midst of all this assault on her body," Jeanne said. "We all pray that she will get better."
Scott, the youth accused of shooting Thompson, also faces felony charges in connection with a robbery that occurred six days after the shooting.
O'Connor said that Scott, who is in custody at the Jackson County jail, probably would be charged with another robbery that occurred the same night and only a few blocks away from where Thompson was shot.
Each of the class a felony charges is punishable by life in prison, O'Conan's
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10
Wednesday, June 24, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
Not paying rent to be felony under revised law
By KRISTEN HAYS
Staff writer
A new addition to a law, to be enacted July 1, says it's a felony for tenants to abandon rental property leaving a bill of more than $150, but a local tenants' association thinks the law is unfair.
Greg Stauffer, Lawrence sophomore and head of a Lawrence tenants' organization, said that when tenants abandon rental dwellings without paying rent, it should be a civil matter because for landlords to withhold security deposits is a civil matter.
Cynthia Harris of the Consumer Affairs Association, 819 Vermont St., said, "Some landlords withhold security deposits with the intent to defraud the tenant, and this law could be used as a threat to always
pay the rent or get prosecuted."
Stauffer said he was concerned that landlords would use this law to harass tenants who were late on their rent.
"They might wave this law around, threatening to file charges and that would mean they were violating fair practice in debt collection," he said.
Before it was amended, the law stated that leaving an innkeeper, or other establishments such as a dwelling unit, with a bill of $30 or more was a class E felony, punishable by a fine of $3, 000 and one to five years in prison.
But the law was ambiguous as to whether the term "dwelling unit" included rental units such as apartments.
State Rep. John Solbach, D-
Lawrence, who signed the amendment to the bill, said the main change was raising the $50 threshold to $150.
"There's no need to send a $50 frauder to the state penitentiary. It's a substantial change favoring tenants convicted of defrauding landlords." Solbach said.
"It doesn't do what landlords think it does. It's not anti-tenant in any way, shape or form."
The amendment states that anyone who defrauds these establishments of less than $150 would be guilty of a misdemeanor. If the amount is more than $150, the person would be guilty of a class E felony.
An addition to this amendment, approved by the Kansas House and Senate on April 1, widens the definition of "dwelling unit" to possibly include rental property.
Jim Flory, Douglas County district attorney, said the law would require some interpretation on a case-by-case basis.
"We have to establish the intent to defraud, or leaving without paying or intending to pay, and it is a crime to obtain lodging with intent to defraud a landlord." he said.
Flory said that it would be difficult to get actual convictions under this law and that the law wouldn't apply to renters who didn't have the money to pay and didn't abandon the rented property.
Neil Woerman, special assistant to the Kansas attorney general, said the burden of proof of intent to defraud was on the district attorney.
Stauffer said the issue wasn't whether the law was enforceable.
"Tenants should get the same
threat with deposits. Tenants' rights are important. They need to know about this, and they can't get the answers," Stauffer said.
Stauffer said he wanted to see tenants better educated about their rights under this law.
Bud Carter, president of the Association of Landlords of Kansas said landlords were trying to determine what the bill actually meant to them and to define fraud and cheating.
"It's a really good law. Landlords have to raise rents to pay for prior cheating and defrauding, so the good tenant has to pay for the bad tenant. We get the same results as inkeepers," Carter said.
"We're not interested in a fight. Landlords won't want everyone in jail, that's not our goal."
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Kansan Summer Weekly/Wednesday, June 24, 1987
11
ROYALS REPORT
compiled by Dawn O'Malley Managing editor
Monday: Royals 1, A's 4
Oakland pitcher Steve Ontiveros allowed only four hits in his fourth major league start. This game marked the return for Kansas City pinch-hitter Jim Eisenreich. He hit a pop-foul. The Royal's only run came in the second inning.
Sports
Royals 010 000 000-1 14 1 1
A's 020 000 02x-4 10 2 1
Sabbign (75%), Quinsey (1%) and Quirk; Ointiversos (7), Jhowell (1), Steinbach Wintership (4), Lsarbrington (2), SV-JHwelle (4), 2BsMcGwire, Tartabulia, Polonia.
Sunday: Royals 0, Angles 8
Royals 0, Angels 8
The California Angels pounded the Kansas City Royals 8-0. A big third inning for the Angels diminished the Royals hopes because the Angels scored seven runs in that inning.
Royals 000 000 000—8 2 8
Angels 007 010 00—8 10 1
Stoddard (2½%), Farr (3½%), Shirley (1), Gleaton (1) and Owen; Reuss (9) and Boone, W-
Stoddard (2%), Farr (3%), Shirley (1), Gleaton (1) and Owen; Reuss (9) and Boone. Wheats (8-4), Larkson (0-1), B2-Wilson, Pettison, Joyes, B3-None. Joyes, Boone.
Saturday: Rovals 8, Angels 4
The Kansas City Royals hit a club high of five home runs in a single game as the team beat the California Angels 8-4. The California pitching staff has allowed 98 home runs this season, the most given up in the American League.
Royals 202 011 200 -8 11 0
Angels 001 000 012 -4 10 1
Leibrandt (8-4), Quisenby (1) and Quirk, Lazorca (4), Buice (3), Finley (2) and Boone WLebrandt (8-4), Llazorca (2-3), BWison, Peterson, Downing, B3-None, HBR-tiff.
Friday: Royals 2, Angels 0
Danny Jackson, Kansas City pitcher, threw a four-hit shutout helping the Royals to a 2-0 victory. It was Jackson's first shutout since Oct. 1, 1986.
Royals 2, Angels 0
Royals 000 000 0000-2 0 0
Angels 000 000 0000-2 0 0
DJackson (9) and Quirk; Sukit (6), Lucas (3) and Boone. W-Djackson (3-9). L-Sutton (3-8). 2Bs-Brett. 3Bs-NRS. HR-NRS.
Thursday: Royals 10, Angles 4
Kansas City pitcher Mark Gubicea won his first game in a month as the Royals beat the Oakland A's 10-4. Frank White drove in three runs and Willie Wilson homered in the eighth inning for Kansas City.
Royals 005 202 210—10 9 0
Angels 202 000 4-4 6 0
Gubicaz (9) and Quirk; Fraser (8), Buice (2), Lucas (1) and Boone W-Gubicaz (4-8), L-Fraser (3-5), 2Bs-FWhite, Brett, B3s-None, HRs-Jhowell, Tartabull, Wilson.
Wednesday: Royals 10, A's 5
Kansas City pitcher Bret Saberhagen became the first 12-game winner in the major leagues as the Kansas City Royals defeated the Oakland A's 10-5. George Brett, Jackson and Frank White each hit home runs helping the team end a four-game losing streak. Oakland led 3-0 at the top of the third inning, but White's three-run home run capped a five-run rally in the third inning.
Royals 005 012 204—10 11 0
A's 003 020 000—5 7 0
Royals 10, A's 5
Sabagenhion (7), and Quirk, Stewart (7), Lamp (4) and Tettleton. W-Sabagenhion (12-1), L-
Stewart (7-7), SV-None, 2Bs-Radackson, Bellson, Balzoni, 3Bs-McWiley, HRt-White, BHr-
eale, MR-White.
LAST NIGHT
Royals ab r h rbi
Wilson cf 4 1 1 0
Seitzer 3b 4 1 1 0
Brett dh 2 2 2 3
Trtabil rf 4 0 1 1
FWhite 2b 4 0 1 1
Beniqu lf 4 0 1 1
Balbon ib 4 0 1 1
AlAzar ss 4 0 1 1
Quirk c 3 0 0 0
Totals 33 4 8 4
Oakland ab r h rbi
Polonia cf 4 0 1 0
MDavis rf 4 0 1 0
Lansford 3b 4 0 1 0
Gwibrom 1b 3 0 0
Canseco lf 4 0 0 0
RJcksn dh 3 0 0 0
Steinbach c 3 0 0 0
Phillips 2b 1 0 0 0
Griffin ss 3 0 0 0
Totals 29 0 3 00
Kansas City 200 000 002 — 4
Oakland 000 000 000 — 00
W - Gulczaea (5-8) L - Rijo (3-1) Winning
W - Wagner (2-6) L - Kansas City
(1.0) Oakland (1.0) Lakewood
Oakland 6, Br-2B, Br-3B HR-2B,
Br-None. S-NE. None. SP-NE. A-13,12I
ON DECK
Today
Royals vs. Oakland 2:15 p.m.at Oakland
Tomorrow No Game
Friday
Royals vs. Seattle
7:35 p.m. Royals Stadium
Saturday
Royals vs. Seattle
7:05 p.m. Royals Stadium
Sunday
Royals vs. Seattle
1:35 p.m. Royals Stadium
Royals vs. Minnesota
7:35 p.m. Royals Stadium
Major League Standings
Monday
East W L Pct. GB
Toronto 43 26 623
New York 44 27 620
Detroit 37 30 552
Milwaukee 35 32 522
Boston 33 37 471 7
Baltimore 29 42 408 15
Cleveland 25 43 368 17
West W 4 L Pct GB GB
Minnesota 30 29 580
Kansas City 36 32 529 1½⁻
Oakland 36 32 522 4
Seattle 36 34 514 4½
California 33 38 465 8
Texas 30 37 373 9
Chicago 25 42 373 14
American League
Tuesday
National League
West W 8 L 3 Pct. GB
Cincinnati 38 L 31 .551
Houston 37 L 31 .544 ½
San Francisco 35 L 31 .515 ½
Atlanta 34 L 500 401
Miami 34 38 641 6
San Diego 22 48 314 6½
| East | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| St Louis | 41 | 26 | 612 | — |
| Chicago | 39 | 31 | 557 | 3 |
| Montreal | 37 | 31 | 544 | 4½ |
| New York | 36 | 31 | 529 | 4½ |
| Philadelphia | 30 | 36 | 455 | 6½ |
| Pittsburgh | 25 | 30 | 455 | 10% |
Gubicza regains magic touch Royals pitcher wins second straight game
The Associated Press
allowed eight hits in going the distance in his first appearance since May 5. Rijo was recalled from Tacoma of the Pacific Coast League when the Athletics sent down Eric Plunk before the game.
OAKLAND, Calif. — Mark Gubicaa allowed only three hits and George Brett knocked in three runs, two with a homer, as the Kansas City Royals beat the Oakland Athletics 4-0 last night.
Gubica, z. outduced Oakland righthander Jose Rijo, 3-0, who
career shoutout and first of the season. The 24-year old righthander had a 12-6 record with four shoutouts last year, and last night's victory was his second straight complete game win after four straight losses. He struck out a season-high and career-tying best 10, including three in the ninth, and walked four.
Gubicza retired the last 16 batters, equalling his career best with the three-hitter and posting his fifth
CHAMPION
Dale Fulkerson/KANSAN
Date Fulkerson/KANSAN
Kelly Garrison-Steves and Tim Ryan compete at Kemper Arena in the 1987 McDonald's U.S. Gymnastics Championships.
Garrison-Steves finished first in the balance beam, and Ryan finished fifth in the still ring events Sunday during the final competition.
1984
Haskell wins marathon title
Indians claim fourth straight championship
By TIM HAMILTON
sports editor
Score another national championship for the Haskell Indian Junior College marathon team.
The Haskell Indians captured their fourth consecutive National Junior College Athletic Association marathon championship at Dowiagiac, Mich., Saturday. It was their fourth NJCAA championship.
Wendell Chino was the individual winner of the marathon, with a time of 2 hours and 42 minutes. Chino is Haskell's first individual champion.
The all-sophomore team consisted of Chino, Juju Poitra, John Wosypi, Dwayne Antonio, Marty Preyaugle, Ken Wells and Alfreie Grace.
Pretends Eagle and George finished fourth and fifth, respectively. Woosypiti took sixth place, with Poitra and Antonio coming in eighth and ninth, respectively. Wells, who was hampered by a foot injury all year, dropped out of the race after about 20 miles.
Of the seven members, only two had run a marathon before. Welles ran one in high school and Chino was a member of Haskell's 1985 championship team. A hip injury forced Chino to miss last year's championship.
Phil Homeratha, Haskell's athletic director, said the Haskell students seemed to be more suited to long distance running than any other sport.
"The Indian people are not a bulky people," he said. "Most of our runners are slightly built."
Besides, Homeratha said, long distance running takes more mental than physical endurance.
'The Indian people are not bulky people. Most of our runners are slightly built.'
Phil Homeratha Haskell athletic director
"I think that 26 miles to a runner is more a psychological barrier than anything else," he said.
"The way I look at it is if you train and you're really physically ready, it would be 70 percent mental and 30 percent physical," said Pretends Eagle. "Our bodies and our minds felt like we could go that far. Everyone has a different set of views on the way to run."
Pretends Eagle said everyone on the team agree that Haskell's numbers were an advantage
"It was teamwork. It all fell together," he said.
Antonio said all seven of the team members were good friends and some even had been roommates. They were on the cross country team that finished fourth in their region last fall.
"We showed a lot of confidence in each other," he said. "At one point hallway through it, we were all kind to give each other a little push."
Homerata said the Indians' numbers were definitely beneficial.
"If we had just sent four or five down we would have been dependent upon a few people," he said. "It is a team snort."
He also said he thought the team's limited training had played an important part in their victory. Some teams have been more than a month before the marathon.
"We didn't want to kill them or overwork them," he said. "There's a fine line between working out too much."
Homeratha said the training sessions were kept to a minimum so the athletes wouldn't become pessimistic about being able to do well in the gym.
"I think we did a good job of not scaring them," he said. "They hadn't known failure. We just said, 'Let's go have fun. It's a personal challenge, and the more the merrier.'"
U.S. Junior Men's team to play former Jayhawk basketball stars
Staff writer
By TIM HAMILTON
The 1987 United States Junior Men's World Championship Team will play an exhibition game against a team of former University of Kansas basketball players at 7 p.m. on July 15 in Allen Field House.
The former Jayhawks who will return include Mark Turgceon, Cedric Hunter, Greg Dreiling, Calvin Hunters, Ron Kellogg and Carl Henry
Junior Men's team at the world competition July 23-30 in Bormio, Italy, with assistants Gary Williams of Ohio State University and Marshall Hamilton of Broughton High School in Broughton, N.C.
Brown said Georgetown basketball coach John Thompson and University of Indiana basketball coach Bobby Rush. The institution of the players to the trouts.
Tryouts for the 12 spots on the team's roster will begin July 7 at KU.
He said the players were ones whom Thompson and Knight wanted to have a chance to make the Olympic team.
Willie Wilson led off the game with a single and advanced to second on a passed ball. One out later, Brett sliced an RBI double to right and then scored on Danny Tartabull's single for a 2-0 Royals lead.
Brett provided the Royals with two insurance runs when he hit a two-run homer, his fourth of the season.
Brown will coach the United States
Kansas guard Kevin Pritchard and
sports editor
KU coach Larry Brown said he also expected Brian Martin, Paul Mokesky, Darnell Valentine and Kelly Knight to play on the alumni team.
Kansas signee Lincoln Minor, from Midland Junior College of Midland, Texas, have been invited to the tryouts.
Other players invited to the tryout sessions include: Robert Brickley, Duke; LeRon Ellis and Eric Manuel, Kentucky; Scott Williams and King Rice, North Carolina; Stephen Thompson, Syracuse; Felton Spencer and LaBradford Smith, Louisville; Lion Simmons, Saalle; Rui Huery, Arkansas; Bryant Walton, California University of Pennsylvania; Brian Williams, Maryland; DeWayne Schintzius, Florida; Stacey Augem, Nevada Las Vegas; Larry Johnson, Southern Methodist.
Bv TIM HAMILTON
Rowing club offers new alternative
The KU Crew team has introduced rowing as an alternative to traditional forms of recreation on campus.
Now, the Lawrence Rowing Association is trying to do the same for the community.
Founded in 1981, the association's membership drive has been on hold for several years during a time when the college was not on establishing the college program.
The association is a rowing club composed of both citizens and students who are interested in learning rowing and associated with only the very wealthy.
Elliott said the association was concerned with providing rowing for a community that wouldn't have the team's equipment sport without the group's support.
Now that the KU program is booming, Cliff Elliott, association president and KU Crew coach, said interest could be developed in the community.
"We're looking for more community involvement," he said. "This is the first summer we've offered a program."
The association boasts more than 27 members,more than half of whom are Lawrence residents.
Novice and veteran rowers alike have taken advantage of the opportunity to learn how to row and stay in shape at the same time.
Elliott said that his wife, Elizabeth, who also coached the University team, helps with the association, which allows more flexible hours for its members.
"The program we've set up is pretty low-key," Elliott said. "We tried, in designing the summer program, to keep it as open and flexible as possible, to let them get out of it what they want."
A membership costs $35 and allows members to row on the Kansas River from Memorial Day to Labor Day. The dues are used to lease practice equipment and shells, the common name for rowing boats, from the KU team.
"The agreement with KU Crew has given us equipment that we didn't have before." Elliott said.
There is a beginning program for novice or recreational rowers. The next step is the intermediate level.
The association offers its members a choice of four programs. Each program entails varied degrees of conditioning and competition.
The intermediate level teaches a little bit more advanced rowing technique and introduces a conditioning program." Elliott said.
The third program is for those interested in competitive rowing.
The association also has a program which places rowers with different levels of experience in the same boat to teach those with lesser experience.
Elliott said the association members were divided evenly among all four programs.
John Sanborn, Lawrence resident, said he was interested in rowing because he owned a canoe.
"Before, I'd seen the KU Crew on the water," Sanbnn said. "Now I have a chance to learn how it is done."
Sanborn said the association's programs were very flexible and easily worked into the members' schedules.
"It's set up to where you can come in when you want to." he said.
Although he said he'd only been out on the water once in his five weeks as a member, Sanborn said he enjoyed rowing and even thought about trying to attach oars to his canoe.
Nancy Erway, Lawrence resident, said she joined the association because she saw rowing as an opportunity for fitness and competition.
"I do not like to lift weights, but I wanted to develop an upper body program," said Erway, formerly a member of local fitness centers. "I'd really like to become competitive too. There are a lot of open regattas."
Erway said membership in the association was much better than a fitness center which might charge as much as $35 per month.
"It's really a bargain," she said. "They even let you go out sometimes on the weekend."
12
Wednesday, June 24, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
Edberg wins match, doesn't lose a game
From Kansan wires
WIMBLEDON, England — Sweden's Stefan Edberg was perfect, while defending champion Boris Becker put on an acrobatic display of tennis Tuesday as the rain-delayed 101st Wimbleldon championships began.
Edberg, the reigning Australian Open champion who is considered one of Becker's chief rivals for the world's most prestigious grasscourt crown, crushed compatriot Stefan Ericksson 6-0, 6-0, 6-0.
It was only the third time since the open era began in 1968 that a man has swept all 18 games in a Grand Slam tournament match.
After rain wiped out all of Monday's schedule and delayed the start of Tuesday's matches, Becker took to Centre Court and began the defense of his title by defeating Czechoslovakia's Karel Novacek 6-4, 6-2. 4-1
Ivan Lendl, the world's top-ranked player who lost to Becker in the final year, struggled before beating West Germany's Christian Saceanu 6-2, 3-6, 6-7.5.
Edberg needed only 60 minutes to blast his way into the second round. It was, according to tournament records, the shortest men's match at Wimbledon since players were first allowed to have chairs on the sidelines and 90 seconds rest after every second game, in the mid-1970s.
The serve-and-volley specialist lost just 34 points as he became the third known player — and the third Swede — to win every game in a match at Wimbledon. The others were Lennart Bergelin, who later coached Bjorn Borg, in 1946 and Torsten Johansson in 1947. Johansson not only did it in the first round, but repeated the performance in his second-round match.
Edberg said he knew his 23-year opponent was playing his first game on grass and he thought about easing up near the end to avoid inflicting such a crushing defeat on a fellow Swede.
"When I was at 5 in the third set, I thought about giving him a game," Edberg said, "but then thought maybe I'll never get another chance to do it in a Grand Slam event. But I feel
very sorry for him."
The nearest Eriksson came to winning a game was at 40-15 in the fourth *game* of the opening set.
But Edberg blasted back to level, saving another game point and then taking 11 of the next 14 points to wrap up the set.
Eriksson won only eight points during the second set, during which Edberg sent down four aces in one service game. He then finished the set with four consecutive points against the serve.
Eriksson reached deuce on Edberg's serve in the opening game of the third set, but his game fell apart at 2-0, after which he won just six more points.
The two other players who have won love matches in Grand Slam tournaments in the open era are Navacek, who did it four weeks ago, and Nikki Spear in 1968. Both were accomplished at the French Open.
Becker and Novacek actually made two appearances on Centre Court. The first ended abruptly after he was given a warm-up when the rain began again.
The acrobatic Becker, who has thrilled the crowd with his diving volleys while winning the title the last two years, didn't disappoint them, although most of his lunges only produced winning points for Navocace.
However, Novacek never really threatened the No. 1 seed.
Other seeded men to win tuesday were No. 11 Pat Cash of Australia, 6-0, 6-3, 6-2 over American Marcel Freeman; No. 12 Brad Gilbert of the United States, 7-6, 6-4, 6-3 over Britain's Stuart Bale; and No. 13 Joakim Nystrom, who defeated Henrik Sundstrom 6-2, 6-7, 6-4, 6-3 in a battle of Swedes.
On the women's side. No. 7 Grabiele Sabatini of Argentina defeated American Barbara Gerkin 6-3, 6-3. No. 8 Manuela Malevee of Bulgaria downed Canada's Helen Kelsei 6-3, 6-2. and No. 11 Noll McNeil of the United States stopped Marie-Christine Calleja of France 6-2, 6-3.
With the backlog of matches due to the weather, tournament officials will begin play on Wednesday about two hours earlier.
Minnesota pitcher ends losing streak
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MINNEAPOLIS — Gary Gaetti drove in four runs with a home run and a double, and Mike Smithson won his first game since April 20 as Minnesota defeated Cleveland 9-4 last night.
Twins 9 Indians 4
Tony Bernazard led off the inning with his second home run of the game, both shots into the upper deck in right field.
CHICAGO — Carlton Fisk and Harold Baines keyed a season-high 18-hit attack with home runs, leading the Chicago White Sox to a 13-3 victory over the Seattle Mariners last night.
Smithson, who was placed on the disabled list May 11 with an elbow injury, allowed six hits over $6^{1/2}$ innings before George Frazier came on and earned his second save.
The loss went to starter Tom Candiotti, 2-8.
Frazier relieved with the bases loaded and two out and got the final out of the seventh. He replaced Keith Atherton, who had hit Joe Carter in the face with a pitch, which loaded the bases. Carter, who was taken from the field on a stretcher, suffered a broken nose.
Carlton hit a home run in the third
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White Sox 13 Mariners 3
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Steve Crawford, 3-2, the third Boston pitcher, was the winning pitcher although he was forced to retire after being hit on the pitching band by Jim Paciorek's single with two out in the seventh inning.
Kelly Gruber followed Upshaw with a single, and McGriff hit Robinson's first delivery for his sixth home run. Bell added his major league leading 24th home run in the seventh inning, a solo shot that boosted Toronto's lead to 8-1.
Dave Stebel, 6-4, went 83% innings,
allowing six打, striking out four
and scoring two.
Robinson gave up five hits, struck
Yankees 2 Orioles 1
Upshaw hit an 0-2 pitch from Jeff Robinson, 4-4, into the upper deck of the right field, and keyed Toronto's six-run fourth inning. The Blue Jays had loaded the bases on two-out walks to Jesse Barfield and Ernie Whitt, and Bell's single.
Rick Rhoden, 9-4, had battled through the first seven innings against Mark Williamson, a 27-year-old rookie making his first major-league start and only the third of his six-year pro career. He last started in a 1984 Class A game.
Wade Boggs extended his hitting streak to 24 games, which is the longest streak in the major leagues this year, with an RBI single for Boston's first run in the fifth before the Red Sox's biggest inning of the season at home.
BALTIMORE — Gary Ward hit a two-out home run in the eighth inning off reliever Doug Corbett, a free agent signed by Baltimore earlier in the day, giving the New York Yankees a 2-1 victory over the Orioles last night.
BOSTON — Rookie Ellis Burks keyed a six-run sixth inning with a three-run, two-out home run last night as the Boston Red Sox rallied from a five-run deficit for a 9-5 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers.
DETROIT — Wille Upshaw hit a grand slam, and Fred McGriff and George Bell also hit home runs last night, sparking the Toronto Blue Jays to an 8-7 victory over the Detroit Tigers.
inning and added an RBI single in the eighth, when Baines hit a two-run shot for the White Sox. The home runs were the seventh for Fisk and the ninth for Baines.
American League
Rhoden, who was warned in the seventh for scuffing baseballs, allowed three hits during his seven-inning stint, including a lead-off home run. Terry Kennedy in the sixth, which included perfect game and tied the score at 1.1.
Making his first relief appearance after 15 starts this year, Wegman, 6-7, retired the first two batters. However, Mike Greenwell hit a pinch double and Burks followed with his 12th home run of the season, which tied the score 5-5.
Dave Righetti pitched the final two innings to pick up his 15th save in 28 appearances.
Blue Jays 8 Tigers7
Corbett, 0-1, who played out his option with the California Angels in 1986, retired the first two batters in his Baltimore debut before Ward hit his 10th home run over the center field fence.
Bill Long, 4-3, was the winner but needed help in the seventh inning. Scott Bankhead, 7-5, took his first loss against Chicago after three lifetime wins.
The White Sox trailed 2-1 before scoring three runs in the second inning and took a lead that they never lost.
Red Sox 9 Brewers 5
Expos 8
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Heaton, 10-3, won for the seventh time in his last eight decisions by limiting the Pirates to a run and five hits over five innings. After Heaton was forced to leave because of a sprained right knee, Andy McGaffigan came on and pitched two innings before yielding to Jeff Parrett. Parrett pitched the final two innings for his first major league save.
PITTSBURGH — Reid Nichols and Mike Fitzinger hit home runs during Montreal's three-run second inning and Neal Heaton won his 10th game as the Expos beat Pittsburgh 8-2 last night.
Heaton was 7-15 last season pitching for Cleveland and Minnesota.
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Tim Wallach doubled off Bob Kiprick, 4-6, to start the Expos' second
inning. One out later, Nichols hit a two-run home run over the left-field wall, his third of the season.
National League
Elia took over for the fired John Felke Thursday and had lost four seats.
ST. LOUISE — Shane Rawley pitched a four-hitter over eight innings, and Philadelphia beat St. Louis 4-1 last night, snapping a six-game losing streak and giving Manager Lee Elia his first victory with the Phillies.
Phillies 4 Cardinals 1
Cardinals 1
NEW YORK — Rick Sutcliffe pitched a four-hitter over 82% innings and Paul Noce hit a two-run double in the fifth inning, followed by Mike Brumley's two-run home run, leading the Chicago Cubs over the New York Mets 4-1 last night.
Steve Bedrosian pitched the ninth inning for his 17th save and 10th in his last 10 appearances, one short of tying Sparky Lyle's major-league record. Rawley, 8-4, walked three and struck out four.
Sutcliffe, 10-3, retired 16 consecutive batters until pinch-hitter Lee Mazziilli led off the ninth with a single. Two outls later. Darryl Strawberry binged and Lee Smith came on to strike out Kevin McReynolds for the final out and his major league leading 200 save. In 44 innings this season, Smith has had 55 strikeouts. Sutcliffe, who has won seven of his
Cubs 4 Mets 1
Ron Darling, 2-5, remained winless in 12 starts since April 22 as his personal losing streak reached a career-high five. Darling retired the first 12 batters, striking out eight, before the Cubs scored in the fifth.
last eight decisions, struck out five and walked two.
Padres 4 Astros 1
Darling, who allowed four hits, struck out a season-high 11 in eight innings.
SAN DIEGO — Ed Whitson pitched a two-hitter and San Diego took advantage of two outfield errors, defeating Houston and Nolan Ryan 4-1 last night.
The victory was Whitson's eighth in 14 decisions. The Padres have a record of 23-48.
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Kansan Summer WeekiyWednesday. June 24. 1987
13
The class of the class of 1987
The Associated Press
NEW YORK - Here are first-round selections in the 1987 National Basketball Association draft, held Monday at the Felt Forum.
1. David Robinson, San Antonio, 7-1,
c, Navy.
1, 2. Navy.
2. Armen Gilliam, Phoenix, 6-9, f.
3. Dennis Hopson, New Jersey, 6-5,
g, Ohio State.
4. Reggle Williams, L.A. Clippers,
6-7, g-f. Georgetown
5. Scott Pippen, Seattle (from
New York). 6-7, f. Central Arkansas.
6. Kenny Smith, Sacramento, 6-3,
g. North Carolina.
7. Kevin Johnson, Cleveland, 6-1, g.
California.
8. Olden Polynice, Chicago (from
dryer through New York), 6-11,
Virginia.
9. Derrick McKey, Seattle, 6-9, f.
Alabama.
10. Horace Grant, Chicago, 6-10, fc,
fc. Clemson.
11. Reggie Miller, Indiana, 6-7, g-f,
UCLA.
14. Tellis Frank, Golden State, 6-10,
f, Western Kentucky.
12. Tyrone Bogues, Washington, 5-
Wyke, Ohio.
Houston), 6-11, f-c, North Carolina
13. Joe Wolf, L.A. Clippers (from
15. Jose Ortiz, Utah; 6-10, f, Oregon State.
16. Chris Welp, Philadelphia, 7-0, c,
Washington
18. Mark Jackson, New York (from Milwaukee through Seattle), 6-3, g.
St. John's.
19. Ken Norman, L.A. Clippers (from Detroit). 6-8. f. Illinois.
17. Ronnie Murphy, Portland, 6-5,
g-f. Jacksonville.
20. Jim Farmer, Dallas, 6-4, g,
Alabama
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Brown v. Board of Education
A. Have provided a cultural base for African American Students for several decades. Considered primary source of leadership for African American Students on all campuses.
B. A 1954 Supreme Court decision striking down "separate but equal" public education and charging all public education systems to move "with all deliberate speed" to provide equal education for all students.
C. Kansas University's first Black graduate (1885), a nationally renowned educator and pioneer in American Education.
All of the above have played a significant role in the area of education, particularly for Black students. Black Student Union believes students have a responsibility for their education and should be actively involved in keeping open the doors to equal education. We hope you do, too.
Answers: Blanche K. Bruce-C Greek Lettered Organizations-A Brown v.Board of Education-B
14
Nednesday, June 24, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
Hayden visits Kansas prisons
LANSING, Kan. (AP) — After a tour of two institutions containing more than half the population in Kansas' overcrowded prison system, Gov. Mike Hayden said he was thinking about retaining Secretary of Corrections Richard C. Mills as a permanent member of his cabinet.
Mills, an appointee of former Gov. John Carlin, would become the second Democratic member of the Hayden cabinet if he stays on at his post. Earlier this month, Hayden announced that he was keeping Secretary of Revenue Harley Duncan, a Democrat who Carlin also appointed.
Hayden's tour of the century-old Kansas State Penitentiary and the Kansas Correctional Institution at Lansing was billed as a surprise inspection. But prison officials had advance word of the visit and had scrambled to make preparations.
The Republican governor said he was making the trip to the two
Prison officials said 2,776 prisoners were being housed in three compounds making up the KSP complex, facilities designed to hold a maximum of about 2,640. At邻伯癣 KCIL, the state's old prison for women, 247 prisoners were being held in quarters designed to hold 175.
Hayden said he was generally pleased with the outward appearance of KSP and added that staff morale seemed higher than it was when he last visited the facility five years ago as chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee.
institutions, both on hills just west of the Missouri River, to check the progress of cellhouse renovations and other construction projects as well as to get a first-hand look at the overcrowded conditions.
three of the prison's 60-year-old housing buildings.
The surprise announcement that Mills was under consideration to become the permanent secretary of corrections in the Hayden administration came during a news briefing at the conclusion of his KCIL tour. But the governor refused to say how seriously he was looking at Mills, 53, who has held the position since August 1985.
However, the governor was less impressed with conditions at KCIL, saying he could understand why plans call for the demolition of all
“It's fair to say we're looking nationwide but that shouldn't be misconstructed to say we aren't looking at qualified Kansans as well.” Havden said.
Mills has said he has been asked to remain in command at the Department of Corrections at least through the end of July. After Hayden's remarks Monday, Mills said he probably would stay on permanently if asked to do so.
41 apply for vacant court posts
TOPEKA (AP) — Forty-one candidates have applied for three new positions and one vacant position on the Kansas Court of Appeals.
The vacancies include three new positions established by the 1986 Legislature and a fourth opening created by the retirement of Judge Sherman A. Parks, who was Kansas's first black appellate judge.
Gov. Mike Hayden will appoint a replacement for Parks and will fill the three new positions. The court was expanded to handle the increased workload and backlog of cases.
The names of the candidates now will be screened by the Supreme
Court Nominating Commission at a meeting July 8. The list will be reduced by at least half, and the remaining group will be interviewed by that panel at another meeting.
The commission will submit the names of three nominees for each vacancy to Hayden, who then will have 60 days to select the four new judges.
Among those who either submitted their own names or had them offered by someone else were State Sen. Robert G. Frey, R-Liberal, Joan M. Hamilton of the parole board, and David K. Fromme, son of the late Supreme Court Justice Alex M. Fromme.
Frey, 48, is chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee and was elected to the upper chamber in 1984. He spent ten years in the House of Representatives and served as majority leader before moving to the Senate.
Hamilton, 37, was appointed to the three-member parole board by former Gov. John Carlin in November 1983 after seven years as an assistant Shawnee County prosecutor.
Fromme, 46, is an Overland Park attorney. His father, Alex M. Fromme, died in October 1982 at the age of 67 after serving 16 years on the Kansas Supreme Court.
Most Kansas wheat ripe very early
TOPEKA (AP) — The 1987 Kansas wheat harvest pushed north last week, with the most progress reported in the central portion of the state, according to the Kansas Agricultural Statistics crop reporting service.
In its weekly dispatch on Kansas crops, the statistics service said all wheat acreage had turned color by the end of last week, well ahead of the normal pace.
About 80 percent of Kansas' wheat had reached the ripe stage, compared to 75 percent reported last year and far out-pacing the five-year average of 30 percent for this date.
The actual harvest is only 35 percent complete, lagging behind last year when 50 percent of the wheat
Infestations appear more widespread this year than in the past and the reporting service blamed the mild winter on the high survival rate of the pests. Common rust and smut was widespread.
Sorghum planting was 90 percent complete, ahead of both last year and the average pace. No major disease or insect problems were evident, although chinch bug migrations from small grain fields were causing some damage to seedling milo.
Overall, 47 percent of the crop was rated in excellent condition by the reporting service while 42 percent was rated in rating and 11 percent was rated fair.
Surface moisture was generally adequate with 8 percent of the state reporting a surplus and 22 percent citing a shortage. Sub-surface moisture also was mostly adequate with 5 percent noting a surplus and 10 percent reporting a shortage.
crop had been harvested by this time. However, the 1987 harvest is ahead of the five-year average of 10 percent of the crop in hand.
Soybean planting reached 85 percent completion, slightly behind the 90 percent rate of last year. The crop was rated at 55 percent excellent, 38 percent good and 7 percent fair.
Overall, 74 percent of the corn crop was rated in excellent shape with 25 percent rated good and 1 percent fair.
Could you use money from Home next semester?
POLICE
Whether you're starting out for college or finishing up a graduate degree, there's one tough subject you'll have to face next semester.
Tuition.
The good news is, Home State Bank can help you find the money for college Because just last year, more than 1,000 students received their low interest loans from us.
So, if you have an intense desire for that college diploma, come to Home State Bank. We have just the loan program for you.
program, for example, you don't need collateral, a cosigner, or an established credit rating. First and second-year students can receive up to $2,625 year. For third and fourth-year student up to $4,000 a year. You make no payments until six months after graduation or after you become a part-time student.
If you're studying in the health professions, there's a special HEAL loan program. And this year, our HEAL interest rate is the lowest in the Kansas City area.
In addition, some students receive Supplemental Loans for Students (SLS), and parents of undergraduates can receive loans for college costs through the Parent Loans program.
To receive your student loan application, call Connie Holmes at 321-3333. Your application will be processed and mailed to the school of your choice within 10 days.
Now, isn't that a good reason to call Home?
Home State Bank
Minnesota Ave. at 5th St • Kansas City, Kansas 66101
321-3333 • Member FDIC
An equal opportunity lender
Home State Bank
5 states to discuss waste disposal
Mike Hayden, Nebraska Gov. Kay A. Orr and Oklahoma Gov. Henry Bellman, said Clinton's press secretary.
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — Governors and representatives of the five member states of the Central Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact Commission will meet in Arkansas next month to discuss disposal of radioactive waste, Gov. Bill Clinton's office said yesterday.
Clinton will host the meeting July 2 at the Capitol. Expected to attend the meeting are Kansas
Clinton has asked Raymond Peery, executive director of the compact commission, to brief the governors and be available to answer their questions.
The meeting is scheduled for 10 a.m. in the Governor's Conference at the Capitol.
Congress authorized the formation of the compact in 1983 to identify potential disposal sites for low-level radioactive waste.
Two sites, in Dallas and Cleveland counties in southeast Arkansas, have been identified in a preliminary study as potential sites for disposal facilities, although residents in the area have voiced opposition to locating a waste dump there.
FBI suspects link in six bank burglaries
BEAVER, Kan. (AP) — The burglar of a bank in Beaver may be connected to five other bank burglaries in small towns in the last seven months, an FBI spokesman said yesterday.
ties do not know how much money was taken, and they have no suspects.
Mike Kortan, a spokesman in Kansas City, Mo., said the agency is investigating the break-in as a possible threat to lives and homes in central and eastern Kansas.
Two vaults of the Farmers State Bank were ransacked after a cutting torch was used to break open their steel doors, Barton County Sheriff Gene Marks said yesterday. Authori-
"You can't rule out some kind of connection," Kortan said.
south of the Rice-Ellsworth county line.
The burglaries have occurred in towns with a population of less than 500, and four have taken place within 40 miles of Great Bend. Beaver is about 20 miles northeast of Great Bend.
In January, banks in Lorraine and Geneseo were burglarized. Lorraine is 30 miles northeast of Great Bend in Ellsworth County, and Geneseo is 35 miles northeast of Great Bend, just
In December, an Arcadia bank was burglarized. Arcadia is near the Kansas-Missouri border.
The Beaver break-in is connected to the Monday morning burglaries of a service station and grain elevator in town, Marks said, and the cutting torch used in the bank burglary was taken from the elevator.
In March, banks in Sylvia, 35 miles southeast of Great Bend in Reno County, and Prescott, 75 miles south of Kansas City, also were burglarized.
1/2 PRICE HANGING BASKETS FREE PLANT With This Ad A Greenhouse Larger Than a Football Field
PENCE
Nursery*Garden Center*Greenhouse 15th and New York 843-2004
Scheffler
"My morning make up routine starts with 14 ounces of hot wax."
Every morning Colleen Beckwith loads a fresh block of paraffin into a hot waxer, gathers inch-up-onch of column-formatted newspaper type, and begins building The University Daily Kansan. At 5 a.m., you'll find her in close collaboration with the Kansan's editor putting the final touches on the current day's paper. By 8 a.m. she's started on tomorrow's ads.
She's been working on the Kansan for a long time. Long enough to have developed a system of checking so
that photos are sized right and type is set right.
Colleen gets to read the Kansan while she waxes its type down on the pages. Her family gets to see her work every afternoon when she pulls into the driveway, newspaper in hand, after eight hours on the job.
Colleen's job may sound like a lot of cutting and pasting to you, but it's an art to her. She cares about it. She cares about the Kansan. And most of all, she cares about doing a good job for you.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Nobody else speaks your language.
/ /
..
w
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k
d
f
s
b
m
'H
tun
pu
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thr
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Kansan Summer. Weekly/Wednesday, June 24, 1987
15
BEFORE YOU BUY,
Check the KANSAN.
Our advertisers
might save you money.
Video Player Four Movies Two Days
(Higher Weekends)
Videoxpress
1447 W. 23rd
9 a.m - 10 p.m Daily
T. J. Cinnamons Original Gourmet Cinnamon Roll and Coffee or Milk only 99¢
The Original
T.J. Cinnamons
Bakery
Gourmet Cinnamons Red
limit one per coupon good only at T.J. Cinnamons in Lawrence not valid with any other offer
--benji
the Huntai G
Louisiana Purchase expires 7-12-87
23rd and Louisiana 841-1841
Make the cash flow.
Kansan Classifieds
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
864-4358
Commonwealth
Beginning on Friday
Sat. Sun.
2:45 7:25
5:00 9:45
Granada
DRAGNET
EDDE MURPY
BEVERLY HILLS
Sat. Sun.
2:15 7:10
4:30 9:25
JACK NICHOLSON Daily
BRE
WITCHES
OF FAITHKING 2:45 9:46
STEPHEN MARTIN DANIEL LUNNAN Daily
ROXANNE 2:25 7:35
4:50 9:45
MPC
The R Daily
UNTOUCHABLES 2:20 7:25
4:30 9:40
SCHWARZENEGGER Daily
PREDATOR [R] 2:30 7:30
4:35 9:30
Daily
2:45 7:40
5:00 9:35
SPACEBALLS
HARRY
VPR
THE
Sat. Sun.
2:50 7:10
HENDERSONS
INC
5:00 9:15
Sat. Sun.
2:45 7:00
4:30 9:00
M
Come and get a taste of home with Cedarwood Apts
a great place to live Now Leasing Summer & Fall
ENTERTAINMENT
*Energy Efficient
*Newly Remodeled Units
*Reasonably Priced
*Air Conditioning & Pool
*Close to Mall
*One block from KU bus route
call Pat today 843-1116 2411 Cedarwood Ave.
1 bedrooms available
Now leasing for August
Classified Ads
Tonight! Dance beneath the Summer stars on the patio at Hot Homes. 811 New Hampshire 9 p.m.
to 1 a.m. Music provided by Metropolis Mobile Sound. (841-7803) Feel the rhythm of the night.
NOW THRU JULY 4th
NO SHOWS THE 25th, 27th & 28th
7:30 & 9:30 ONLY $3.00
MONTEREY
POP
MONTEREY
POP
JANIS.JOPLINWITHBIGBROTHERAND
THEHOLDINGCOMPANSCOTTMC
KENZIEMAMASANDPAPASCANNED
NEVICUMASTSYLVALEPERSON
AIRPLANEWIHERACSLICKERIC
BURDONANDTHEANIMALSTHEWHO
COUNTRYJODEANDTHEFISHOTIS
REDINGJIMMIENDRIX
RAVISHANKAR
FOR RENT
Commercial office space available in Lawrence's Research Park. For more information call
ELEGANT RESTORATION* 835 Tenn 3 brs, 1/2 baths, dishwasher, microwave, oven, washer/dryer, off STREET parking, lawn care provided, Available Aug. 1st; $750.00 low utilities
Patronize Kansan Advertisers.
For Rent one bedroom apt close to campus. Rent $190 utilities. 749-2919 842-9607
MASTERCRAFT
offers
Completely furnished
apartments--all near KU!
- Custom furnishings
Consider
A relaxed atmosphere with plenty of space
Spacious 2 bedroom
Laundry facilities
Waterbed fine
Swimming pool
10 month leases
- Energy efficient
- Affordable rates
- Affordable rates
- Variety of floorplans
- Designed for privacy
- Many great locations
- Professional management
CAMPUS PLACE—1145 Louisiana
941.1429
Berkley FLATS
HANOVER PLACE—14th & Mass.
village squa
TRAILRIDGE
- STUDIO—rg, closets, kitchenette, laundry bldg. next door, water paid.
841-5255
We still have a few left for summer and/or fall
VILLAGE SQUARE
842-304
- 1 BR APT-walk-in close laundry in bldg, gas & water paid, balcony or patio.
OPEN DAILY 1-5
843-2116 11th & Mississippi
1123 Indiana Furnished by Thompson-Crawley
TANGLEWOOD—10th & Arkansas 740.0415
STUDIOS APARTMENTS TOWNHOUSES
- 2 BR townhouses, woodburning fireplace, carport with extra storage W/D hookups, patios.
- 2 BR townhouse—
Great location walk anywhere
- Over 40 New Units
FLEXIBLE LEASING
- 4 BR townhouse—fireplace, carport, W/D hookups, patio.
- On KU Bus Route
3 swimming pools, tennis courts,
basketball courts, excellent
maintenance. KLU bus
Laundry facilities
* Furnished Units
Sleeping rooms .. 162 bdrm. apg. close to campus
Summer & Winter lease. No Pets. 842-8971
**house Mates Wanted:** 3 to 4 people needed for a house north of stadium-goal location. Rent $125.00 share of utilities and phone. Contact **Richard "Pigger" Eason** E421 859-1007 Abbatia
walk anywhere
Laundry facilities
Furnished Units
--in town
2500 W. 6th St. 843-7333
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
2040 HEATHERWOOD DR LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
A FEW
12 & 3
BDRM. APTS.
STILL AVAILABLE
FOR FALL
- Swimming Pool
- Covered Carports
- On KU Bus Route
- Lowest utility bills
MISCELLANEOUS
- Quiet location
For more info. call between 9-6, Mon.-Fri.,843-4754
TACO TRAVELLER
THE BITTER CHEESE COMPANY
---
SUNRISE PLACE
8th & Michigan
FOR SALE
fering luxurious townhome and apartment living.
Stop by to see our show unit at 9th and Michigan or call us 1-871-8241 for an appointment.
Office hours are 1-5 F-M.
Sunrise Apartment
979 Vanaam 650 Special, like new, red, new hat,
and pipes. $725 on 0810 842 7056
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
MUSEUM SHOP
Museum of Natural History
M-S10-5/Sun, 1-5-864-4450
KU Campus 14th and Jayhawk
EDDINGHAM
FOR SALE: 145 Liberty Mobile Home E-Commerce condition may to appreciate at 843-996-0001
after a 2 year.
MAX'S COMICS. Comic Books, Playbills, Pn. thence, etc. 811 New Hampshire.
OFFERING LUXURY
Livingroom Liquidation Dealer refused All 1/2 price
842-2254
- 10 or 12 month
Hiking, Biking Canoeing and Backbacking!
**MOTHALL GOOD USED FURNITURE**
Monday Friday 10:5-30 p.m on Saturdays 10:2-9 p.m
PLACE
24th & Eddingham (next to Gammons)
- Fire place
7th & Arkansas 843-3328 Near Louise's West
Can you buy Jeep, Cars, 4x4's Seized in theft
Call for facts today!
875-381-300, Est. 769
- Exercise Weightroom
Waterbed Saled Complete K size $9, Bookcase
bain $138, Sheets $15, Heater $19, Pailboard rail $
Matt Pad钱 $4, dr chest $3, Condition $2/1 $per
day 7 days Maple & Quam Furniture
Furniture
HELP WANTED
- Energy efficient
- Open Daily 3:00-5:00
Saturday 9:00-12:00
841-5444
- On-Site Management
- Swimming pool
GRAN SPORT
- Laundry room
Is It True You Can Buy Jeeps for $44 through the
call 312-742-6181 or the facton 312-742-6181.
- Fire place
Must sell luxury车 1979 Dodge New tires, A6
Must or best offer Call 842 102 between 5:37 - 5:40
EDDINGHAM PLACE
- Swimming pool
* Free Showtime
Dinettes' Dinettes' Trucksack to choose. From 888. Open to the Public 7 days. Mark & Kairn Furniture Warehouse, 738 New Hampshire, Lawrence
KANU *Bradford* is the University of Kansas seeks a part-time Programming Assistant (Announcer to host WEEKEND EDITION) a weekend informational event in addition to announcements and announce music conference. One year’s previous radio experience is required. Applicants must have a Bachelor's degree in an informal, entertaining manner. An associate's degree in journalism experience is preferred, though not required. Experience with broadcast journalism Brogdon, Program Director, KANU Radio, Broadcasting Hall, The University of Kansas.
Satellite T.V.
Professionally managed by Key Valley Management, Inc.
GOVERNMENT JOBS $16.040 $59.290 yr Now
Call 851.676 6000 or Fax 851.676 6000 R for current
registration.
HELP WANTED! Music student to come to our home school. Send resume and a phone number. Flexible schedule to fill out. Call 801-725-4639.
Satellite T.V.
--classifies:
01 announcements 300 for first 80 help unanticipated
100 entertainment 310 auto sales 700 personal
ligging 900 lighting 900 insurance 900
- Free Showtime
Immediate opening for Student Senate Executive Secretary. Part time position, 20 hours, per week Applications available in Senate office at Hassam Burge Union. Salary $450 per month. Position requires Bachelor's degree.
Kaw Valley Management, Inc
--classifies:
01 announcements 300 for first 80 help unanticipated
100 entertainment 310 auto sales 700 personal
ligging 900 lighting 900 insurance 900
SUBJECTS NEEDED
Students: Can you spare an hour on Thursday morning or Friday? Take part in a fascinating research project. Read some info, fill out a few forms, make a decision Simple, eh? You'll receive $1 for your trouble. Call today Professor Belcher. 864-3434.
MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTIONIST Lawrence Memorial Hospital has an on-call position for a Medical Transcriptionist. No guarantee of hours. High school diploma or equivalent, knowledge in computer science, English, and AP applications accepted from 1 a.p. to the Personnel Department, 325 Maine, 790-6161 EOE.
PYRAMID
PIZZA
Chill Out At The Glass Orion 8 a.m. to midnight
Mon Sat. New summer time menu. Above Yellow
Sandbox. $39.95. (20) 614-732-2130
HEADACHE, BACKACHE, ARM PAIN, LEG PAIN? Student and most insurance accepted For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark Johnson 843-3679
Open every night this summer! 4:30-12:30
Buy one Get one free Mondays & Wednesdays
Oread Neighborhood Assoc. Coordinator 20
hr. wk$460 mwk. Send Application letter, resume:
ONA Board of Directors, 1008 Ohio. Lawrence
Deadline June 24. E O E.
Nightly Specials
Ladies: Take a break from the Books. Pamper
yourself with a Complementary Formal call
afterternores or at 9:30 AM.
NANNY-Responsible live in help for three months beginning July 1. Must have own transportation to take two children to day care. Help with meals $\sim$ house work. Call 841-4362 at 6:00
OVERSEAS JOBS Also CruiseShipping Listings
TO Nowak, To 99K, To 86-87-600 Crete J4 09758
POSITION OPEN: Assistant Project Coordi-
nate/R Research Associate for Water and
Recreation, at the San Diego Water and
Environmental Center, a non-profit agricultural and
environmental Organization. College degree and
good communications skills required. Send
resume and writing sample to KRIC 394 Paul
808 W. 23rd
842-3232
GREENS PARTY SUPPLY
WANTED: Part-time Instructor to teach MCAT
review course for large national organization.
Ppq: MCAT Scores, degree required.
Call: 842-5423.
Fure and Used Records Buy, Sell, or Trade
Tradepac's 811 New Hampshire
Wanted: French tutor 841-1019
SERVICES OFFERED
Weekly Beer Specials
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7790
- Body Toning Classes
BUS. PERSONAL
$25 per month
SUMMER
MEMBERSHIP
Expert tutoring service in STATISTICS AND
Economics! All levels. Call Dennis B42 10556
Coors Light
- Sauna
- Certified Instructors
12 pk. $5.39
24 pk. $9.49
IDEA/RHYTHMIC AEROBICS
June 24-30
- Whirlpool
- Individualized Weight and Training Programs
- Toning Programs
- Hourly Classes
- Exclusively For Women
- Shower Facilities
- Membership Transferable
to 2500 Clubs
6 pk. $2.69
12 pk. $4.26
FITNESS CLUB
Body Shapes
Hours:
M-F 8:30-8:30
Sat. 9:00-4:00
Sun. 1:00-4:00
Wiedemann 12 pk. $3.19
601 Kasold Westridge Shopping Ctr. 843-4040
SUNFLAWOR DRIVING SCHOOL Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion Transportation provided 841.236
The College of Liberal Arts offers tutoring in Math and English courses through Supportive Educational Services. Reasonable Rates. Apply at SES Building, 864-3971.
GRAF/X- Scientific and statistical illustration, maps, drawings, slides, editing aid. Phone 841-2616. leave message.
PRIVATE OFFICE Obj Gn and Abortion Ser.
PRIVATE OFFICE Obj Gyn and Abortion Ser-
Overland Park...413946978
Joda & Friends
HAIR SALON
THE COTTAGE
- HAIRCUTTING
- Our staff does unique services in a unique old stone house
- HI-LIGHTING
- EAR PIERCING
- PEDICURES
- Please come by and see us for the best in hair care.
- COLORING
- FACIALS
- MANICURES
Ooda & Friend
841-0337
3009 W. 6th
1-1-1 THO Word processing: Consistent, Responsible. Relatable. Call 852-3811 for service.
Transformed into accurately spelled and punctuated grammatically correct letters of letter name.
*
TYPING
1-1000 pages. No job too small or to large.
Carerate and affordable typing and wordprocessing.
For further enquiries, call 718-352-4691.
AAA WORKPROCESSING work low
price 824/1924 after 5pm mfr; anytime
weekends Campus pick up; drop off available
ACT NOW PAYS $15.00/Resumes $15
24-Hour Typing 13th semester in Lawrence
campus and camp quality and fastest score 941-806
ACT NOW, Papers $1.50/pg. Resumes $15
Writing LIFEHELF 814-3409
Accurate, affording typing by former Harvard
secretary M. Garcia, 841, 219-7500, space spaced Call Me
Rights
DISSERTATION THESES LAW PAPERS, Mommy's typing in Australia but
she is writing in English.
WRITING LIFELINE
A-Z Word Processing Service Quality resumes.
Voice calls: 843-1000 to 1 p.m.
E-mail: 843-1000 fax to 1 p.m.
Resumes, Thesis, term papers
word processing
call 841-3469
Cincinnati, OH 45208
Discount of $10.00 per sheet
--classifies:
01 announcements 300 for first 80 help unanticipated
100 entertainment 310 auto sales 700 personal
ligging 900 lighting 900 insurance 900
Experienced typetus; theses, dissertations, term papers 942-3102 after 6:15 p.m. M or F/Sat/Suh.
Domna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Domain. Be able to type well, resume applications, mail lists, Letter
quotations, use spelling checkers.
Experienced Typist at reasonable rate Call Holly at 843 0111
Fast and clean typing assured Call 841-6946 any time
For professional typing/word processing, call
Myra 84-1490 Summer special $12.00 per hour.
Call (718) 635-6548.
Quality typing excellent spelling, punctuation,
formatting and flow of data available
Fast, reliable service. 943-679-8100
THE WORDCTORS Legal, Thesis, Office
overload. Why for typing? Word processing
with the new PC.
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing, manuscript resumes, these letter templates and cover letters.
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, edging, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes HAVE M.S. Degree 841-6254
Typing-Great rates. help with spelling. call
842-2629
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
- Policy
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
Words set in Field Face count as 3 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
entry development.
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.
- Prepail Order Form Rules
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 on Monday at 4:00pm 2 days prior to publication.
Deadline for cancellation is Monday at 4:00pm 2 days prior to publication.
Classified Rates
Words 1 Insertion 2-3 Insertions 4-5 Insertions 6-8 Insertions
0-15 2.70 4.00 5.70 9.50
16.20 3.20 4.75 6.70 10.75
21.25 3.70 5.50 7.70 12.00
26.30 4.20 6.25 8.70 13.25
31.35 4.70 7.00 9.70 14.50
Classifications
Name
Classified Mail Order Form
_Phone no
(phone number published only if included below)
Please print your ad one word per box:
ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAN
Date ad begins
Total days in paper
Amount paid
Classification
OLOLW KANSAN POLICY
Make checks payable to:
University Daily Kansan
119 Staatsburg
56 60453
---
16
Wednesday, June 24, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
Double Coupons Dillons
Double Your Savings On All Manufacturer's "Cents Off" Coupons Up To And Including 50¢ In Value.
Dillons FOOD STORES
KOCKY TOP
COLA
THE PEAK OF MEETING MEN'S LOVE
Bonus Special
12 Pack-12 oz. Cans
Additional Purchases $2.09 12 Pack
Super Coupon!
Rocky Top Regular Cola
12 Pack-12 oz. Cans
Rocky Top
Regular Cola
Limit One 12 Pk. With This Coupon
Limit One 12 Pk. Per Customer
Coupon Good June 24, 30 1978
Super Coupon Not Included!
Super Coupon Not Included!
K.U.
"ROCK
CHALK
JAYHAWK"
Bonus Special
12 oz. Can 100% Pure Concentrated
Regular Or High Pulp
DONALD DUCK
100% PURE FROZEN CONCENTRATED
ORANGE JUICE
NET 12 FL. OZ.
(354 mL)
DONALD DUCK
100% PURE FROZEN CONCENTRATED
ORANGE JUICE
NET 12 FL. OZ.
(354 mL)
Additional Purchases 89c Can
Food Club
SLICED BREON
Orange Juice
Additional Purchases $1.39 16 oz.Pkg
Super Coupon!
Limit One Pkg With This Coupon
Limit One Coupon Per Customer
Coupon Good June 24, 1987
Coupon Good July 26, 1987
Double Coupon Program
Bonus Special
16 oz. Pkg. Food Club
Sliced Bacon
16 oz. Pkg. Food Club Sliced Bacon
99¢
Dellons
Limit One With Coupon
Dallbors
Super Coupon!
12 oz Can 100% Pure Concentrated
Donald Duck Orange Juice
59¢
Limit One Can With This Coupon
Limit One Coupon Per Customer
Coupon Good June 24.30.1987
Super Coupons Not Included in Double-Coupon Program
Limit One With Coupon
0 5
47260 09003
0 41260 D9003
KU
Prices Effective June 24-30,1987 Limit Rights Reserved
—Bonus Special —
Dillon's Fresh Baked 20 oz. Loaf
Honey Bran
Wheat Bread
Additional Purchases
39c Loaf
ZONA
HONEY BRAN
WHEAT BREAD
NET WT. 340 G (12 OZ.)
Super Coupon!
Honey Bran Wheat Bread
Limit One Leaf With This Coupon
Limit One Coupon Per Customer
Coupon Good June 24, 1987
In Double Coupon Program
In Double Coupon Program
29¢
Limit One With Coupon
0 41260 09618 9
Deli & Cheese
-Bonus Special-
Honey Ham Wilson $3.99 "It's The Best" LB.
Summer Sausage Sparrer's $2.49 Smokey Beef LB.
Wilson Bologna Meat, Garlic or Beef. $2.29 "Summertime Is Sandwich Time" LB.
Crab or Shrimp Salad $3.99 LB.
Cheddar Cheese Alma Mild $2.19 "Nibblin Good" LB.
Macaroni, Beef
& Tomato Stouffer's
"Dinner Is Ready To Serve
Green Bean 8
Green Bean &
LB. $1.99
Mushroom Casserole Slouffer's "Dinner Is Ready To Serve" LB. $1.99
Ready-To-Eat Fully Cooked
Hot Dogs, Polish Sausage or Hot Links Ea. 35¢ or 3/$1
35¢ or 3/$1
Seafood Shoppe
船上的货物
-Bonus Specials-
Catfish Fillets Fresh Farm Raised LB. $3.59
Mako Shark Steaks LB. $3.29
Fresh Perch Fillets LB. $3.19
Fresh Shrimp or Crabmeat
Salad LB. $3.99
Look For Our Recipes At Our Seafood Counter.
Lobster and Shrimp Adored 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.
Fruit & Salad Bar...
SALAD BAR
HOURS
Salad Bar
799
Fruit & Salad Bar...Our in-season fresh fruit bar is now open. Enjoy the sweet natural taste of sunripened cantaloupe, honeydews & watermelon...all in addition to our same variety filled salad bar!
(Available Only In Stores With Salad Bars. Salad Bars Not In These Towns. Salina, Dodge City, Emporia, Wettingham, Augusta, Praftt Arkansas, Greenberg. E.Dorado, Lennard Lawned, Derby, Murvana, John or Starking.)
From Our
Plant Dept...
Bonus Special-
6"
6"
Hydrangea $799
(Not Availabe In All Stores.)
From Our Flower Shop...
Bonus Special
Sweetheart
Rose Arrangement
$599
Cash & Carry
NO FLOWER SHOPS In These Towns. Hays, Augusta.
Pratt, Arkansas City, Greensburg EI Dorado, Winfield.
Larned, Mulvane. St. John or Sterling.
Floral Deliveries Twice Daily.Morning & Afternoon.Sunday, Afternoon Only.