WEATHER
Today: Partly sunny, high 84. Tonight, 20% chance of thunderstorms, low 68.
Tomorrow: Sunny and warm, high 90. Overnight low 68, little or no precipitation.
Weekend: Chance of evening thunderstorms each day. Highs 88-93, lows 65-70.
Nazi bomb threatens London Independence Days schedule of events KU swim coach to be assistant U.S. coach
Page 2
Page 9
Page 11
Wednesday July 1, 1987 Vol. 97, No. 149 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Brother of slain U.S. civilian gives talk on contras
By KRISTEN HAYS
Staff writer
"The contrast are simply hired guns; the real killers are the United States government, with their hands clean and nails clipped.
"We know the facts. The fact is that Ben is dead. He was murdered by the contras, and the contras are armed, trained, and directed by the U.S. government."
John Linder, whose brother,
Benjamin Linder, was the first
U.S. citizen killed by the contras in
Nicagua, spoke to about 80 people
at Thursday at the Ecumenical
Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave
"I'm doing this tour to stop the killing, not to ask for pity for me or my brother." he said.
John Linder, 32, temporarily left his job as an autoworker at Martin Marietta Corp., in New Orleans, for what he called his "peace tour."
His stop at KU was the fourth in a national speaking tour to tell the story of his brother's death, the U.S. government's response and the destruction caused by the war in Nicaragua.
"I want to bring home what's happening in Nicaragua. When you lose a family member, there's a lot of grief. But 15,000 people been killed in Nicaragua, and we need to multiply that grief by 15,000."
At first Linder appeared hesitant, speaking slowly. But he gradually gained confidence, telling his brother's story and answering questions with an emphasis on detail
He explained why his brother went to N
Washington
"He had degree, a people an them cont
"He was agua), an built a hy the people time.
"He w
empoweri
ing a m
school, ag
and electr
"Ben si saw childr driver and killed, and killed."
John Linder speaks about the destruction
Nicaragua. Linder's brother, Benjamin, was the
by the contra. Linder stopped Thursday at
"peace tour."
Before
Cua had
battacks. I
thought
prevent
hydroelect
ing on.
He said prevent t because th with the
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Liquor laws loo
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Drinking establishments can sell liquor from 9 a.m. to 8 a.m. Before the new law went
Also affected by the legislation are the hours a club can sell alcohol.
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However, John Gillem, training officer for the state division of Alcohol Beverage Control, said, "The voters of a county can apportion waiving the 30 percent requirement."
In Lawrence
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In Kansas City Call: 648-8888
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Staff writer
In Lawrence
Call: 843-2211
In Kansas City Call: 648-8888
Wallace said, "It's entirely possible that the Hawk will be gone pretty soon. If we can't stay in a club, there's no way we can stay in business." "We'll really be missing a piece of history."
Liquor by the drink is here
Liquor by the drink is here Right above the Drink Clock
According to the new law, only clubs that derive at least 30 percent of their incomes from food sales will not require memberships. All other clubs will remain as they have been, requiring drinking customers to be members.
Right here in River City.
Today, for the first time in more than 100 years, Kansas drinkers can belly up to a bar and legally order a drink without having to show a club card.
Also going into effect today are laws prohibiting the sale of alcoholic beverages to anyone under 21.
"I can't conceive of going to college and not being able to drink at 18." Ken Wallace, owner of the Jayhawk Cafe 1340 Ohio St, said. Wallace was chairman of the board of the new-defunct Kansas Club and Tavern Association.
"I'll tell you one thing," Wallace said. "They couldn't have raised the drinking age when I was going to school. They would have heard from the young people.
"We would have burned the statehouse or kidnapped the governor or whatever it took."
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In Kansas City Call: 648-8888
DOUBLE DEAL!
A caterer's license allows a caterer to go anywhere in a county that voted for the liquor-by-the-drink law. The caterer does not have to be based in that county to operate there.
The old law didn't allow the issuance of temporary liquor licenses.
"The fraternity possibility is an extreme limit to the law. It isn't likely at all. If liquor laws are continually violated, we have the excuse to strike and padlock the premises." Gillem said.
Pizza Hut.
"There's nothing in the law that says fraternity row can't set up a string of bars every night of the week," Wallace said.
© 1987 Pizza Hut, Inc.
Enforcing the law as it applies to temporary licenses would not be easy, Gillem said.
Gillem said he didn't think that would become a reality.
"This will be a headache for us and a headache for local law enforcement officers," he said.
Wallace and Gillem both disapproved of temporary permits.
See LIQUOR, p. 5, col. 1
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Order any Large Pizza Monday-Tuesday-Wednesday and we'll double
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One cupon per party per driver per participation $10.00 delivery.
Offered good only on regular prices by July 26, 1987. 12:00 cent; redeemable value LIMITED CUPON A $1.50 000 Charge on All Attendance.
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Pizza Hut
In Lawrence
Call: 843-2211
In Kansas City Call: 648-8888
DEVELOPMENT
An establishment which does less than 30 percent of its business in food must continue to operate as a club and must require memberships. These clubs may share reciprocal agreements with other such businesses.
Taverns and grocery stores will continue to sell 3.2 beer. The hours of operation for these businesses have not been changed. Only those 21 or older are permitted to buy alcoholic beverages of any kind.
Caterers can obtain a license to sell liquor by the drink at unlicensed locations such as private parties.
Liquor may be soiled at special events such as parties if a special permit has been obtained from the Alcoholic Beverage Control Division in Topeka. The permit is good for up to three days. An individual must obtain four such licenses each year.
16 Fluid Ounces
CONNIE SHERIDAN / Kansan Graphic
student, said, "we don't believe what the government says anymore."
Today, Chun is expected to agree to implement reforms, including a direct presidential election, demanded by the chairman of the ruling South Korean Democratic Justice Party, Roh Tae Woo.
But Jeong said he didn't see much difference between Roh and Chun.
Young Chung, Seoul graduate student, also said he was sketical.
"Both Roh and Chun were educated and have worked together for a long time," he said. "They are basically in the same category."
"President Chun had to accept the suggestions of Roh, otherwise he would become worse," he said. "I don't expect the war, I hope it does not improve."
Chung said he thought moss Korean people were politically apathetic because they'd never had opportunity to voice their opinions.
He said that only students were able to criticize the government, because they didn't have jobs to lose.
Authors invited for reunion
Ginsberg and Burroughs will attend
IM HAMILTON
writer
e beat movement was a cultural var movement that expressed intent with U.S. values of prog- and power.
the first full week of September, rence will host a gathering of e of the finest minds of the beat ement, a co-coordinator of the t said yesterday.
jorge Wedge, associate professor
english and co-coordinator, said
famed beat poets and writers
a Ginsberg, William Burroughs,
waldman, John Giorno, Andrei
escu and Michael McClure were
treated to attend and read theirs.
idea is to bring KU alumni beat as, as well as nationally known ts, to Lawrence for a week of ncissence, Wedge said.
ase and other renowned authors be in Lawrence for the River Reunion, an event sponsored by department of English in conio with other campus and comy groups.
mong the people who are com-
ack will be Jim McCrary, who
and operates his own press near
Fransisco, and Robert Day,
r of The Last Cattle Drive.
here'll be music at various s around town. There also will beat film festival going on to town with some films previous- shown in Lawrence."
nes Grauerholz, coordinator of
uineston's downtown activities,
the festival would focus on Jack
tac, perhaps the most famous
perf of the beat movement.
films on Kerouac by Robert
would be included, he said.
films are: "Pull My Daisy",
"features Ginsberg and Bur-
s; "This Song Is For You,
"a documentary of the 1982
ac Conference at the Naropa
ate in Boulder, Colo.; and "Me
My Brother," which features
ac and Peter Orlovsky.
companies are restricted by the ment, and employees are cond by the companies," Chung
is easier to get involved if you student and don't have a family ak of."
ns doubtect nation
Yong-Cha Jenerette, aance resident who grew up in i, South Korea, said all South asns should join the demonstra-
1
"It is not a problem stricty for students. It affects all the Korean people," she said.
Jenerée said she was concerned about the safety of her mother and brothers, who live in Pusan.
"I talked to my mother two weeks ago, and she told me that she was standing in the door." Jeneretta said. "It looks like stant demonstration was gone on."
The latest wave of demonstrations broke out three weeks ago to protest the selection of Roh as Chun's presidential nominee.
Chun seized power in 1980, one year after the assassination of President Park Chung Hee.
Cameron Hurst, director of the Center for East Asian Studies and professor of history, said, "There has not been an equivalent amount of political and economic development. The economical development has been enormous since the mid-1970s, but the political situation has remained static."
WEATHER
Today: Partly sunny, high 84. Tonight, 20% chance of thunderstorms, low 68.
Tomorrow: Sunny and warm, high 90. Overnight low 68, little or no precipitation.
Weekend: Chance of evening thunderstorms each day. Highs 88-93, lows 65-70.
Nazi bomb threatens London Independence Days schedule of events KU swim coach to be assistant U.S. coach
Page 2
Page 9
Page 11
Wednesday
July 1, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 149
(USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Brother of slain U.S. civilian gives talk on contras
By KRISTEN HAYS
"The contras are simply hired guns; the real killers are the United States government, with their hands clean and nails clipped.
Staff writer
"We know the facts. The fact is that Ben is dead. He was murdered by the contrasts, and the contras are armed, trained, and directed by the U.S. government."
John Linder, whose brother,
Benjamin Linder, was the first
U.S. citizen killed by the contras
nicaragua, spoke to about 80 peo-
ler Thursday at the Ecumenical
Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread
Athie.
"I'm doing this tour to stop the killing, not to ask for pity for me or my brother," he said.
THE AVIATION FINDER
John Linder, 32, temporarily left his job as an autoworker at Martin Marietta Corp., in New Orleans, for what he called his "peace tour."
His stop at KU was the fourth in a national speaking tour to tell the story of his brother's death, the U.S. government's response and the destruction caused by the war in Nicaragua.
"I want to bring home what's happening in Nicaragua. When you lose a family member, there's a lot of grief. But 15,000 people been killed in Nicaragua, and we need to multiply that grief by 15,000."
ant, speaking slowly. But he gradually gained confidence, telling his brother's story and answering questions with an emphasis on detail.
At first Linder appeared hesit
He explained why his brother went to Nicaragua after graduating from the University of Washington in 1983.
Walt Gunn, director of the Aerophobia Clinic, explains the cockpit instruments of a commercial jetliner to a partici- Jan Morrison KANSAN
Jan Morris/KANSAN
"He had a chemical engineering degree, and he wanted to help people and use his skills to give them control of their lives.
"He was sent to El Cua, (Nicaragua), and by May 1986 he had built a hydroelectric plant to give the people electricity for the first time.
He was in the process of empowering the people, establishing a mechanical shop with a school, agricultural cooperations and electronics training.
killed, and 11 constru
killed."
"Ben saw contra attacks. He saw children killed, an ambulance hung."
Before his brother Cua had been under attacks. Linder said thought the contras prevent completion hydroelectric plant on.
He said the con prevent that kind because they were with the Nicaragua
PADRICK GARCIA
John Linder speaks about the destruction caused Nicaragua. Linder's brother, Benjamin, was the first L by the contras. Linder stopped Thursday at KU du "peace tour."
Liquor laws loose
By KEITH ROBISON
Wallace said, "It's entirely possible that the 'Hawk will be gone pretty soon. If we can't turn into a club, there's no way we can stay in business," he said. "We'll really be missing a piece of history."
Staff writer
According to the new law, only clubs that derive at least 30 percent of their incomes from food sales will not require memberships. All other clubs will remain as they have been, requiring drinking customers to be members.
Liquor by the drink is here.
"I can't conceive of going to college and not being able to drink at 18." Ken Wallace, owner of the Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio St. said. Wallace was chairman of the board of the now-defunct Kansas Club and Tavern Association.
"I'll tell you one thing," Wallace said. "They couldn't have raised the drinking age when I was going to school. They would have heard from the young people.
However, John Gillem, training officer for the state division of Alcohol Beverage Comprison said. "The voters of a county can approve waiving the 30 percent food requirement."
Right here in River City.
Also going into effect today are laws prohibiting the sale of alcoholic beverages to an adult.
"We would have burned the statehouse or kidnapped the governor or whatever it took."
Also affected by the legislation are the hours a club can sell alcohol.
Today, for the first time in more than 100 years, Kansas drinkers can belly up to a bar and legally order a drink without having to show a club card.
Drinking establishments can sell liquor to 9 a.m. to 9 a.m. Before the new law went
When You Wanna This Great Taste...
Call The “Pizza Experts” At Pizza Hut Delivery
he said
A caterer's license allows a caterer to go anywhere in a county that voted for the liquor-by-the-drink law. The caterer does not have to be based in that county to operate there.
See LIQUOR, p. 5, col. 1
is good for up to three days. An individual may obtain four such licenses each year.
16 Fluid Ounces
CONNIE SHERIDAN / Kansan Graphic
The beat movement was a cultural postwar movement that expressed discontent with U.S. values of progress and power.
He said that only students were able to criticize the government, because they didn't have jobs to lose.
Korean people were politically apathetic because they'd never had the opportunity to voice their opinions.
Authors invited for reunion Ginsberg and Burroughs will attend
George Wedge, associate professor of English and co-coordinator, said the famed beat poets and writers Allen Ginsberg, William Burroughs, Anne Waldman, John Giorno, Andrei Codrescu and Michael McClure were expected to attend and read their works.
By TIM HAMILTON Staff writer
In the first full week of September, Lawrence will host a gathering of some of the finest minds of the beat movement, a co-coordinator of the event said yesterday.
hier renowned authors
for the River
in event sponsored by
t of English in con-
cursus campus and com-
bring KU alumni beat nation as nationally known Lawrence for a week of Wedge said.
be music at various town. There also will film festival going on some films previous in Lawrence."
people who are com-
mune Jim McCraary, who
rates his own press near
o, and Robert Day,
Last Cattle Drive.
herholz, coordinator of its downtown activities, would focus on Jack haps the most famous the beat movement. on Kerouac by Robert be included, he said.
sire: "Pull My Daisy",
Ginsberg and Burd-
Song Is For You,
documentary of the 1982
inference at the Naropa
Boulder, Colo.; and "Me
other," which features
Peter Orlovsky.
ies are restricted by the t. and employees are con'the companies." Chung
doubt nation
easier to get involved if you areent and don't have a family
ong-Cha Jenrette, a resident who grew up in uth Korea, said all South should join the demonstra-
not a problem strictly for
It affects all the Korean
he said.
he said she was concerned safety of her mother and who live in Pusan.
"d to my mother two weeks she told me that she was walk out of the door." said. "It looks like a conformation was going on." est wave of demonstrations three weeks ago to protest of Roh as Chun's presi- nominee.
peized power in 1980, one year
a assassination of President
Lung Hee.
ron Hurst, director of the for East Asian Studies and
professor of history, said. "There has not been an equivalent amount of political and economic development. The economical development has since the mid-1970s, but the political situation has remained static."
WEATHER
Today: Partly sunny, high 84. Tonight, 20% chance of thunderstorms, low 68
Tomorrow: Sunny and warm, high 90. Overnight low 68, little or no precipitation.
Weekend: Chance of evening thunderstorms each day. Highs 88-93, lows 65-70.
Nazi bomb threatens London Independence Days schedule of events KU swim coach to be assistant U.S. coach
Page 2
Page 9
Page 11
Wednesday
July 1, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 149
(USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Brother of slain U.S. civilian gives talk on contras
By KRISTEN HAYS
Staff writer
"The contras are simply hired guns; the real killers are the United States government, with their hands clean and nails clipped.
"We know the facts. The fact is that Ben is dead. He was murdered by the contas, and the contras are armed, trained, and directed by the U.S. government."
John Linder, whose brother, Benjamin Linder, was the first U.S. citizen killed by the contras in Nicaragua, spoke to about 80 people Thursday at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
"I'm doing this tour to stop the killing, not to ask for pity for me or my brother." he said.
John Linder, 32, temporarily left his job as an autoworker at Martin Marietta Corp., in New Orleans, for what he called his "peace tour."
His stop at KU was the fourth in a national speaking tour to tell the story of his brother's death, the U.S. government's response and the destruction caused by the war in Nicaragua.
"I want to bring home what's happening in Nicaragua. When you lose a family member, there's a lot of grief. But 15,000 people killed in Nicaragua, and we need to multiply that grief by 15,000."
At first Linder appeared hesit
ant, speaking slowly. But he gradually gained confidence, telling his brother's story and answering questions with an emphasis on detail.
He explained why his brother went to Nicaragua after graduating from the University of Washington in 1983.
"He had a chemical engineering degree, and he wanted to help people and use his skills to give them control of their lives.
"He was sent to El Cua, (Nicaragua), and by May 1966 he had built a hydroelectric plant to give the people electricity for the first
"He was in the process of empowering the people, establishing a mechanical shop with a machine shop for operations and electronics training.
"Ben saw contra attacks. He saw children killed, an ambulance driver and nurse killed, teachers killed, and 11 construction workers killed."
Before his brother's death, El Cua had been under heavy contra attacks. Linder said his brother thought the contras were trying to prevent completion of the second hydroelectric plant he was working on.
He said the contras tried to prevent that kind of progress because they were unable to deal with the Nicaraguan army and
See LINDER, p. 7, col. 1
M. GILLESNIK
Darcy Chang/KANSAM
John Linder speaks about the destruction caused by contras in Nicaragua. Linder's brother, Benjamin, was the first U.S. citizen killed by the contras. Linder stopped Thursday at KU during his national "peace tour."
Walt Gunn, director of the Aerophobia Clinic, explains the cockpit instruments of a commercial jetliner to a participant in the clinic.
Clinic helps fliers manage fears
By STORMY WYLIE
Staff writer
Patty, a plump, pretty, blonde-haired woman in her late 20s, showed the signs of being absolutely petrified at the thought of flying.
As she sat down in a window seat, she pulled the seat belt tightly around her and clutched the armrests with a white-knuckled grip. Her face was drained of color, and she glanced at her husband often for reassurance
Except Patty wasn't really flying.
She was sitting in a simulator.
Patty, whose last name was withheld on request, was one of six people with a fear of flying who attended an aerobia clinic at the University of Kansas Medical Center last week.
The clinic, which is designed to help people learn to cope with the fear of flying, is conducted by Walt Gunn, assistant clinical professor of psychiatry and director of the Med Center's aerophobia clinic. Gunn is also a retired Trans World Airlines pilot with 39 years of experience.
Gunn said more than 500 people have attended the clinics, which he has offered about once a month for the last three years. The two-session clinic costs $90 per person.
In the first session, Gunn explained why people were afraid to fly and suggested relaxation techniques to help his clients ease their fears.
The second session involved a trip to the TWA office in Kansas City, Mo., where clients sat in a simulator of a jet airplane's cockpit. This demystifies the client about the technical aspects of flying a jet plane, Gunn said.
His most recent clinic was on two Thursday evenings, June 18 and 25.
Aerophobia, or fear of flying, is a common problem among U.S. citizens, he said. He estimated that more than 25 million U.S. citizens suffered from it. For some, this means missing vacations or job opportunities.
For Patty, who is a public information officer for the state of Kansas, it means weeks of worrying and bad dreams before she flies.
"I went into the fetal position (on a flight) once, with my head in my husband's lap," she said last week during the trip to the simulators. "I thought, 'Oh God, they think I'm crazy!'"
When she does have to fly, she always asks for an aisle seat and never goes to the bathroom on the plane, she said.
Patty said she read about the aerophobia clinic in a Topeka newspaper. Her husband, Jim, came along to give her moral support, he said.
tors and usually walked up four flights of stairs to her office.
"Flying makes her crazy." Jim said. "She worries about it before, during and after the flight. I think this clinic will be good for her just so she knows she's not the only one."
Patty also suffers from claustrophobia, or fear of enclosed spaces. She said she avoided riding in eleva-
Bill, an older man who is in the investment business, wore a "Top Gun" hat to the clinic. When he飞sys, he goes to the bathroom to make deals with God. he said.
Hylan, a sales representative, also must fly a lot in his job, but said he hates every minute of it. Like Patty, he had he worried for days before a flight.
Neither Bill nor Hylen would agree to be identified by last names.
Gunn said people who suffer from aerophobia generally fit into one or more of four profiles, which are general anxiety, control problems, claustrophobia or separation anxiety.
People with general anxiety are usually nervous about many things,
See PHOBIA, p. 5, col. 1
Authors invited for reunion
Ginsberg and Burroughs will attend
By TIM HAMILTON Staff writer
In the first full week of September, Lawrence will host a gathering of some of the finest minds of the beat movement, a co-coordinator of the event said yesterday.
These and other renowned authors will be in Lawrence for the River City Reunion, an event sponsored by the department of English in conjunction with other campus and community groups.
George Wedge, associate professor of English and co-coordinator, said the famed beat poets and writers Allen Ginsberg, William Burroughs, Anne Waldman, John Giorno, Andrei Codresu and Michael McClure were expected to attend and read their works.
The idea is to bring KU alumni beat authors, as well as nationally known authors, to Lawrence for a week of reminiscence, Wedge said.
"Among the people who are coming back will be Jim McCrary, who owns and operates his own press near San Fransisco, and Robert Day, author of 'The Last Cattle Drive.'
"There'll be music at various places around town. There also will be a beat film festival going on downtown with some films previously not shown in Lawrence."
James Grauerholz, coordinator of the Reunion's downtown activities, said the festival would focus on Jack Kerouac, perhaps the most famous member of the beat movement. Three films on Kerouac by Robert Frank would be included, he said.
The films are: "Pull My Daisy, which features Ginsberg and Burroughs; "This Song Is For You, Jack," a documentary of the 1982 Kerouac Conference at the Narpa Institute in Boulder, Colorado; and "Me and My Brother," which features Kerouac and Peter Orlovsky.
Liquor laws loosen up
By KEITH ROBISON
Staff writer
Liquor by the drink is here. in River City
Right here in River City.
Today, for the first time in more than 100 years, Kansas drinkers can belly up to a bar and legally order a drink without having to show a club card.
Also going into effect today are laws prohibiting the sale of alcoholic beverages to adults.
"I'll tell you one thing," Wallace said.
"They couldn't have raised the drinking age when I was going to school. They would have heard from the young people.
"I can't conceive of going to college and not being able to drink at 18." Ken Wallace, owner of the Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio St. said. Wallace was chairman of the board of the now-defunct Kansas Club and Tavern Association.
However, John Gillem, training officer for the state division of Alcohol Beverage Control, said, "the voters of a county can apportion waiving the 30 percent food requirement."
According to the new law, only clubs that derive at least 30 percent of their incomes from food sales will not require memberships. All other clubs will remain as they have been, requiring drinking customers to be members.
Wallace said, "It's entirely possible that the 'Hawk will be gone pretty soon. If we can't turn into a club, there's no way we can stay in business," he said. "We'll really be missing a piece of history."
"We would have burned the statehouse or kidnapped the governor or whatever it took."
Also affected by the legislation are the hours a club can sell alcohol.
Drinking establishments can sell liquor from 9 a.m. to 2 a.m. Before the new law went
into effect, a private club could sell alcohol until 3 a.m.
Gillem said that although some drinking establishments would be able to serve liquor on Sundays, grocery stores would not be able to sell beer on Sundays.
"The law is meant for on-the-premises consumption, not for carrov." he said.
Temporary liquor licenses can be obtained for $2 a day, with a three-day limit. A person is allowed these permits only four times each year.
Wallace and Gillem both disapproved of temporary permits.
The old law didn't allow the issuance of temporary liquor licenses.
"The fraternity possibility is an extreme limit to the law. It isn't likely at all. If liquor laws are continually violated, we have the musterize and padlock the premises." Gillem said.
The new law also allows caterers to serve alcohol and allows the issuance of temporary liquor licenses.
"There's nothing in the law that says fraternity row can't set up a string of bars every night of the week," Wallace said.
Gillem said he didn't think that would become a reality.
Enforcing the law as it applies to temporary licenses would not be easy, Gillem said.
"This will be a headache for us and a headache for local law enforcement officers," he said.
A caterer's license allows a caterer to go anywhere in a county that voted for the liquor-by-the-drink law. The caterer does not have to be based in that county to operate there.
See LIQUOR, p. 5, col. 1
Liquor Laws at a glance
Licensed restaurants can sell alcoholic drinks to anyone 21 or older. These restaurants are permitted to operate from 9 a.m. until 2 a.m. 7 days a week.
Taverns and grocery stores will continue to sell 3.2 beer. The hours of operation for these businesses have not been changed. Only those 21 or older are permitted to buy alcoholic beverages of any kind.
An establishment which does less than 30 percent of its business in food must continue to operate as a club and must require memberships. These clubs may share reciprocal agreements with other such businesses.
Caterers can obtain a license to sell liquor by the drink at unlicensed locations such as private parties.
Liquor may be sold at special events such as parties if a special permit has been obtained from the Alcoholic Beverage Control Division in Topeka. The permit is good for up to three days. An individual may obtain four such licenses each year.
16 Fluid Ounces
CONNIE SHERIDAN / Kansan Graphic
Staff writer
Local S. Koreans doubt reform will affect nation
Bv CARLA PATINO
Three Lawrence residents born in South Korea said yesterday that no matter what South Korean President Chun Doo Hwan said, they still doubted he would agree to a direct presidential election.
See related story p.2.
Ji-Young Jeong, Seoul graduate student, said, "We don't believe what the government saves anwmore."
Today, Chun is expected to agree to implement reforms, including a direct presidential election, demanded by the chairman of the ruling South Korean Democratic Justice Party. Rob Tae Woo
But Jeong said he didn't see much difference between Roh and Chun.
1
"Both Roh and Chun were educated and have worked together for a long time," he said. "They are basically in the same category."
Young Chung, Seoul graduate student, also said he was sketical.
He said that only students were able to criticize the government, because they didn't have jobs to lose.
Chung said he thought most Korean people were politically apathetic because they'd never had an opportunity to voice their opinions.
“President Chun had to accept the suggestions of Roh, otherwise the situation would be worse,” said. “I don't expect big changes, but I hope the situation would improve.”
"Companies are restricted by the government, and employees are controlled by the companies," Chung said.
"It is not a problem strictly for students. It affects all the Korean people," she said.
"It is easier to get involved if you are student and don't have a family to think about."
But Yong-Cha Jenerette, Lawrence resident who grew up in Pusan, South Korea, said all South Koreans should join the demonstrations.
Jenerette said she was concerned about the safety of her mother and brothers, who live in Pusan.
"It talked to my mother two weeks ago, and she told me that she was afraid to walk out of the door," Jenerette said. "It looks like a constant demonstration was going on."
The latest wave of demonstrations broke out three weeks ago to protest the selection of Roh as Chun's presidential nominee.
Chun seized power in 1980, one year after the assassination of President Park Chung Hee.
Cameron Hurst, director of the Center for East Asian Studies and professor of history, said, "There has not been an equivalent amount of political and economic development. The economical development has been enormous since the mid-1970s, but the political situation has remained static."
2
Wednesday, July 1. 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
Around the World
German World War II bomb found in London; Citizens take shelter
LONDON (AP) — Police emptied the streets, evacuated apartments and closed pubs. More than 500 people took shelter in community halls where soup kitchens and beds were set up hurriedly. Ambulances and fire engines stood by.
London held its breath for more than 30 hours until late yesterday afternoon while army experts defused a World War II bomb dropped by the German Laufwaffen near Tower Bridge that was buried 21 feet deep near the banks of the River Thames.
But this was 1987, not 1940-41 when the German war machine rained hundreds of thousands of bombs on London to soften the British capital for an invasion that never happened.
This bomb was found while a construction crew was working on a site where abandoned Victorian warehouses were being converted into apartments in southeast London's Docklands area.
Construction foreman Michael Killeen said he thought his workers had hit a cast iron pipe at about noon Monday while using a pile driver on the site.
"We picked it up and then let it drop. It was only then we realized it looked like a bomb and called the police," he said. "Thank goodness I didn't break it or we would all have been goners."
have been cut off.
It was actually a 2,200-pound device, one of the largest the Germans dropped over Britain during the Blitz which killed more than 15,000 Londoners and damaged or destroyed 3.5 million houses.
nolesons. Londoners had nicknamed this particular type of bomb "buffern" because its round shape with a wide band around the middle reminded them of Air Marshal Hermann Goering, the head of the German Air Force.
Soviets pass laws for economic reforms
MOSCOW (AP) — The Supreme Soviet passed laws yesterday designed to reform the economy and to lay the legal groundwork for Mikhail S. Gorbachev's liberalization plans.
The Supreme Soviet is the nation's nominal parliament, and its passage of the laws was a formality.
With a unanimous show of hands, the 1,300 deputies of the Supreme Soviet passed three laws that the Communist Party Central Committee endorsed at its semi-annual meeting last week.
One measure is the keystone of an economic reform plan to reshape industry by giving more power and responsibility to local managers and restricting the role of bureaucrats based in Moscow.
Factories and other enterprises
will be expected to make a profit. They also will be allowed to set some prices and fix production plans on the basis of guidelines issued in Moscow.
All the legislation is linked to campaigns for increased labor efficiency and discipline, official accountability, and wider citizen participation in decisions, begun by Gorbachev after he became Communist Party chief in March 1985.
The other laws adopted on the final day of the Supreme Soviet's two-day summer session implement clauses of the 1977-Soviet constitution that provide for national discussion of important government decisions and court redress for abuse of power by officials.
Around the Nation
Conservative favored for Supreme Court
WASHINGTON (AP) — Top administration aides discussed about a dozen possible Supreme Court nominees with Republican Senate leaders yesterday, but gave no indication who President Reagan would choose to succeed retired Justice Lewis F. Powell.
Attorney General Edwin Meese III and Howard Baker, White House chief of staff, met with Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan. and Strom Thurmond of South Carolina, ranking Republican on the Judiciary Committee.
Thurmond said after the meeting that 10 to 12 names were on the White House list of finalists.
The four men then met with Majority Leader Robert Byrd, D.W.Va., and Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr., D-Del, chairman of the Judiciary Committee.
A Senate Republican source, speaking only on condition he not be identified, said the list included Judge Robert Bork of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia. A staunch conservative and advocate of judicial restraint, Bork is considered the favorite for the nomination.
Bork is best known nationally as the solicitor general who fired Watergate Special Prosecutor Archibald Cox in 1973 on the orders of President Richard Nixon.
Meese said it was likely that Reagan would make his choice by the end of next week, possibly sooner.
Bakkers looking at sites for new ministry
GATLINBURG, Tenn. (AP) — Jim and Tammy Bakker said yesterday that they were looking at three locations for a new ministry while their lawyer battles for the PTL and its lucrative theme park, Heritage USA.
Potential sites include a locations in California, Florida, and Gatlinburg, where Bakker said the couple would make their permanent home.
Bakker deflected questions about his struggle with the Rev. Jerry Failwell for control of PTL and questions about the 1980 sexual encounter that eventually cost him the television ministry.
Bakker, dressed in white pants and a blue T-shirt, spoke yesterday while signing a 20-foot replica of the U.S. Constitution with his wife, Tammy, wearing a red jump suit.
"In order to take PTL from Jim and Tammy, you've got to make Jim and Tammy look as bad as possible. And the people who have taken it are working day and night to destroy us," Bakker said during a news conference at the Gatlinburg Chamber of Commerce.
Nation and World S. Korean president might accept reforms
Mountain resort's celebration of the document's bicentennial, marked the Bakkers' first meeting with the media since they arrived here last week.
The signing, part of this Smoky
Meese broke ethics law; inquiry to continue
Meese is the subject of a criminal investigation by independent counsel James McKay, who will determine, among other things, whether any of Meese's $60,000 was invested in scandal-plagued Wedtech Corp.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Attorney General Edwin Melee violated federal law because he failed to get approval from the Office of Government Ethics when he invested $60,000 in a limited blind partnership, the director of the ethics office said yesterday.
The ethics law which Meese violated contains criminal penalties. Martin said, however, that he has not delved into the question of whether they would apply in Meese's case, because of the criminal investigation of the attorney general being conducted by McKay.
tin, director of the Office of Government Ethics, said in a letter to Congress.
The 1978 Ethics in Government Act "contains specific requirements for the creation of blind trusts, including necessity of approval by our office," which Meese did not obtain, David Mar-
Martin made the statements in a letter to Rep. Gerry Sikorski, D-Minn., chairman of the House Civil Service subcommittee on human resources, which oversees federal ethics requirements. Sikorski announced that he will hold congressional hearings on the Meese issue.
Direct presidential election soon may be permitted
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — President Chun Doo Dwan was expected to announce today that his government will put into effect the democratic reforms he rejected before nationwide protests began June 10.
The former army general was to address the nation on television. Officials said he would agree to a direct election to choose his successor, in place of the present electoral college system, and other reforms the opposition demands.
the opposition, Security forces were ordered off maximum alert yesterday for the first time since protests aimed at ousting Chun's authoritarian government began three weeks ago.
Riot police withdrew or took up posts in back streets. Newspaper and television reports showed smiling
Chun met yesterday with Roh Tae Woo, head of the governing Democratic Justice Party, who startled the nation on Monday by demanding that Chun accept the reforms and end the unrest.
officers packing up gear or relaxing in the sup.
Officials said Chun met with his Cabinet and his advisers later yesterday and ordered them to start work on implementing key reforms which included releasing political detainees, restoring freedom of the press and granting autonomy to local governments.
Roh, also a former general, helped Boring Chun to power after President Park Chung Hee was assassinated in 1979, and was Chun's personal choice to succeed him as president next
February. The day the protests began, June 10, was the day a party convention endorsed Roh's candidacy.
In his statement Monday, Roh threatened to quit both the party leadership and presidential candidacy if Chun did not accept the reforms. Whether he consulted Chun in advance was not certain, but there were indications he did not.
Roh said he would meet with Kim Young Sam, leader of the main political opposition, to begin talks on constitutional reform.
proceed smoothly," Roh told reporters.
Opposition leaders have said Chun should have a largely ceremonial role until his seven-year term expires in February.
The party chairman, who has tried to present himself as a moderate, said after the 70-minute meeting yesterday at the Blue House presidential mansion that Chun "accepted in principle" all the reforms.
"Since basic agreement has been reached on the form of government structure, talks on other matters will
Discontent that led to nationwide protest began in April, when Chun declared that all discussion of constitutional change would be postponed until after the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, and that his successor would be chosen by the electoral college, which favors the government.
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Kansan Summer Weekly/Wednesdav. July 1, 1987
3
Local Briefs
Friday classes canceled for July 4 holiday
The University of Kansas has canceled classes for Friday, July 3. in observation of the July Fourth holiday, all office offices also will be closed Friday.
The Watson and engineering libraries will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday, closed Saturday and open from noon to 5 p.m. Sunday. The Spencer Art Library and the music library will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday and closed Saturday and Sunday. The science library will be open Friday, Saturday and Sunday. The math library will be closed all three days.
Free children's show to emphasize safety
A free show on safety for children, sponsored by area emergency departments, will be held at 10:30 a.m. and 1 p.m., Thursday, at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St.
Each of the four departments — ambulance, police, fire and emergency preparedness — will handle a particular area of safety.
"We're not going to lecture the kids but give them a balance of information and entertainment," you may say, one of the event's organizers.
Mayo, a paramedic with the Douglas County Ambulance Service, will play the guitar and sing songs about safety. Other skills will include McGruff, the crime dog, and a remote control robot. The grand finale will be a joint simulation by all four emergency departments in which a trapped child is rescued from a burning house.
Correction
For more information about the safety show, call Liberty Hall at 749-1912.
Campus and Area
Due to an editor's error, a story in the June 24 Kansan incorrectly reported the times of public sky-observation sessions sponsored by the Astronomy Associates of Lawrence. The July 3 and July 10 observation sessions at Broken Arrow Park, 31st and Louisiana streets, will begin at dusk and end about 11 p.m.
Clarification
A story in the June 24 Kansas reported that the Lawrence City Commission voted June 23 to approve an ordinance establishing a Business Improvement District in downtown Lawrence.
The story failed to specify that the June 23 vote was on the first reading of the ordinance. The ordinance must be approved a second time and published in an official newspaper before it becomes a law. The second reading will be July 7.
New associate dean
Rv MARK IOST
Special to the Kansan
The new associate dean of pharmacy at the University of Kansas will bring a variety of experiences from both the academic and professional worlds to his position.
Matchett has taught at KU since earning his doctorate in pharmacology here in 1976.
Jeremy Matchett, 53, associate professor of pharmacy practice, will become the associate dean of pharmacy July 18.
"He is not an unknown quantity," said Howard Mossberg, dean of pharmacy. "He knows the school as well as the faculty, very faculty committee in the school."
Matchett, who is also director of pharmacy continuing education, worked 14 years in the private sector. He was, at various times, chief pharmacist at the Topeka State Hospital, staff pharmacist at Stormont-Vail Regional Medical Center in Topeka, and owner of The Prescription Center, a pharmacy prescription shop in Topeka. He was also chief of pharmacy services at the U.S. Army Hospital in Fort Meade, Md.
M. A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z.
"The advising process is complicated," Matchett said. "I want to improve its efficiency."
Matchetch, who will continue to teach several classes, said he took the position because he wanted to be involved in decision-making about the school's direction and administration.
Darcy Chang/KANSAN
Jeremy Matchett, associate professor of pharmacy practice, will become the new associate dean of pharmacy July 18.
The associate dean is primarily responsible for dealing with student admissions, graduations and all the problems that occur between, Mossberg said. The associate dean also serves on two faculty committees, schedules classes and counsels students.
"He's a very approachable person," said Ruth Carter, Chanute senior and president of the Academy of Students of Pharmacy. Carter has worked with Matchett on several fund-raising efforts.
"Dr. MATCHet is a very understanding person, a very caring person. I think he'll function well in that role." Carter said.
University shows approval for Regents policy on AIDS
By STORMY WYLIE
Policy says institutions 'have obligation to help educate'
Staff writer
The Kansas Board of Regents recent policy regarding AIDS is being accepted with approval by KU administrators and campus groups.
The Regents policy, which was adopted June 26, says its institutions "have an obligation to help educate their students, faculty and staff" about acquired immune deficiency syndrome.
Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare and former adviser to the Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas, said yesterday that the Regents policy was rational and humane.
"I can't imagine a more humane policy to have," he said. "The issue now is whether student health services are prepared to provide the biological care necessary for someone who has been diagnosed with AIDS."
Dr. Kermit Krantz, chairman of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Kansas Medical Center, said the Regents policy was already being carried out at the Med Center
"We will educate anyone on the various aspects of AIDS," he said. "This is part of our obligation. We
don't turn out doctors ignorant of syphilis or gonorrhea, either."
"We thought a statement on AIDS
appropriate at this time," he
8454
The Regents adopted the AIDS policy at the recommendation of the Governor's Task Force on AIDS to help raise the public's awareness of the disease, said Stanley Koplik, executive director for the Regents.
Norman Jeter, a Regents member from Hays, said, "This statement was just something the Regents wanted to do to remind the campuses of their obligation on the part of the school. We have an obligation to help people understand the nature of this problem and how to prevent it."
The Regents institutions are Emporia State University, Fort Hays State University, Pittsburg State University, Kansas State University, University of Kentucky, University of Kansas and the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina.
Each of the seven Regents institutions will develop its own policy on educating people about AIDS and assuring confidential and non-discriminatory treatment of persons diagnosed with AIDS, Koplik said.
KU will create its own AIDS task
force before the fall semester to define what kinds of educational programs would work best for students and employees, said David Amber, vice chancellor for student affairs.
The task force will include members from the faculty, students and health services staff, he said.
The University does not have a set
policy regarding student health care,
directors of student health services.
Strobl said, however, that two nurses and a nurse health educator were available to speak to student groups about AIDS. The health services office also has available various informational pamphlets and videotapes about AIDS.
Two of those videotapes were made by Dr. Richard Keeling, chairman of the American College Health Services Task Force on AIDS. Keeling was at KU last spring to speak at a three-day workshop that examined possible policies and procedures on how to deal with AIDS. Ambler said.
Keeling will return to KU this fall to give a free lecture about AIDS. The Academy of Students of Pharmacy, a KU pharmacy students' organization, is sponsoring the lecture, which will be at 7 p.m. Nov. 18.
Magician escapes bonds and boredom of 9 to 5 job
By KATHLEEN FADDIS
Special to the Kansan
Mario Manzini found his calling at an early age.
When he was five, he entertained his friends by slipping out of hand-cuffs and ropes. His idol was the writer Harry Houdini and escape artist Harry Houdini.
"Since I was a kid, I knew what I wanted to do, and I'm doing it," he said last week.
Thursday, he slipped out of thumb cuffs, leg and neck shackles and eight pairs of handcuffs while underwater at the Elks Club swimming pool. 3706 W 2rd St. It took him only a minute to get inside his magic and escape stunts Monday night at Hoch Auditorium in a show sponsored by the local Elks club.
It was the latest stop of a career
that came before he graduated from
high school.
"I felt something when I went in there," Manzini said. He talked to the circus manager that day and walked out with a job as an escape artist.
One day he and his friends were walking home in New York City when they passed Hubert's Museum and Circus. They went in to see the show.
At the age of 16, he ran away from home and found a traveling job with the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus. He stayed with the circus six years.
Joseph Bonomolo of Long Island,
N. Y., grew up with Manzini. As a child, he said, Manzini once spent a week in a movie house watching "The Great Houdin".
"He is the most motivated and driven person I've ever known," Bonomolo said. With his intense concentration, Manzini "seemed to will himself to escape."
Manzini grew up in the Bronx, the only child of parents who wanted him to be an electrician. Even though his father had once been a racecar driver, Manzini's parents disapproved of their son's dangerous ambitions.
Manzini travels the world performing with Dina, his wife of 13 years, and two Siberian half-breed wolves.
"I used to think he was crazy.
Manzana. On them.
She looked like a teenager."
His wife has participated in the shows since magic was added to the act a few years ago
"I wouldn't care to do the tricks — that's for him," she said. She rarely worries about whether her husband will get hurt.
But he has been hurt, and he is aware of the danger. Manzini said the scariest thing that has happened to him was in 1972, when he was hanging over a lover of love, who had sharked as he swam for his life. He was not injured.
In 1978, he was performing at the Circus World Championship in London. He hung by his feet upside down
on a burning rope, shackled with handcuffs and wearing a straitjacket. The rope broke faster than he expected. He fell 25 feet and broke his leg in three places. He spent more than a year recuperating physically and mentally before he could perform again.
Manzini said three other escape artists had been killed trying that stunt.
Despite the risks, the Manziniis said they would never be happy with a nine-to-five job. They enjoy the freedom of the road too much.
"If I stay home for three weeks, I go nuts," Manzini's wife said.
The Manzinis have no children. "I can't see myself with kids anymore," she said. "I'm happy the way we are."
In 25 years of performing, Manzini said he had been arrested for a stunt only once, when he jumped off the Brooklyn Bridge. The police thought he was attempting suicide. Later the same evening, he went out for a beer with the officer who arrested him, he said.
For his next stunt, he is planning to be cuffed and chained inside a barrel and dropped into the Niagara River. He hopes to free himself from his bonds and escape by grabbing a rope from a waiting helicopter before the barrel plunges over the Niagara Falls. If he pulls it off, he probably will be arrested again, he said.
POLICE
Dale Fulkerson/KANSAN
Escape artist Mario Manzini prepares to jump into the Elks Club pool, 3705 W. 23rd St. Off-duty Lawrence police officers made sure the cuffs and shackles were put on properly. Manzini completed the escape in 18 seconds Thursday.
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Wednesday, July 1, 1987
Kansan Summer Weekly
Opinions and Editorials
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
KANSAN
Regents adopt AIDS policy
The Kansas Board of Regents last week adopted an AIDS policy aimed at curbing the spread of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome. The policy will attempt to increase public awareness and perhaps will prevent the spread of AIDS.
In the new policy, the Regents said they "have an obligation to help educate their students, faculty and staff" about the disease.
But to what extent should the University of Kansas extend itself? Should it require freshmen to take a class? Should the information be taught in Biology 104 classes, or classes that teach human sexuality? The recent budget cuts will make programs such as these difficult to enact. Is it reasonable to believe that another class could be added to the curriculum when classes are being cut?
The Board of Regents governs the six state universities and Kansas Technical Institute.
The Regents policy also called for the universities and the institute to "assure prompt, confidential and nondiscriminatory treatment" of anyone diagnosed with the disease or AIDS-related conditions. This will ensure that patients will get the necessary treatment without fear of public outcry from those who have been overcome by mass hysteria and those who have not been supportive to AIDS patients.
There are 79 reported cases of AIDS in Kansas, and 32,000 cases reported in the United States. It is estimated that by 1991, about 100,000 people in the United States will have the disease. The nation's medical workers must unite and work on a cure to treat the dying and stop the disease from spreading to the healthy. State school districts have taken a responsible step in the right direction to educate younger students.
The state Board of Education last month approved a policy that requires all public school districts and accredited private schools to begin a human sexuality program by fall 1988. The Regents are following in the board's footsteps.
The Regents have begun to implement this program. The Regents have committed themselves to a program that must work. Budget restraints aside, this program must begin soon.
Fireworks, pets don't mix
The Fourth of July weekend is approaching, and that signals family outings celebrating the day complete with fireworks. While the celebration is fun for people, these fireworks are hazardous to animals.
Fireworks often are associated with the festivities, but animals really don't like all the noise and hoopla that the day generates. The noise can cause severe distress to the animals.
fences hoping to escape the noise.
Dogs and cats do not like firecrackers because of the loud noise that sounds like gunshots. The noise will hurt sensitive ears. If the firecrackers continue to explode, animals may become agitated to the point of running away.
It is a good idea to keep the animals inside where the noise is not as loud.
Although many animal owners have fences for their animals, a fence will not hold back a hysterical dog that is trying to escape the frightening noise. And cats are jumpers; they will climb over
The basement is an ideal location for the animals because it is cool and the animal cannot escape. And if the animal is inside, the owner will not have to worry that the confused pet might bite a visitor. Animals can be very loving, but if provoked, their moods can change.
If the animal should escape from the yard or basement, it should be wearing a collar with identification tags. If can be returned to its owner.
The Fourth of July is a family weekend, and the family must remember that there is one member which does not enjoy all the noise from the firecrackers or rockets. The family can have more fun if the pet stays safely inside at home.
U.S. stays married
It's nice to hear that things apparently aren't as bad as we thought.
A Harris Survey released Sunday exploded the myth that 50 percent of marriages will end in divorce. The survey showed that only about one in eight marriages will suffer that fate.
In fact, the Harris poll showed that in any given year only about 2 percent of married couples call it quits. Additionally, the divorce rate peaked in 1981, while the number of marriages has increased every year. One can only hope that the fact that more couples each year are willing to tie the knot despite this strain is a testimony to the power of love and is not merely an economic necessity.
The source of the original rumor was a 1981 report from the U.S. National Center for Health Statistics which showed that 2.5 million couples got married that year, and 1.2 million got divorced.
Hang in there, Married America. Remember that the 50th anniversary is gold.
News staff
John Benner . . . . .
Business staff
Lisa Weems...Business manager
Lisa Osment...Retail sales manager
Sally Depew...Campus sales manager
Dan Pennington...Classified manager
Serg King...Production manager
Chuck Rotbut...National sales manager
Jeanne Hines...Sales and marketing adviser
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Veteran soldier remembers Korea
Past and present united toward achieving democracy
Van Jenerette
Guest Columnist
I remember being a 19-year-old AmericanGI listening to the Rolling Stones and The Doors as I sat freezing in a foxhole along the Korean demilitarized zone. No different from the average soldier of the late 60s, I wondered why the United States had to send us 5,000 miles from home to protect freedom. Unknown to most Americans, while the war in Vietnam was raging, young U.S. soldiers were engaged in combat along the Korean DMZ, and scores became casualties. Quietly, bodies were shipped home and buried — no monuments, no movies, no memorial for them.
Naturally, the recent news from Korea and the television footage of demonstrations brought back a flood of memories. Along with the names and faces I had forgotten for so long came the same old questions asking why were we there.
something other than the official party line
Korea could have become another Vietnam if the communist North had had its way. Not that it didn't try. While Woodstock was going on in the United States, and public attention was focused on Vietnam, communist infiltrators were hell-bent on taking over South Korea. Not only did they kill U.S. and South Korean soldiers defending along the DMZ, but they killed many civilians who disagreed with them or got in their way. I wonder how many demonstrations would be happening in Korea today if the United States had pulled out back then? Communist countries tend to have a sense-of-humor failure when their people try to express
Not long ago, I talked to an ex-GI now living in Virginia. David was the only survivor of a U.S. patrol that got wiped out by North Koreans in the 60s. He carries 48 scars from grenades that blew him off a hilltop when he was just 17 years old. We talked about the DMZ and both wondered if the sacrifice was all worth it. Most of the Koreans demonstrating in the streets now were just children back then, and they probably don't even realize the part he played in their lives. Perhaps I'm looking too deeply into things, but I honestly think that David and other U.S. citizens like him played a key role in setting the stage for the Koreans' present move toward democracy.
people's rights of self-determination. If you were to ask me, I would say that for the people of South Korea, their Olympics are happening now. Not in the new stadiums or track fields but in the universities and the churches and the streets throughout the country. The South Korean People's Olympics has started now, and the main event is freedom.
However, it seems that most of the world is more worried about the 1988 Olympics than the Korean
I must admit feeling a sense of comradeship when I see the protesters in Korea standing up against the odds and demanding a government that represents the will of all the people. However, the weapons used to secure democracy include more than the guns that we carried. Weapons of justice, fairness, equality and human rights have to be brought to bear when the smoke finally clears.
Regardless of what happens to the 1988 Olympics, the Koreans have their Olympics now. A people's Olympics perhaps, but when you think about it, that's the most valuable kind.
I think I now have the answer for the hundreds of U.S. soldiers who went out on patrols, and sat up on lonely ambushes to keep the communists out of South Korea. If I could yell back across almost twenty years, I would tell them, "We were over there then . . . for today." If the South Koreans get their democracy, then it was worth it, and we were there for a reason. We were there for the people.
Good luck to the people of South Korea. . . "GO FOR THE GOLD!"
Is responsibility suddenly gained at 21?
I guess I'm jealous
Tonight, some of my friends are making plans to go out, visit a few bars and have a few drinks. Sometimes, they go to Westport in Kansas City, Mo., because in Missouri they don't need club cards. But tonight, they are going to stay in Atlanta for a couple of days and be on a bar on a Wednesday night, (heaven's) one could miss an episode of Night Court), but tonight will be somewhat special
PATRICIA CAMERON
Jane Zachman
Jane
Zachman
Today, as if no one has heard, the state drinking age rose to 21, and club cards are no longer necessary in all drinking establishments.
Jane Zachman
Jane Zachman
News Editor
--weren't out driving around town with a case of beer in the back seat.
Big deal. right?
I can vote and, if I were a male, I could be drafted and sent to fight in a war. I can also be prosecuted in court as a legal adult. I know it's been said before, but in almost all instances, I am considered a responsible legal adult. So, (yes, this is the big question I've been leading up to), why can my friends go out this evening and have a drink when I cannot?
I'm 29 years old. It's not a bad age, and my 21st birthday is on July 30. But, legally, I am faced with a few restrictions for the next 29 days that my friends are not.
I remember in 1984 on my 10th birthday, I sat in a tavern in my hometown and thought it was really neat that it was finally legal for me to be there. I had been frequenting the bar since I had been a freshman in high school; there was little else to do in a town of 7,000 residents. And at least our parents always knew where we were and that we
Maybe I have this attitude because when I was a teenager, the bar scene was never played up. We didn't start the evening by saying to each other, "Hey," and "Let's go to the Lanten and see who there's." "Let's go to the Lanten and see who there's."
The legal drinking age for 3.2 beer was raised to 19 on July 1, 1985, and to 20 one year later. No grandfather clause, which would have allowed those who were 18 years old at the time to maintain legal drinking privileges, was added to the law.
It still bothers me that for 11 months, from July
30, 1984 to July 1, 1985, I was considered responsible
eagerly for my actions.
I have lived away from my family's home for more than three years. I pay my own bills, I feed my dog everyday and I consider myself a fairly responsible person.
Some 21-year-olds I know still live at home with
their parents. A couple of my friends turned 21 recently and have done little else but work a few hours during the day to get by and then go out all night they manage to make it home and fall into bed.
I guess its one of those cases where many people my age must pay for the mistakes of a few who abuse their drinking privileges.
I am not saying that the laws of our state are unreasonable. If I were making the decision whether the state should raise the drinking age or lose 5 percent of its highway funds, I would have to think about it a long time. Would I take away a privilege that comes with responsibility and age, or fix the cracks on K-10?
Sometimes, I think it doesn't matter anyway. I can't say that since I have been legally restricted from drinking, I have drank any less. Alcohol is easily accessible to me.
So tonight when my friends go out, I guess I won't be too upset. I'm sure one of my 21-year-old friends won't mind running to the liquor store for me.
And I will wait the 29 days until my birthday. I guess sometime during those 29 days I will be instilled with the responsibility that makes it appropriate for me to legally walk into a bar and order a drink.
U.S. must take care not to fall into the Gulf
There is that moment before a terrible accident that one might give anything to return to. It is a moment that never can be brought back.
There are such moments in history, too, and this might be one of them. Call it the moment before the United States is sucked into a long, drawn-out war over shipping rights in the Persian Gulf. One can see that murky conflict shaping up now, with no clear goal or policy or explanation.
But this moment is still intact. Yes, there are tremors and premonitions, and first blood already has been spilled in the attack on the USS Stark. But the United States is only on the edge of the abyss; American policy has not yet made the plunge. Perhaps it won't if some questions are not only asked but answered:
Paul Greenberg
I
- Why is the United States moving toward war with Iran over an attack on an American warship by Iraq?
Syndicated Columnist
● Why is the United States now siding with Iraq in order to assure safe navigation in the Gulf when it has been threatened by terrorists?
--we don't?
- Why should the United States lend its flag and protection to Kuwait when that sheikhdw will not let U.S. aircrafts use its airfields?
- Why should the United States be protecting the interest of oldums that not long ago boycotted this country preparatory to raising the price of petroleum to extortionate levels? The oil out of Kuwait isn't of great importance to the American market. It matters to Western Europe, but European allies are not dispatching their fleets and flags to the Persian Gulf. Do they know something
If Iran should attack these Kuwaiti tankers flying the U.S. flag, just what would be the response? Does anyone think a single act of retaliation would discourage Iran's fanatic regime? Might it not welcome war with the Great Satan? Or does Washington still believe in the tooth fairy and Iranian moderates?
In short: What in the sweet name of reason are we about to do?
The president says that this kind of open-ended intervention is necessary to prevent the Soviets from moving into the Persian Gulf. But Moscow is learning the folly of heedless intervention in Afghanistan. There is little evidence that it is prepared to commit itself in the endless war between Iran and Iraq, too. Why should Washington?
Henry Kissinger may not be anyone to consult on the morality of foreign affairs, but it would be a
foolish president who failed to ask for his counsel on matters of Realpolitik. Last week, Kissinger clearly spelled out the unclear nature of the Administration's latest policy in the Gulf. "If an American ship is attacked," he said, "we will have to retaliate, and we will have to retaliate massively."
But there is no guarantee that even a massive attack would end the danger to shipping in the Gulf; it might only increase it, given the nature of the regime in Teheran. Then the war would be on without a clear reason or a clear end in sight. It is always best not to begin a conflict unless one has some idea of how to end it. Let us learn from Iraq, which chose to begin this war without some assurance of being able to end it. Let's avoid an indefinite war for indefinite reasons.
Instead, the U.S. public is getting only the vulgant explanations. That is no basis for war or for public support of a war. A contest that divides the U.S. public opinion might weaken this country in the Persian Gulf far more than a studied neutrality two regimes that both have a terrorist bent.
Kissinger put it this way: "Now if the American national interest is involved, of course we should be prepared to fight Iran. But it isn't something that one likes to slide into one tanker at a time when one cannot define what the war aim is and what the terms are on which to settle."
Now is the time to *think* about what looms ahead. Now is the moment before the accident, when it still happens.
MR. BADGER by AD long
FREEDOM OF NAVIGATION
Port of Hoculus 20km
Cap'n! I see 4 Iraqi F-15
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Quick! Run up the
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AMDOKA KAWANI
NOW SHOKING
232382
But Caph. All we've got are Liberian flags. Not enough stars! Grab a white bed sheet! What for?
AMOCO
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BAYTEDPELL WEST
Letters
Monkey's meditation
Assuming evolution has not resulted in a narrow mind for those holding to that theory, and assuming that they are not too heady from the recent misguided court decisions in the case of greeting, even humorous, to hear what one of their own has to say about the subject.
A Monkey's Meditation
A monkey musing in his cage
"This evolution is a lie."
Surprised to hear him speak so plain, I paused, profounder truth to gain. Unconscious I was there to heed, not to misunderstand. "For mortal (hu) man to try to trace Decent from our illustrious race
Upon the progress of the age, half-whispered as I happened by.
Is rank injustice to our clan,
the monkey much surpassed (bu)man.
"In blood wars, men butcher men; They slander, both with tongue and pen.
"They trahphe justice in the must; they toll in luxury and lust. Their men, their women, young and old. They sell their very selves for goods; they laugh under their eyes to trust. They详尽 the dreams of youth. Their hearts are hard as solid stone; They worship God with legs alone. "No self-respecting monkey can Admit himself akin to (hu)man. According to the Word from on High
'They trample justice in the dust;
They cheat, they lie, they wear, they steal,
they wine, with wine, they rock and reel
and reel
This evolution is a lie
Taken from D E. Gayton
This evolution is a lie."
It is unlikely that those in their various camps, e.g., creationist scientists, theistic evolutionist scientists, and the several types of evolutionist scientists will be much moved from their respective positions of faith regarding the origins of life.
B. Crawlev
Kansan Summer Weekly/Wednesday, July 1, 1987
5
Phobia
Continued from p.1
he said. They want things to be neat, orderly and predictable.
Those with control problems usually fit into two categories. One consists of timid or shy people who are afraid of embarrassing themselves in public by losing their self-control. The other category includes aggressive and demanding people who can't handle not being in control.
Claustrophobics are uneasy in the confined space of the airplane.
Those persons with separation anxiety, or homesickness, get ominous
feelings when separated from familiar surroundings, Gunn said.
"The distorted macho male image often keeps them from seeking help,"
"and they don't know where to go."
Although 80 percent of his clients are women, Gunn said, many men also have a fear of flying.
Many people will never be cured of
Gunn said, but he
Gan Pinh Tiem Pham,
pham.
"They have to confront their fear. There is no other way," he said. "They get themselves in a bind with their thoughts, and they can get themselves out with their thoughts."
He tells his clients to distract
themselves when they fly. He suggests taking along their income tax forms, listening to music or looking at pornographic magazines. He also suggests that they meet the plane's crew before the flight and ask for seats where they feel most comfortable.
Liquor
He said he also approved of the use of tranquilizers as a relaxant before flying.
For those who can't take the clinic or who need a refresher, Gunn has written a book on aerobia called "The Joy of Flying: Overcoming the Fear." The book should be available in booksstore sometime this month.
Continued from p.1
"The caterer can have a cash bar there if they serve 30 percent food," Gillem said.
"I just don't feel it's in the best interests of the state. There are too many possibilities. There could be open saloons on wheels."
Shelley Patterson, owner of Patterson Liquor, 484 Illinois St., said the new legislation would have its advantages and disadvantages.
"I don't know how they will affect us yet," she said. "They haven't really issued written laws to us to
give us the specifics. In some ways they will be beneficial, like being able to deliver liquor to clubs."
Judy Billings, director of the Lawrence Convention and Visitor's Bureau, said she was in favor of the new laws.
"I don't think it will have an impact immediately, but in the long run, it'll be great. It will help out new restaurants, clubs and entertainment places, which will surely help attract conventions."
Some people aren't as pleased with the changes.
more alcoholism.
"Alcohol is our number one drug problem," he said. "The more people drinking more liquor in more places on more occasions and driving away from those places gives you more drunk drivers and more alcoholics."
The Rev. Richard Taylor, chairman of Kansans for Life at its best! said the new laws would only lead to
Taylor and his organization lobbied heavily against the passage of the new liquor laws.
Wallace said Taylor and his organization had more success with their lobbying efforts than they thought.
"Taylor got the two o'clock closing. He also got the 30 percent food provision, and two-thirds of Kansas counties are still dry."
Transcend Space and Time.
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House OKs $9.4 billion measure
WASHINGTON (AP) — The House rejected yesterday a Senate call to tear down the U.S. embassy in Moscow, instead freezing the project until November while an alternative plan is developed for the electronically bulged diplomatic post.
$144 billion limit promised by the Gramm-Rudman budget-balancing law.
The action was taken as the lawmakers approved and sent back to the Senate a compromise $9.4 billion spending bill, including $5.6 billion in long-delayed payments to farmers.
The basic package, a compromise with the Senate, was ratified 309-114. The House then finished some of the bill's details which a House-Senate conference committee was unable to settle, after which the bill was returned to the Senate for final congressional action.
Spending additions for the Pentagon, foreign aid, the space program and the homeless were also part of the package to expand spending on the debt. The bill adds on to a fiscal 1987 deficit running $30 billion in excess of the
Farm-state lawmakers, eager for the crop payments which have been halted by the Commodity Credit Corporation since since May 1, were pressing for final House and Senate passage before the July 4th recess later in the week.
on the embassy, which also restated a long-standing agreement with the Soviets that they won't occupy their new chancery building in Washington until the United States can move into its structure in Moscow.
Rep. Neal Smith, D-Iowa, sponsored the amendment freezing work
The action came by voice vote a day after former Defense Secretary James R. Schesinger reported to Congress that the structure was so surveillance devices that its top three floors will have to be dismantled.
Schlesinger, whom President Reagan appointed five months ago to study the embassy's security problems, told Congress on Monday that remedying the bugging will add at least three years to an already delayed project and cost $70 million.
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6
Wednesday, July 1, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
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Kansan Summer Weekly/Wednesday, July 1, 1987
7
Linder Continued from p. 1
destertions in their own troops.
They focused on what they called "soft targets," unarmed civilians and peasant settlements.
Before the speech, Leonard Magruder, founder and co-director of Vietnam Veterans for Academic Reform, distributed literature that presented an opposing view to Linder's.
Magruder said he was concerned that Linder's tour would generate sympathy for the Sandinistas, whose government the contras seek to overthrow.
"This is a Marxist-Leninist propaganda campaign, and if Benjamin Linder is made out to be a martyr, others with his beliefs will go down there (to Nicaragua) to support a repressive, genocidal, totalitarian regime.
"I support the contrasts. They're the freedom fighters, and they minimize the amount of Americans in Nicaragua."
But Linder said, "On April 28, Ben was killed while working on the second plant, along with six Nicaraguan workers. They were ambushed with grenades, rifle fire and shrapnel. Ben was shot in the
"This was done by what Reagan calls a moral equivalent of our founding fathers."
head at point-blank range.
Linder said that the contras first said his brother was killed accidentally in a battle between Nicaraguan troops and themselves. They later admitted that Linder was deliberately killed in an ambush.
"Besides, does nationality justify murder?"
"In any court of law, the contras would be judged guilty of murder solely on the basis of their own statements," Linder said. "Now they claim Ben was Cuban, which is absurd. He had worked in El Cua for three years and was known as a U.S. citizen."
"Ben was cautious. He didn't travel at night, and he thought about getting a horse to avoid land mines. The contrast claim he was a legitimate target because he was armed, but all eyewitnesses she wasn't carrying any weapons when he was killed.
"But who makes the people in Nicaragua carry guns?" If civilians arm themselves for protection, they're legitimate targets. If the contras would stop killing civilians, they wouldn't carry arms."
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8
Wednesday, July 1, 1987
Independence Days
Kansan Summer Weekly
R R
[Image of a woman in an elegant, satiny dress standing beside a piano.]
BANU BREWERS
NEW
ORLEANS
HQT
JAZZ
ORGANIZATION
4E 24E
Story by
Caroline Reddick
Arts editor
Banu Gibson and the New Orleans hot jazz Orchestra, above, will perform at Independence Days.
Tom Burkholder, Peabody graduate student, gets a trim from Mayor Mike Amyx for his role as Senator John James Ingalls. Burkholder will perform in a women's suffrage debate presented by KU faculty and students.
Pam Carvalho, a Baldwin resident, at right, cuts flowers that she will dry and put into arrangements. The flowers will be sold at the festival.
The cast of Herald of Freedom, above, rehearses a scene from the play that it will perform at Burcham Park Saturday and Sunday. The cast members are, from left, David Longhurst, Phillip Schroeder, Marcia Higginson, Hannes Zacharias, Beth Parelman, Jennifer Glenn and Ric Averill, background.
Wendi Smith, Lawrence resident,
wears a ball gown copied from styles
of the 1870s. She will be modeling
the gown at the turn-of-the-century
fashion show.
1930.
Celebrate an old-fashioned fourth of July
Part of Lawrence will be transformed into a turn-of-the-century setting by 6 p.m. Friday, the beginning of the fifth annual Independence Days celebration at Burcham Park.
Between 30,000 and 35,000 people are expected to attend the three-day festival, said Judy Wright, executive director of Independence Days.
Wright said that all aspects of the festival would be appropriate for the period of 1855 to 1915. Old-time music will accompany historical exhibits and activities, antique crafts and old-fashioned food.
"The whole purpose of Independence Days is to celebrate the history and heritage of America's war during the turn of the century."
"I think that it lends the festival a uniqueness," she said. "It's entertaining but also educational. It's more than just another carnival or fair. It's a celebration of another time."
"We want them to experience the 19th century," she said. "When they come in the park, it will be like they take a sten back in time.
Wright said ticket prices for the festival were $5 for adults, $3 for children from ages 5 to 12, and free for children under 5. One ticket admits a person for all three days.
The festival will begin on Friday, she said, with performances by New Grass Revival and Riders in the Sky.
Saturday's events start off at 7:15 a.m. with an eight kilometer race and a one mile Fun Run, both of which start and end at the Lawrence Holiday Inn Holidome, 200 McDonald Road. Late registration for both races is from 6:15 to 7 a.m. Saturday at the Holiday, Curt Hall, president of the Lawrence Track Club, urged latecomers to sign up.
The races are followed by a parade that begins at 9:30 a.m. at South Park. The parade features the Lawrence Gunfighters, antique cars and a best-dressed pet contest. The parade follows Massachusetts Street north to 7th Street where it turns east. It ends about 10 p.m. at 7th and continues through the town where chairman of the parade committee, said that anyone in turn-of-the-century costume could participate in the parade.
"It's a lot of fun," he said. "We usually have the fire department out with their hoses mid-course or so and they hose everybody down. It's not for competition but for fun. They can come out and enjoy the comaraderie with the other runners."
The festivities Saturday and Sunday at Burcham Park begin at 10 a.m. There will be performances by groups including the Lawrence Barn Dance Association, Lawrence Gunfighters Association, Seem-to-Be Players, River City Six, Scartaglen, Scrapwood Stringband & Cloggers, Full Circle, Last Kansas Exit, and Paul Gray and the Gaslight Gang.
New acts this year include a tightrope walker and Sideshow, a variety show featuring magicians, jugglers and vaudevillians.
Children can be entertained by pony rides, face painting, crafts, games and the Tom Sawyer Fence Painting Contest.
Other activities include canoe races, river rides, historic sidewalk tours and more than 50 craft booths. People who want to sit and listen for a while can attend a Women's Suffrage debate, watch an antique horse show or attend and even parade short plays based on Kansas history.
Sue Booth, chairman of the food committee, said some of the best entertainment was sampling food from the 30 booths. She said that all of the food available, with the exception of soft drinks, was food that could have been served in the 1800s.
"The traditional food of the 19th century is what we want," she said.
"And all of the vendors must be in historical costume and use utensils appropriate to the period."
Buffalo burgers, turkey drumsticks, funnel cakes, barbecued chicken, piggy pops and Greek are among the items offered for sale.
Booth said KS. Magazine rated the food at seven state festivals, including Independence Days, on a scale of one to ten.
"This festival rated 11½, which was the highest in the state," she said. "It shows what the vendors do. They really do go all out. They try to serve a good product and have fun doing it."
Wright said that attendance at the festival had grown from about 8,000 people the first year, 1983, to more than 27,000 last year. She added that last year's attendance was dampened by a rain Sunday which brought out only 3,500 people.
She attributed much of the festival's success to volunteer workers.
"Independence Days is a non-profit corporation with a board of directors and 16 standing committees," she said. "But what really keeps it going is the volunteers. We have over 500 volunteers, some of whom have worked on it since the first year."
THE BARBER'S CAFE
Darcy Chanc
Kansan Summer Weekly/Wednesday, July 1, 1987
9
Independence Days Festival tradition continues
Kansas City and Topeka organizers plan explosive Fourth
By DEBRA A. PETERSON Special to the Kansan
Independence Day extravaganzas in Topeka and Kansas City, Mo., might lure some people out of Lawrence this holiday weekend.
Organizers of the fourth annual Spirit Festival in Kansas City, Mo., said they are hoping to attract about 175,000 people with a focus on family fun this year. Topeka's Go 4th! festival organizers expect their fireworks display to attract nearly 100,000.
The Spirit Festival at Liberty Mall in Kansas City's Penn Valley Park will feature five theme areas. One of the themes is Familyville, which will offer hands-on art for children, strolling Disney characters and carnival rides. It will also feature Box City, which is an all-day activity where children will decorate small boxes to represent buildings in a miniature Kansas City.
"We're trying to bill it this year as a family flag-waving celebration," he said.
To maintain a family atmosphere, all coolers and parcels will be checked at the gate for alcohol, fireworks, cans and bottles.
O'Brien said that celebrities could bring their own food, but that 15 food vendors inside the park would sell a variety of items. On a-stick, food rides and novelties
must be paid for with 25-cent coupons available there or at United Super stores.
Entertainment on Friday will include political satire by local comedian David Naster at 7 p.m. and Motown music revise at 9:30 p.m.
On Saturday, the Metropolitan Children's Choir will perform at 7 p.m., followed by the U.S. Navy Band, which will play music from the last 40 years.
At 9:20 p.m., former democratic Sen. Thomas Eagleton will narrate Aaron Copeland's *A Lincoln Portrait*, accompanied by the Kansas City Civic Orchestra and Chorus. The fireworks display begins at 10 p.m.
Volunteer staff and two full-time planners have been preparing for the estimated 175,000 guests for months, O'Brien said. Volunteers run concessions, sell tickets and organize publicity.
“As soon as the furor died from last year's festival, they started on plans for this year,” O'Brien said. “To have it without the volunteers.”
She recommended that visitors park in the Hallmark Cards Inc. employee lot, downtown, or in the Plaza shopping center lot and take one of the 50 city buses marked Special or a trolley car to the park. Police recommend that people avoid
parking on Penn Valley Drive because tickets may be issued.
Admission is $2 for adults and free for children under 12 accompanied by a guardian.
All ages receive free admission to Topeka'sGo 4th! celebration on the Washburn University campus, said Bob Botsford of KSNT-TV, a co-sponsor of the event.
'As soon as the furor died down from last year's festival, they started on plans for this year. We wouldn't be able to have it without the volunteers.'
— Jan O'Brien volunteer
The two-day celebration again will feature fireworks choreographed to music by Austin Fireworks Inc., Wichita. The company was awarded one of six fireworks contracts for last year's Statue of Liberty celebration in New York City and also half of the World's Fair fireworks exhibit in Canada last year.
Botsford said that Austin Fireworks Inc. usually records one tape
of fireworks music and distributes it to several cities. But this year, Topeka wanted something different.
He said computerized machinery controlled the fireworks' display.
"At that point," Botsford said, "the whole sky will be full of stuff."
"We took the Washburn Concert
Orchestra and a medley of songs by
June Murphy, a local artist,
Austin mixed them," Botsford said.
The recorder America, God bless
the recorders. Murphy will sing for the finale.
But there's more to the Topea festival than fireworks. The festival also incorporates Concert in the Sky, a talent show in its 11th year. The four winners of the talent show will perform at 7 p.m. Saturday, before the fireworks display begins.
People who attend the festival are advised to arrive early, especially on Saturday evening, to avoid traffic around the campus, Botsford said.
“Parking is a problem only during the fireworks,” Botsford said. “Between 9 and 10 p.m. traffic is blocked for 12 blocks all around.”
The main idea of the two-day event, Botsford said, is to show off Shawnee County. The celebration is a community effort. Local non-profit organizations provide food and amusements.
Fireworks will light the Lawrence sky
By VAN IENERETTE
Special to the Kansan
At dusk on Saturday, two rockets will arch skyward from a north Lawrence riverbank and explode in a brilliant flash of color, signaling the start of the Independence Days fireworks display.
The traditional Fourth of July exhibition is being staged for the 32nd year by the Lawrence Jaycees. This is the second year that the event, once known to local residents as the Jaycees Fireworks Extravaganza, has been a joint effort of the Jaycees and Independence Daws organizers.
Doyl Merz, chairman of the Jaycees' fireworks committee, said that a team of workers would begin the show at 9:08 p.m.
"The grand finale will be great," said Merrz. "We are planning to have
115 bombs go off at once, and you have to see something like that to believe it!'
Merz said he and a crew of six would spend most of Saturday preparing about $5000 worth of fireworks for the evening's show, which should last nearly 45 minutes. He said they would set the fireworks off at the launch site, called the "pit" on the east eave of the Kansas River.
Everyone on the team has experience handling fireworks, and is certified by the Lawrence Fire Department for the event, Merz said.
Rich Barr, Lawrence fire marshal,
said, "Members of the pit crew were
required to pass an examination
written by the state before receiving
certification. Safety is a primary
concern for everyone involved, and
we are taking every precaution possible to prevent accidents."
The fireworks display was held at Memorial Stadium until 1985 but was moved to the current site on the second and Indiana Streets last year.
Barr, a ten-year veteran of the Lawrence Fire Department, said that he preferred having the fireworks at the river because it put distance between spectators and the pit.
"We will have a fire engine on location but we don't anticipate any problems," he said.
However, Barr said he was concerned about the use of fireworks by the public. He said that injuries and property damages could be avoided by following the manufacturer's instructions and by using common
sense.
"City ordinance specifies that the only three days during the year that an individual may be in possession of fireworks are the second, third and fourth," Barr said. "Also, fireworks can be discharged only within certain hours on those three days."
Fireworks can be set off in the city from 7 to 10 p.m. on July 2 and 3, and from 7 to 11 p.m. on July 4, he said. Cherry bombs, M80s and bottle rockets are illegal.
In the past, fires in Lawrence have been attributed to fireworks, including one which resulted in residential property damage of over $60,000. Most of the fires were a result of mishandling or unsafe practices by individuals, Barr said.
The calendar is for afternoon and evening events only. All shows will be held at Burcham Park, Second and Indiana streets.
Weekend Calendar
Friday
Riverfront Stage
7 p.m. — Riders in the Sky, country music
8:40 p.m. --- New Grass Revival, blue grass music.
Saturday
Riverfront Stage
12:10 p.m. — Paul Gray and the Gaslight Gang, traditional jazz.
1. 50 p.m. — Scrapwood, string band and cloggers.
1 p.m. — Sideshow, juggling and comedy.
2:40 p.m. — Scaraglen, Irish.
3:30 p.m. — Blue Grass Brigade,
blue grass music.
4:20 p.m. — Scrapwood, string hand and cloggers
5:10 p.m. — Full Circle, folk music
8:45 p.m. — Lawrence Symphony Orchestra.
7 p.m. — Banu Gibson and the New Orleans Hot Jazz Orchestra, New Orleans jazz
9 p.m. — Jaycees Fireworks Extravaganza.
9:45 p. m.- Lawrence Symphony Orchestra, Banque Gibson and New Orleans Hot Jazz Orchestra, and Philip van Lidh de Jeude.
Tent Stage
12:15 p.m. — Blue Grass Bri
blue grass music
1:50 p.m. — Rick Averill's Seem-to- Players.
2:20 p.m. — Full Circle, folk music
3:15 p.m. — Sideshow, juggling and comedy.
and comedy.
4:10 p.m. — Scartaglen, Irish.
5:10 p.m. — Sideshow, juggling and comedy
6 p.m. — Lawrence Barn Dance
music and String Band
6 p.m. LAWRENCE
Assoc. and Scrapwood String Band
Noon - Scartaglen, Irish.
Shadv Grove Stage
12:30 p.m. — Phil Belknap, tight rope walker.
1 p.m. — Mike Helvey.
1:30 p.m. — Paul Gray and the
Gaillard Gang, traditional jazz
4 p.m. - Mike Helvey.
3 p.m. — Lawrence Recorder Ensemble
5 p.m. — Blue Grass Brigade,
blue grass music.
Riverfront Stage
1 p.m. — Scrapwood, string band and cloggers.
■ 5:30 p.m. — Phil Belknap, tight rope walker.
and come
1:50 p.m. — Scartaglen, Irish.
12:10 p.m. — River City Six, New Orleans jazz.
12:10 p.m. — Sideshow, juggling and comedy.
3:05 p.m. — Ric Averill's Seem to be Players
Tent Stage
4:30 p.m. — Ric Averill's Seem-to-be-Players.
Sunday
3:35 p.m. — Last Kansas Exit,
blue grass music
1. 50 p.m. — Full Circle, folk music.
3:30 p.m. - "Sweet Home"
Suite 4.5.6 Speedup
Noon — Scartaglen, Irish.
Shady Grove Stage
12:30 p.m. — Phil Belknap, tight rope walker
4.10 p.m. — Scartaglen, Irish.
5 p.m. — Full Circle, folk music.
4:10 p.m. — Scartaglen, Irish.
1 p.m. — Last Kansas Exit, blue grass music
1. 30 p.m. — Sideshow, juggling and comedv.
2:30 p.m. — Mike Helvey.
2 p.m. — Phil Belknap, tight rope walker.
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10
Wednesday, July 1, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
Smokers face tougher laws, fines
KU working to reach compliance
By BRAD ADDINGTON Special to the Kansan
Smokers now have fewer places on campus to flick their Bics.
The new state smoking law goes into effect today that will apply to buildings on the University of Kansas campus. A Lawrence smoking ordinance took effect 11 days ago, but did not apply to state institutions.
Violators can now be fined up to $25 for smoking outside the designated smoking areas of a public place. Public places include passenger elevators, school buildings, libraries, restrooms, public transportation, museums, theaters, auditoriums and recreational facilities.
The law also states that the person in charge of a public place may be
fined up to $50 for failing to conspicuously designate both smoking and non-smoking areas.
Public information officer at the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, Bob Moody said going to the district attorney was the first step to take in seeking enforcement of the law.
"What this law does is change the philosophy 180 degrees," he said.
Before it was illegal to smoke in non-smoking areas, and now it is also illegal to smoke in areas not designated specifically for smokers, Moody said.
As of yesterday, several buildings on campus did not conform to the
new requirements of designating smoking areas.
The Department of Facilities Operations is in the process of designating smoking and non-smoking areas in the 175 buildings on campus, department director Tom Anderson said. The buildings are not in compliance with the law because of designating areas must come from the University's 1987-88 fiscal budget. The budget money became available today.
The Memorial Corporation Board, which establishes policies for public areas in the Kansas Union, is comparing its current smoking policies with the requirements of the new law, director of the Kansas and Burge Unions, James Long said.
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Kansan Summer Weekly/Wednesday, July 1, 1987
Sports
11
WSU to name athletic director KU associate athletic director will not get WSU position
By L. A. RAUCH Special to the Kansan
The new athletic director for Wichita State University will be named at a news conference this afternoon in Wichita.
Gary Hunter, associate athletic director at KU, will not be named to the position, although he was one of three finalists.
WSU President Warren Armstrong is expected to name Tom Shupa, the associate athletic director at the University of West Virginia, to the position. Shupa will replace Lew Perkins, who resigned in May to become athletic director at the University of Maryland.
Hunter said. "I have nothing to lose by staying." Hunter said that even though he was a bit disappointed with the decision, he and his family loved Lawrence and KU and were happy to remain here.
"I was in a win-win situation,"
Hunter also said that someday he would like to become an athletic director, but that the right opportunity needed to come along before he would leave KU.
Early last week, the search was narrowed down to six applicants, and over the weekend it was cut down to Shupe, Hunter, and Larry Templeton, the associate athletic director at Mississippi State University.
"I'm looking forward to working with Bob Fredericks," said Hunter about Kansas' new athletic director.
Hunter said that he was originally nominated by a special search committee hired by WSU to find applicants for the position and then he was asked to apply for the position.
Bob Hartsook, vice president of Development at WSU, said that Shupe was chosen because he had accumulated a vast amount of experience over the last decade in athletics.
Shupe, 39, has been the athletic director at West Virginia since July 1982. He also was the assistant athletic director at Purdue. Shupe graduated in 1973 from Slippery Rock University in Slippery Rock, Pa.
The Associated Press supplied some information for this story.
KU coach invited to train U.S. team in Yugoslavia
By a Kansan reporter
Gary Kempf, Kansas men's and women's swimming coach, is on his way to Yugoslavia today. He will be an assistant swim coach for the U.S. swim team to the World University Games, which will be held July 9-14 at Zagreb, Yugoslavia.
Kempf will coach swimmers in the breaststroke and individual medley. There are two other assistant swim coaches, Tim Hill of Arizona State University, and John Asmuth of Auburn University. Jim Presses of Louisiana State University will lead the coaching staff.
America. This is definitely one of the highlights of my career."
"I was tremendously excited," Kempf said. "This is a first for me to represent the United States of
The coaches are chosen by a rotational system. Their names are placed on a list, and they work way toward the top coaching spot.
The U.S. team will compete against swimmers from around the world. It is a strong team, Kempf said, even though some of the stronger swimmers opted to stay back to train for the Pan-American Games, which will be held later this summer.
"This is a tremendous opportunity for other swimmers to shoot up into the lightlime," Kemp said. Fifteen swimmers are on the U.S. team. None of the swimmers from Kansas qualified for the
team.
Todd Torres, an LSU swimmer and the NCAA champion in the 100-yard breaststroke, will compete for the United States. His NCAA winning time, 53.96 seconds, was also a school record. Torres just completed his freshman year.
Another LSU freshman swimmer, Buffy Krieger, will swim on a freestyle relay team.
Adam Schmitt and Andy Diechir, both LSU juniors, will also represent the United States. At the NCAA, Schmitt placed second in the 50-yard freestyle and eighth in the 100-yard freestyle. Deichert placed third in the 100-yard breaststroke.
New softball coach builds program with new philosophies
The games will be televised live on ESPN.
Bv ELAINE SUNG
Special to the Kansan
The only thing Kalum Haack can find wrong with Kansas is the winter
But, that wasn't enough to stop him from accepting the head coach job (oops).
Haack will replace Bob Stancilf,
who resigned this spring after 11
weeks.
He recently completed his first season as head softball coach of his high school team at Houston High School. University, Huntsville, Texas, he guided them to a 34-26 overall record.
second place in the Gulf State Conference and an invitation to the National Invitational Tournament. Haack also was an assistant for the University of Nebraska for two years.
"I was pretty chosy with where I wanted to go," said Haack. "I wanted the salary that I could afford to live on, and I like the Big Eight conference, which is probably one of the most competitive in the nation."
Haack said that the quality of KU's facilities and the softball team's large budget and national reputation attracted him to the job.
compete nationally. We can travel and play any team in the country, and I can go to recruit any player in the nation," he said.
"We have the resources here to
Floyd Temple, assistant athletic director, said he was confident that Haack would maintain the excellence of the program.
"We feel confident that he is the man for the job and will keep KU very competitive in the Big Eight and nationwide." Temple said.
"To go where I want, it'll take x' number of years to get my type of ballplayers to get my style of play," he said.
Recruiting is a major concern for Haack, who considers it a year-round process, but he said he was confined to the Texas area due to a tight budget and smaller facilities at SHUI.
"I was limited to only in-state kids, and to be able to compete nationally, you need the best ones in the country." Haack said.
Haack said he would emphasize academics over softball.
"Anytime there is a conflict, I will give in to academics," he said. "I will try to keep conflicts to a minimum, but of course, sometimes they will occur."
Although KU had winning seasons the last 11 seasons under Stancifl, Haack said he will be rebuilding next year.
"We will be a very young team, with eight freshmen, and probably six to eight as walk-ons. The biggest impact will come from losing five seniors," he said. "We'll have to show freshmen where to go."
Haack does not anticipate major
adjustments for the players.
"We'll have different plays that they might not have seen before, and we might do situations differently," he said. "The key is going to be an aggressive style of play, both offensive and defensive."
Reeien Noble, Omaha, Neb.
senior, has talked with Haack several times since his arrival and said the team would have to make several changes.
"You'd think that by senior year, you'd know the ropes, but with a new coach, things will be different," Noble said.
THE WEEKEND IN TAMPA
KU cricketers second in league; gunning for '87 conference title
By L.A. RAUCH
Special to the Kansan
Cricket is a little-known sport in the United States, even among sports enthusiasts. But here in Lawrence, the demand for the sport has evolved with the Kansas Cricket Club.
Recently, the Jayhawks competed against the Iowa State Cyclones and won. The victory moved Kansas into second place in the Southwest Cricket Conference, which consists of eight teams from the Midwest.
"We fought until the very last. We have a realistic chance to go to the finals," said Dinesh Kumarjeeva, Sri Lanka senior and KU Cricket Club president.
The club's record of 1-1-1 gives the team a total of six points for the season, which runs from May to August. The scoring system awards four points for a win, two points for a draw, and no points for a loss. At the end of the season, the two teams with the most points
play a tournament for the conference championship.
KU's first match against the Kansas City West Indies ended in a loss. A match against Tulsa I two weeks ago was ruled a draw because of rain. Kumarajee
- Dinesh Kumarajeevay
KU Cricket Club president
said the team could have won the match if it hadn't rained. Tulsa 1 was the team to beat, he said, because it holds the 1986 conference title and has a bowler, the equivalent of a pitcher in baseball, who plays for the U.S. World Cup team.
'We don't have any superstars,
but we have a very well-balanced team. We're going to do what it takes," Kumarajeeva said.
A cricket team has 11 members. When a team plays defense, there are nine fielders, a bowler and a keeper. On offence, there are two batsmen. Game points are scored when a batsman hits the ball and runs between two sets of wickets, which are three wooden stumps on the field.
The KU Cricket Club has about 40 members, mostly from foreign countries, including India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, England, New Zealand and Australia. Only two club members are from the United States.
Lance Rake, KU Cricket Club faculty adviser, is one of the two members from the United States. He learned the game in New Zealand where he taught.
"They play cricket in the summer the way we play baseball," Rake said about New Zealanders.
Joe Wilkins III/KANSAN
Lent, Unmesh Kumarajeva, Sri Lanka senior, attempts to hit the ball during a KU Cricket Club practice at Shenk Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets. The club was practicing Thursday for Saturday's match against the Iowa State Cyclones. Kansas won the match and is now ranked second in the Southwest Conference. Below; Nadeem Sheikh, Pakistan freshman, strokes one past the midoff fielder in a KU Cricket Club practice last Thursday.
A
Endurance triathlon attracts athletes from three states
By JOHN MONTGOMERY
Athletes from around the area tested their endurance Sunday at Lone Star Lake in the third annual Jackie Johnson Memorial Triathlon.
Special to the Kansan
Wesley Hobson was the men's overall winner with a time of 2 hours and 2 minutes. Kristi Newcomb won the women's division, finishing in 2 hours and 23 minutes. The three-man corporate relay team of Mark Wilson, James Sloan and Milo Ransopher from the Lawrence Fire Department took first place in the team competition with a time of 2 hours and 20 minutes.
More than 159 individuals and 36 three-member relay teams participated.
Brian Morray, an assistant director of the event, said the triathlon was gaining popularity among athlete in Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma.
The number of triathletes increased about 25 to 30 percent from
The triathlon is nationally sanctioned. The ton finishes go on to
national competition at a triathlon at Hilton Head. S.C.
"A lot of top athletes from around the area are enjoying the course." Morray said. "It's probably as tough a course as there is around here."
The race consists of a 1.5 kilometer (93 mile) swim, 40 kilometers (24 miles) bike ride and a 10 kilometer (6.2 mile) run. Morray said the distances were standard for triathlons.
The race started and finished at the concessions and beach area on the south end of the lake. The transition
point for the different portions of the race was on the south side this year. In past years, competitors made transitions on the north side by the dam.
The biking and running portions of the race were routed through surrounding county roads.
Morray said the relay team competition was expanded this year to men's, women's, mixed and corporate divisions. In the relay competition, each team member completes a portion of the race.
Tammy Silver, 22, who graduated
"The run is really where you show whether you have it or not. If you can run, you can win," she said.
"It was better than last year," she said, "I really enjoyed it."
Silver said the 10 kilometer run was the hardest part of the triathlon for her.
Silver said a lot of training was required to compete seriously in the field.
from the University of Kansas in May, participated in the triathlon for the second time. She said the course had improved since last year.
five times, bibd about 100 miles and ran about 20 miles each week
She said she enjoyed triathlon competition for the physical and mental rewards. This was her seventh triathlon.
"I're really good for your attitude." She said. "I's an endurance event so it takes a lot of practice."
The triathlon is dedicated to Jackie Johnson, a Lawrence woman who died at age 46 while training for a marathon in Hawaii. She was struck by lightning while jogging along the Kansas River levee in Lawrence.
12
Wednesday, July 1, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
ROYALS REPORT
compiled by Tim Hamilton Sports editor
Monday: Royals 3, Twins 2
Bo Jackson's home run capped a three-run fifth inning to lift the Royals to a 3-2 victory over the Minnesota Twins last night at Royals Stadium. The game was ended one out after Jackson's home run when rain delayed the game for the second time.
Royals 3, Twins 2
Twins 002 00-20 2 0
Royals 000 03-16 3 0
D. Jackson (5); Straker (4½). W.D. Jackson (4-10). L-Straker (3-5). 2Bs-Newman,
Duckett (4); Duckett (4½). Eisgröth, HRs. B.-Jackson.
Wednesday: Rovals 2. Athletics 4
Royals pitcher Danny Jackson last night became the major leagues' first pitcher to lose 10 games as the Royals' lost the last game of their four-game series with the Athletics, 2-4. Oakland's Mike Davis hit a two-run single off of Danny Jackson in the sixth inning that extended the Athletics lead from 1-0 to 3-0.
Royals 2. Athletics 4
Athletics 010 003 00x-10 4 0
Royals 000 000 200-5 2 1
C. Young (7) and Eckersley (2); D. Jackson (5%) and Farr (2%), W.C. Young (9-4). L.
D. Leibert (44) and Keberty (44) in Marin (10) Devine.
Friday: Royals 1, Mariners 5
Dave Valle went 4-for-4 with two triples and drove home three runs Friday night leading the Seattle Mariners to a 5-1 victory over the Kansas City Royals. A two-run home run and a two-run single in the sixth inning put the Mariners up for good. Charlie Leibrandt, 8-5, took the loss for the Royals.
Royals 1, Mariners 5
Marmers 000 104 000-5 11 11
Royals 000 001 000-1 5 0
Morgan (6) and Wilkinson (3); Leibrandt (6) and B. Stoddard (3); W-Morgan (6-8). L.
Lawrence (6) and Wilkinson (3); O'Connor, D. Pearson (3).
Saturdav: Rovals 6. Mariners 0
Bret Saberhagen pitched his third shut-out game of the season, allowing the Mariners only three hits in nine innings and boosting his record to 13-2. The Royals jumped out to a quick three run lead in the first inning and scored again in the second and sixth innings.
Royals 6, Mariners 0
Mariners 000 000 000—0 3 2
Royals 310 001 10x—6 12 0
Saberhagen (9); Guettterman (7) and Clarke (1). W-Saberhagen (13-2). L-Guetterman (5-1).
Sunday: Royals 8, Mariners 3
Mark Gubicaz the five-hitter and a six-run fifth inning helped boost the Royals to a 8-3 win over the Seattle Mariners. Bo Jackson and George Brett each hit home runs fueling the Royals offense. The Royals ended their three-game series with the Mariners, 2-1.
Marrins
Royals
000 200 001—3 5 0
100 600 10x—8 10 0
Gubiza c (9); MMoore c (4), Clarke (1) and RThomas (3). W-Gubiza c (6), L-Moore (3-9).
2bS-quinnes, Wilson. 2bS-ADavis, Presley. HRs-Blackson (15), Brett (7).
LAST NIGHT
Today
Royals ab r r hbi
Wilson cf 5 0 1 0
Seitzer 3b 4 0 2 0
Brett tb 3 0 0 0
Trtabl rif 4 0 0 0
FWhite 2b 4 0 1 0
Eisnch dh 4 0 0 0
BJackns lf 4 1 1 0
Salazr ss 1 0 0 0
Biancn ss 2 0 0 0
Bosley ph 1 0 1 0
Quirc c 4 0 1 0
Beniquz pr 0 0 0 0
Totals 36 1 7 0
Tomorrow
Royals vs. Minnesota
7:35 p.m. Royals Stadium
Friday
Royals vs. Minnesota
7:35 p.m. Royals Stadium
Brewers ab r h ri
Gladden lf 5 0 2 1
Newmn 2b 4 0 2 1
Puckett 2b 4 0 0 0
Brinsky rf 3 0 0 0
Larkin rf 4 1 1 0
Laudner c 4 1 1 0
Davidns cf 2 0 0 0
Gagne ss 4 0 2 1
Totals 34 3 10 3
Saturdav
Kansas City 000 000 001 — 3
Others 021 000 000 — 3
Royals vs. Toronto
7:05 p.m. Royals Stadium
Friday
Royals vs. Toronto
7:35 p.m. Royals Stadium
W - Blyleyn (7.4) L - Lebert (8.6)
G - Gillman (7.3) J - Leibnitz
Sogne, gagne (2). DF - Kansas City (1). LB-
Minnesota (7). Kansas City (10). BB - Baghee
(Sogne, gagne (2). SB - Brumham (7). A-
21. 555 (1).
Sunday
Royals vs. Toronto
1:35 p.m. Royals Stadium
Monday
Tuesday
Major League Standings
American League
East W 4 L 29 Pct. GB
New York 48 29 623
Toronto 45 30 600 2
Detroit 41 32 600 2
Milwaukee 37 36 507 9
Boston 37 39 487 9
Baltimore 31 46 403 17
Cleveland 26 49 347 20
West W L L Pct. GB
Minnesota 43 34 558
Oakland 40 35 533 2
Kansas City 39 35 527 2
Seattle 39 37 513 3½
California 38 37 494 5
Texas 35 39 473 6½
Chicago 27 46 370 14
Twins nip Royals 3-1 stop 9th inning rally
West W2 L4 Pct. GB
Cincinnati 42 34 .553
Houston 40 35 .533 1½
San Francisco 37 38 .493 1¼
Los Angeles 36 35 .493 1½
San Diego 35 40 .467 6½
National League
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Bert Blyleen pitched a six-hitter over 8% innings, and Kirby Puckett hit his 14th home run last night, pacing Minnesota over the Kansas City Royals 3-1 and ending the Twins' five-game losing streak.
Blyleen, 7.6, allowed one run, six singles, struck out two and walked one. Jeff Reardon got the final out for his 16th save.
An error by shortstop Greg Gagne allowed the Royals to score their only run in the ninth, preventing Blyleen from getting his 66th career shutout.
Royals starter Charlie Liebrandt, 8-6, gave up all three runs and was relieved by Steve Farr after giving up a walk and a single with two outs in the sixth.
Bosley singled in the ninth, and Jackson scored on Gagne's error of Jamie Quirk's grounder.
on getting his soul career shroud.
Bo Jackson and pinch-hitter Thad
Puckett's solo home run to right field gave the Twins a 3-0 lead in the third inning.
Larkin took third on Laudner's hit and scored when Gagne grounded into a fielder's choice, forcing Mark Davidson who had walked.
KC player overcomes Tourette's Syndrome
Eisenreich's last major league hit came on April 17, 1984, as a member of the Twins. His first for the Royals was a fifth-inning, opposite-field bloop double Monday night that sent Frank White to third base. White scored on a ball by Twins pitcher Les Straker, and Eisenreich scored on a passed ball before Bo Jackson hit a homer — his 16th — 410 feet to dead center a short time before the game was called because of rain.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — On Monday, the Royals' Jim Eisenreich got his first major league hit in three years.
Eisenreich said revenge was not on his mind before the game against the Twins, the team that signed him in 1980. He went into voluntary retiree care and continued of a nervous disorder called Touraine's Syndrom that sidelined him.
Eisenreich spent parts of three seasons with the Twins before giving up on pro baseball in 1984. He was claimed on waivers in the off-season by the Royals and sent to Class A Tomphis, where he hit .322 with 11 homers and 52 runs before he was called up to Kansas City two weeks ago.
thing out of this, but I can't consider this a comeback. Not yet," Eisenreich, a left-handed designated hitter, said before the game.
"I know people are making a big
He said he was not worried about getting his first hit. "One hit's not a season. But it's a start. I hope I can get a few more of those."
Eisenreich, 28, said he is trying to put behind him memories of the ailment that made him twitch and shake uncontrollably when he was in the outfield for the Twins three years ago. He said he has controlled the disorder with medication.
the Sanctuary
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For further information contact: Judy Wright, Executive Director, P.O. Box 581, Lawrence, KS 66044, 843-4411
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(913) 842-1811
Kansan Summer Weekly/Wednesday, July 1, 1987
13
Foul smell at plant to end
By a Kansan reporter
The foul smell caused by sulfur dioxide emissions from the KU power plant behind Stauffer-Flint Hall will end today because the plant will burn natural gas instead of oil, a KU official said yesterday.
Rodger Oroke, director of support services, said the plant had been burning low-grade fuel oil in recent months partly because of University budget cuts.
But at 8 a.m. today, the plant will begin burning natural gas because of a new cheaper rate from Kansas Public Service.
"Natural gas will cost $2.40 per 1000 square feet, which costs less than burning oil, and we're committed to using the cheapest fuel available." Oroke said.
The power plant had emitted sulfur dioxide when burning oil that contained sulfur.
Dr. Gerald Kerbby, director of pulmonary disease at the University of Kansas Medical Center, said breathing sulfur dioxide in the form emitted by the plant was a nuisance but not a health hazard.
Ooke said the Kansas Department of Health and Environment notified him April 10 that the power plant was in violation of air quality standards.
But, Oroke said, the department's study was inaccurate.
"They assumed all four boilers operated on 100 percent oil, but one operates only on natural gas, and other uses only 50 percent oil," he said.
Computerark
Dennis Lane, associate professor of civil engineering, is running a computer model based on the modified data, Oroke said. Those results will be submitted to the KDHE by Sept. 21.
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14
Wednesday, July 1, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
Kansans must begin buckling belts today
By GEORGE NORTON Special to the Kansan
Kansans won't be able to get away with a simple warning anymore.
Starting today, Kansas state law says residents may have to pay the price, up to $10, for not wearing their seat belts.
Passed by the Kansas Legislature in July 1986, the law requires front-seat occupants in passenger cars to have their seat belts properly fastened while their vehicles are in motion.
For the first year after the law was passed, violators were issued only warnings.
"From last July 1 to May 31, we have issued 43,344 warning citations on Kansas highways," Terry Maple, spokesman for the Kansas Highway Patrol, said this week.
State and local police now can cite violators for failing to wear seat belts, but only if drivers have been stopped for other violations.
"According to state law, seat belt citations can only be given incident to being stopped for some type of moving violation." Lawrence Police Sgt.
David Cobb said.
Bill Henry, coordinator for the Kansas Coalition for Safety Belts, said Monday, "We did not think that simple education about wearing seat belts was doing the job. It was clear that more lives could be saved if seat-belt use could be made mandatory.
"Most recent surveys indicate that 27 percent of motorists on Kansas roads are using their seat belts."
Henry said road surveys were used to determine seat belt usage. He explained that a group of trained observers were assigned to watch specific intersections at the same times on varying days to collect data on belt use.
"We think the percentages would be higher if more surveys were done on the highway, since people tend to buckle up more on long trips," Henry said. "But it is more important to buckle up closer to home since there is a greater likelihood that accidents will occur within a 25-mile radius of home."
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
The Etc. Shop
TM
722
The Etc. Shop
What's New?
New Styles
1928 Jewelry $7.50 and up
of
BORDER BANDIDO
732 Massachusetts 843-0611
Mon.-Sat. 11:5-30 Thurs.-8
ALL YOU CAN EAT DOUBLE BUFFET
843-8019
Kinko's Downtown
9th & Vermont
5¢
No Minimum
FRIDAY: ($2 Cover)
All You Can Eat Tacos (4:30-6:30)
SATURDAY: ($2 Cover)
$1 Well Drinks
Sunday: (No Cover) $1.95 Schooners
Sanctuary
641-6177 Kinko's Campus
12th & Oread
the Sanctuary
7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 843-0540
5-9 p.m.
Tacos, Enchiladas Burritos, Spanish rice Tostadas, Tomales Taco Salads!
MEXICO CITY
kinko's
A NATIONWIDE NETWORK OF ELECTRONIC PRINTSHOPS
Need
1528 W. 23rd across 842-8861 from post office new location:
1820 W. 6th 749-2770
money for school?
flexible work hours?
excellent wages?
cash bonuses?
incentives?
Relaxed atmosphere?
Evening-Weekend hours?
No Experience required?
749-5392
Kinko's 23rd
23rd & Iowa
We've got it all!
841-1200
E. O.E. M/F/H
ENTERTEL
Call today.
TELL THE TOWN-CALL THE KANSAN 864-4358
southridge
comfortable apartment living
For comfortable apt. living and reasonable rates Check out Southridge Plaza Apts. NOW LEASING 1 & 2 BDRM APTS 1704 West 24th 842-1160
$895*
$1295^{*}
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
TANDON PCX-20
This PC-compatible has 604K RAM, two floppy disk drives, serial/parallel ports, DOS 3.1 and full one year warranty.
This powerful XT-compatible comes with a 20 MB disk drive, 640K RAM, a single floppy drive, serial/parallel ports, DOS 3.1 and one year warranty.
TANDON PCA-20
The PC-20 is an "AT" compatible and comes with 1 MB of RAM, dual speed processor, dual video board, and high speed 20 MB hard drive, serial/parallel ports, DOS 3.1, MS-Windows and a full one year warranty - all for under $2000!
$1795 $1795*
COMPUTER OUTLET
Your computer
connection at
843-PLUG * 804 N.H.
Louisville, Kansas
- Monitor not included
WZR 106 day***
★★★★★
A week of 106 days continues Tomorrow at SIRLOIN STOCKADE 1015 Iowa
LISTEN TO KLZR FOR MORE DETAILS!
Great Daily Specials
STRICK'S RESTAURANT only $3.50 DAILY SPECIALS
Today...Smothered Steak
Thursday...Pork Chops With Mushroom Gravy
Friday...Meatloaf
Saturday...Closed for 4th of July
Monday...Fresh Pork Tenderloin
Tuesday...Chicken Fried Steak
Wendnesday...Roast Beef
includes salad, mashed potatoes & gravy, vegetable, & Texas toast
Friday and Saturday Special 4:11-10 p.m.
2 Ribeye Steak Dinners $9.95
Served with Baked Potato or French Fries. Salad and Texas Toast
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
$3\frac{1}{2}$ blocks north of the bridge
鱼肉蔬菜
Safety Hints from your gas company. If you detect an odor you think may be natural gas-
A
OFF
(1) Open windows and doors to dilute the air to a safe level.
(2) Call for aid or advice from the gas company or fire department or police department
(3) If the odor appears to be very strong leave the house or building immediately. Go to a telephone and notify the gas company—do not turn on any electrical appliances, including light switches.
(4) When the problem is solved, have a qualified person from the gas company, plumbing or climate control firms relight appliances.
(5) In the event a leak is detected anywhere outside of a building notify the gas company immediately and describe the location and approximate level of the odor—a quick check of the area will be made to determine the problem and corrective action needed.
If you have any questions please contact our office.
CALL 843-7842
KANSAS PUBLIC SERVICE
GAS MAKES THE BIG DIFFERENCE
110 E. 9th
10% OFF
Professional Journals
- Magazines
- Magazines
- Newspapers
Hard Binding Good Thru July 1987
University Materials Center
25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza
Phone 749-5192
Kansan Summer Weekly/Wednesday, July 1, 1987
15
--apartments--all near KU!
Tuesday: OPEN MIC NIGHT (Every Tuesday!)
Wednsday: The Ebeling Brothers
Thursday: The Drive
Friday: ??????????????????????
Saturday: Holiday
12th & Indiana 842-9469
--apartments--all near KU!
Classified Ads
ANNOUNCEMENT
TODAY'S WOMAN
Exploring Career Options
A Workshop designed to explore your values, philosophies, and lifestyle as they affect your career choice.
Wednesdau
July 8,1987
2-4 p.m.
International Room Kansas Union
Facilitator; Barbara W. Ballard;
Associate Dean of Student Life;
Director, Emily Taylor Women's
Resource Center.
Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Research Center for more information, call Sherill Robinson, at 800-265-4390.
--apartments--all near KU!
ENTERTAINMENT
Tonight! Dawn be on the Summer stars on the patio at Dos Hombres, 815 New Hampshire 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Music provided by Metropolis Mobile Sound (841-7833) Feel the rhythm of the night.
SPALDING GRAY'S SWIMMING CAMBODIA
PURITUDEY
FIVE
STARTS SUNDAY!
7:30 & 8:00
The Seauel Goldway Company Presents
ROBERT TOWNSEND'S
Hollywood
SHOFFLE
MUSEUM SHOP
Museum of Natural History
M-S-10/Sun, 1-5-864-4450
KU Campus 14th and lajawk
MONTANA
FOR RENT
Commercial office space available in Lawrence
Research Park. For more information call
ELEGANT RESTORATION: 935 Tenn 3 brs, 1 bldg,
weather/door, ceiling fans, central air, minibinds
OFF STREET parking, lawn care provided
$75.00 low utilities for 24 hours of service
$26.00 for appointment
EMERY PLACE AUPTS. A foe 8m & 2m 6ft
Great location / 2 block form Fraser Hall Park.
Great location / 1 block from Fraser Hall Park.
842-7444, or stop by 191-6320 (visa on hold) for female roommate wanted to share brand new gagacious two bedroom apartment for fall own,房主要求房间有2张床,171.30 sq.m. smooth utilities. Call Dana at 841-2907.
**House Mates Wanted:** 3 to 4 people needed for a house north of stadium-good location Rent $25.00 share of utilities and phone Contact @Jagger "Pigger" Eason 8412 106 / Alabama Contact @the blocks from the Kamaus Union, Call Jeff at 842-790 (from 9-36; 0-60) or 842-5313 at 6:30 p.m.
A relaxed atmosphere with plenty of space
Spacious 2 bedroom
Laundry facilities
Waterbed fine
Swimming pool
10-12 month leases
HILLVIEW APTS.
1745 W.24th 841-5797
NOW LEASING FOR FALL!
Starting at $260
For Rent one apartment apt close to campus. Rent $190 utilities. 749-2919 or 842-9007.
Great Location! Walk to campaise 2 bdrm apt
January 1st only! Aug 1st. Lease no:
07-19-2015
- Close to KU & on bus route
- Laundry facilities
- Laundry facilities
- Starting at $250
- Rental furniture available
905 Emerv Rd. 841-5797
--apartments--all near KU!
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
DOWNTOWN
CENTER FOR
THE ARTS, SCIENCE &
TECHNOLOGY
SUNRISE PLACE 9th & Michigan
Sunrise Apartment
Offering luxurious townhomes and apartment living.
Stop by to see our show unit at 9th and Michigan or call 844-1287 for an appointment. Office is 1:5 M-F
Sleeping rooms - 16 & 28 bdm, apts close to campus.
Summer & Winter lease. No Pets. 842-8971.
Sunflower屋 now taking applications for fall semester. Please call or drop by to find out about classes. Call (842) 8971-3000.
MASTERCRAFT
Completely furnished
apartments--all near KU
Consider:
- Custom furnishings
- Variety of floorplans
- Designed for privacy
- Energy efficient
- Affordable rates
- Many great locations
- Professional management
CAMPUS PLACE—1145 Louisiana
941.1429
HANOVER PLACE—14th & Mass. 021-654-3722
TANGLEWOOD—10th & Arkansas 749-2415
SUNDANCE-7th & Florida
841-5255
Berkeley FLATS
843-2116 11th & Mississippi
LEASING NOW & FOR FALL
Avalon
FLEXIBLE LEASING
Available
Great location walk anywhere
- On KU Bus Route
- Laundry facilities
- Laundry facilities
* Furnished Units
- Great location
- 1123 Indiana Furnished by Thompson-Crawley
- Furnished Units
- Laundry facilities
- Over 40 New Units
- Rental furniture available from Thompson-Crawley
---
2040 HEATHERWOOD DR.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
A FEW
BDRM. APTS.
STILL AVAILABLE
FOR FALL
A FEW 1&2
- Hollywood style bath
- Covered Carports
- On KU Bus Route
- Low utility bills
- Low utility bills
- Gas heat, C-A
For more info. call between 9-6, Mon.-Fri.,843-4754
Dishwasher
- FF refrig, Disposal,
TRAILRIDGE
- Quiet location
---
- STUDIO—lrg. closets,
STUDIOS APARTMENTS TOWNHOUSES
kitchenette, laundry bldg. next door, water paid.
- 1 BR APT—walk-in close laundry in bldg, gas & water paid, balcony or patio.
2 *BR townhouse*—woodburning fireplace, carport with extra storage W/D hookups, patios.
2500 W. 6th St. 843-7333
3 swimming pools, tennis courts basketball courts, excellent maintenance
- 4 BR townhouse fireplace, carport, W/D hookups, patio.
maintenance, KU buc
PLACE
OFFERING LUXURY
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- 10 or 12 month
OFFERING LUXURY 2 BR APARTMENTS
contract
- Exercise Weightroom
- Free Showtime
FOR SALE
Professionally managed by
- Laundry room
- On-Site Management
MAX'S COMICS. Comic Books, Playbys, Penhouch,
etc. 811 New Hammish.
Open Daily 3:00-5:00
Saturday 9:00-12:00
841-5444
FOR SALE 14 x 14" Liberty Mobile Home Es-
cential condition to meet to appreciate 843-996
www.libertymobilehome.com
AUTO SALES
**** MOTHBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
11:30 a.m. 30 p.m. Saturday 10:24 p.m.
12:15 a.m. 12:45 p.m.
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Can you buy Jeep, Cars, 4x4's Seized in drug
cases? Call for facts today.
887-354-1201, Ext. 700
Two bottled pop machines $100 each. Will also hold long necks 723-3560.
Soney-University of Kansas, Lawrence Campus Legal Services for Students at Office of the Attorney General who will take the July 1977 Kansas Bar examination are welcome to apply. Preferences: interest in law or legal studies, desire to be emblem, willingness to handle litigation and interest in helping educate university students about their legal rights and responsibilities. Applicants should have a background upon qualifications and experience. For complete information, visit www.soney-university.edu.
NUNCOUNER 'WEEKEND EDITION' HOST
KANU Radio at the University of Kansas seeks a
Programming Assistant/Announcer to
set WEB radio broadcast in an online
magazine, assemble and read newscasts;
and announce music programming. One year,
you must possess a pleasant speaking voice and
the ability to communicate ideas in an informal,
professional manner. You must possess a pleasant speaking voice and
HELP WANTED
Is It True You Can Buy Jeep for 444 through the
phone? Call the face today! Call
1-877-322-6120 or visit www.jeep.com
Waterbom Dedwards Sale. Complete waterproof $9.
Sheets #15, Demo Mat #15, Demo Heater #10,
Mats #15, Pad #29, padded mat, camper covers
2/1, Mattress #18 & K&Q Quantum
Warehouse 738 New Hampshire, Lawrence
position description, write or call; Cynthia Woolk, Director, Legal Services for Students, University of Kansas, 148 Burge Union, 603-527-8984, www.ukw.edu/603-527-8984 One position available July 20 . http://www.ukw.edu/
Wanted: Part-time Instructor to teach MCAT review course for large national organization. Top 10% MCAT scores; degree required. Call 842-5442
- position available July 20, 1987 or as soon
as possible August 25, 1987, and should be
available August 18 at as soon thereafter as possible. Application process Resume, a writing sample, a cover letter, and three references must be received by Friday.
464-3524. Pposition available August 1, 1987. Submit letter of application, resume, and name of two references by July 13, 1987 to Dr. Barbara Ballard, Assistant Dean of student life and Director of Student Resource Center, I2B Strong Hall, University of Kansas, Laverne, Kansas 66455. EEO/AO/AA
Furniture refurned. We made major purchases of
Lakewood Baths & Cabinets, Backbay Beds &
Bockbech Beds & Recliner Sets, Sectionals & Sofa
& chair $88, Dineette $18, Mat & Box $28, Daybeds
& Chair $88, New Home Furniture, Quantum Furniture
& New New England Furniture.
Emily Tiemy Women's Resource Center
Bachelor Degree Required and enrollment as
Graduate student at University of Kansas, failu-
ing the requirements of a Master's degree,
and working with women essential. Complete
job announcement available at women's center.
Send resumes to Women's Resource Center,
mit letter of application, resume, and names of
applicants.
Now hire Food Service Employees at Mass Street Deli. Must have one year experience, 15.20 hours per week. Start paying $7.47 per hour. Applicants must possess (a) Buffalo Bills Smokehouse).
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $10,040 $9,250 yr. Now
Hiring Call 618-907-6000 Ext. 4780 for current
employees.
IRADIATE ASSISTANT. Half time position in
Silky Taylor Women's Resource Center
OVERSEAS JOBS Also Cruisees Listings
Now Hiring. To $4K, 80-657-600-671 J07.9388
POSITION OPEN: Assistant Project Coordi-
nate/Research Associate for Water and
Resource Research Group at a non-profit agricultral and
environmental Organization. College degree and
good communications skills required. Send
SKILLS TO: KRC 341 St. Whiting, KS 6552
Position Opening: Assistant Construction of Facilities Planning Construction Administration The university of Kansas, Lawrence Campus.
The applicant must hold a professional degree in Architecture or a related field. You will have 3 years of experience in two years exp. use the field, emphasis on construction administration as architect's or owner's representative and demonstrate the ability to work with architects.
ton scheduling, laiison between the university of Kansas, Architects/Engineers and other State Agencies, and processing of cotractural documents.
Position available immediately and renewable upon satisfactory performance each July. For further information and full job description please visit www.edu/kansas.edu/graduate-director-of-facilities-planning. The University of Kansas, 114 Carruth O'Leary Hall, Lawrence, Kansas 60458 (913) 86434-3431. A letter of application and resume must be received before July 22, 1987. Applicants depend upon experience and training.
An equal opportunity/Affirmative Action
employer. Applications are sought from
qualified persons regardless of race, religion,色
ignorance or national status, national
origin, age, or ancestry.
Program Assistant, Half-time, School of Education, Office of the Dean, Assistant budget officer. Experience in bookkeeping' accounting program support. Requisite of all necessary Applications should include information regarding education and work experience and names of students. Requisites to: Suzanne Collins, School of Education, 11 Bailey Hall, Lawrence, Kansas 60405. Applicant must be a graduate of July 17, starting date in August 18. EOA / Year.
PERSONAL
★★★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
Well Bob, I'd have to say
YOU NEED A DATE!!
Cool Out At The Glass Onion 8 a.m. to Midnight
Mon Sat. New summer time menu. Above Vellow
Friday Saturday Sunday
work. For info call 312-7414-B00 Ext 623
BACKACHE. BACKACHE PAINT LEG
Excellent Instrument for part time home assembly work. For info call 312-7840 8400 Ext 621.
GREENS PARTY SUPPLY 808 W.23rd
BUS.PERSONAL
SUMMER CABIN
PAMN Student and most insurance acceptance. For complete quality chiropractic care drill Dr. Mark Foster
Our staff does unique services
PYRAMID PIZZA
Weekly Beer Specials July 1-7
Open every night
this summer!
4:30-12:30
- PERMS
- HAIRCUTTING
- HI -LIGHTING
- COLORING
- FACIALS
- COLORING
- MANICURES
Buy one
Get one free
Mondays &
Wednesdays
Nightly Specials
PEDICURE WAXING
- EAR PIERCING
SERVICES OFFERED
842-3232
Joda & Friends
841-0337
3009 W. 6th
Please come by and see u for the best in hair care.
- Certified Instructors
$25 per month
SUMMER
MEMBERSHIP
Ladies. Take a break from the Books, Pamper Yourself. Have a Compensatory Facial, call after afternoons or evenings. Michele 749-1658. Quarrell's New Hampshire. Trade. Quarrell's New Hampshire.
IDEA/RHYTHMIC AEROBICS
Toning Programs
- Individualized Weight and Training Programs
- Exclusively For Women
- Hourly Classes
- Sauna
- Tanning
- Membership Transferable to 0500 China
BodyShapes
FTTNEBB CLUB
MF 8:30-8:30
Sat. 9:00-4:00
Sun. 10:00-4:00
601 Kasid Westside Shopping Ctr. 843-4040
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwet Driving School, serving K U students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749.
expert tutoring service in STATISTICS AND
ECONOMICS All levels. Call Dennis B44-105-6.
GRAPH 7 Scientific and statistical illustration,
8 Graphing, editing aid, editing aid. Phone
841-256- leave message.
Graduate Students Experienced editor will
be assigned to write a review or dissertation.
Reasonable rates. 1977-2028.
DONALD G. STROLE Attorney at Law
- D. W.I.'s & Traffic
* Fake I.D.'s & other criminal offenses
* Family Law & other legal problems
**16 East 13th St.** 842-1133
PRIVATE OFFICE Ogbyn and Abortion Services (overland Park) ... (913) 401-9628
WRITING LIFELINE
vices. Overland Park (913) 894-9745
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided
--e ___ Phone no___
1-1-1 TRIO Word processing Consistent,
Responsible, Reliable. Call 842-3113 for service.
WHAT:
Resume, Thesis, term papers
word processing
call 841-3469
Clip this ad for $150 discount
(include cover paper)
24-Hour Typing, 13th semester in Lawrence
and best quality and service 914-400-9800
WRITING LIFELEVEL 841-3409
Resumes #15
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large A-
cres. Work on typing and wordprocessing, working
from 7945 to 7946 or less.
The College of Liberal Arts offers tutoring in
math, computer science, English and
Educational Services. Reasonable Rate. Apply
to the College of Liberal Arts by calling (800) 555-2414.
AAA WORKPROCESSING Quality work, low prices 4824 1924 after 5pm mf; anytime weekends Campus pick up up drop off available ACT NOW, Papers 1.50/pg. Resumes $15.
TYPING
Responsible, Reliable, Call 848-3111 for service.
i-Der woman Word Processing. Your Scrubbies Transformed into accurately spelled and punctuated grammatically correct letters of letter writing.
Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard
Cassius Spencer, spaced pageed Call Me Nastia
Nancy Martina 341-349-1281
A-Z Word Processing Service Quality Resumes.
- File storage available. 843-1806 up to 9 p.m.
DISSERTATIONS. THESES. LAW
DISSERTATIONS. THESES. LAW
will return. KEEP WATCHING THIS AD
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing.
Term papers, theses, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter
printing, spelling corrected 842-2747
Experienced typist i瑟, dissertations, term paper 842 1012 after 6:15 p. m. F or Sal/San 842 1012 after 6:15 p. m. F or Sal/San
Experienced Typist at reasonable rate. Call Holly at 843-0111.
For professional typing/word processing, call
614-6089. Summer special $12.00;
double-save $15.00.
THE WORDOCTORS, Legal, Thesis, Office
of the President. Why put for *typing* Word processing
Why? Why put for *typing* Word processing
Quality tying, excellent spelling, punctuation,
grammar editing. Pickup delivery available.
100% satisfaction guarantee.
Typing Great rates - help with spelling, call
842. 2629
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional wordpress
technology, web design, thesis, letter
printing, etc. 843-5000
Word Processing Dissertations/thesis and professional resumes APA format experience
WANTED
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, these; dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes Have M.S. Degree.
Male non-smoker needed to share 28mpt app, i/d w/app. $185 Plus utility. Prefer serious stat.
d/APP. $300 Plus utility.
Roommate wanted: for Mo. aug. w/fall option.
Nice/quet $125 usl 842-1753
Wanted male Bedroom summer
furnished room with bath
$115 Plus / 14
799-292-386
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wanted roommate to share house near Hollowate
$132.00 month/1/3 utilities. call 842-5788
- Policy
Classified Information Mail-In Form
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
Words set in Field face count as 3 words
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words.
Classified rates are based on consecutive day insertions only.
No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising.
Blind box ads please add $4.00 service charge.
Tear sheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements. Found ads are free for three days, no more than 15 words.
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.
Deadlines
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 announcement
100 entertainment
200 for rent
Classifications
100 for sale 500 help wanted
110 auto sales 700 personal
100 lost/lost 710 has been
Name.
Classified Mail Order Form
800 services offered
900 typing
990 wanted
(phone number published only if included below)
Please print your ad one word per box:
ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Date ad begins___ Make checks payable to:
Total days in paper___ University Daily Kansan
Amount paid___ 119 Stauffer-Filth Hall
Classification___ Lawrence, KS 66045
---
16
Wednesday, July 1, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
Sound of music camp brings the Hill to life
By WENDY ELDER
Special to the Kansan
The KU Midwestern Music Camp provides the best for both worlds: High school students improve their musical talents while the faculty scouts for future KU band members.
More than 240 high school students from across the country arrived Sunday for either a two-week or four-week stint working with students. A session for junior high school students ended Saturday, June 27.
Jim Simpson, assistant camp director, said, "The camp is designed to give the students a chance to improve their musical abilities by working with our faculty and other camp students. They have the opportunity to see improvement in their skills from week to week."
Simonson said the camp also provided a recruiting base from which all KU bands could recruit musicians with potential.
About half of the campers chose to stay for the four-week program, thus ensuring a well-rehearsed foundation of musicians in the camp's band, orchestra and choir, Simonson said.
All students must compete in at least two of these disciplines: band, chair, music theory or piano.
Auditions for all bands and choirs are held at the beginning of the session.
"Each student is assigned to a band or choir according to his
Campers are confronted with a variety of musical challenges and build progressively on the skills learned each week.
ability," Simonson said.
"Many kids come year after year," said Gwen Garland, camp flute instructor. "Kids come to have fun, and if they learn something, it's gravel."
In many cases, hometown band instructors or music teachers have called Gartland to comment on a student's improvement. she said
The campers reside at Oliver Hall all而 at KU. Garland is also a resident assistant and counselor for 25 female campers.
PUTT-PUTT
GOLF COURSES
COUPONS
--only $3.00
($5 value)
"Usually they call wanting to know if I have a magic formula," Garland said. "Sometimes they say that much progress a student has made."
PUTT PUTT
GOLF COURSE
Gartland dispelled the notion that the camp is hard work and no blav.
"They can be kind of goofy, and it is hard to get them to go to sleep," she said "but they are girls who are not girls are more mature and ready."
In addition, students may attend faculty and staff recitals on Tuesday and Thursday evenings and Lawrence city band concerts on Wednesday evenings.
"We schedule recreational activities like softball games and an optional trip to Worlds of Fun, and we have a party at the end of the session where everyone acts a little crazy." she said.
Buy a single or three game ticket and get a single or three game ticket FREE
HOT SAVINGS IN THE SUMMERTIME
1 day only: July 1
2 hours only: 3-5 p.m.
25% OFF
all CD, cassette, Lp purchases *
w/coupon *excludes supersale items
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS
AUDIO / VIDEO
THE CRAPPHONE.COM
Exn. 7/10/87
--only $3.00
($5 value)
BATTING CAGES
Baseball Player Running
MAXELL diskettes
($5 value)
DS/DS Box of 10
5 Batting Cage tokens for
31st. & Iowa 843-1511
Limit one per person exp 7/10/87
$12.00 with coupon
MICROTECH 25 & Iowa Holiday Plaza 841-9513
--limit 2
$ \frac{1}{2} $ Priced Yogurt
50% Discount on small or medium cone or cup with this coupon
coupon expires 7/7/87
I Can't Believe It's YOGURT!
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Louisiana Purchase Shopping Center
23rd and Louisiana, Lawrence
Open: 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Daily, Noon-11 p.m. Sunday
Phone: (813) 943-5500
1 CONTACT LENS CARE PRODUCT at 40% Off
Raney Drug Store
843-3521 843-9021
921 Mass. & 9th & Iowa
01.00 VALUE
CHECKERS
PIZZA
16 inch Two Toppings
$6.99 + tax
expires 7-31-87
2214 YALE RD.
841-8010
With the purchase of
True To You
LOOK
CHECKERS
10 Session Package ($25.00) receive;
FOR MEN AND WOMEN
$1.00 off Evening Buffet (7 days a week)
50¢ off Luncheon Buffet (7 days a week)
--or
PADDED RAIL SET $14.95 (2 piece vinyl)
1 FREE TAN!
(913) 842-5921
9TH & MISSISSIPPI
LAWRENCE, KS 66044
749-4244
FREE DELIVERY
PIZZA LASAGNA SALADS
SPAGHETTI MANICOTTI
Valentino's
Pistonants
Expires 7/14/87
Expires 7/14/87
CHECKERS
PIZZA
16 inch Deluxe
$7.99 + tax
expires 7-31-87
2214 YALE RD.
841-8010
10 Visits $25 or
REPLACEMENT HEATER PADS $19.95 or
REPLACEMENT MATTRESSES $29.95
- - -
Waterbed Works
MONEY SAVER Unlimited Use $15 a month $2 a visit
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
710 W.6th
--get the second one for 50¢
25th & Iowa 841-6232
Sub&Stuff Sandwich Shop
$2.00 OFF
Any 3 or more pizzas
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
842-1212
FREE MEDIUM SOFT DRINK with the purchase of any sub 1618 W.23rd St.
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
Firestone
Lube Oil & Filter $ 1 2^{8 8} $
24th & Iowa
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Please present coupon offer expires 7/14/87
--get the second one for 50¢
1/2 PRICE MOVIE RENTAL
expires 7-14-87
not to be used with any other promotion
VIDEO BIZ'
832 Iowa Street
Lawrence, KS 66044
(913) 749-3507
VIDEO BIZ.
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
$100 OFF
Any 2 or more pizzas
Buy One No.1 Texas Burrito and get the second one for 50¢
842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
BORDER
BANDIDO
---
1528 W. 23rd
1820 W. 6th
*expires* 7/14
*Not valid*
*wild delivery*
842-8861
749-2770
---
MEXICO
Esquire Barber Service 2323 Ridge Court (just behind Mrs. Winner's)
BRING COUPON & SAVE $4.00
Men's shampoo, cut & blowdry — reg. $4.00
Women's shampoo cut & blowdry — reg. $15.00
For appointment call 842-3699
Walk-ins welcome also
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST + FREE
DELIVERY
$1 000 OFF
Any Pizza Ordered
11 a.m.-4 p.m.
---
Nobody knows the athlete's foot like The Athlete's Foot
842-1212
10% off any shoe
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
Valid through 7/15/87
MISSION
DOUBLE TROUBLE
MEDIUM
LARGE
TWO TOPPING or TWO TOPPING
PIZZA
$5.99
PIZZA
$6.99
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thru
Dine in • Carry out • Delivery
7:15 87
942 Mass.
841-6966
Expires 12/31/87
DOUBLE TROUBLE
MEDIUM OR LARGE
---
PIZZA SHUTTLE
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DELIVERY
Minsky's
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CHARGE FOR DELIVERY!
FREE PLANT with this coupon
2228 IOWA
842-0154
842-1212
PENCE
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ADDRESS
DATE
Form 132187
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15th and New York 843-2004
Taste and savor our mouth-watering Runza sandwich on your next visit. It's a delicious blend of ground beef, cabbage, onion and special spices... baked inside homemade bread. *Come on and get a taste*
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Coupon expires 7/14/87
2700 Iowa, Lawrence
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---
WEATHER
Today: Rain ending, partly cloudy, high 88. Chance of p.m. thunderstorms, low 70.
Tomorrow: Mostly sunny, high 90. Overnight low 70.
Weekend: Daily highs 90-93, lows 71-74. Slight chance of thunderstorms daily.
Sikhs again massacre Hindu bus riders Dragnet: Criminal miscasting Brown trains U.S. junior men's team
Page 2
Page 7
Page 9
Wednesday
July 8, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 150
(USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Watkin's may stop in-patient treatment
By STORMY WYLIE
Staff writer
One way to offset the rising costs of medical care at the University may be to close down the in-patient care facilities at Watkins Memorial Hospital permanently, a University official said this week.
This summer, the hospital is closed every day from 11 p.m. to 7:30 a.m., and patients are treated on an outpatient basis only.
The hospital again will be open 24 hours starting Aug. 16, but inpatients still will not be admitted, said Jim Strobl, director of student health services.
But David Ambler, vice chancellor of student affairs, said Monday that the summer closing of the in-patient facilities was an experiment.
"We wanted to see if this satisfies the needs of the students," he said. "If not, we'll go back to the drawing board. Nothing is final."
Even if the in-patient facilities are closed permanently, KU students still will receive out-patient treatment this fall, and students could stay at the hospital up to 23 hours for observation, Strobl said.
During this summer semester, students needing medical treatment during the hours Watkins is closed should go to Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Strobli said
During fall and spring semesters, an average of 300 students are treated each day, but only one actually is admitted, he said.
"This plan goes beyond saving money," Strobel said. "It just doesn't make sense economically to stay open for one student.
"There's not much demand for 24-hour service. To spend the student's money wisely, we don't want to duplicate some services."
Strobil said he had not received any complaints since the inpatient facility was closed.
Strobl said the change should not affect many students. The heaviest concentration of medical care now is needed from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., he said.
Each KU student paid $33 for health fees during this summer semester and will pay $56 this fall semester.
7
ETLL
Down the court
Kansas guard, Kevin Pritchard, works out in Allen Field House. Pritchard is one of 19 candidates competing this week at KU to be chosen for the Junior World Basketball Team. See related story on page 9.
North assumed Reagan gave OK for his activities
WASHINGTON (AP) — Lt. Col. Oliver North, a take-no-guff witness trumpeting his devotion to the contras, said yesterday that he had assumed President Reagan had approved his efforts to divert Iranian arms sales profits to the cause.
But, he said. "No memorandum ever came back to me with the initials from the president." And he said that on the day Reagan fired him, the president told him on the telephone, "I just didn't know."
North's testimony was the most sought-after in the congressional Iran-contra hearings to date, and it lived up to its advance billing. His more than six hours in the witness chair was punctuated by sharp exchanges with committee counsel John Nield, and between North's lawyer and the committee chairman
North contradicted the testimony of former National Security Advisor Robert McFarlane that McFarlane had told his staff not to solicit assistance from foreign leaders for the contrast after Congress had cut off U.S. aid.
"I never heard those instructions,' North said and added that he once gave McFarlane a card containing the number of a foreign bank account that could accept contributions earmarked for the contrasts.
Repeatedly, North told the committees that he had been conducting covert operations whose details were not for U.S. citizens.
"There are boxes within boxes to protect the operation," he said. "I
pray to God you are not going to turn those loose."
North made no secret of the fact that other countries, including China, identified at the hearing only as "country No. 4," were asked to contribute to the contras. When he met with the FBI, North said, he asked that the FBI keep tabs so his meeting would not be misunderstood.
But he denied, strongly, that he solicited money himself. That was not because of a congressional amendment forbidding official U.S. aid, he said, "but because I understood there were regulations against government officials soliciting money."
He also said he did not offer meetings with the president or tours of the Oval Office for contributions.
To a question about diversion of the Iranian arms profits to the rebels fighting the Nicaraguan government, North said, "The only thing we did was divert money out of Mr. Ghorbanifar's pocket and put it to better use." North was referring to Manucher Ghorbanifar, a middleman in contact with Iran.
"I would have offered the Iranians a free trip to Disneyland if we could have gotten our hostages home for it." North added.
Stephan files suit to stop bogus mortgage firm
As for memos North said he prepared for Reagan on the proposed diversion, presidential spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said Reagan had previously denied knowledge of the operation.
Staff writer
By KEITH ROBISON
Common Title out of Kansas.
TOPEKA — The Kansas attorney general said Monday that people who desperately sought to save what they cared about would grasp the facts, sometimes even braindrops.
Kansas Attorney General Robert Stephan filed suit Monday in Shawnee County District Court against Common Title and Trust Co., a Nevada- and California-based firm linked to a white-supremacist and tax-protest group. He accused the firm of swindling financially troubled Kansas farmers into thinking they could save their land.
He said the purpose of the suit was to drive
"There are always some unscrupulous, despicable people who want to take advantage of those who are in severe financial stress," Stephan said.
In the scheme, Stephan said, farmers mortgage their land to Common Title in return for seemingly negotiable documents called "sight drafts." The sight drafts supposedly offer a 4-year tenancy and are paid by payments. The farmers then try to pay off debts and bank loans with these bonus papers.
"Of course, it's all to no avail because the sight draft is worthless." Stephan said.
The farmers are led to believe that they were transferring their bank loans to the Federal
Reserve system. The Federal Reserve refuses to honor the papers, and banks have been warned not to accept them.
"Farmers falling for this may jeopardize their existing loan, they may lose redemption time if in foreclosure, they may injure their position in bankruptcy, they may risk criminal charges, and they will cloud the title to their property." Stephan said.
In the suit Stephan requested that Common Title stop selling its program, make restitution to all Kansas it had dealt with and pay a civil judgment against the violations of the Kansas Consumer Protection Act.
Stephan now is investigating the number of possible violations the firm has committed.
Stephan said the company also had an office in Osborne, Kan. Bob Saylor, an alleged officer of the firm in Osborne and a defendant named in the suit, could not be reached for comment.
Special Agent Max Geiman, spokesperson for the Kansas City division of the FBI, said the president of Common Title and Trust in California was Roger Elvick, who also was a national spokesman for the Committee of States, a right-wing political organization.
Although some Common Title officers have links to radical, right-wing political groups, Stephan said, the operations in Kansas have been strictly business-oriented.
See STEPHAN, p. 8, col. 1
Opinions differ on Towers' vandals
By KEITH ROBISON
Staff writer
Some of the descriptions are nauseating. Bags of trash in the elevators. Urine in the washing machines and stairwells.
Some KU housing officials said recently that the vandalism problem at the Jayhawker Towers apartments, 1603 W. 15th St., was improving.
However, other people don't agree. Kenneth Stoner, director of student housing, said June 24 that vandalism at the Towers was on the decline.
"We have had some intermittent difficulties, but occupancy is increasing, so we must have some favorable student response. One of the markers of success is whether students choose to live there. They don't have to," he said.
"We have a lot of (fee) holds against football players right now, and I'm catching a lot of flack for it," he said.
Mowery said he had charged football players for some damages, but said the players claimed the damages were done three years earlier.
He said that when he started his job about a year ago, he had no record of how long he worked.
But Larry Mowery, facilities supervisor at the Towers, said vandalism wasn't declining.
"Towers C and D are the worst. I'd say Tower D is worse than C."
Tower D's occupants are predominantly championship athletes.
"Next summer when I go through there, I'll know exactly what they did," Mowery said. "We're keeping a history on every apartment."
"Most of it (vandalism) is exit lights broken,灯亮 lights broken.
doors broken, security doors' glass kicked in and spray painted graffiti on the walls," he said.
Stoner said that Bob Valenteen, KU head football coach, was working with housing officials to prevent vandalism at the Towers.
"There been a noticeable improvement since Valesente began his program of values and standards. It's a big difference when the head of a program sets the basic standards," he said.
"Coach Valesente will tour the D tower before we open it and will know exactly what it looks like before it opens. That way, he will know exactly what damage has been done. The athletic department will be responsible for the damages done by the athletes. They are willing to assume the costs for damages obviously done by athletes."
Ken Hopkins, Lawrence freshman, who is not a KU athlete, said he lived in Tower D last year, when the elevators were repaired.
"They put in new ceiling tiles (in the elevators), new tiles on the floor and fixed the walls. That lasted about a week before the ceiling tiles were removed, there was stuff on the floor," he said. "D Tower is like 'Animal House.'"
"At least once a week there was furniture disassembled in the hall — Towers furniture, all smashed up. There was urine in the washing machines. There was urine in the stairwells all the time. Also, the security doors were never locked.
"They would put their trash in the elevator instead of taking it on out to the dumpster."
Vandalism at the Towers is not new.
Jay Hudspeth, Lawrence resident,
was a maintenance man at the Towers
13 years ago. The residents kept
him busy, he said.
"I'd be trying to get some sleep, and they'd be partying at 5 in the morning. The weekends were hell." I thought. "They think some of them went to class."
"Once, the elevator was set on fire. Another time, we had to clean burnt stereos out of the incinerator. I think someone was trying to steal them," he said.
"It's just this year we're getting our system in the same way as the rest of the residence halls. As part of our joining the system, we are working on ways to prevent the problem. We have a task force in the investigating stages, and we hope to have a policy in line for the fall."
"Before, the Towers used to be operated just like a regular apartment complex. Now, they will be built like a residence hall," she said.
Marilyn Schroeder, Towers manager, said earning a new reputation
The Towers have been controlled by the University since 1980, Schroeder said, but this year they are being integrated into the same booking and billing system as the residence halls.
Residents will be able to pay in installments to the Office of the Comptroller in Carrith O'Leary in the office. The staff at the Towers' office, Schroeder said.
Steve Keel, assistant director of student housing and director of the Towers, said, "I think there's vandalism in every residence hall, whether you look at KU or K-State."
Crime on campus diminishes during the summer months
By KRISTEN HAYS
Lawrence Police Lt. Mike Hall, a crime analyst, said summer used to be a slack season for crime in the city, allowing the department to catch up on back work from the winter.
Although the Lawrence crime rate remains steady during the summer, campus crime diminishes with the student population.
Staff writer
"Lawrence has grown in the past five or six years. It's not the number of crimes that keep the crime rate steady as much as the kinds of crimes. Rapes, robberies, burglaries and murders take more time to investigate, so there's no slack season," he said.
Connie Sheridan/Kansan Graphic
JAN FEB MAR APR MAY JUN JUL AUG SEP OCT NOV DEC
KU Campus Crimes during 1986
However, crime on campus is a different story.
KU Campus Crimes during 1986 by month of occurrence
KU Police Lt. John Mullens said the number of crimes and the types of crimes committed on campus changed significantly in the summer.
"There's a lack of major crimes in the summer, like burglaries. It's more the 'I left my book here,' or 'I left my wallet there.'"
Most campus crime occurs during September, October and November. It decreases in December and January, during Christmas break, and stavs low until Anil and May.
June, July and August have nearly half the crime rate of the months ahead.
In the summer, Joseph R. Pearson Hall houses KU students, and other residence halls house students who are participating in summer camps.
"There are less cars broken into because less cars are left overnight, since JRP is the only hall with regular students. In other dorms -- camps, generally -- no cars are allowed, so that alleviates the car situation." Mullens said.
"Fall has always been a party time, and accidents and tickets as well as crime goes up. One-fifth of the student population is here for the first time, and they don't know their way around or what to expect.
"There's a downswing in crime during mid-terms and finals, as well as in accidents and tickets, when students get the idea to hit the books.
Fall is the adjustment period."
January, February and March are relatively quiet months where crime is concerned, largely because of weather, Mullens said.
Campus crime fluctuates the most in May and late August depending on finals, commencement and when students move into the residence halls, Mullens said.
"If the weather's bad in April, students will study earlier, and we'll have less crime. It's when the students arrive in August and move into the dorms that the rate starts to rise."
---
2
Wednesday, July 8, 1987
---
Kansan Summer Weekly
Around the World
34 Hindus killed by Sikh terrorists on second night of massacring
CHANDIGARH, India - Sikh terrorists massacred 34 Hindus on two buses in Haryana state last night, the day after Sikh gunmen killed 38 Hindu passengers on a bus in neighboring Punjab, officials reported.
"The modus operandi of the killings is the same as the one we had inside Punjab," said Munish Chandra Gupta, interior minister of Haryana.
He said an unknown number of Sikhs halted a state-run Haryana Roadways bus on a bridge near Fatehabad, about 150 miles south west of Chandigarh near the Punjab. The terrorists then dragged four passengers who killed them with auto-rickets weapons.
When a second bus drove from the opposite direction, the gunnen stopped it and killed 30 of its occupants, Gupta said.
Eighteen people in the two buses were wounded, he said. The wounded in the Monday attack totaled 32.
Gupta quoted police as saying that yesterday the Sikh attackers were in a car and a jeep and that one bus was carrying 60 people. One bus was headed for Sisra, a grain center, and the other for New Delhi, about 135 miles to the southwest.
Monday night in Punjab, Sikh gunmen hijacked a bus crowded with Hindu pilgrims. They killed 38, including five women and four children, and declared that more than 100 people die in the fight for independence.
Army and police were put on full alert throughout northern India to prevent more terrorism and revenge attacks on Sikhs by Hindus, which have occurred in the past after Sikh terrorist actions.
Officials on trial for Chernobyl accident
CHERNOBYL, U.S.S.R. — Six former top officials and technicians at the Chernobyl power plant went on trial yesterday charged with "blatant violation" of security regulations that led to the worst nuclear accident in history.
All but one of the accused, Yuri A. Laushkin, senior engineer and atomic energy inspector, are charged under Article 220 of the Ukrainian criminal code on violations of security measures in enterprises where explosions may result. That charge carries a maximum 10-year prison sentence.
Other defendants are Nikolai M. Fomin, former chief engineer, Boris V. Rogozhin, chief engineer No. 4 shift director, and Alexander P. Kovalenko, chief of reactor No. 4.
Soviet officials said that the April 26, 1986 accident was caused entirely by human error.
At least 31 people died after unauthorized experiments led to an explosion and fire at Chernobyl's No.4 reactor. More than 200 others suffered acute radiation sickness.
A judicial investigatory commission report accused the six of "blatant violation of technical safety measures and regulations governing the use of nuclear reactors in the Soviet Union." The report said that the defendants generally accepted professional responsibility for the disaster but that they thought they were not guilty of the criminal charges.
A small group of Moscow-based reporters were driven in by bus from Kiev under police escort for the trial's first day. All were checked by white-coated technicians at the courtroom entrance for traces of radiation.
More bodies recovered from sunken barge
HARARE, Zimbabwe — Rescue teams recovered 16 more bodies yesterday from the crocodile-infested Luapula River, where officials fear that 390 passengers died in the sinking of a barge.
One officer said the man at the tiller may have dozed off.
The barge Maria was carrying 470 people from Zaire to Zambia when it hit a sandbar and overturned during a crossing early Sunday.
ered. Twenty-three bodies were recovered immediately after the sinking.
Eighty passengers on the upper deck swam to shore in pre-dawn darkness, but 351 of the 470 women, and children crowded onto the barge remained missing, the statement said.
A statement from the office of Zambia's President Kenneth Kaunda in Lusaka, capital of Zambia, said 39 bodies had been recov
Police reinforcements and villagers were coming the river banks for survivors, said the officer, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
He said that the man at the tiller surrendered to police and was detained pending an investigation.
PTL goes broke, seeks $2 million this week
Around the Nation
FORT MILL, S.C. (AP) — PTL's operating funds have dried up, and the ministry needs $2 million by Monday and another $11.5 million before Oct. 1 to survive, the Rev. Jerry Falwell said yesterday.
PTL has three months to submit its reorganization plan to the court. PTL's 1,400 creditors are scheduled to meet with the ministry's leaders on July 22 in Columbia, S.C.
"We must raise more than $4.5 million a month (through September) to prove to the court, our lawyers, that we're looking in that we are viable."
PTL generates about $1.5 million a month in revenue from its Heritage USA facilities and television network, but the remaining $3 million needed for daily operating expenses comes from viewer contributions, he said.
Falwell said he had sent telegrams to 200,000 past contributors asking them to send $100 apiece by Friday so PTL can meet operating expenses by Monday.
Before the end of the year, PTL officials hope to arrange a loan to consolidate past debts, Falwell said.
"We are at zero balance in our checking account." Failwell told viewers of the PTL Club television show "The Dancing with the Rainbow" raising medium for the ministry.
PTL, officials have filed a petition with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court to seek protection from its creditors while it reorganizes and looks for a way to pay off its $72 million debt.
Woman accused of killing baby waives extradition
Killeen, an assistant stockbroker who claims she has given up two other babies for adoption, was traveling to Florida with her brother when she gave birth to a daughter in the bathroom of an Eastern jet, authorities said.
Because the birth and death occurred during Eastern's flight 66 layover June 30 at the airport in Covington, the children were brought by authorities there.
Nation and World U.S. hostage says he worked for CIA
Jill Killeen, 22, of San Francisco, was jailed here without bond Monday on a murder warrant issued by prosecutors in Platte County. Mo. She was arrested at her father's Miami apartment.
"She signed a waiver of extradition. The state of Missouri must pick her up within 10 days," said Assistant State Attorney Gerardo Simms. "They said they wanted her, so I presume they will be here within the 10-day period."
Killeen said the child was born dead, but the Dade County Medical Examiner ruled that the child was born alive and asphyxiated.
MIAMI — A woman accused of killing her newborn soon after the birth aboard an Eastern Airlines jet agreed yesterday to waive extradition to Missouri, where she faces felony murder charges, a prosecutor said.
The baby girl's bloodied body, wrapped in a disposable airline pillowcase, was found July 1 in a trash can in a women's bathroom at the Miami International Airport.
He said an exact date for Kil leen's transfer had not been set.
Government official says Glass could have made statement under torture
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) — U.S. journalist Charles Glass, his face drawn and unshaven, said on a videotape released yesterday that he was working as a CIA agent when Muslim kidnappers took him hostage June 17.
State Department spokesman Charles Redman denied the claim and said statements by hostages were always made under duress.
Glass choked up several times while reading on the five-minute timer.
36-year-old former ABC television correspondent from Los Angeles, who went to Lebanon to work on a book about the Middle East. He was shown on the waist up, wearing a dark blue track suit.
"I am Charles Glass," he said. "Many of you know me as a journalist, but few knew the truth.
"I'm actually the CIA agent in the region and the Middle East. I made many secret missions to this area. I used the press as a cover for my main job with the CIA."
Fourteen gunmen seized Glass and the son of Lebanon's defense minister together with their driver in the south Beirut slum of Ouzai, a stronghold of Hezbollah, a radical Shiite Muslim group supported by Iran.
It was not clear if his kidnappers prepared the statement for Glass, a
The tape was delivered to the west Beirut office of a Western news agency with a statement from the Organization for the Free People's Defense, a previously unknown organization that claimed last week to hold Glass.
and Hezbollah, which means Party of God. "is the only suspect."
A source close to the Syrian military command in Lebanon said yesterday that it had established that the "political identity" of the kidnappers
In the nine-line statement released yesterday, typewritten in Arabic, the kidnappers said, "America was and still is trying to exploit us."
Voice quality on the videotape was poor, making it difficult to hear precisely what Glass was saying. In 1985, he recited his English was not grammatical.
He read from yellow sheets of paper, which he brought close to his face several times as if having trouble deciphering the words.
"I came back to Lebanon on a secret mission from the office of the CIA in London. My plan was to get the last (latest) information in this area and how the last action affected Israeli-Christian relations."
"I collect information for the benefit of the CIA," he said. "For that, I made secret missions. They ordered me to do that."
"I'm not the only one to use the press as a cover for those things. Many people who work for the agency use the same cover, and some of
them were arrested in some countries and I am one of them.
What action he referred to was not clear.
"I want to send all my love to my family. I love you," he said in conclusion.
In Washington, White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said: "The history of those kinds of videotapes suggests often that they are done under coercion or even torture." He denied Glass had worked for the CIA.
At least 30 dead from gas truck explosion
Truck crashes into ice cream parlor in West German town, ignites gas mair
HERBORN, West Germany (AP)
— A tank truck loaded with gasoline erased into an ice cream parlor last night, exploded and set off a ruptured gas main, killing at least 30 people and injuring 29, officials said. The truck driver survived.
Police said three buildings in the town of 21,000 were destroyed, and five were heavily damaged in the series of explosions from the truck and the broken gas main. Dozens of cars were set ablaze.
The downtown section of Herborn looked as if it had been firebombed. It took hundreds of firemen about five hours to bring the flames under control after the 9 p.m. accident.
Police spokesman Helmut Kremer said the explosives killed at least 30
people. He did not say how many bodies had been recovered.
'We don't know how many more bodies may be in the ruins. Rescuers are now starting to sift through the debris.'
Gerhard Boekel town spokesman
he said some of the missing may have failed to register with authorities.
"We don't know how many more bodies may be in the ruins. Rescuers are now starting to sift through the bones of Gerhard Berkel told reporters.
Ernst Achilles, a spokesman for the rescue teams, said up to 50 people were believed missing or dead. But
A Red Cross official said he was told by a man who had left the ice cream parlor moments before the truck slammed into it that 35 to 40 people were inside at the time.
Achilles said at least 29 people were hospitalized. Four of them were flown by helicopters to the burn unit of a hospital in Cologne and were in critical condition.
Five firemen were among the injured, he said.
Bookel said more than 100 people were evacuated from the area of the blast and taken to a local school to spend the night.
Gerhard Heimman, another police spokesman, said the 48-year-old bus driver survived the accident "by a miracle" and was hospitalized.
A pizzeria on the floor above the ice cream parlor apparently was closed at the time of the accident, Heimann said.
Heimann said the driver told officers his brakes failed after he left a nearby thruway.
His truck's burned hulk rested on its side in the wreckage. Police spokesman Kremer said it was carrying more than 8,300 gallons of gasoline.
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Wednesday, July 8, 1987
Kansan Summer Weekly
Around the World
34 Hindus killed by Sikh terrorists on second night of massacring
CHANDIGARH, India — Sikh terrorists massacred 34 Hindus on two buses in Haryana state last night, the day after Sikh gunmen killed 38 Hindu passengers on a bus in neighboring Punjab, officials reported.
"The modus operandi of the killings is the same as the one we had inside Punjab," said Munish Chandra Gupta, interior minister of Haryana.
He said an unknown number of Sikhs halted a state-run Haryana Roadways bus on a bridge near Fatehabad, about 150 miles southwest of Chandigarh near the Punjab border. The terrorists then took four passengers and killed them with automatic weapons.
When a second bus drove from the opposite direction, the gunmen stopped it and killed 30 of its occupants, Gupta said.
Eighteen people in the two buses were wounded, he said. The wounded in the Monday attack totaled 32.
Gupta quoted police as saying that yesterday the Sikh attackers were in a car and a jeep and that one bus was carrying 60 people. One bus was headed for Sisra, a grain center, and the other for New Delhi, about 135 miles to the southwest.
Monday night in Punjab, Sikh gunmen hijacked a bus crowded with Hindu pilgrims. They killed 38, including five women and four children, and declared that more Indian civilians die in the fight for independence.
Army and police were put on full alert throughout northern India to prevent more terrorism and revenge attacks on Sikhs by Hindus, which have occurred in the past after Sikh terrorist actions.
Officials on trial for Chernobyl accident
CHERNOBYL, U.S.S.R. — Six former top officials and technicians at the Chernobyl power plant went on trial yesterday charged with "blatant violation" of security regulations that led to the worst nuclear accident in history.
All but one of the accused, Yuri A. Laushkin, senior engineer and atomic energy inspector, are charged under Article 220 of the Ukraina criminal code on violations of security measures in the construction industry. The result That charge carries a maximum 10-year prison sentence.
Other defendants are Nikolai M. Fomin, former chief engineer, Boris V. Rogozhi, reactor No. 4 shift director, and Alexander P. Kovalenko, chief of reactor No. 4.
Soviet officials said that the April 26,1986 accident was caused entirely by human error.
At least 31 people died after unauthorized experiments led to an explosion and fire at Chernobyl's No.4 reactor. More than 200 others suffered acute radiation sickness.
A small group of Moscow-based reporters were driven in by bus from Kiev under police escort for the trial's first day. All were checked by white-coated technicians at the courtroom entrance for traces of radiation.
A judicial investigatory commission report accused the six of "blatant violation of technical safety measures and regulations governing the use of nuclear reactors in the Soviet Union." The report said that the defendants generally accepted professional responsibility for the disaster but that they thought they were not guilty of the criminal charges.
More bodies recovered from sunken barge
HARARE, Zimbabwe — Rescue teams recovered 16 more bodies yesterday from the crocodile-infested Luapula River, where officials fear that 390 passengers died in the sinking of a barge.
One officer said the man at the tiller may have dozed off.
The barge Maria was carrying 470 people from Zaire to Zambia when it hit a sandbar and overturned during a crossing early Sunday.
A statement from the office of Zambia's President Kenneth Kauda in Lusaka, capital of Zambia, said 39 bodies had been recov
ered. Twenty-three bodies were recovered immediately after the sinking.
Eighty passengers on the upper deck swam to shore in pre-dawn darkness, but 351 of the 470 women and children crowded onto the barge remained missing, the statement said.
r once reinforcements and villagers were combing the river banks for survivors, said the officer, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
He said that the man at the tiller surrendered to police and was detained pending an investigation.
Around the Nation
PTL goes broke, seeks $2 million this week
FORT MILL, S.C. (AP) - PTL's operating funds have dried up, and the ministry needs $2 million by Monday and another $11.5 million before Oct. 1 to survive, the Rev. Jerry Failwell said yesterday.
"We must raise more than $4.5 million a month (through September) to prove to the court, our lawyer, that one looking in that we are viable."
"We are at zero balance in our checking account." Fairwell told viewers of the PTL Club television program, the principal fund-raising medium for the ministry.
PTL has three months to submit its reorganization plan to the court. PTL's 1,400 creditors are scheduled to meet with the ministry's leaders on July 22 in Columbia, S.C.
PTL generates about $1.5 million a month in revenue from its Heritage USA facilities and television network, but the remaining $3 million needed for daily operating expenses comes from viewer contributions, he said.
PTL officials have filed a petition with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court to seek protection from its creditors while it reorganizes and looks for a way to pay off its $72 million debt.
Before the end of the year, PTL officials hope to arrange a loan to consolidate past debts. Falwell said.
Falwell said he had sent telegrams to 200,000 past contributors asking them to send $100 apiece by Friday so PTL can meet operating expenses by Monday.
Woman accused of killing baby waives extradition
Julie Killineen, 22, of San Francisco, was jailed here without bond Monday on a murder warrant issued by prosecutors in Platte County. Mo. She was arrested at her father's Miami apartment.
MIAMI — A woman accused of killing her newborn soon after the birth aboard an Eastern Airlines jet agreed yesterday to waive extradition to Missouri, where she faces felony murder charges, a prosecutor said.
"She signed a waiver of extradition. The state of Missouri must pick her up within 10 days," said Assistant State Attorney Gerardo Simms. "They said they wanted her, so I presume they will be here within the 10-day period."
Killeen, an assistant stockbroker who claims she has given up two other babies for adoption, was traveling to Florida with her brother when she gave birth to a daughter in the bathroom of an Eastern jet, authorities said.
Because the birth and death occurred during Eastern's flight 66 layover June 30 at the airport in Kansas City, Mo., charges were brought by authorities there.
Killeen said the child was born dead, but the Dade County Medical Examiner ruled that the child was born alive and asphyxiated.
The baby girl's bloodied body, wrapped in a disposable airline pillowcase, was found July 1 in a trash can in a women's bathroom at the Miami International Airport.
Nation and World U.S. hostage says he worked for CIA
He said an exact date for Kileen's transfer had not been set.
Government official says Glass could have made statement under torture
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) — U.S. journalist Charles Glass, his face drawn and unshaven, said on a videotape released yesterday that he was working as a CIA agent when Muslim kidnappers took him hostage June 17.
State Department spokesman Charles Redman denied the claim and said statements by hostages were always made under duress.
36-year-old former ABC television correspondent from Los Angeles, who went to Lebanon to work on a book about the Middle East. He was shown from the waist up, wearing a dark blue track suit.
Glass choked up several times while reading on the five-minute videotape.
"I am Charles Glass," he said. "Many of you know me as a journalist, but few knew the truth.
"I'm actually the CIA agent in the region and the Middle East. I made many secret missions to this area. I used the press as a cover for my main job with the CIA."
Fourteen gunmen seized Glass and the son of Lebanon's defense minister together with their driver in the south Beirut slum of Ouzai, a stronghold of Hezbollah, a radical Shiite Muslim group supported by Iran.
It was not clear if his kidnappers prepared the statement for Glass, a
The tape was delivered to the west Beirut office of a Western news agency with a statement from the Organization for the Free People's Defense, a previously unknown group that claimed last week to hold Glass.
A source close to the Syrian military command in Lebanon said yesterday that it had established that the "political identity" of the kidnappers
and Hebbolish, which means Party of God, "is the only suspect."
In the nine-line statement released yesterday, typewritten in Arabic, the kidnappers said, "America was and still is trying to exploit us."
Voice quality on the videotape was poor, making it difficult to hear precisely what Glass was saying. In at least one sentence, his English was not grammatical.
He read from yellow sheets of paper, which he brought close to his face several times as if having trouble deciphering the words.
"I collect information for the benefit of the CIA," he said. "For that, I made secret missions. They ordered me to do that."
"I'm not the only one to use the press as a cover for those things. Many people who work for the agency used the same cover, and some of
"I came back to Lebanon on a secret mission from the office of the CIA in London. My plan was to get the last (latest) information in this area and how the last action affected Israeli-Christian relations."
them were arrested in some countries and I am one of them.
"I want to send all my love to my family. I love you," he said in conclusion.
What action he referred to was not clear.
In Washington, White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said: "The history of those kinds of videotapes suggests often that they are done under coercion or even torture." He denied Glass had worked for the CIA.
At least 30 dead from gas truck explosion
Truck crashes into ice cream parlor in West German town, ignites gas main
HERBORN, West Germany (AP)
— A tank truck loaded with gasoline crashed into an ice cream parlor last night, exploded and set off a ruptured gas main, killing at least 30 people and injuring 29, officials said. The truck driver survived.
The downtown section of Herborn looked as if it had been firebombed. It took hundreds of firemen about five hours to bring the flames under control after the 9 p.m. accident.
Police said three buildings in the town of 21,000 were destroyed, and five were heavily damaged in the series of explosions from the truck and the broken gas main. Dozens of cars were set ablaze.
Police spokesman Helmut Kremer said the explosions killed at least 30
people. He did not say how many bodies had been recovered.
'We don't know how many more bodies may be in the ruins. Rescuers are now starting to sift through the debris.'
Gerhard Boekel town spokesman
"We don't know how many more bodies may be in the ruins. Rescuers are now starting to sift through the debris," town spokesman Gerhard Boekel told reporters.
Ernst Achilles, a spokesman for the rescue teams, said up to 50 people were believed missing or dead. But
he said some of the missing may have failed to register with authorities.
A Red Cross official said he was told by a man who had left the ice cream parlor moments before the truck slammed into it that 35 to 40 people were inside at the time.
Achilles said at least 29 people were hospitalized. Four of them were flown by helicopters to the burn unit of a hospital in Cologne and were in critical condition.
Five firemen were among the injured. he said.
Boekel said more than 100 people were evacuated from the area of the blast and taken to a local school to spend the night.
Gerhard Heimman, another police spokesman, said the 48-year-old bus driver survived the accident "by a miracle" and was hospitalized.
A pizzeria on the floor above the ice cream parlor apparently was closed at the time of the accident, Heimann said.
Heimann said the driver told officers his brakes failed after he left a nearby thruway.
His truck's burned hulk rested on its side in the wreckage. Police spokesman Kremer said it was carrying more than 8,300 gallons of gasoline.
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Kansan Summer Weekly
Wednesday, July 8, 1987
3
Local Briefs
Regents select new chairman to head Board
Donald C. Slawson was recently elected chairman of the Kansas Board of Regents.
Slawson, 53, Wichita, was first appointed to the Regents on Jan. 1, 1986, by former Kansas Gov. John Carlin. Slawson successes Frank J. Becker, El Dorado as chairman
Slawson is chairman of the board and president of Slawson Companies, a corporation with principal interests in oil, gas and real estate, and is the director of First National Bank of Wichita, Kansas Gas and Electric Co. and Security Benefit Life Insurance Co. He is also on the advisory board to the National Petroleum Council.
This past year, Slawson was chairman of the Regents fiscal affairs committee. He said he was optimistic about Kansas' future, especially the role higher education would play in paving the way for renewed prosperity.
KU official named to School Board
The Lawrence School Board Monday elected a KU official as its new president
Barbara Ballard, director of the Emily Taylor Resource Center and associate dean of student life, was unanimously elected to serve a one-year term as president of the Lawrence School Board.
Ballard, 42 is the first black woman to serve as board president. Her duties as president will include presiding over board meetings and meeting once a week with Superintendent Dan Neuenswander to set adendas.
The board also elected Alice Fowler as its vice president. Fowler, 52, is a clerk-typist for the Lawrence Fire Department.
KU student injured in head-on collision
A KU student is in stable condition today at Lawrence Memorial Hospital after being injured yested on collision on East 23rd street.
According to Lawrence police reports, the student, Sheldon Wilson, 39. Prairie Village graduate student, was driving west on 23rd Street when his Honda Civic was hit head-on by a Toyota pickup driven by Thad Petry, 18, Lawrence resident.
Petry told police he had been eastbound on 23rd Street and had started to turn left on to Learnard Avenue about five or six carlengths from the intersection to beat the oncoming traffic. He said he seen Wilson's car because another car obstructed his view.
Because of budget cuts, the KU library may no longer subscribe to Playboy, Reader's Digest or People
Petry wasn't transported to LMH. The police report indicated that neither driver was wearing a seat belt.
Clarification
Campus and Area
In the July 1 edition of the University Daily Kansan, it was incorrectly reported that Allen Ginsberg and William Burroughs were featured in *Pull My Daisy*. The film features Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac. Also, *This Song For You*, Jack features Ginsberg and Peter Orlovsky. In the same story, it was stated that the event would focus on Kerouac, however, it also will focus on Lawrence and its art community.
Weak dollar forces KU libraries' budget cuts
PLAYBOY
ENTERTAINMENT FOR MEN
COLLECTOR'S EDITION
THERE'S A HOLD NEW LOOK UNDER OUR COVERS
ABUSER: The unmasking of OLIVER NORTON
People
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BUSSING WAKE UP!
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"The Star duster's Last Flight"
By STORMY WYLIE
Staff writer
Photo Illustration by Darcy Chang/KANSAN
KU students may stroll into Watson Library next spring, go up to the periodical section on the fourth floor and ask to see the latest issue of their favorite magazine. But, it might not be there.
About $200,000 worth of magazines and about $200,000 worth of books are being cut from the University of Kansas libraries' 1988 budget, said Richard Ring, KU collections development librarian.
Ring and his staff have been assembling a list of about 2,500 periodicals that may be canceled as a result of this budget cut. KU faculty and librarians have been reviewing the periodicals list since February.
Some of the more popular magazines that may not be renewed are Reader's Digest, People and Playboy. Several newspaper subscriptions, including The Sun Times and the Boston Globe, also may be canceled. Ring said.
The amount of foreign language materials will be decreased significantly, but the biggest cut would come from professors' and scholarly journals, he said.
good, solid scholarly work on Nicaragua or a how-to-dress-for-success book, we'll buy the book on Nicaragua," Ring said. "We're trying to take into consideration the needs of everybody."
A final list of the magazines that we will be renewed should be released for free.
Ring said the short-term effect of the budget cuts would mean more to KU students than not being able to read their favorite magazine or the newest book. In the long run, it will affect research possibilities for graduate students and faculty.
Richard Schowen, chairman of the council of distinguished professors steering committee, said the libraries' budget cut would be severe.
to be addressed at a national and international level."
"The real impact may not be felt until five years down the road when students come in to look at the last couple of years of a journal and a book written it," he said.
"The long-term effect could be the most devastating."
"This could be quite dangerous to research and teaching capabilities of the University," he said. "But this is also a national problem and has got
James Ranz, dean of libraries, said the libraries' budget cuts were not due to a lack of financial resources
Ranz said the budget cuts were due to the rising costs of books and the devaluation of the dollar, which design books even more expensive.
weakened against foreign currencies," he said. "We have the same amount of money available, but it doesn't purchase as much as it used to."
Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said the library budget actually increased by 2.4 percent and should increase 7.2 percent in 1988.
between the dollar and foreign currencies had risen about 50 percent over the past two years. In that same time, the cost of domestic books has risen 10 to 12 percent and 20 percent on periodicals, he said.
The strength of the dollar has
The devaluation of the dollar means a considerable loss of purchasing power because about a third of all U.S. exports come from foreign books and periodicals, he
Ring said the exchange rate
said.
Ring recently returned from a convention of the American Library Association in San Francisco and said other libraries across the United States were facing the same problem as KU libraries.
"Unless we start receiving (budget) increases that match inflation, we will continue to lose a little every year," he said.
Libraries to cut some scholarly magazines
Staff writer
By STORMY WYLIE
Staff writer
Imagine spending $3,000 a year for a magazine subscription.
That's what the University spends for eight issues of Computer State of the Art Reports. KU also shells out $2,000 a year for 30 issues of Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, and $1,150 a year for 24 issues of Biochemical Pharmacology.
Those and other scientific and technical journals will be hit the hardest when the University trims about $400,000 from its libraries' 1988 acquisition budget, said Richard Ring, KU collections development librarian.
"About 60 percent of the cuts will come from these publications." Ring said. "We tried to do this fairly and across the board. We're cutting according to the percentage of dollars spent."
A larger percentage of the cuts will come from those magazines than from the more popular ones such as Time or Newsweek because the libraries spend more money on scholarly magazines,
Ring said.
The high cost of such journals is forcing many libraries throughout the United States to consider buying cheaper magazines published by non-profit scholarly agencies, he said.
A local printer and distributor of scientific and scholarly journals addressed this issue June 14-19 at the International Conference of Scientific Editors in Hamburg, Germany.
A. C. HALL
The printer, Arly Allen, owner of Allen Press Inc., 1041 New Hampshire St., said that buying non-profit journals was an alternative for libraries that were encountering financial problems for their academic journals.
The large European commercial publishers control the market of scientific and scholarly journals now. Allen said. These commercial journals often cost between $100 and $250 for a subscription. The non-profit publications usually run from $35 to $100 for a subscription.
"In a sense, there is a war going on between the commercial and
Dale Fulkerson/KANSAN
Arly Allen, owner of Allen Press,
1041 New Hampshire St., talks about the availability of non-profit academic journals to libraries.
"They (commercial publishers) are effectively wiping out the library market because their publications are so expensive. This leads to a disruption of the entire flow of knowledge."
To help sell some non-profit publications to academic libraries in the United States, Allen Press has put together a subscription catalog of about 300 non-commercial journals.
Commissioner asks for preservation measure
Staff writer
By KRISTEN HAYS
Condemning Douglas County Bank's demolition of eight houses last Saturday, Lawrence City Commissioner Dennis Constance last night asked the commission to adopt a city preservation ordinance connected to the demolition process.
"Not since Quantrill's raided burnt Lawrence down has Lawrence in one day lost so many structures," he said. "A very, very small group of people, the directors of Douglas and his family, have a viable residential structures worth roughly a quarter of a million dollars."
The Douglas County Bank ordered the demolition of eight houses on Tennessee Street in order to expand the branch bank on 9th and Kentucky streets.
Constance said even though bank officials acted within their rights, he had hoped these rights would have been exercised in "a more sensitive, cooperative, reasoned, temperate manner, not in the abrupt and irreversible way they in fact were."
Constance suggested a new ordinance that would include mandatory public notice of an application for a
demolition permit, inspection by city staff members to determine if the structure to be demolished contained material requiring special handling, such as asbestos, and a waiting period of 30 days after a permit application before demolition could proceed.
"The community at large has rights, and if those rights aren't professed by citizenry, they should be professed by ordinance." he said.
Steve Lopes, president of the Old West Lawrence neighborhood association, said that police should have a policy to promote and preserve historical landmarks.
"I feel blind-sided in trying to preserve those old houses. I would like to see a draft of an ordinance that would put into effect as soon as possible."
Sir Penny, Lawrence Preservation Alliance member, asked the commission to appoint a committee to draft the ordinance.
Mayor Mike Amyx the matter would be on the agenda for next Tuesday.
In other business, the commission received a report about vacating of rights-of-way for 12th and 13th streets in West Hills.
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Wednesday, July 8, 1987
Kansan Summer Weekly
Opinions and Editorials
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
SUMMER
WEEKLY
EDITION
Don't sling mud at Bork
President Reagan recently nominated Robert H. Bork, an appeals court judge, to the Supreme Court. Bork is a staunch conservative, and if confirmed, might be the vote that swings the Court back to the right.
Bork was nominated to succeed Justice Lewis F. Powell, who recently announced his retirement because of health problems.
Bork has said that the Supreme Court's 1973 decision in Roe v. Wade was a classic instance of the Court imposing its morality on local jurisdictions. This desire for municipalities to dictate and enforce abortion legislation ignores past bombings of abortion clinics and the long history of local vigilantism in the United States. The thought of abortion laws that differ from one state to the next can be frightening and confusing.
Because Justice Powell has cast the deciding vote in recent years on issues as diverse as affirmative action, school prayer and the rights of the accused, this does not mean that a Court with Bork on the bench would automatically overturn these decisions in future cases.
Civil libertarians, however, argue that a man with a predisposition to lean to the right would not serve the United States with an open mind. They fear that Bork's tendency to decide cases to the letter of the law will not allow him the flexibility to mold the law to fit a country that has changed during the past 200 years.
Even if the Senate should reject Bork, the fight for the nomination would have revealed a disturbing factor: the shameless complaining by
people or groups with special interests in mind.
Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., upset about Republican stalling on defense authorization and campaign spending bills, said last week, "If the current Republican strategy of delaying the Senate is still in vogue, then I will expect some quid pro quo on the nomination."
Other groups oppose Bork for more noble, but still biased, reasons. Consumer activist, Ralph Nader, and AFL-CIO president, Lane Kirkland, have launched campaigns to prevent the Bork nomination because, as Nader said, "He is the pre-eminent judge for big government and big business and for excluding the rights of consumers, taxpayers and citizens to challenge these power structures in court."
Art Kropp, executive director of the civil liberties group. People for the American Way, has pledged to spend "several hundred thousand dollars" to lobby against the Bork nomination.
Sen, Strom Thurmond, R.S.C., expressed only lukewarm praise for Bork after President Reagan ignored his advice to choose a southerner for the Court.
Just as it is the right of President Reagan to nominate a conservative judge to the Supreme Court, it is the right of these groups to oppose the nomination. Also, it is the duty of the Senate to review this nomination and decide whether to accept another conservative appointment to the high court. All parties involved should do what their conscience dictates without slinging mud or making judgments based on scant evidence.
NCAA tomfoolery
The coaches did cut the number of recruiting visits for prospective basketball players from 18 to 15, and reduced the number of paid-recruiting visits from 95 to 85 in an academic year.
Coaches and athletic directors voted down tightening their belts in favor of allowing the programs to continue to expand.
It cost the NCAA $1.8 million to decide that it really doesn't want to cut corners in athletic programs after all. Sports has become big business for colleges and universities, and unfortunately, neither the NCAA nor universities are taking the necessary steps to stop this growth.
They defeated several proposals which would have resulted in cutbacks, although these cutbacks were reasonable suggestions and would not have crippled any program. For example, the NCAA's President's Commission recommended reducing the number of football scholarships from 95 to 90.
The convention really did not accomplish much except to teach coaches and athletic directors how to spend $1.8 million while doing nearly nothing. The coaches and athletic directors succeeded in stalling NCAA goals to cut programs.
The motto of "It's not whether you win or lose, but how you play" is quickly being changed to "It's not whether a coach wins or loses, but how much money the sport will make."
The coaches and athletic directors are forgetting the purpose of sports — to have fun. Sports can be an outlet for athletes' energy, and can be a way to demonstrate cooperation and teamwork in preparation for the real world. Athletes shouldn't feel the pressure of the "win at all costs" attitude. They have enough pressure trying to get an education.
News staff
John Benner ... Editor
Dawn O'Malley ... Managing editor
Jane Zachman ... News editor
Pam Miller ... Campus editor
Tim Hamilton ... Sports editor
Darcy Chang ... Photo editor
Connie Sheridan ... Graphics editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Business start
Lisa Weems ... Business manager
Lisa Osentm ... Retail sales manager
Sally Depew ... Campus sales manager
Dan Pennington ... Classified manager
Greg Knipp ... Production
Truck Rotbulut ... National sales manager
Jeanne Hines ... Sales and marketing adviser
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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.
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 University Dailly Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stairwater-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60045, 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. 60044. 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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God bless schizophrenic America
Glover Bless a slightly schizophrenic America. We have a lot to celebrate as we acknowledge the very beginnings of one of the world's longest-running, albeit somewhat battered, democracies.
And when we gained these freedoms that we celebrate, we gained a country with a way of life that bests all others (no matter what other countries' citizens may tell us). But it's a schizophrenic's way of life, and at no time has it been more obvious on this last Fourth of July.
So, on the day when families and friends enjoy themselves watching parades and fireworks, picnicking in the park and reveling in the spirit of our independence, it's only natural that some people also take the time to recognize and celebrate the birthdays of Phyllis Diller and Spam.
Maria Luisa Gomez
Phyllis Diller And Spam2
It's ironic — as well as schizophrenic — to take two entities which should be far from anyone's reverence and celebrate their birthdays on the most patriotically revered holiday of the year.
I laughed when I first heard about it. Come on, when someone thinks of Phyllis Diller with her frenzied cackle, crazy hair, her long cigarette in its equally long holder and her string of plastic surgeries, who doesn't smirk a little? And when someone thinks of Spam (especially those in my grandfather's generation), who doesn't shudder?
And yet, the more I think about it, the more I realize that the celebrations are very analogous to the essence of what America is celebrating.
Pam
Miller
Pam
Miller
Campus
Editor
After all, Phyllis Diller turns 70 later this month, which is no small feat for anyone. This lady is the self-admitted queen of plastic surgery.
Pam
Miller
Pam
Miller
Campus
Editor
But she is more than just a prime example of excessive vanity. She also can be seen as a symbol of perseverance, the end product of a series of tucks and lifts on top of tucks and lifts, returning to her surgeon unfailingly when something has fallen loose.
Now is she 72? She really doesn't look that old. She just looks the way she always has.
If "preserved" applies to Diller, it applies to Spam as well. Despite the ridicule that the processed "mystery meat" has endured, the product has reached age 50.
And people in Austin, Minn., home of the Hormel Meat Packing Plant where Spam is produced, celebrated that fact with festivities such as a Spam cook-off and a Spam parade. A local McDonald's even had Spam McMuffins.
All this festivity for a food that has been criticized for "clogging up" America's arteries with fat, salts and preservatives.
But in the midst of this festivity were 850 fired meat packers who protested the celebration of a processed pork product made by a company that has left them with no job. The strife led to slashed tires and threatening phone calls to Spam supporters. The joy was not shared by all.
Where does the analogy fall into place, you ask? Consider America, still following the rules laid down 200 years ago by a bunch of guys in white wigs. This country has been through its own kind of facelifts and ridicule and our democracy, too, has been accused of "clogging up" America's arteries.
America in many ways does not seem as old as its 200 years. But our country still needs needing those "facelips"." Why? Because a lot of people protest a country has left them without a job, among other things.
America is not always pretty, like Fourth of July fireworks, but it's enduring. And as long as it's there, we can keep trying to improve.
So that's why I say our country is slightly schizophrenic — where else can you draw a connection between America, a 70-year-old comedienne and processed pork?
They're just as American as baseball, apple pie and mom — especially my mom, who still seems to love me even though I forgot her birthday.
Gouging: as American as designer jeans
God Bless America, Phyllis Diller and Spam
And you too. Morr.
We might as well dispute whether it is the upper or the under blade of a pair of scissors that cuts a piece of paper, as whether value is governed by utility or by cost of production. — Alfred Marshall.
Value: 1. A fair price in return for goods or services. 2. Worth in usefulness or importance to the possessor. — The American Heritage Dictionary.
The pursuit of things and of services is a game, though not originated in the United States, that is played by this nation with the greatest skill in the world. Our national motto might be: How much is it? Or perhaps: What's it in for me?
How is it that a society that is obsessed with material goods is so unconcerned with value? Why not ask instead: What's it worth?
John Benner
Editor
Before I go any further, I should say that I have been known to use plastic money once or twice, and I believe in a free market system. But, as the consumate consumer, I want to get what I pay for.
BENNETT HARRIS
--shows, we can herd a few of the moviegoing masses in early to relieve later congestion. Furthermore, we don't have to give anyone a price break. We're just being nice guys."
Let's start small. What is the value of going to the movies? I said value, not cost. Let us assume that the market will bear an outrageous price of $4. If we are willing to pay that much, then is that what attending the film is worth? Why does it cost $2.50 to see the same movie at the matinee showing?
I've never noticed that the service by the theater employees was any less skilled at the earlier showing. They still leave the garbage waist-high in the aisles between shows. The product is the same, so why is the price lower? We all know the pat answer, "If everyone wants to go to the later
I think a really nice guy would charge $2.50 for every show, but I'm just a consumer trying to get my money's worth. I don't have to pay the theater rent or placate the employees with sub-$4-an-hour wages.
Let's look at a few more examples, staying small for the moment. Many videotape rental outlets in town charge $1 Monday through Thursday, but gouge the viewer for $2.50 Friday through Sunday. Is the tape worth 2½ times as much three days a
America is a land of gougers. Examples of man's (fiscal) inhumanity to man are many, if not important. The only problem I have with market demand setting the price of a good or service is that so many consumers are willing to take it on the chin. Some are willingly led down the primrose path of excess, and arriving at the object of their desire, offer to pay extra.
week? Is the derived pleasure 2½ times greater?
Are these establishments simply trying to herd customers toward the "low-traffic" days of the week?
I don't think they're doing anything we're not allowing them to do. Businesses charge more for one simple reason: They can.
Instances of gougery are present in all facets of life. Gas costs more on the turnipke. Food costs more at the ballgame. Drinks cost more at a popular bar or club.
other gouging follows a schedule as do movie prices. Airline tickets are more expensive during the holidays. Hotel prices and cruise prices also fluctuate seasonally.
Telephone calls have an even more sophisticated tier of prices, and all based on convenience - the convenience of the phone company, that is.
Probably the most incredible example of gougng is in the "designer" clothing industry. The Coca-Cola Co. should pay us to wear shirts with their logo, making ourselves tiny billboards advertising their product. Instead, undiscriminating consumers who care more about being chic than they do about the cost, quality, or comfort of clothing, set prices.
On campus, students regularly pay ridiculous prices for textbooks and parking fines. (Perhaps parking fines would be better left to a future column.)
Look for moderation in Bork's judicial record
To those people I have only two things to say: 1. "Designer" reprints of this column are available from me at a cost of only $1,000. 2. Make the check payable to me.
The resignation of Associate Justice Lewis Powell from the Supreme Court of the United States, where he has served long (15 years) and moderately (he's been the Court's swing man) may lead to much clearer jurisprudence — but also much worse. His designated successor, Robert Bork, should be judged on his record and his views and not on the enthusiasm he inspires among right-wing ideologues or the separate-bat-equal hysteries from the left. One way to assess what a Robert Bork would contribute to the Court, or take away from it, is to measure him against the jurist he would succeed.
]
Paul Greenberg
Syndicated Columnist
Lewis Powell was seldom known for the clarity of his views; he was moderate not only in the ideas, but in their expression. In perhaps his best-known swing vote, he ruled against racial quotas in college admissions as a violation of the Fourteenth Amendment, but left the door open for racial preferences in the interest of the state. That may be less than consistent, but so was Lewis F. Powell.
Many of Lewis Powell's decisions were determined by his strong preference for things as they vaguely are. One of the few strong, clear and consistent positions he took, for which the nation can be grateful, was in favor of the separation of church and state. He stuck by that principle even in what seemed to others to be minor matters. He did so, as his decisions make clear, not because of any great sensitivity to the injustice involved, but out of a warranted fear about where such small intrusions would lead: to greater ones, until the religious peace that has marked American society is replaced by strife.
is Teachable. Lewis Powell will be remembered as a jurist who valued stability, even if his devotion to that quality often led him simply to stick with the status quo. Yet, on those occasions when his love of peace combined with his understanding of justice, Justice Powell was capable of demonstrating great vision. That usually happened when the issue was education, a field in which he had particular knowledge and experience. He had been a member
of the Richmond, Va., school board when the old capital of the Confederacy peacefully integrated its schools. Justice Powell could have written no better words to be remembered by than his opinion upholding the right of children to an education, even if they happened to be the children of illegal aliens.
"The classification at issue," he wrote in Plyter v. Doe five years ago, "deprived a group of children of the opportunity for an education afforded all other children simply because they have been assigned a legal status due to a violation of the law by their parents. These children thus have been singled out for a lifelong penalty and sigma. A legislative classification that threatens the creation of an underclass of future citizens and residents cannot be reconciled with one of the fundamental purposes of the Fourteenth Amendment."
One might wish that the rest of his law reflected as clear a sense of justice and of the future, but his country can be grateful for those occasions when Justice Powell set aside his usual caretaker's view of the law and spoke out like a prophet come to judgment.
There is no doubt that of the many U.S.institutions Lewis Powell values, he loves the Supreme Court itself the most. That may explain why he believed in using its powers sparingly to shield it from the kind of assaults that a firm exercise of judicial power invariably provokes. If judicial
resrant is the measure by which one values members of the Court, he may have been its most valuable. Lewis Powell was surely the most popular member of the Supreme Court among his fellow justices, not just because his vote would prove decisive so often, but because of his devotion to the Court as an institution. If only he had loved the Court less, and justice more.
But those who love both may soon have cause to miss him if he is succeeded by a narrow ideologue, however clear or consistent. Whatever their opinions of his law, his fellow citizens can agree that Lewis F. Powell Jr. met his own standards well.
Justice Powell understood almost instinctively what Oliver Wendell Holmes put so well, "The life of the law has not been logic; it has been experience. The felt necessities of the time, the prevalent moral and political theories, intuitions of public policy, avowed or unconscious, even the prejudices which judges share with their fellow men, have had a good deal more to do than the syllogism in determining the rules by which men should be governed."
Lewis Powell was not as clear or as forceful as Justice Holmes in expounding that view. Few jurists are. Too often his moderation was inchoate, uncertain and imprecise; too vague to shed a light for future generations. But it was moderation. He did attempt to channel and tame the felt necessities of his time and place them under law. To replace his moderation with abstract theory, with the strained syllogisms of some political theology, and give the prejudices of the time unbridled reign and even legal justification... that would be to punish the country and the Court. It would separate the law from Justice Holmes's great teacher, experience. The felt necessities of the time would be forced into new and dangerous channels without moderating influences, and theory would replace sense.
Whatever the shortcoming of Lewis Powell's kind of constraint, it sure beats fervor, however consistent or brilliant.
MS. BADGER by A.D. Long
THE FIFTH VOTE
Uh, oh.
PLANNED PARENTMODD
• Abortion referrals
• Contraceptives
• Teenager counseling
• Pregnancy tests
The New York Times
JUSTICE POWELL DESIGNS
Abortion Ruling Breaks in Jeopardy
Uh, oh.
SCHOOL
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BIBLE
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Ethics Trends
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PRINCIPAL
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Kansan Summer Weekly/Wednesday, July 8, 1987
5
Slattery helps to pass legislation to keep Haskell open, tuition-free
By KEITH ROBISON Staff writer
Staff writer
Since 1884, American Indians have attended Haskell Indian Junior College without paying tuition. Many of them couldn't pay it if they had to.
The U.S. House of Representatives recently passed legislation blocking a proposal from the Reagan administration that would have forced all Haskell students to pay an $850 tuition fee.
The action to block the tuition proposal was headed by Rep. Jim Slattery, D-Kan., who visited the Haskell campus May 16 to view the deterioration of the buildings, said Cynthia Rapp, Slattery's press secretary.
The 1988 Interior Department Appropriations Bill gave Haskell $1.25 million for the next school year to improve administration's tuition proposal.
In a prepared statement, Slattery said, "The President's proposal represents a back-door attempt to close Haskell Indian Junior College."
A tuition fee would have had disastrous side effects, said Charles Geboe, Haskell's dean of instruction.
"The only way some of the students can get here is to hitchhike here and are ready for a ride."
clothes on their backs," Geboe said.
"The reservations are really economically depressed. There is just no way for those people to pull together money without leaving there."
Monte Joseph, Haskell graduate and Lawrence resident, said, "Most students there are dependent on school just to get by. It's either leave and go to school or stay home and try to get welfare.
"I knew a guy who had no way to get home. He had to call back to the Navajo tribe to get them to send him money, and they're not that rich of a tribe. He had to practically beg to get home."
"Haskell is a good school," he said.
"They really push you. If you're not doing so great, they've got tutors. They really help. Most Indians graduate high school with only a tenth-grade education. It takes most students two and a half years to get a two-year degree.
Joseph, who attended Haskell from 1985 to 1987, said he had attended Bureau of Indian Affairs boarding schools since the fifth grade.
Geboe said, "Haskell would have changed dramatically. We could no longer provide opportunities where no others exist. The money just isn't there. The most basic issues are the
treaty rights and obligations that say that educational services will be provided.
"I saw in the paper the other day where a reservation in Idaho had an unemployment rate of 96 percent.
"It really bothers me personally that they would be cutting out so many opportunities. They just don't have anywhere else to go to school. They are very bright and very poor."
Rapp said that almost 50 percent of new students came from families with a parent who had diabetes.
Geboe said, "I know Slattery has really been trying. Slattery was here this spring looking in buildings and seeing for himself the things we've had to neglect in stretching the funds."
Slattery testified several times before the Interior Appropriations subcommittee. Radd said.
"He was trying to make the members of the committee aware of Haskell," she said. "Many of them didn't even know where it was and what it was and what it meant to the Indian nation and how it had been suffering because of budget cuts. He wanted to make them realize the importance of giving them the money."
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6
Wednesday, July 8, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
KU's biggest fund-raiser on its way
By CARLA PATINO Staff writer
Plans for the biggest fund-raising campaign in the history of the University of Kansas are on their way.
James Martin, senior vice president and executive campaign director of the Kansas University Endowment Association, said yesterday that the Endowment Association and the University administration had worked on the campaign, dubbed "Kansas," for about two years.
Martin said the Endowment Association had been working on the mechanics of the campaign, while Chancellor Gene A. Budig and his associates were focusing on the needs of the University.
"The campaign will be officially announced somewhere in the next 12 months," he said. "I will expect that the most active phase will run for two years, but the campaign itself will be conducted for a period of five years."
"Campaign Kansas" is the Endowment Association's second major campaign.
"The Association launched the
'Program for Progress' fund-raising campaign twenty years ago," he said. "'Campaign Kansas' is the biggest one ever of the University."
The goal is to raise $100 million using a variety of advertising
'Without question. Campaign Kansas will assist us in retaining the finest graduate and undergraduate students. The same is true with staff.'
Gene A. Budig Chancellor
approaches, including personal, telephone and direct-mail solicitions and requests for corporate support, Martin said.
Budig said some of the proceeds would support scholarships, fellowships and professorships. Other proceeds would buy books and magazines for the KU libraries, computer
equipment, and build a performing arts center.
The executive board of the campaign consists of 15 members.
Jordan Haines, chairman of Fourth Financial Corporation of Wichita and a KU graduate, will serve as chairman of the campaign. Robert Riss, chairman of the board of Commonwealth Insurance Co. of City, Mo. will also be a KU graduate, will serve as vice chairman.
Budig said that this would be his first involvement in an organized fund-raising drive at KU.
Budig said the campaign was not intended to relieve the state from its obligations but to retain academic quality at KU.
"The private dollars provide a margin of excellence to the University," he said. "Without question, 'Campaign Kansas' will assist us in undergraduate students. The same is true with staff."
Del Shankel, acting executive vice chancellor, said that although the goal was high, it was achievable.
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Wednesday, July 8.1987
7
Arts and Entertainment 'Dragnet' found guilty of mediocrity
By KRISTEN HAYS
Staff writer
Let the record show that *Dragnet* is a violation of penal code 1.23475.0987.56, which roughly translates into gross misuse of talent, a mediocre script and story line, and above all, miscasting.
Don't get me wrong. *Dragnet* isn't a complete failure by any means. It does have its moments.
Harry Morgan, who played Jack Webb's sidekick, Gannon, in the series, once said how difficult it was for them to talk in the now classic monotone. Dan Akyrok couldn't have been more perfect for the role of Joe Friday, nephew of Webb's Friday. He rolls off a five-minute monologue without batting an eye, almost like an auctioneer.
So... if the lead character is so good, what's so wrong with this movie? Unfortunately, quite a lot. It's incredible how a好 group of filmmakers, from director to actor to writer, can produce such a sloppy mess, and a sloppy mess this is.
Clue 1: Akyrok and his Gannon-like sidekick, Peb Streebuck, played by Tom Hanks, are both entertaining, funny men who need good scripts
to be good. If not, the result is a Dr. Detroit, or The Money Pit.
Here, not only are they mired in a ridiculous story line, but they are thrown together and expected to be funny. But there's no chemistry whatsoever between the two. Is Streebek Friday's straight man, or straight funny man? They seem awkward and uncomfortable together. Perhaps this movie would have been better with Bill Murray in Hanks' role. Hanks is wasted here. He was good in Nothing in Common with Jackie Gleason, a partner with whom he had exciting chemistry. Here he's reduced to being Aykroyd's shadow.
Clue 2: Dabney Coleman, the quintessential schmuck, plays a Guccione-esque porn king with a lisp, but we don't even get a chance to hate him because he's onscreen so little.
to the audience. Plummer hasn't had a decent role since The Sound of Music. This muck is an example of the kinds of roles he'd has since then, a shame for such a fine actor.
Clue 3: Christopher Plummer plays a priest gone bad who is the head of P.A.G.A.N. People Against Goodness And Normalcy. This deviant group steals a truckload of Coleman's skin magazines for some reason beneficial to Plumber, Coleman, and the police commissioner, played by Elizabeth Ashley, but lost
Clue 4: Friday and Streebek are hot on P.A.G.A.N.'s trail and attend a bizarre ceremony where the virgin Connie Swail, played by Alexandra Paul, will be sacrificed. Connie strums the romantic strings of stodgy Friday's heart, and, although beautiful, she's about as expressive as Tupperware.
*Dragnet* could have been better had it not fooled with the sacrificial virgin/P.A.G.A.N. story and stuck with typical cops-and-robbers stuff. For example, Friday defuses some young muggers, and bemoans the fact that not only do they try to mug him, but they do it "on a school night," too. Also, what was the connection between the commissioner, the priest, and the porn king? For some reason, that's a secret, and not even Friday divulges it.
One interesting twist is the return of Gannon, played by Harry Morgan, as the precinct captain. He's the
crowning touch to references to the series, including photos of Uclee Friday and Chesterfield cigarettes sitting neatly on nephew Friday's desk. Gannon's gotten more emotional and grandfatherly in his old age, too.
Tom Mankiewicz's direction is adequate, even if predictable. We know the missing snake will be in the sacrificial pit, we know Friday will lose his composure for once, and we know what Friday's biggest accomplishment will be at the end. The problem here is the script.
If a film has a poor script, it can't rise above it. This one, written by Aykroyd, Alan Zweibel, and Mankiewicz, has some funny moments, especially with Aykroyd's monologues. However, those are Aykroyd's moments. No such luck for Hanks, Coleman, Morgan or anyone else. It's as though Aykroyd gave himself the pick of the litter and left the runts to everyone else, which was poor judgment on his part. Had he tried to be more of a team player, this movie could have reached its full potential.
The Ebeling Brothers
Local group takes its act on the road will play in the streets Down Under
By DEBRA A. PETERSON
Special to the Kansan
From the outside, the Rock Chalk Bar, at 618 W. 12th St., looked like a Frank Lloyd Wright experiment in driftwood. But from the crowd assembled on the front porch last Wednesday night, it was clear that something besides architecture had attracted people there.
By 9:30 p.m., people had begun drifting inside. Some sit at picnic tables and workbenches or at the bar on stools with torn seats. Others ringed the tiny 4-by-8-foot dance floor in front of the performing area.
As customers poured in, bartender Geoff Mockbee pirouetted like a dancer from bar to refrigerator to cash register, puffing clouds of smoke around the cigarette in his mouth.
"They're slipping through the woodwork. Howard," he called to the ticket-taker. A half hour later, more than 50 people had jammed into the tiny bar.
The occasion was a performance by the Ebeling brothers, a 10-year old local band that plays the blues. But after their gig tonight at 9 p.m.at the Rock Chalk Bar, who want to hear the Ebelings' music will have to buy their newly released tape because the brothers will be 7,000 miles away playing music in Australia and New Zealand.
Terry Ebeling said the idea for the trip came when Billy Ebeling recently returned from a world tour, enthusiastic about the opportunities for street musicians in Australia and
New Zealand. He suggested that the other two brothers go back with him.
Billy and Tim Ebeling plan to leave July 10. Terry will join them at the end of the summer. Meanwhile, he will continue to play Wednesday nights at the Rock Chalk Bar.
Terry and Billy Ebeling have been overseas before, playing their guitars and harmonicas on the streets in Europe. They, with brother Tim on percussion, have played regularly in the Rock Clash bar Mo, and in the Rock Chalk Bar. Last weekend, they played at Kansas City's Spirit Festival.
Their father, Donald Ebeling, said,
"None of them had formal lessons.
They just picked biting it un."
All three brothers have worked part-time jobs to survive, Terry Ebeling said, and all three are looking forward to playing music full time on their tour because there aren't many places to play in Lawrence.
"Seems like it's hard to play live music and survive." Terry Ebeling said, "I'm tough for local bands. They are several hungry bands that are excellent."
The Jazzhaus, 926$^1$ Massachusetts St., has live music four nights a week, said P.J. Mather, a bartender there. She said that only about one-third of the bands that play there are local, and the others come from all over the country.
As they performed Wednesday night at the Rock Chalk Bar, the brothers seemed to be having a good time.
ALEXANDRIA FOOTBALL CENTER
Billy, Tim and Terry Ebeling.
Terry Ebeling used a harmonica case to thump his homemade wash tub bass, an instrument he said he fell in love with when a musician started jamming with him on the streets of Phoenix.
Tim Ebeling tossed his spinning drumstick into the air and caught it as if he were the Johnny Carson of the music world.
Billy Ebeling, the slave-driver of
And as people got up on the dance floor to bop, sweep and shimmy, it didn't seem to matter that the room was empty. It was hard to carry on a conversation.
the trio, according to brother Terry, tortured his slide guitar as he growled about "Wishy Washy Women" and having "One Eye on the Road."
Nothing mattered but the blues
Calendar
9 a.m. — "Introduction to dBase III," a microcomputer workshop at the Academic Computing Center. Call 864-4291 for more information.
Today
2 p.m. — "Exploring Career Options," an Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center program in the International Room in the Kansas Union.
7 p.m. — "In Cold Blood,"
7 p.m. — "In Cold Blood," SUA film shown in Wooldraft Union in the Kansas Union. Admission is free. The SUA office on level 4 of the Union
8 p.m. — Carillon recital. Albert Gerken, University carillonneur.
8 p.m. — Lawrence Community and Musician's Concert. Live music in South Park, 12th and Massachusetts streets.
9:30 p.m. — MaHoots Live music at the Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St.
Tomorrow
Noon — Summer Youth Theatre performs for the Brown Bag Concert series in front of the First National Bank Building, 900 Massachusetts St. 2 p.m. — "Human Relations," an affirmative action workshop in 208 Strong Hall. Call Carla Anderson at 864-3664 to register
All day — Orientation for new College of Liberal Arts and Sciences students in the Kansas Union
**7 p.m. — “Casino Royale”**
**Going Hollywood,” SUA films shown in Woolfrift Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Admission is $2. Tickets are sold at the SUA office on level 4 of the Union.
7 p.m. — "The American Past with Calder Pickett," KANU FM— 91:5
8 p.m. — Midwestern Music Camp honors recital in Swarthout Hall in murphy Hall.
Friday
9 a.m. — "WordPerfect It," a microcomputer workshop at the Academic Computing Center, Call 864-4291 for more information.
1 p.m. " intermediate Wordstar " a microcomputer workshop at the Academic Computing Center. Call 864-4291 for more information.
7 p.m. — "Opera Is My Hobby with James Seaver," KANU FM— 91.5.
7-30 p.m. — Midwestern Music Camp jazz ensembles recital in Swathowt Jazz Hall in Murphy Hall
Swainborough Hecital Hall in Murphy Hall.
8 p.m. . . Observeary open house, weather permitting, at the Clyde W. Tombaugh Observatory, 500 Lindley Hall. Call 684-3166 for more information.
9 p.m. - The Lonesome Houndogs. Live music at the Rock Chalk Bar, 618 W. 12th St.
9:30 p.m. — Evan John and the H-Bombs. Live music at the Jazzahus, 92$^{1/2}$ Massachusetts St.
9:30 p.m. — Red Zone. Live music at The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St.
Saturday
All day — Orientation for new College of Liberal Arts and Sciences students at the Kansas Union.
9 a.m. — "The Vintage Jazz Show with Michael Maher," KANU FM-91, 53
10 a.m. - "The Jazz Scene with Dick Wright," KANU FM-91.5.
10 a.m. — Midwestern Music camp piano recital in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
2 p.m. — Midwestern Music Camp concert in Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall.
9:30 p.m. — Evan John and the H-Bombs. Live music at the Jazzer. 92% Massachusetts St.
9 p.m. — Dashboard Buddha.
Live music at the Rock Chalk Bar, 618
W. 12th St.
5:30 p.m. — Red Zone. Live music at The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St.
Sunday
3 p.m. — Carillon recital. Mark Holmberg, assistant University carilonneur.
Monday
8-30 a.m. — "Our Solar System," "Aquatic Biology," and "Drawing From Nature." Three Museum of Natural History workshops for children ages 7 to 13. Through July 17. Call 864-4173 for more information.
9 a.m. — Sturgeon Memorial Writers Workshop in science fiction. The instructors for the five-day workshop are Frederick Pohl and James Gunn. Limited to 15 applicants. The fee is $250. Call James Gunn at 864-3771 for more information.
1 p.m. — “Beetles Bees and Bugs” and “Vanishing Prairies.” A historical History workshops for children aged 14 and up July 17. Call 864-1473 for information.
Tuesday
All day — Orientation for new College of Liberal Arts and Sciences students in the Kansas Union.
9 a.m. — "Intermediate MS-DOS," a microcomputer workshop in the Academic Computing Center. Call 864-4291 for more information.
1 p.m. - "WordPerfect ill," a microcomputer workshop in the Academic Computing Center, Call 864-4291 for more information
2 p.m. — "Preventing Sexual Harassment," an affirmative action workshop in 208 Strong Hall. Call 864-3686 to register.
8 p.m. — Midwestern Music Camp faculty and staff recital in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
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8
Wednesday, July 8, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
Stephan
Continued from p.1
Stephan said, "The agent that attended the meeting here in Topeka on behalf of this office did not hear any of the white-supremacy language or anti-Semitic language that one might find in some other schemes of this kind."
Brownback said, "Put yourself in the farmer's slot. He's struggling, and he can't find any way out of this, and he's just trying to look for something to be able to let him hold onto this farm.
Sam Brownback, Kansas secretary of agriculture, said farmers were particularly vulnerable to these type of schemes.
"You make yourself a little more susceptible to be willing to believe certain things."
Brownbuck said, "The thing that's different about this one is that it's not
requiring any up-front money, the typical triggering mechanism. It's a little more hidden."
Stephan said he began investigating Common Title a few months ago, after he received questions and complaints from people in the state.
He asked that farmers involved contact his office or the Farmer's Assistance, Counseling and Training an informational agency in Topeka.
Stephan said, "The sad part is that they're financially strapped and losing their farms or in the process of losing their farms, so they're grasping at anything to try and save their farm, and these people come in with a harebranded scheme that makes them believe they can save their land."
"It's primarily in the Western one-half or two-thirds of the nation," he said.
Geiman said that the company had operations in about 30 states.
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1978-04-12
Kansan Summer Weekly
Wednesday, July 8, 1987
Sports
Coach Brown starts selection process for U.S. team
Rv L.A. RAUCH
Special to the Kansan
Practice sessions for the selection of the 1987 U.S. Junior World Team begins today at Allen Field House. Kansas Coach Larry Brown will lead the team, which will compete during the last week of July in Borto, Italy.
Eleven other national teams will be competing in the Junior World Game.
Assisting Coach Brown is Gary Williams, a basketball coach at Ohio State, and Marshall Hamilton, Broughton High School coach from Raleigh. N.C.
There are 19 players trying out for 12 positions on the U.S. team. Final cuts for the team will be made Sunday. The players were invited by a selection committee to try out for the team.
"I'm not necessarily looking for the best players. I'm looking for the players that get along," Brown said, referring to the selection process.
Brown said that his practice philosophy will remain simple because the team was starting from scratch. He will be holding a-a-day practices, beginning today and continuing until next Tuesday in the field house. Practices will run from 9 to 11 a.m. and will resume at 5 p.m. and continue until 7 p.m. The afternoon sessions will be open to the public.
"We're going over to win," Brown said. He also said that this team was going to be unselfish, play hard and have a strong defense.
He said that being chosen head coach was an honor because he always had wanted to get involved
coaching national teams.
"It is a stepping stone to the Olympics," said Nolan Richardson, head coach at Arkansas. Richardson said he was attending practices for the next few days to watch the team, and his player, Arkansas guard Ron Huery, who is trying out for the team.
USA
16
ESTUARIO
USA
7
'I'm not necessarily looking for the best players. I'm looking for the players that get along.'
Larry Brown KU basketball coach
Kansas player Kevin Pritchard and new recruit Lincoln Minor are competing for positions on the team.
"There's so much talent out there," Pritchard said. "It's incredible. I don't think there is a guy out there who puts himself above winning. I want to go to Italy."
The athletes chosen for the team will play former Kansas players in an exhibition game at 7 p.m. next Wednesday in the field house. Former Kansas forward Ron Kellogg is one of several former players returning to play against the Junior World Team.
"This is my house," said Kellogg. "I'm looking forward to playing against these talented players."
Brown's team leaves July 16 for Frankfurt, Germany, where they will play two more exhibition games. The teams arrives July 23 in Italy, the tournament finishes July 30.
A. Junior World Basketball Team candidate goes down in the first work out of week long series of practice sessions.
Joe Wilkins/KANSAN
Cleveland beats Royals 6-4 in ninth
CLEVELAND (AP) — Joe Carter hit a two-run home run just inside the left-field foul pole of reliever Dan Quisenberry with one out in the ninth inning last night, giving the Cleveland Indians a 6-4 victory over the Kansas City Royals.
Carter had tied the game 4-4 with a two-run single off Quinberry, 4-1, in the seventh. Carter's 18th home run of the season came on a 2-2 pitch and followed a lead-off single by Tony Bernardaz and a fly out by Julio Franco. Doug Jones, 2-1, pitched $2\%$ bitterness for the victory.
After retiring the first two batters
in the bottom of the seventh, Royals starter Mark Gubicza gave up singles to Bernazard and Franco and then three a wild pitch, allowing the runners to advance a base. Quisenberry relieved and gave up Carter's two-run single.
Cleveland went ahead 2-1 in the fourth when Pat Tabler tripped and scored on Meil Hall's ground out, but Sam Tolka took a 4-2 lead in the seventh.
throwing two balls to Juan Benijose,
and Mark Huismann came on and
finished the walk, which was charged
to Schrom and forced home Jackson.
Singles by Bo Jackson and Angel Salazar and a walk to Larry Owen loaded the bases. Cleveland starter Ken Schrom then was removed after
Kevin Seitzer then walked, giving Kansas City a 3-2 lead. Ed Vande Berg came on and yielded a run-scoring single to George Brett.
The Royals took a 1-0 lead in the first inning on a pair of walks and Danny Tartallbuff's run-scoring single before Cleveland tied the game in the second on Hall's single, a walk, and Cory Snyder's RBI single.
Royals center fielder Willie Wilson was ejected from the game in the
third inning, Schrom threw an 0-2 fastball to Wilson inside and high, causing Wilson to duck the pitch. After Wilson flied out on the next pitch, he charged the mound and tackled Schrom, causing both benches to clear.
Indians 6. Royals 4
Royals 100 000 300–4 7 0
Indians 100 100 202–6 13 0
Schrom (6) Huiusman (5), Djones (25%) and Vande Berg (3) Gubiza (6), Guisezberry (14%), W-Djones (2-1) L-Quisenberry (4) 2Bs-Snyder, Tbab-Taber, HC-Rater (18)
Recreational services official leaves KU
Special to the Kansan
By ELAINE SUNG
He calls soccer "the real sport."
He calls soccer the real sport. Hector Munoz, assistant director of recreational services and an ardent soccer fan, left the University of Kansas on Thursday after holding that position since 1983.
Munoz, who helped build the intramural soccer program, is going to be the assistant director of recreational sports at the University of Texas-El Paso.
He said he loved many of the things to offer, but he needed new challenges.
"After several years in a program, you grow to love it," he said. "But
after a while, you just would like to go somewhere else and face new problems and situations."
Munoz also wanted to be closer to his hometown in Chihuahua. Mexico
"I'm from that area," he said.
"It's close to my relatives, and I wanted to be near my parents down there."
His search for new challenges led him to Texas-El Paso, where interest in the intramural soccer team is declining.
"They are having problems with the soccer program," Munoz said. "Hopefully, I'll have a chance to straighten it out and try to develop the floor hockey program as well."
'Everyone laughs at me because I call soccer 'the real sport.' I enjoy it the most, and I have more experience in it than in any other sport.
"When I started out, we had 12 teams of seven players each. Now it's grown to 50 teams with 11 players on each."
Johnny Johnson, graduate assistant in team sports, said the growth of soccer at KU was due to Munoz's involvement.
the most enjoyment, Munoz said.
"He's always taken an active interest in the programs, to the point of coming out and officiating himself," he said. "I've improved because of that," he said.
Interaction with students gave him
"There's a socialization process that exists with team sport activities," he said. "We're in a process of training, and in interacting with students continuously. We try to make them perform at their best possible level in our activities."
Munoz was also successful in getting the best performance out of his assistants.
"He was really easy to work for," Johnson said. "He delegated a lot of power, and I had the opportunity to grow professionally. He never interfered until I asked for his help."
PRESENTS
Bv IOHN MONTGOMERY
KU football shapes up
special to the Kansan
Jay Allen, offensive lineman for KU, lifts 285 pounds in the weight room at Anschutz Sports Pavilion. Allen was work ing out yesterday afternoon preparing for fall football practice.
Ed Bilik, head speed/strength coach, said the program was divided into three four-week sessions. The sessions begin the third session next week.
The KU football team hopes to be in top shape for fall practice by building their strength, speed and endurance this summer.
About 40 Kansas football players currently are involved in an intensive 12-week summer weight training program.
The program is getting more rigorous, concentrating on speed and accuracy.
Bielik said he had divided the players into either a strength group or a skill group. The strength group consists mainly of offensive and defensive linemen and also some defensive quarterbacks, wide receivers, defensive backs, cornerbacks and kickers make up the skill group.
The first four-week session involved basic strength building, and the second session worked on speed.
Both groups run Monday through Friday, with Wednesday off. The strength group lifts weights the same days. The skill group, however, works with the weights only three days a week, Monday, Wednesday and Friday.
The players can lift weights in the Shaffer-Holland Strength Center in Anschutz Sports Pavilion from noon to 8 p.m., but Bielik said most work out in the evening.
He also said there were other training devices, such as a 145-pound sled, which the linemen pull across the field.
"It's really rigorous, particularly with the running," he said. "With the heat and humidity, it's not uncommon to see a player drop to his knees."
Roger Finkemeier, assistant speed/strength coach, said the program was demanding.
Jay Allen, junior offensive lineman, said he lifted weights for about an hour and a half, starting around 4 p.m. He then spends from 20 to 30
minutes running, doing sprint work and pulling the sled on the indoor track in the Pavilion. The sled is loaded with weights.
"It's getting more and more intense as the season gets nearer." Allen said. "It's harder than if I was at home."
Allen is taking classes at KU in addition to his training this summer.
strict and effective.
Rick Clayton, junior linebacker,
said Bielik's weight program was
"It's one of the tougher programs they've come up with since I've been here," he said. "You come home dead tired, but you can feel it working and getting you stronger and faster."
Clayton, who took classes in June and now works full time, said he also took Taekwondo classes to help his flexibility.
Cost-containment plan killed at NCAA meeting; Kansas coaches happy
Bv ELAINE SUNG
The National Collegiate Athletic Association recently wrapped up a special convention that was held in Dallas, Texas. The cost of the convention was $1.8 million.
Special to the Kansan
Coaches at the University of Kansas sighed with relief when the NCAA defeated the majority of cost-containment proposals presented at its national convention.
One of the proposals was cutting scholarships for non-revenue sports. Several women's groups protested the cuts because the number of scholarships eliminated would have been higher in women's sports than men's.
Carla Coffey, KU women's track coach, said that the proposed cuts would have hurt KU's women's track team if the proposals had been adopted.
"I was glad to see them fail," Coffey said. "They would have affected our program drastically.
Women's basketball coach Marian Washington said that women's athletics across the nation also would have been hurt by the cuts.
"Fewer scholarships would mean fewer women participating. It would truly have been a step backwards," she said. "I can't imagine that anyone associated with women's athletics would support that large a percentage in difference (between men's and women's cuts)."
"Looking down the road at the future, if we don't have aid, we won't have anything to offer to our incoming athletes."
"The women have to have financial support in order to increase the attraction of women's sports. We've tried so hard to get to where we are, it'd be a real shame to lose it," she said. "It's only fair that we get our fair share."
Pat Collinson, administrative assistant of scholarships and women's athletics, said that taking away scholarships would hurt women's programs and that more scholarships were needed to recruit more women.
Cuts in scholarships to men's nonrevenue sports would have hurt as well. KU baseball coach Dave Bingham said.
"To get the blue-chip athletes, we'll need the aid," he said. "A lot of athletes will accept less aid in order to play in the warmer southern climates. That will affect our ability to compete."
Proposed cuts in the number of campus visits allowed to a sport's potential athletes would have affected the future for KU in general, said Gary Hunter, KU associate athletic director.
"We need to get the young student-athletes on our campus to show them what we have." Hunter said. "We need all the visits we can get."
Larry Brown, KU men's basketball coach, said that previously 13 scholarships had not been enough
Instead of cutting scholarships at the convention, the NCAA restored the number of scholarships from 13 to 15 in Division I-A basketball, reversing its January decision.
because it denied many athletes the opportunity to go to school.
"Some kids may not be able to afford school, and the reduction in scholarships prohibits us from giving them a chance," Brown said. "I hate to see kids not given the opportunity to go to school."
In another proposal, which was passed, non-revenue team sports were limited to a total of 26 weeks of practice and play. Previously, a limit for practice time was not set. Individual sports such as gymnastics, swimming, and track and field were not included in this proposal because coaches nationwide protested, saying that it would damage the development of Olympic hopefuls who were attending college.
"Swimming is a year-round sport, and 28 weeks is not enough time to generate the success for our Olympic hopefuls." John Christie, KU assistant swimming coach, said. "You need to keep a consistency in training, and if the season were to end after the NCAA and Big Eight Championships in April, we would have a big layover during the summer. You need to be in the water in May and June in order to do the best at Olympic trials."
"You can't judge the value of a sport on the money it brings in," Brown said. "You have to consider what other things they do for the University.
The 26-week limitation includes team sports such as baseball and softball.
"We (basketball) do well enough to support non-revenue sports. We'll do anything to help."
Washington and Brown both said that although revenue generated by a sport was important, non-revenue sports should not be sacrificed just because they do not generate money.
"Overall, it won't have too many ramifications, depending on how they read the rule." Bingham said. "We're not on the field playing and practicing much more than 26 weeks anyway. But if the rule includes off-season training, and if coaches aren't even allowed onto the field or in the training room in the off-season, then it will have an effect on us."
Division I football also is affected by a new rule limiting the number of practice sessions. Proposals regarding a cut in the number of assistant football coaches and scholarships for I-A football were defeated by the NCAA.
However, the degree to which KU baseball is affected will depend on how the rule is interpreted. Bingham said.
KU head football coach Bob Valesente and his assistants could not be reached for comment.
Most coaches agreed that a more extensive study was needed before any other cost-cutting proposals were presented to the NCAA again.
"They'll need to investigate further before bringing it to the committee again." Washington said. "They'll have to come up with other ways that won't have as alarming an impact. There must be areas we can go to first before taking away an avenue that allows the growth of sports."
10
Wednesday, July 8, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
ROYALS REPORT
compiled by Tim Hamilton Sports editor
Sports editor
Monday: Indians 9, Royals 7
The Cleveland Indians Cory Snider hit a grand slam in the eighth inning to give the Indians a 8-7 win. Snider also hit a two-run home run off Royals pitcher Bret Saberhagen, whose record dropped to 14-3. Danny Cartabull hit a three-run home run and Be Jackson hit a home run for the Rangers.
Royals Indians
Indians 9, Royals 7
cantlon (7), SStewart (1), VandeBerg (2) and Huismann (9). W-SStewart (1-1), L-Sabberhagen (14-3) and Farr (1). 2Bs-Bernazard, Carter, T seizer. 2Bs-None. HRs-Snyder 2 (16), Blackson (18), Franco (6), Cartat (43).
Sunday: Royals 4, Blue Jays 3
George Brett drove in the winning run in the 10th inning last night to give the Kansas City Royals a 4-3 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays. It was the last game of a four-game series. The Royals won all four games. Dan Quisenberry earned his fourth save of the season.
000 200 010—1—4 7 0
000 000 300—0—3 9 1
Royals
Blue Jays
000 000 300 - 0-9 1
Leavard (6%), Farr (0), Djackson (4), Uquienberry (3), Steeb (7), Musselman (4),
Eichhorn (8) and Lavelle (0), W-Uquienberry (4-0), L-Eichhorn (8-4), B2s-GBell, Jackson
3Bs-Eisenich, HRS-Brett (7).
Saturday: Royals 9, Blue Jays 1
Kansas City pitcher Bud Black gave up only five hits in six innings in his first appearance since knee surgery. The Royals gave Black plenty of room, racking up five runs in the first two innings. Bo Jackson hit his 17th home run of the season.
Royals 9,Blue Jays 1
Royals 321 100 11x—9 12 0
Blue Jays 000 100 000—1 8 1
Black (6) and Stoddard (3); Wells (1½) and Junnez (6½). W-Black (4-2). L-Wells (0-2). SV-
Stoddard (1) 2Bs-White 2Bs-Wilson HRS-Blackon
Major League Standings
American League
East W L Pct. GB
New York 52 32 619.
Toronto 47 35 573 4
Detroit 45 35 563 5
Milwaukee 40 40 500 10
Boston 40 40 482 11%
Baltimore 32 51 386 19½
Cleveland 29 51 354 22
West W L W Pct. GB
Minnesota 47 37 560 -
Kansas City 45 37 549 -
Oakland 44 38 537 1
Seattle 42 41 506 4½
California 42 42 500 5
Texas 38 43 469 7½
Chicago 32 48 400 13
National League
East W 5 L 2 Pct. GB
St. Louis 10 29 633 —
New York 44 38 537 7½
Montreal 44 38 531 8
Philadelphia 43 38 530
Philadelphia 40 41 494 11
Pittsburgh 37 41 494 15
West W 4 L 47 Pct. GB —
Cincinnati 46 37 554 — —
Houston 43 39 524 2½ —
San Francisco 38 41 504 4 —
Atlanta 37 45 451 8 ‡
San Diego 37 55 345 17½
BEGINNING ON THE WEEKEND
Commonwealth
Cranada 1058 Main Street, Pittsburgh 643-726-9000
DRAGNET Daily 2:45 7:25
5:00 9:45
Varsity 1058 Main Street, Pittsburgh 643-726-9000
The UNTOUCHABLES Sat. Sun. Daily 4:30
2:15 7:00
7:00 9:15
Hillcrest 800 & 900
STEVE MARTIN DAVID HAWKEN ROXANNE PG Daily 7:35
4:50 9:45
JACK NICHOLSON Daily 7:20
2:15 7:20
4:40 9:45
THE WITCHES OF LAWMOCK PG Daily 7:20
4:30 9:40
INN SPACE Daily 7:20
2:45 9:25
4:30 9:40
SCHWARZENEGGER Daily 7:30
4:35 9:30
PREDATOR PG Daily 7:40
5:00 9:35
SPACEBALLS PG Daily 7:40
5:00 9:35
Cinema Twin 1058 Main Street, Pittsburgh 643-726-9000
ADVENTURES Sat. Sun.
2:50 7:10
5:00 9:15
BENJI Sat. Sun.
2:45 7:00
4:30 9:00
THE HURTLE
Commonwealth
GRANDA
DRAGNET
Daily
2:45 7:25
5:00 9:45
IN SPACE Daily
2:20 7:25
4:30 9:40
PG
SPACEBALLS Daily
2:45 7:40
5:00 9:35
BEFORE YOU BUY, Check the KANSAN. Our advertisers might save you money.
SERVICE QUALITY
SERVICE MIS QUALITY
DON'S AUTOMOTIVE CENTER
"COMPLETE SERVICE AND PARTS SALES"
"FOR MOST FOREIGN CARS"
• VW
• SUBARU
• DATSUN
• TOYOTA
• VOLVO
• MG
• MAZDA
• HONDA
BOSCH AUTOMOTIVE
Machine Shop Service Available
841-4833
1008 E. 12TH
Delivery
11-2
5-Midnight
841-3268
NEW STORE
ON 23rd St.
841-ASUB
MEGA MEAL
(½ sub, med. pop, side)
75¢ OFF
yello sub
exp. 7/22/87
1814 W. 23rd
12th & Oread
Delivery
11-2
5-Midnight
841-3268
NEW STORE
ON 23rd St.
841-ASUB
ROCK CHALK BAR
Tuesday: OPEN MIC NIGHT (Every Tuesday!)
Wednsday: The Ebeling Brothers ($1 cover) Last Performance!
Thursday: Darrell Lea (no cover)
Friday: Lonesome Hounddogs ($1 Cover)
Saturday: Dashboard Budda (no cover)
The ROCK CHALK BAR
12th & Indiana 842-9469
MILWAUKEE'S
BEST
$317
12 PAK.
12 OZ.
CANS
PEPSI, DIET PEPSI
PEPSLEFEE $99¢
Wakelee's BEST
Friday
not valid w/other offers • expires 7/22/87
DIET PEPSI
PEPSI
Convenient
Food Mart
PRICES GOOD THRU 7-14-87
12 PAK.
12 OZ.
CANS
PEPSI, DIET PEPSI
PEPSI FREE 2 LITER 99¢
Lawrence. KS
Mighty Mocha, Peachy Peach, Chocolate Chip, Coffee Frost, Banana Rum, Vanilla Almond, Strawberry Smoothie, Chocolate Mint Flip, Raspberry
--from the summer heat
9th & Indiana
Grass Onion
Shake It Up!
--from the summer heat
Shakes just $1.00 (reg. $1.75)
All night long
Scooners $1.50
(first draft)
$1.00 refills
$1.00 Pitchers
25¢ Draws
All day
Every Saturday
$1.00 refills
Take Time Out
842-9533
Check into our summer keg prices for parties
--new location:
$2.00 cover after 7 p.m.
FRIDAY: ($2 Cover)
All You Can Eat Tacos (4:30-6:30)
SATURDAY: ($2 Cover)
$1 Well Drinks
Sunday: (No Cover) $1.95 Schooners
the Sanctuary
southridge
comfortable environment living
For comfortable apt. living
and reasonable rates
Check out Southridge Plaza Apts.
NOW LEASING 1 & 2 BDRM APTS
1704 West 24th 842-1160
2408 Iowa
TIME OUT Tavern
Every Thursday
KANSAS SPORTS
BAR & GRILL
--new location:
SUMMER FOOD AND DRINK SPECIALS
All dinners include salad, fries, Texas toast.
Served 4 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Mon — l/2 lb. sirlinco $4.95.
Wed.— 12 oz. T-bone $5.95. Miller Lite $1.25
Michelob and Michelob Light pitchers $3.00
Basket of steak fingers $4.95
Bud Light Longnecks $1.25
Fried shrimp basket $5.95.
Michelob and Michelob Light Draws 75 $
Fri. & Sat.—Prime Rib Sandwich $5.95.
Budweiser $1.25.
It's not a CLONE
--new location:
OPEN MON.-SAT. 4 p.m. to 2 a.m.
INTRODUCING
LOWER LEVEL ELDRIDGE HOTEL 749-5011
Fully IBM PC/XT Compatible
FEATURES:
* 8088 CPU
IT'S COMMODORE INTRODUCING
COMMODORE PC-10
Breakthrough Price
- 640K Memory
$ 899 Complete
- Dual floppy drives
- Dual joppy dives
* Multi-Video card
- Multi-Video card
* High-RS monitor
- Parallel and serial ports
- MS-DOS 3.2 & GW-BASIC 3.2
- AT-Style keyboard
* MS POS 320 * GW
- One year warranty
MICROTECH Computers
25TH & Iowa Holiday Plaza 841-9513
IBM and COMMODORE are registered trademark
BORDER BANDIDO
ALL YOU CAN EAT DOUBLE BUFFET 5-9 p.m.
Tacos, Enchiladas,
3
Burritos, Spanish rice
Tostadas, Tomales,
Taco Salads!
1528 W. 23rd across from 842-8861
1820 W. 6th 749-2770
Kansan Summer Weekly/Wednesday, July 8, 1987
1
Enjoy smooth, creamy Frozen Yogurt that tastes like ice Cream but with 80% less fat!
--FREE SAMPLES--
I Can't Believe It's YOGURT! Frozen Yogurt Stories
OPEN: 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Daily Noon-11 p.m. Sundays
Enjoy smooth, creamy
$9.95
Four Movies
SUNDAY: (No Cover)
$1.95 Schooners
7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 843-0540
Monday: ($1 Cover) $1.25 Import Night
Videoexpress
1447 W. 23rd
Open 9 a.m.-9 p.m. Daily
the Sanctuary
Classified Ads
Marketing Yourself
A WORKSHOP
DESIGNED TO
HELP WOMEN
IMPROVE AND
ENHANCE
INTERVIEWING
SKILLS AND
RESUME WRITING
TECHNIQUES
2:00 - 4:00 p.m.
International Room
Kansas Union
ANNOUNCEMENT
Wednesday, July 15, 1987
Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Residency program more information, call Sherill Robinson at 516-287-4800.
Events of the Week
HILLEL
כפל
Shabbat Dinner
Play Putt-Put with Hillel Thursday, July 9, 8:00 p.m. Meet at the Hillel House
For More Information Call Hillel
Shabbat Dinner
Friday, July 10, 6:00 p.m.
Hillel House
940 Mississippi
749-4242
ENTERTAINMENT
Tunight: Dance beneath the Summer stars on the patio at Dome Homes, 815 New Hampshire 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Music provided by Metropolis Mobile Sound (941-703) Feel the rhythm of the night.
THE FIELD FAIR
"EXPLOSIVELY FUNNY."
David Ansen, NEWSWEEK
ONLY $3.00
MAT. $2.50
The Annual Golden Company Present
ROBERT TOWNSHID'S
Hollywood
SHOFFLE
7:30 & 9:30
11:30 latenite Fri. & Sat.
5:30 matinees Sat. & Sun.
BIG TANK RANCH CO., LTD.
MUSEUM SHOP
Museum of Natural History
M-S10-5/Sun. 1-5-864-4450
KU Campus 14th and Jayhawk
Avalon
- Laundry facilities
- Close to KU & Hillcrest
2 bdm diplex, on bus route, 15min walk to union,
washer/derwash/disposal, CA, Cats OK
$360/mo. 844-420 evenings and weekends. 1027
New Jersey.
FOR RENT
- Extra storage space
- Shopping Center
• On KU bus route
- Rental furniture available from Thompson-Crawley
Commercial office space available in Lawrence's newly developed University Corporate & Research Park. For more information call 841-7120.
Duplex. Avail 8-1. A/C, /A/C, D/W, disp range, refert, carpet, lease, deprivem, reference req
9th & Avalon Rd. 841-5797
ELEGANT RESTORATION! 953 Tenn 3 brs. 1/2 baths, dishwasher, microwave, oven, refrigerator, blinds, OFF STREET parking, lawn care provided, 820-4973 for payment $752.00 low utilities
- Close to KU & on
- bus route
- Starting at $250
* Retail & furniture available
from Thompson-Crawley
905 Emery Rd. 841-5797
--from Thompson-Crawley
Sunrise Apartment
SUNRISE PLACE
9th & Michigan
House Mates Wanted. 3 to 4 people needed for a house north of stadium location. Rent $125.00 share of utilities and phone. Contact Richard "Pigger" Eason 842-159-1071. Abbah One and two bedroom luxury apartments to rent m. p. c. 842-2700 at 9:30-6:00, or 842-3159 at 6:30 p.m.
Offering luxurious townhouses and apartment living.
Stop by to see our show unit at 9th and Michigan or call. . .
841-1287 for an appointment.
A relaxed atmosphere with plenty of space
Spacious 2 bedroom
Laundry facilities
Waterbed fine
Swimming pool
10-12 month leases
VILLAGE SQUARE
HILLVIEW 1745 W.24th
Village squarE
- 1 & 2 BR units
- Laundry facilities
Excelcell location 2 bedroom room in 4plex
in St. Augustine, FL
Available Aug 15th at 13h. Ohio 810; Call
810-755-6925
- On bus route - near shopping
Female roommate wanted to share brand new spacious two bedroom apt. for fall, own room, on bus route, washer, dryer, and microwave. 217.50月 units. Call Dana at Dna4-8197-2967
Great Location! Walk to campus 2 bdm apt
pete k800 & 8751 & 941-1600. Year lease: pte
pete k800 & 8751 & 941-1600.
FLEXIBLE LEASING
Berkeley FLATS
- Over 40 New Units
Available
Laundry facilities
walk anywhere
LEASING NOW & FOR FALL
Furnished by
1123 Indiana
- On KU Bus Route
Furnished Units
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
2040 HEATHERWOOD DR.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
Thompson-Crawley
A FEW
1 & 2
- Hollywood style bath
- Covered Carports
- Swimming Pool
- On KU Bus Route
- FF refrig, Disposal,
- On KU | Bus Route
EMERY PLACE APTS. A few 18" and one 24"
left for summer and fall. Reasonable rates.
Send in to www.marymary.com or
permises, laundry facilities avail. Call
843-7644, or stop by 1191 and 4230 for more info.
- Low utility bills
- Gas heat. C-A
- Quiet location
Sleeping rooms - 18 *b2* rbmts close to campus.
Summer & winter lease. No Pets. 842-8717
Sunflower House now taking applications for fall
accommodation. 749-8717, 1406 Tenn.
cooperative living. 749-8717, 1406 Tenn.
For more info. call between 9-6,Mon.-Fri.,843-4754
MASTERCRAFT
NEW
1963
apartments--all near KU!
FURNISHED
15th & Kasold
Apartments
Orchard Corners
- On KU Bus Route
- Fully equipped kitchen
- Gas heat
- Custom furnishings
- On site manager
Our Display Units Open Daily 9-5
- Affordable rates
w/microwave
- Variety of floorplans
- Designed for private
749-4226
- Laundry
EDDINGHAM
Completely furnished
- Swimming pool
- Energy efficient
- Custom furnishings
PLACE
HANOVER PLACE—14th & Mass.
- Affordable rates
- Variety of floorplans
FOR SALE
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
24th & Eddingham (next to Gammons)
- On-Site Management
TANGLEWOOD—10th & Arkansas
710-9145
- Designed for privacy
OFFERING LUXURY APARTMENTS
OPEN DAILY 1-5
841-5444
Dinetes are 12 off if she last from $99
Mark & Quinn Farm, Warmington, NY 830-2544
- Manv great locations
- Professional management
- 10 or 12 month
- Laundry room
FOR SALE-Queen Size Waterbed, complete.
Electric Typewriter-call Bob at 749-7585.
FOR SALE: 14 X 56 Liberty Mobile Home Equired condition must to appreciate 843.996
CAMPUS PLACE—1145 Louisianna
841-1429
Open Daily 3:00-5:00 Saturday 9:00-12:00
Professionally managed by
841-5255
MAX'S COMICS. Comic Books, Playbys, Pen
house, etc. 811 New Hampshire.
- Fire place
* Energy efficient
Truckloads of closeout livingroom direct to public. Several to choose. From $199 Open 7 days. Mark & Quain Furniture Warehouse 842 2254
- Exercise Weightroom
MOTHBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
Monday - Friday 10:5-30 p.m.
Weekdays 1:2-6 p.m.
Satellite T.V.
Two bottled pop machines $190 each. Will also hold long necks 723-3960
1976 Pinto station wagon, 4-speed, AC.
1980 Aircon excellent condition. Tom at
841-818-0388.
Can you buy Jeepees, Cars, 44s '64 Seized in drug
can you buy jeeps 1000. Ext. Call for facts
can you buy jeeps 1000. Ext. Call for facts
HELP WANTED
Waterbeds! Waterbeds! Complete K size $99.
Bookcase Q size $139. $159. $199. Startup $99.
Books are on sale now. Much more
open to the public 10-8 daily. Mark & Quain
Furniture Warehouse. 728 New Hampshire.
- Energy efficient
Is R True You can Buy Bees for $44 through the government? "Get the facts today" Call 1-800-725-3535.
- Laundry room
* Fire place
- --contract
- Swimming pool Free Shoutime
FIRE SERVICE TRAINING EXTENSION COURSE INSTRUCTOR: the University of Kansas Fire Service Training instructor, 12-month position for a Fire Service Training instructor. Major responsibility is to provide training to fire service personnel based on the fire service community in Kansas. Topics to be covered will include firefighting techniques, basic safety and as set out in N.P.F.A. standards. Provide consultant service for apparius and other fire department personnel. Develop training, instruction and trainingishment and fire prevention for the fire departments of the state of Kansas, governmental entities, and other agencies.
Program Assistant, Half-time, School of Education, Office of the Dean. Assist budget officer. Experience in bookkeeping; accounting pro-ductions; payroll management. Applications should include information regarding education and work experience and names and addresses of three references. Send application to Larry Lawrence, 117 Bailey Hall, Lawrence, KC 66045. Application deadline is July 17, starting date is
REQUIRED QUALIFICATIONS: An associate's degree in fire protection technology or related field is required. Firefighters basic firefighting skills, a thorough knowledge of municipal fire department operations, an ability to design, write and otherwise manage a fire station, and physically able to participate in fire service field training activities under stress conditions; willingness to work in a team environment; $12,000-$28,000. Applications
must be received by 5.00 p.m. on 14 August 1887.
Application must include letter of application, a copy of the application form, and a copy of the resume. Send to: John P. Wolf, Fire Service Training, University of Kansas, Division of Continuing Education, Continuing Education Law, LAWS 6064-2034 EO/UA employer
job announcement available at Wendell 681-3522. Position offered: 1978, 1987. Substitute teaching, resume, and names of two references by July 13, 1987 to Dr. Barbara Ballard, Associate Dean of Student life and Director. Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center. 218 E. Washington Blvd. in Kansas, Lawrence, Kanaas 60445 EOE/AO
GRADUATE ASSISTANT, Half time position in EMILY Taylor Women's Resource Center
Bachelor's Degree required and enrollment as graduate student at University of Kansas, fall 2007. Experience in programming is essential. Complete job announcement available at Women's Center. Submit resume to B.D. with cover letter of application, resume, and names of two references by July 13, 1987. Dr. Barbara
Illustrator wanted. Must currently be a student in a public or private art school, or be illustrating children's books. Please call 845-276-1721 and ask for Beth Williams for details. Close July 17. Project Life Bureau of Child Research, an institute of the American Academy of Art.
Now hiring Food Service Employees at Mass
Street Del. Must have one year experience. 15-20 hours per week. Starting pay at $7 per hour. Appl-
wardments to Massachusetts (invoice Buffalo Mills)
Smokehouse
STUDENT HOURLY POSITION AVAILABLE
Duties: reception; filing; do work; derrags; type:
proofread; etc. $34.48; Applications available
in Center, Center, Strong;
484-1064 484-107.9.17 deadline
Wanted. Part-time Instructor to teach MCT MA
Top 10% MCAAT Scores, degree required. Call
(212) 364-5298.
GOVERNMENT JOBS
GOVENOMENT JOBS $1,000-$59,250 yr/w
1957-58-6700 Exemption for current
employee
Dog. Just because I'm too shy to say it doesn't matter. You're the one for all those sleepless nights.
PERSONAL
Chill Out At The Glass Onion 8 a.m. to Midnight
Mon. Sat. New summer time menu. Above Vello
Mar. Sun.
BUS. PERSONAL
Excellent Job for part time home assembly work. For info call 31278149 8400 Ext 623
Position available immediately and renewable hours are limited. Receive further information and full job description announcement contact James Moolg, Campus Management, 114 W. University Drive, Lawrence, KS, 1145. Karrison O'Rourke L. Haller, Lawrence, KS, 1145. Salary dependent upon experience and resume must be received before July 22, 1997. Salary dependent upon experience and resume must be received before July 22, 1997.
**VERSEAS JOBS** Also Cruiseshipping Listings.
Now Hiring. To 84KM. @ 89H-680-697-0001 Jct. U7938.
part time teacher's aid for preschool program to
start July 27th. Classroom experience with 5 yr
ids required. Position for other preschool age
group avail. to start August 1st. Apply at Children's
Job Centre.
GREENS PARTY SUPPLY
Position Opening. Assistant Director of Facilities Planning Construction Administration The university of Kansas, Lawrence Campus. The director is in charge of the Director for the Lawrence campus to assist the Director in administering construction projects which includes funding management, construction projects, and environmental impact assessments. Architects/Engineers and other State Agencies, and processing of contractual
The applicant must hold a professional degree in工程管理或相关领域 or related field with two years experience in the field, emphasis on construction administration and use year in construction work desirable.
Busch 12 pk. $3.99
Coors Light 12 pk. $5.19
Lite 24 pk. $8.99
Michelob 6 pk. $2.99
Michelob Light 6 pk. $2.99
Miller Draft 6 pk. $2.59
Old Style 12 pk. $3.99
Wiedemann 12 pk. $3.19
HEADACHE, BACKACHE, ARM PAIN, LEG
PAIN? Student and most insurance accepted. For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark
Johnson 843-3979
An equal opportunity/Affirmative Action employer. Applications are sought from all qualified persons regardless of race, religion, national origin, age, or ancestry.
Ladies. Take a break form the books. Pamper
yourself with a cup of tea or coffee and a
afternoon calls. Michele 249-1698
Race and Used Records. Buy, Sell, or Trade Quantrill's 811 New Hampshire
EXPERT tutoring service in STATISTICS AND ECONOMIC. All levels. Call Dennis B42-1053 GRAF X-Scientific and statistical illustration, maps, drawings, slides, editing aid. Phone (800) 278-8222.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwinter Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749
SERVICES OFFERED
**Educate Students Experienced editor will**
*edit proofread your thesis or dissertation*
*using a specialized software kit.*
PRIVATE OFFICE OFPEN and Abortion Services,
Overland Park...9131-491-4878
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. get your
complete completion. Transportation provided.
TAROT THERAPY Readings, counseling by ap-
pointment. B41-8235
The College of Liberal Arts offers tutoring in
English, French, Spanish and other Foreign
Educational Services. Rewardable Rates.
Apply online at college.library.ca.
FLAPS THAT DON'T FLOR
10
Now a sandal for hiking, biking, and canoeing It's amphibious
711. G Arkansas
Near Louise's West
843-3228
DONALD G. STROLE
Attorney at Law
GRAN SPORT THE & AGRAND AMERICA
- D.W.I.'s & Traffic
* Fake I.D.'s & other criminal offenses
* Family Law & other legal problems
**16 East 13t St.** 842-1133
Joda E Friends
HAIR SALON
Our staff does unique services
- PERMS
- PEDICURES
- HI -LIGHTING
- COLORING
- COLORING
- FACIALS
- MANICURES
TYPING
Please come by and see us for the best in hair care.
1-1-1 THRO WO process ing Consistentioe
Responsible Reliable. Call 842-3111 for service
transformed into accurately spelled and pun-
tured, grammatically correct letters of letter
noun.
typing yp.
AAW KnowledgeSSISKING work low
842-1942-149 after 5pm m.f.; anytime
weekends. Campus pick up; drop off available.
Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard
secretary. $1.25 double spaced page. Call Mrs.
Nancy Mattia 841-1219
13,100 pages. No job too small or too large. At least a typeable typed wordprocessing, 842,797 bytes.
A-Z W Word Processing Service Quality resumes.
B-C W Word Processing Service Quality resumes.
D-F W Word Storage available. 843-1850 up to 9 p.m.
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12
Wednesday, July 8, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
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North 'highlights' soon on 90 minute video Page 2
Kubrick serves up horrific Full Metal Jacket Page 7
KU basketball alumni vs. Junior World tonight Page 9
Wednesday July 15, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 151
(USPS 650-640)
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
North's testimony false in chief areas says former boss
WASHINGTON (AP) — Lt. Col. Oliver North concluded six extraordinary days in the congressional hot seat yesterday and was followed by his former boss, Robert McFarlane, who called North's testimony "passionate in delivery" but in chief areas untrue.
North was dismissed with a declaration by the chairman of the House Iran-contra committee that his activities were part of a policy that catapulted President Reagan into his most serious crisis.
"You said these hearings caused serious damage to our national interest," said Rep. Ree Hamilton, D-Ind. "But I wonder whether the damage was caused by these hearings or acts which caused these hearings."
which requires the McFarlane, who testified without the cloak of immunity that covered North, offered these rebauts:
On North's statement that he kept McFarlane advised of his activities: "Colonel North did advise me from time to time on a few, but certainly not all."
On North's belief that the Boland amendment, which for a time restricted direct U.S. aid to the Nicaraguan contras, did not apply to the National Security Council staff, McFarlane he argued with Congress about the matter for weeks and "at the end of it we lost. I think the evidence is that surely I believed that the Bolander amendment applied. Otherwise, why would we have worked so hard to get rid of it after it passed."
■ On North's contention that he was involved in a "full-service" covert-action operation, with the blessing of the late CIA Director William Casey, McFarlane said. "I never heard of any such full-service operation from either Director Casey or Colonel North, and I certainly never concurred in one."
514078
VOLKSWAN
Motorists find an obstacle course and equipment on Jayhawk Boul
Resurfaci
Bv CARLA PATINO
When the resurfacing of Jayhawk Boulevard began Monday morning, it took several students and staff members by surprise.
Antonio Norwood, Kansas City Kan, senior, said that he usually parked somewhere near the corner of 13th Street and Olear Avenue, but that on Monday those streets were closed.
Staff writer
"I was surprised and then angry. I had to park on Ohio Street and then run up the hill, because I was already late to class," he said.
Norwood said the parking services should issue some kind of notice before a job such as this was started.
'They don't give us any alter-
KU prof recalls North as 'dynamic'
'You said these hearings caused serious damage to our national interest. But I wonder whether the damage was caused by these hearings or acts which caused these hearings.'
- Lee Hamilton U.S. Rep., D-Ind.
McFarlane said that in October 1985, North sent him some memoranda that "raised doubts about his compliance with the laws. I instructed him," in Colonel North's words, to fix it, "meaning McFarlane wanted compliance with the law.
McFarlane said it was true that
Bv ELAINE SUNG
BY ELAINE SUNG Special to the Kansan
A KU faculty member knew Lt. Col. Oliver North before his name became a household word.
U. S. Marine Col. Michael D. Wyly, the commanding officer of the KU Navy ROTC and a KU professor of naval science, first met north in 1974. They took a night class together at the military base in Quantico, Va.
North had a unique character that made him unforgettable, Wyly said.
"He always did stand out in the crowd. He's the type of person that you'd meet the first time, and you wouldn't forget him," he said. "He is unusually dynamic, with a good sense of humor and a quick mind."
Wlyd he was impressed most by North's diligence and talent while he went back and forth from class to the field.
North also taught infantry tactics in the Marine Corps basic school during this time.
"He (North) would spend two or three days in the field and come right out of the field all muddy into class." Wyly said. "He was determined to
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Carol Jeffries, library associate at the acquisitions department, said that although she was surprised Monday morning when she was told to move her car from
I Can't Believe It's YOGURT!
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Please press this coupon but not ordering. Limit one time only.
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Please ensure this compares the first interview. Luckily, one company paid the customer not only for the interview but also for it. I don't know how much it costs to do it. I don't know how much it costs to do it.
be finished by Friday, depending on the weather.
The general contractor for the street resurfacing is Asphalt Improvement Co. Inc., 31st and Haskell streets.
I Can't Believe It's YOGURT!
Enjoy Your Journey
park where I always park, ano I didn't see any parking signs at 6 a.m.," she said. "I figured that it was probably announced in the newspaper, but I didn't read it. I didn't mind moving my car."
Robert Porter, associate director of the physical plant, said his office issued a public notice on the cominir restaging last Thursday.
'We are doing it now, because
'my job is to keep people from parking here. It sounds silly, but some people want to park even though we have signs all along the way,' he said. 'It is an inconvenience, but it has to be done.'
Cook said that no extra parking spaces had been provided.
Parking is a problem, but we have limited parking spaces anyway," he said.
"Frozen yogurt makes me feel less guilty when I eat it because I think I am getting fewer calories," she said.
Mary Pfortmiller, a Lawrence resident, said she liked to combine exercise with a nutritional snack, so she walked to the local frozen yogurt store once in a while.
essential vitamins and minerals such as phosphorous, vitamin B-12, calcium and riboflavin.
---
Darcy Chang/KANSAN
e at the Military Science building. Wwy met
por-
iore
une
that
terribly complex," he said. "His family background is solid — that keeps coming to mind. He's from a close family with strong values and
See WYLY, p. 6, col. 1
rozen
ome-
taste make gurt popular
was gurt. aste,
arly.
Can't
siana
said
the
ets.
it,
laste,
ity of
ming
photo illustration by Jan Morris, Daryc Chang and John Boneh KAMAN
11 W.
ogurt
CBY's
been
LIMESTONE by Jim Morle, Derry Shannon and
udent
vogurt
sweet-
had
in ice
other Frozen yogurt has gained popularity in Lawrence because of nutritional values as well as taste.
equal ein for dit to les in ome a
essen.
But Doug Shade said people were kidding themselves with the thought that frozen yogurt had fewer calories than ice cream. Shade is the owner and manager of Baskin-Robbins 3 Flavors Ice Cream Stores, 925 Iowa St. and 1524 W. 23rd St.
"With all the toppings people add to the yogurt, I don't think they are getting less calories," he said.
Shade said that although the frozen yogurt stores had not affected his business much, he thought he had lost some of the weight-conscientious college students.
He said that it was a good possibility he might add a frozen yogurt selection at his stores.
Besides the specialized frozen yogurt stores in town, some restaurants offer the yogurt as a menu item, and grocery stores have begun stocking it.
WEATHER
Today: Mostly sunny, high 86. Overnight low 65; no precipitation expected.
Tomorrow: Mostly sunny, high 90. Overnight, fair, low 68.
Weekend: Daily highs 90-93, lows 70-73. Chance of thunderstorms daily.
North 'highlights' soon on 90 minute video Page 2
Kubrick serves up horrific Full Metal Jacket Page 7
KU basketball alumni vs. Junior World tonight Page 9
Wednesday
July 15, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 151
(USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
Museum House
North's testimony false in chief areas says former boss
U. S. Marine Col. Michael D. Wyly watches the contra hearings in his office at the Military Science building. Wyly met U. S. Olive, North, in 1974, at a military base in Virginia.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Lt. Col. Oliver North concluded six extraordinary days in the congressional hot seat yesterday and was followed by his former boss, Robert McFarlane, who called North's testimony "passionate in delivery" but in chief areas untrue.
Darcy Chang/KANSAN
North was dismissed with a declaration by the chairman of the House Iran-contra committee that his activities were part of a policy that catapulted President Reagan into his most serious crisis.
"You said these hearings caused serious damage to our national interest," said Rep. Ree Hamilton, D-Ind. "But I wonder whether the damage was caused by these hearings or acts which caused these hearings."
McFarlane, who testified without the cloak of immunity that covered North, offered these rebuttals:
■ On North's statement that he kept McFarlane advised of his activities:
"Colonel North did advise me from time on time a few, but certainly not all."
■ On North's belief that the Boland amendment, which for a time restricted direct U.S. aid to the Nicaraguan contias, did not apply to the National Security Council staff, McFarlane said he argued with Congress about the matter for weeks and "at the end of it we lost. I think the evidence is that surely I believed that the Boland amendment applied. Otherwise, why would we have worked so hard to get rid of it after it
- On North's contention that he was involved in a "full-service" covert action operation, with the blessing of the late CIA Director William Casey, McFarlane said. "I never heard of any such full-service operation from either Director Casey or Colonel North, and I certainly never concurred in one."
- Lee Hamilton U.S. Rep., D-Ind.
KU prof recalls North as 'dynamic'
'You said these hearings caused serious damage to our national interest. But I wonder whether the damage was caused by these hearings or acts which caused these hearings.'
McFarlane said it was true that "narrow and changing restrictions" of the Boland amendment caused changes in conduct of covert operations.
McFarlane said that in October 1985, North sent him some memoranda that "raised doubts about his compliance with the laws. I instructed him, in Colonel North's words, to fix it," meaning McFarlane wanted compliance with the law.
The former national security adviser was the first witness to make a reappearance at the televised hearings. He was questioned only by the senators and representatives on the committee, not by its lawyers.
As North's appearance neared its end, Sen. Daniel K. Inouye, the Senate committee chairman, harshly denounced North for his activities in a program that then turning over some of the Nicaraguan rebels for use by the Nicaraguan rebels.
"It was painful to all of us to sit here and listen to your testimony," said Inouye. "It was equally painful that youlied and misled for what you believed to be a good cause."
Earlier in the day, North gave a version of the pro-contra pitch he testified he had given more than 100 times during his White House tenure.
By ELAINE SUNG Special to the Kansan
A KU faculty member knew Lt. Col. Oliver North before his name became a household word.
U. S. Marine Col. Michael D. Wlyl, the commanding officer of the KU Navy ROTC and a KU professor of naval science, first met North in 1974. They took a night class together at the military base in Quantico. Va.
North had a unique character that made him unforgettable. Wyls said.
"He always did stand out in the crowd. He's the type of person that you'd meet the first time, and you wouldn't forget him," he said. "He is unusually dynamic, with a good sense of humor and a quick mind."
North also taught infantry tactics in the Marine Corps basic school during this time.
"He (North) would spend two or three days in the field and come right out of the field all muddy into class." Wyly said. "He was determined to keep academics going at the same time."
Wyly said he was impressed most by North's diligence and talent when he went back and forth from class to the field.
North's talent and hard work made him a valuable asset to the National Soccer Team.
"Even when he was only a Marine captain in 74, he worked extremely long hours," he said. "He used to keep a cot in his office, and whenever he worked late, he'd just stay there."
and they trusted him."
In the early 1960s, North was a student at State University of New York at Brockport. He later transferred to the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md. An auto accident forced him to repeat his freshman year.
"He gained the confidence of his men very quickly. His men always listened to him," he said. "By reputation, we heard that his platoon had very high morale. They were loyal
"He wanted very badly to go to the naval academy, and wanted to serve his country. Certainly, his experience in Vietnam would enforce that feeling." Wyly said.
North graduated from the academy in 1968 and immediately was assigned to Vietnam as a platoon leader. Wwyly said he had heard good
Wyly said North was being portrayed publicly as something more complex than he really is.
"I'd describe him as a genuine solid citizen. I don't think he is that
terribly complex.” he said “His family background is solid — that keeps coming to mind. He's from a close family with strong values and
Motorists find an obstacle course consisting of road resurfacing crews and equipment on Jayhawk Boulevard. Campus traffic might be congested this week while sections of Jayhawk Boulevard and Oread Avenue get three inches of new asphalt.
See WYLY, p. 6, col. 1
S
Darcy Chang/KANSAN
Resurfacing job smooths campus streets
When the resurfacing of Jayhawk Boulevard began Monday morning, it took several students and staff members by surprise.
Antonio Norwood, Kansas City
Kan, senior, said that he usually
parked somewhere near the corner
of 13th Street and Oread
Avenue, but that on Monday those
streets were closed.
By CARLA PATINO
Staff writer
"I was surprised and then angry. I had to park on Ohio Street and then run up the hill, because I was already late to class," he said.
Norwood said the parking services should issue some kind of notice before a job such as this was started.
"They don't give us any alternatives to parking." he said.
Ron Cook, a civil engineer for facilities operations, said the resurfacing involved Jayhawk Boulevard east of the Sunflower Road intersection and Oread Avenue south of 13th Street.
The general contractor for the street resurfacing is Asphalt Improvement Co. Inc., 31st and Haskell streets.
Carol Jeffries, library associate at the acquisitions department, said that although she was surprised Monday morning when she was told to move her car from
He said the top three inches of the road would be removed to be replaced by new asphalt.
Cook said he expected the job to be finished by Friday, depending on the weather.
Jeffries at 6 a.m. Monday she parked in front of the library, as she usually does. But she didn't. She called her car, a.m. from someone telling her to move her car because she was illegally parked.
"I didn't understand, because I park where I always park, and I didn't see any parking signs at a m.a.," she said. "I figured that it was probably announced in the news about me, so it. I didn't move moving my car."
Robert Porter, associate director of the physical plant, said his office issued a public notice on the coming resurfacing last Thursday.
Jayhawk Boulevard to make way for the resurfacers, she had expected it to happen sooner or later.
We are doing it now, because
we thought that the least amount of people will be affected," he said.
William Durant, parking control officer, sat in his parking services vehicle Monday and monitored the traffic at the intersection of Sunflower Road and Jayhawk Boulevard. He said that although he had not received any complaints, he thought the lack of parking space was a problem.
Cook said that no extra parking spaces had been provided.
"My job is to keep people from parking here. It sounds silly, but some people want to park even though we have signs all along the way," he said. "It is an inconvenience, but it has to be done."
"Parking is a problem, but we have limited parking spaces anyway," he said.
Nutrition, taste make frozen yogurt popular
By CARLA PATINO
Four years ago, Kent Johnson was not at all interested in eating yogurt. It was too sour and tart for his taste, he said.
But that has changed.
Johnson now eats yogurt regularly. The frozen kind, that is.
Johnson is the manager of I Can't Believe It's Yogurt, 2223 Louisiana St., which opened April 21. He said the freezing of yogurt had changed from a frozen food to low-fat food once relegated to the healthfood aisles in supermarkets.
"The trick is to get them to try it," he said. After that, the smooth taste, creamy texture and wide variety of flavors keep the customers coming back.
Compared to ice cream, frozen yogurt is a relatively new phenome.
Photo Illustration by Jan Morris, Darcy Chang and
The Country's Best Yogurt, 711 W. 23rd St., is the oldest frozen yogurt store in town. Cecilia Wood, TCBY's manager, told the store had been open about three years.
10
Mary Pfortmiller, a Lawrence resident, said she liked to combine exercise with a nutritional snack, so she prefers frozen yogurt store once in a while.
"Frozen yogurt makes me feel less guilty when I eat it because I think I am getting fewer calories," she said.
Flavors, 701 W. Ninth St., another frozen yogurt store, has been open since January, Bill Davidson, the store's manager, said.
Ann Kohl, a dietitian for Student Health Services, said frozen yogurt was a good alternative for sweet-tooth satisfaction because it had fewer calories and less fat than ice cream.
Frozen yogurt has gained popularity in Lawrence because of nutritional values as well as taste.
Kohl said frozen yogurt had essential vitamins and minerals such as phosphorous, vitamin B-12, calcium and riboflavin.
"Frozen yogurt gives a high-quality source of calcium and protein for your body. I like to recommend it to the weight-conscient females in particular," she said. "I've become a frozen yogurt fan myself."
But Doug Shade said people were kidding them with the thought that frozen yogurt had fewer calories than ice cream. Shade is the owner and manager of Baskin-Robbins 31 Flavors Ice Cream Stores, 925 Iowa St. and 1524 W. 23rd St.
"With all the toppings people add to the yogurt I don't think they are going to eat."
Shade said that although the frozen yogurt stores had not affected his business much, he thought he had lost some of the weight-conscientious college students.
He said that it was a good possibility he might add a frozen yogurt gelate to the smoothie.
Besides the specialized frozen yogurt stores in town, some restaurants offer the yogurt as a menu item, and grocery stores have begun stocking it.
2
Wednesday, July 15, 1987
Kansan Summer Weekly
Around the World
Central Karachi rocked by bombs; hospital appeals for blood donors
KARACHI, Pakistan — Four explosions struck central Karachi last night, and doctors said at least 49 people were killed and 300 were injured.
The blasts occurred at two bus stands, a restaurant and an old building, which were within 200 yards of each other. Witnesses reported four buildings ablaze, including the restaurant. They also said vehicles and vending carts were shattered.
Nation and World
"The situation is very bad," said Abdul Karim, head physician at Jinnhn Medical Post-Graduate Hospital. "We have declared a state of emergency in the hospital, and we don't know what the toll will be."
Civil Hospital reported 11 deaths and another 150 injured.
Police said the four explosions apparently were caused by bombs. No group has claimed responsibility for the bombing.
Karim said his hospital had received 38 bodies and 150 injured people, 30 of them in critical condition.
More than 1,000 people assembled outside the Jinnah hospital, where a public address system appealed for blood donors.
Columns of smoke could be seen rising over the city of 7 million, Pakistan's largest. Fire trucks and ambulances rushed to the city center while police cordoned off the blast area.
Paris celebrates Bastille Day with a parade
After threats in June of terrorist attacks, security at the parade was tight.
PARIS — Jet fighters swooped low over the Arc de Triomphe yesterday while thousands of soldiers marched down the tree-lined Champs Elysees as France celebrated Bastille Day.
President Francois Mitterrand rode in a black limousine down the boulevard to the Concorde where he was welcomed by Premier Jacques Chirac and Defense Minister Andre Giraud.
Anyone there could see the jets overhead, the first ones trailing red, white and blue smoke trails, the colors of the French flag. They were followed by Mirage and Jaguar jetfighters, Transall transport planes, Super-Frelong helicopters and other planes flying in graceful formation.
All branches of the military passed in review. Various branches of French police marched in the parade as did the Paris fire brigade, a favorite of first lady Danielle Mitterrand, who did not applaud the military forces.
Military hardware also was displayed, including Pluton and Hawk nuclear missiles, the foundation of France's nuclear arsenal.
The loudest applause was reserved for the French Foreign Legion, which moved down the boulevard more slowly than other military troops and were honored by the president, who rose as they marched by.
On July 14, 1789, a Parisian mob stormed the Bastille prison, a despised symbol of the oppressive reign of King Louis XVI. The event marked the start of the French Revolution and eventually led to the downfall of Louis XVI and his queen Marie Antoinette.
Around the Nation
North's testimony to be marketed on video
very historic."
CHICAGO - A home video company said yesterday that it planned to sell a videotape of LL Col. Oliver North's appearance at the Iran-contra hearings to people who were unable to follow the 30-plus hours of testimony on television.
The tape is about 90 minutes long and the suggested retail price is $19.95, Ali said. Tapes will be shipped to stores beginning July 30.
"You can't get an in-depth look at Oliver North in 90 seconds on the news each night," said Jaffi Alarie, vice president of sales at MPI Home Video. "Oilier North has really captivated the hearts, minds and souls of the public, and we think that these hearings are
"While focusing specifically upon the testimony of North, the program will additionally draw upon the hearing testimony of other witnesses to the Select Committee, previous testimony by North, and background material about key figures and events," MPI said in a prepared statement.
Legislation aimed at airline improvement
WASHINGTON — A Senate committee completed work yesterday on a bill that would prod the nation's airlines to improve service, while a Senate claused over a House-passed measure banning smoking on most domestic flights.
The government, in turn, would be required to issue monthly reports, which Senate aides said were likely to appear in the government's Federal Register and be distributed in news releases to reporters.
Legislation sent to the full Senate would require the nation's airlines to provide monthly reports to the government of their on-time records, canceled flights, lost luggage and burned passengers.
It also would require the Transportation Department to establish a toll-free phone number to handle complaints from the rapidly growing ranks of unhappy airline travelers.
The bill, approved by the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee, is opposed by the Air Transport Association, which represents U.S. airlines.
Thirteen U.S. carriers have asked the Transportation Department to compose a similar reporting system, although participation would be voluntary.
In a letter released yesterday to members of the Senate commerce panel, Transportation Secretary Michael R. O'Reilly gave opposition to the Senate measure.
She said that her agency was considering consumer protection regulations and argued that the bill "will rule out potentially better approaches to airline consumer protection" because it would not leave enough time for analysis
Consumer legislation has been moving through Congress this year in response to growing commercial customers about poor service.
On another front, battle lines in the Senate began forming over a measure the House approved late Monday that would prohibit cigarette smoking on airline flights of two hours or less.
The measure is an amendment to the transportation appropriations bill for fiscal 1988 that the House approved.
Cleveland clinic plans egg donor program
The donor and recipient would be matched according to physical characteristics but would remain unknown to each other, a clinic official said. The donor would supply the egg that the recipient was unable to provide.
CLEVELAND — The Cleveland Clinic announced yesterday that it would recruit women to donate eggs for couples unable to have children.
This may be the first program in the nation to use a pool of anonymous donors.
"I think the proper way of using donor eggs is the way that most programs use donor sperm — appropriately screened, appropriately matched but anonymous donors," said Martin M. Quigley, director of the clinic's In Vitro Fertilization and Embryo Replacement Program.
The clinic planned to use the test tube baby technique to fertilize the donor eggs. The eggs would be surgically removed from the donor and fertilized in a laboratory by the sperm of the recipient's husband.
Quigley estimated there were more than 100,000 women in the United States who were unable to have children because their ovaries did not produce eggs, they didn't have ovaries, or their eggs were defective or carried an inherited disease.
Under the clinic's guidelines, the donor must be 18 to 35, and if married, she must have her husband's consent.
The recipient couple must be married. The woman must have a healthy uterus, and the man must have a sufficient sperm count for fertilization.
Ukrainian premier, 8 officials ousted
MOSCOW (AP) — The premier of the Ukraine has been ousted along with at least eight other top officials in recent weeks, reported to the area's economic problems.
Not directly affected by the changes is Ukrainian Communist Party Chief Vladimir V. Scherbitsky, but the departure of several of his key aides suggests his power base may have eroded.
Scherbitsky is one of the last of the Soviet old guards to retain his influential seat on the country's 14-member national ruling body, the Politburo. The Ukraine is the Soviet Union's most populous republic after the Russian Federation.
Soviet last week. Ukrainian newspaper reports gave no reasons for the shake-up. It appeared, however, to be another step in Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev's effort to restructure the Soviet economy.
The reshuffle was made during a meeting of the Ukrainian Supreme
At last year's Communist Party Congress, the Ukraine's economic performance came under harsh criticism, indicating that Shcherbitsky was in political trouble. The veteran party leader has survived national party Central Committee meetings since then, but his political status remains unclear.
Saturday's issue of Pravda Ukrainy, the republic's party newspaper, said the 69-year-old Schcheri ordered the session that ordered the changes.
The government department chiefs responsible for finance, planning and crucial consumer industries were among those removed, indicating the shake-up was prompted by Gorbachev's effort to restructure the economy.
Those ousted, however, were mostly long-time party and government officials seen as the backbone of Shcherbitsky's power.
Pravda Ukraine said republic Premier Alexander P. Lyashko, 71, was retired after 15 years on the post and replaced by the Ukraine's planning chief, Vitaly A. Masol.
Among those retiring was KGB chief Stepan N. Mukha, who, the newspaper said, was removed "in connection with his discharge from active military service." As with many of the changes announced, it was not clear whether his departure was voluntary.
Sunday's issue of the newspaper listed eight other republic officials removed from the Council of Ministers.
Those replaced in the Cabinet and their successors included Oleg Y. Kasyanenko, minister of light industry, succeeded by Grigory G. Kasyanenko, minister of rail safety and mining supervision, succeeded by Anatoly D. Fydua, Vasily P. Kozerki, finance K. Shamkerson, chief of the Department K. Shamkerson, chief of the Department succeeded by Dimitri M. Nedashkovsky, Nikolai P. Shulgin, minister of road construction and forestry, succeeded by Valery I. Samsikovsky, Gutu Vasiliy B. Dataila, wood products minister succeeded by Valery I. Samsikovsky, KBG chief Makka succeeded by Nikolai M. Golushko, and forestry I. Sinchenko, succeeded by Anatoly Y. Gul
Iraqi warplanes attack Iranian oil fields
MANAMA, Bahrain (AP) — Iraq attacked offshore Iranian oil fields yesterday in the Persian Gulf war, which appeared to be intensifying before the arrival in the next four or five days of reflagged Kuwaiti tankers and their U.S. Navy escorts.
A communique issued in Baghdad said Iraqi warplanes struck Iran's Rakhsh oilfields east of Qatar, in the southern gulf, and the targets were "engulfed in fire."
Other jets bombed Farsiyah island and attacked Iran's main oil export
Kharg is a regular target of Iraq's campaign to cut off oil exports so the Iranians cannot finance the nearly 7-year-old war. Units of Revolutionary Guards are based on Farisiyah and use fast gunboats to attack ships, particularly those serving or belonging to Kuwait.
terminal on Kharg Island in the northern gulf for the fourth time since June 20.
The raids followed air strikes Monday on Iranian oil targets, in which Iraq said its planes hit a tanker and
bombed the tanker anchorage off Kharg Island.
Iraqi aircraft also raided Farisiyah on Monday, hours after a French freighter that had called at Kuwait was attacked off Saudi Arabia by Iranian gunboats firing rockets and machine guns.
Kuwait borders Iraq, whose Persian Gulf ports have been closed since soon after the war began in September 1980.
Maritime salvage executives based in the gulf said Iraqi planes
inflicted heavy damage on Kharg. They said the terminal was damaged and one of its two loading berths destroyed.
United States' reflagging of 11 of Kuwait's 21 tankers, putting them under protection of U.S. warships, is due to begin with a ceremony on the weekend or Monday.
The U.S. flag will fly on a supertanker and a liquid gas carrier anchored off the United Arab Emirates just outside the Strait of Hormuz.
Math test's content blamed for low scores
TOPEKA — The state's minimum competency exam for math for 10th graders doesn't test them on what they study and could be responsible for recent low scores, a state Board of Education member and an education official said yesterday.
Marion Stevens, a Wichita Republican, criticized the test, saying it was more of a reading test than a math test because of an emphasis on consumer math questions. Only 66.4 percent of the high school sophomores tested passed it this year, compared with 69 percent in 1985.
"I think I know now the reason," Stevens said, during the board's monthly two-day meeting. "I think it's the test itself."
David McDonald, assistant to the commissioner of education who directs the program, said Stevens criticisms are valid. McDonald said the test covered mostly consumer math when most sophomores studied algebra or geometry.
However, McDonald and other board members said guidelines for the content of the tests were set by state law.
"I think the real problem is what the law says," said Richard Robl, a Hutchinson Republican.
The comments came during a review of a report on the tests by the University of Kansas Center for Educational Testing and Evaluation, which conducted them. The board voted to extend its contract for tests in the coming school year, at a cost of $216,000.
The report studied attitudes toward the test among parents, teachers and students. Of the students who took the 10th grade math test, 39
percent said the test was difficult.
Only 7 percent of those taking the 10th grade reading test said it was difficult, and 89.9 percent passed.
Although teachers responding in the study generally said their students had an opportunity to learn what was included in the tests, Stevens said he received complaints from math teachers that the test contained too much reading.
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"I think this test should not be labeled a math test," Stevens, a former math teacher, said.
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(5) In the event a leak is detected anywhere outside of a building notify the gas company immediately and describe the location and approximate level of the odor — a quick check of the area will be made to determine the problem and corrective action needed.
(4) When the problem is solved, have a qualified person from the gas company, plumbing or climate control firms relight appliances.
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Kansan Summer Weekly
Wednesday, July 15, 1987
4
Local Briefs Injured student files civil suit against driver
John Buzbee, Hutchinson junior,
has filed a civil suit against
another KU student, Eldon Alldritt,
Wichita junior.
Alidrith was the driver of a car involved in an accident May 5 that crushed Buzbee's legs. Part of Buzbee's left leg was amputated
Buzbee's petition states that his injuries were caused, or were contributed to, by the reckless and negligent driving or wanton conduct of the driver. Aldritt.
Alldritt allegedly lost control on his car on Stewart Avenue near 21st Street. The car struck a glancing blow off the first of three parked cars, then hit the second car. Buzbee was trapped between the second and third parked cars
Buzbee will seek actual and punitive damages. He requested a jury trial.
Campus and Area
Alldritt has been charged in Douglas County District Court with driving under the influence of alcohol and reckless driving. The trial is scheduled for 8 a.m. July 17.
Matt Dillon arrives in town for filming
Actor Matt Dillon is in Lawrence for the making of Kansas, a movie that will be filmed in the Lawrence area.
He arrived yesterday and is staying at the Eldridge Hotel, Seventh and Massachusetts streets.
Dillon will co-star with Andrew McCarthy and is expected to stay at the Eldridge for a 50-day shooting period scheduled to begin July 29.
Sights mentioned for filming besides Lawrence are Topeka, Valley Falls and Gardner.
McCarthy also is expected to stay at the Eldridge when he arrives.
Sci-fi conference to begin July 18
The 14th annual Campbell Awards Conference for science fiction fiction will begin at 9 a.m. July 18 in the Adams Alumni Center. The conference is in conjunction with the presentation of the Campbell Awards and the Sturgeon Awards.
The awards will be given during a banquet July 18 at the alumni center. The banquet will begin at 6 p.m. The conference and the awards banquet each will cost $15 to attend.
Correction
Because of a reporter's error, a story in the July 8 Kansan incorrectly reported the beginning date of the demolition of eight houses on Tennessee Street. The demolition began June 27.
Opinions on new drinking laws differ
By KEITH ROBISON
Some love them. Some hate them.
Kansas' new drinking laws have spurred different opinions among owners and employees of bars and clubs in Lawrence, depending on the type of bar or club.
Staff writer
The owners and employees of bars that meet the 30 percent food requirement say that business is doing well, while owners of taverns and clubs that cannot meet the food requirement say business is slow.
Establishments whose revenue from food sales is less than 30 percent of total sales have to remain private clubs, according to the new drinking law.
Shane Lee, the owner of Gammon's, 1601 W. 23rd St., said his place didn't meet the 30 percent food requirement and must remain a private club.
"All it's done is hurt me," he said. "There are scars."
sano
"There are so many restrictions. It's hard to stay in business." It toluya. toluya.
Hugh. It's a tough business." He said the new drinking laws didn't reflect what the public wanted.
"They're (Kansas Legislature) not speaking for the populace. They're speaking for small special interest groups. You can't tell me that Reverend Taylor has that big of a following. But then again, I heard that Kansas had prohibition, so at least we're moving ahead," Lee said.
The Rev. Richard Taylor is chairman of Kansans for Life at it's Best!, an anti-liquor lobbying group based in Topeka.
Lee said, "The state Legislature traded out some vital, key issues just to get liquor by the drink passed. They didn't go with what the population wanted. They went with the special interest groups.
"I don't see how this will cut down on drunk driving. We have to close an hour early now. People will be coming in and drinking twice as much twice as fast and then driving."
Lee said Kansas liquor laws would make going to Westport, an area in Kansas City, Mo., heavily populated with bars, more attractive.
"They don't need club cards for anywhere over there, and they can drink until three. How many more drunks will there be on Highway 10?" he said.
Before the drinking law changed, Johnny's, the ground-floor bar, served only beer that had 3.2 percent alcohol, and the Up and Under, upstairs, operated as a private club.
Roxanne Medlan is the manager of Johnny's and the Up and Under, 403 N. Second St. Johnny's and the Up and Under were previously two separate establishments in the same building, but Medlan said the two bars had been combined.
Kansas Highway 10 connects Lawrence and Kansas City.
The establishment has qualified for the 30 percent food requirement and doesn't require a club card.
"We are now a drinking establishment, a completely open place. Business seems like it has increased a little bit. We've got new people coming in now because they can get a beer and a burger without having a membership card. We also have the old regulars." Medlan said.
Brooks Hanson, manager of Dos Hombres, 815 New Hampshire St., said the elimination of the club card had improved business.
"it's picked up at lunch hour especially. The newaws haven't hurt us a bit," he said.
The Jazzhaus, $ 192^{1/2} $ Massachusetts St., still requires a club card.
Ed Noenone, a bartender at the Jazzhaus, said the bar didn't meet the 30 percent requirement, and the new law did nothing positive for them.
"We'll be open publicly in a week. We have had a lot more people trying to get in. I'm sure business will pick up when we open publicly," he said.
Jay Jamison manages the Shenago Lunge, 2907 W. Sixth St. He said his business would have to remain a private club.
"It did not do anything for us except make us close an hour earlier. That's liberal drinking for you," he said.
Wes Kabler, owner of the Flamingo Club, 501 N. Ninth St., said the bar would qualify to be an open drinking establishment.
"We're losing money every night," Jamison said.
Lee said he was trying to formulate a plan that would allow minors into Gammon's.
D05.10
"We may do something to identify the minors and let them inside the club and drinkokes. We've
thought about using some kind of bracelet for the drinkers so the bartenders would know who could drink and who couldn't.
"There is no place in Lawrence for the freshman and sophomores to take a date and dance. If there's nothing for people that age to do, why come to KU? We've got the academics, but there's more to college life than that," Lee said.
"I know when I was a kid, if someone told me I couldn't do something, I would damn sure do it. It seems safer to keep the drinking in where there's somebody that cares, instead of out drinking all over the place."
Med Center to hold workshop in genetics
Staff writer
By STORMY WYLIE
Scientists are finding ways now to predict a person's future through genetics.
For instance, within the past two or three years, scientists have discovered "marker" genes that can identify persons who are carriers of genetic diseases such as Alzheimer's, Huntington's, muscular dystrophy, cystic fibrosis and even manic depression.
But many people, especially students, are not being kept up-to-date on the latest breakthroughs in genetics, a University of Kansas Medical Center genetic counselor said last week.
The counselor, Debra Collins, said much of the information on genetics found in elementary and secondary school science textbooks was several years behind the technology. Many science teachers have very little knowledge of genetics
"Most teachers are ill-equipped to teach genetics today," she said.
To help educate a few Kansas teachers about some of the recent
breakthroughs in genetics, Collins and the Med Center will offer the Genetic Teacher Training Program Aug. 17-21 at the KU Regents Center in Overland Park.
The program is being paid for by a $323,916 grant from the National Science Foundation in Washington, D.C.
About 140 teachers at urban Kansas schools, whose students range from kindergarteners to high-school seniors, will attend the first of two workshops offered this year. A second workshop for teachers in rural schools will be offered sometime this fall, Collins said.
Each of these 140 teachers will then train about 10 more teachers in their school districts. As a result, Collins said, they hope the teachers can educate more than 100,000 students on new genetic information.
The teachers will receive teaching aids such as textbooks, videotapes, computer programs and slides to help improve the students' knowledge of genetics.
Collins and her staff will follow up next year with an evaluation of the
For many teachers in the program, this may be their first genetics course in many years, Collins said. For others, it may be their first genetics course ever.
Virginia Epps, a KU graduate teaching assistant, helped Collins apply for the grant. She also will help teach the workshop.
As a former science teacher at Wyandotte High School in Kansas City, Kan., Epps said she could speak from experience on how little was known about genetics in elementary and secondary schools.
"The last genetics course I took was in 1961," she said. "Since then, I've done some reading and took one short course as a refresher. The amount of time I had to read was microscopic, but I was still way ahead of the textbooks."
either covered minimally or not at all.
"What is in the school textbook may have been adequate for a school setting, but it is shocking how little is known," she said.
As part of the application for the grant, Epps said she did a survey of genetics information in school textbooks and found that the subject is
Eric Flesher, Lawrence resident and teacher at Shawnee Mission Northwest and West high schools in Johnson County, Kan., will also take part in the program. He said he was excited about other issues that also were related to new genetic technology.
"Of course, genetics has ties with biology and other science-related fields, but there are also issues in politics, social studies and math," he said. "This can help promote cultural and creative thinking."
At the workshop, Flesher and the other teachers also will discuss ethical and legal questions related to genetics.
The teacher training program is designed not only to help educate teachers, but more importantly, to help teachers educate their students, Collins said.
Center to get grant for study
By STORMY WYLIE
Staff writer
The University of Kansas Medical Center will take part in a nationwide $10 million study of Parkinson's disease, a hospital spokesman said last week.
William C. Koller, the new chairman of the neurology department and head of the Parkinson's Disease Center at the Med Center, said this is the largest amount of money ever earmarked for the study of the dis
The Med Center is one of 29 medical centers in the United States and Canada participating in the study, which is being financed by the National Institutes of Health, Bertiesia, Md. The Med Center's piece of the $10-million pie is $125,000 a year for five years.
Other medical centers in Denver, Omaha, Neb., St. Louis, Mo., and Houston are also participating, Koller said.
Nationally, the research will include testing more than 800 persons in the early stages of Parkinson's with the use of two drugs — deprenyl and tocopherol, two of four drugs that constitute vitamin E. These drugs are being tested to see if they can stop or prevent the progression of the disease, Koller said.
“This is a brand new concept,” he said. “It is more than just testing. We're going to see if we can stop this disease in its early stages.”
Parkinson's is a progressively disabling disease that deteriorates the brain's nerve cells. It affects about 2 percent of people 60 and older. The average age a person contracts the disease is 59.
People with Parkinson's usually experience one or more of four major symptoms — tremors, droopy posture, rigidity of movement and slowness.
"Many patients find it difficult to get dressed or to feed themselves," Koller said. "It is not usually fatal as such, but the quality of a patient's life is poor."
Parkinson's is not passed genetically. Part of the research will be to determine how the disease is contracted.
Twenty volunteers from the Med Center's Parkinson's clinic will be divided into four groups. One group will be tested with deprenyl, another with tocopherol, another with a combination of the two drugs and another with a placebo, or sugar pill.
Koller said the Med Center has already started recruiting patients from its Parkinson's clinic. The number of eligible patients is limited, because most of the clinic's annual 500 patients are in the later stages of the disease.
The research will probably begin about Aug. 15, Koller said.
Koller, 42, came to the Med Center on July 1 from Loyola University, Chicago, where he was the head of the Parkinson's Disease Center.
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4
Wednesday, July 15, 1987
---
Kansan Summer Weekly
Opinions and Editorials
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION KANSAN
North's smoke screen
Marine Lt. Col. Oliver North had his day in court, and he became quite an apt performer in front of the cameras. Being the able actor he was, Nor turned the hearings into a public forum to gain support for Nicaraguan contra spending.
North, a decorated war veteran, testified about the diversion of Iranian arms sales to contras and the role he and other administration officials played in the scam. The hearings became a forum for North, the attorneys and committee members to accuse one another. North's long-awaited appearance drew a packed committee hearing room and 150 tourists who lined up outside the room daily.
In the beginning, North was prepared to become the fall guy, to shoulder the blame. But since then, he changed his mind after learning that criminal charges were to be brought against him. His defense was based on the assumption that
his superiors had knowledge of the operation. He assumed that he acted with President Reagan's consent in the affair.
In a prepared statement made last Thursday, North portrayed himself as a staff officer who did what he was ordered. "I did not engage in fantasy that I was the president or vice president or Cabinet member or even the director of the National Security Council." But since North did what he was told, he sat before the committee.
North dug his own grave by bypassing Congress, but in an attempt to cover his tracks, North shifted some of the blame on he called Congress' inconsistent policy.
"I suggest to you that it is the Congress which must accept the blame in the Nicaraguan freedom-fighter matter. Plain and simple, you are to blame because of the fickle, vacillating, unpredictable, onagain policy toward the contras."
It's time to pull PTL's plug
Enough is enough
On Tuesday, Jerry Falwell, current leader of the scandal-wracked PTL so-called ministry, said PTL must raise $11.5 million before Oct. 1 to survive.
Stop us if you've heard this one before
Many people who have better sense than to send money off to televangelists — to be spent on God knows what — are getting quite a kick out of following the seemingly daily revelations about the inner workings of the TV ministries. Unfortunately, the men involved, Jim Bakker, Oral Roberts and Falwell, make themselves only too easy targets.
Falwell said the money must be raised to show that PTL is viable. The ministry is $72 million in debt and has 1,400 creditors on its tail.
The real story here is not that the ministry is seeking
more money. That's old hat.
Also, it isn't surprising that its Heritage USA theme park generates $1.5 million in one month. What is surprising is that this money pays for only about half of PTL's operating expenses.
In other words, the PTL ministry requires about $3 million a month to keep itself going. It is, of course, in the best interest of the ministry to continue operating. Part of that $3 million pays the salaries of its employees.
It is time for PTL to look at itself objectively. Most businesses $72 million in debt would have the good sense to close up shop. It isn't likely that the U.S. government will offer to bail out the PTL ministry.
Perhaps then its followers would find a charity worthy of the $1.5 million they could donate each month.
Miss America's gaffe
Kellye Cash, Miss America 1987, has accomplished a notable feat: In one swift, stupid statement, she made the citizens of three states and the organizers of the Miss America pageant wince.
In summing up her accomplishments as Miss America, Cash said she was glad to visit places she "never thought people actually lived in — like North and South Dakota and Nebraska."
Dakota and Nebraska.
Perhaps it takes winning a national title and allegedly becoming an articulate, intelligent (but most of all, shapely) representative of our country to find out that people really do live in North Dakota, South
This stupid comment from Cash only serves to do two damaging things: It perpetuates the "dumb, blonde" stereotype that so many truly intelligent, articulate women are trying to overcome, and it sets back the efforts of the pageant organizers.
Let us hope that this isn't a larger reflection upon education in our country. But studies of our educational system have indicated that U.S. children are not as proficient in geography and demographics as they should be. May Cash is an accurate representative of our country.
What a disheartening thought.
News staff
John Benner .Editor
Dawn O'Malley .Managing editor
Jane Zachman .News editor
Pam Miller .Campus editor
Paul Belden .Assoc. Campus Editor
Tim Hamilton .Sports editor
Darry Chang .Photo editor
Connie Sheridan .Graphics editor
Tom Eblen .General manager, news advisor
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 Robbit ..National sales
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 columns 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 columns. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas教室 - 113 StuartFall Hall.
Letters, great columnas and staff columns are the opinion of the writer and not necessarily reflect the views of the university Dally Kansan. Editorial columnas are edited by the university Kansan editorial board.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stairwater FliHall, Lawland, Kan. 60454, 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. 60444. Annual subscriptions by mail are $40 in Douglas County and county. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student activity费。
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hill, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
Beauty of Land of Ahs deserves close inspection
'What's the matter with Kansas?'
Once, crossing the Midwest, a pioneer found himself dying of thirst. While the rest of his wagon train went on to the green pastures and gold in California, this pioneer became crazy from dehydration. He bit off his lips and did not form an appreciation for the Kansas prairie.
As I see it, most early Kansans were not taken by the romanticism of those who continued west. Instead, they mixed idealism with the knowledge that they would all some days. One day, they hoped it would pay off.
Meanwhile, these Kansans knew about daily rewards over and above long-term profits. They generated values coinciding with everyday life.
PARKS 1985
Today we conform to a faster pace, and old values are out of date. Some Kansans think we're still not modern enough to pursue a more worldly lifestyle. Kansans seem to be embarrassed at themselves by doing and saying the strangest things. For example:
--businesses escaping the urban areas, by then neglected. Hence, the city becomes "new"
$\textcircled{1}$The European put-on. Some of us seem to think that if we begin to spell differently, we'll fool people into thinking us worldly. This explains the lovely new "Exocentre" in Toneka.
- The o' Kansas twang. It doesn't exist, as does the funny talk of New Englanders, who create vowel sounds not recognized as English by most linguists. Yet, I can detect the Kansas twang when someone admits to living in the state. "G-a-a-d, K-a-a-nas is s-o-boring."
●Somewhere is nowhere syndrome. In cities experiencing economic growth, expansion is favored over improvement. Suburbs grow, each with their own shopping mall. Eventually, a loose cluster of townships emerges of homes and
Ilisabe
Zhihguaraipu
Ilisabe
Schlingenslepen
Staff Columnist
On the other hand, some Kansans are uncharacteristically (for Kansans) romantic about the way things "used to be." They want to bring back the old days that were. . . actually not all that great. But there are some unromantic aspects of that history that seem timely again.
**Realistic expectations.** A good thing about the handplow was that you already knew the desired ends would require hard work. Today, the difficult task might be to improve a city, yet we tend to think that technology will do all the work. Our ideas, like the plow, need to be painstakingly guided.
Kansas?)
- Hard work. I like to think early Kansans were less concerned with the "self-made" man, then a modern breed, than with making the plains inhabitable for the least of its settlers. I like to think they were, translated into modern English, more liberal (but dare we even say such a thing about
An unromantic view of nature. It is easy for Coloradoans and Californians to romanticize the mountains and the ocean. And it is probably good, since they are usually most outspoken about environmental conservation.
Still, there is always the point beyond just being made aware that the land is being polluted and ruined by us, where conservation stops and pollution continues. Here, Kansas history intervenes, implying it is much easier to care for a land that you rely on for survival daily, than one that makes a pretty postcard.
The plains being just a little bit plain is nothing to bemoan. After all, the beauty of purple mountains majesty is just a cliche. With Kansas, the more you look at it, the more you like it. Colorado is and always has been a monument to beauty, but the beauty of Kansas comes more as a daily reward.
I used to grab a little of it on jogs along the Kansas river (where there are no mountains obstructing the view.) Without stepping one foot outside the state, I saw a piece of landscape that was new every day. The beauty was there, though some days I really had to squint for it.
So, while other states have cosmopolitan cities and natural landmarks that burst out at you, they also have their drawbacks. We shouldn't try, nor wish, to copy them. To get to know the shy state of Kansas takes some effort. Even then, it's less of a lasting romance than a risky day-to-day love affair. As the early settlers might have said, in their own words, "Go for it."
Buying rubbers is an awkward situation
Few things can compare to the gripping fear of buying rubbers for the first time. This occasion usually falls only too close to the advent of puberty, before the delicate male psyche is even fully able to deal with acne.
Women can empathize with men. Surely going to the doctor to get that first prescription for the birth control pill can be equally harrowing. Both men and women know the terror of the trip to the pharmacist.
From many accounts, pharmacists are cruel men. So, apparently, is everyone behind the drug counter with the power to dispense rubbers. Anyone who has seen The Summer of 42 knows how far this cruelty can go. I once had a nightmare that goes something like the cartoon that appears on this page.
I still remember my first time as if it were yesterday. The very worst events in life somehow fade conveniently from our minds, but the memory of the day still sits neatly atop the pile of my remembrances.
I knew the drugist at the nearest store, so I drove to a neighboring suburb. Along the way, I wondered where I was going to go next time, if indeed there was to be a next time.
Brian McGregor
Just as I was beginning to breathe a sigh of relief, my girlfriend's best friend walked out of the stockroom and behind the counter to ring up my rubbers.
I went to the counter, which mercifully was situated at the rear of the store. Everything seemed to be going just fine. The rubbers were peg-hooked on the front of the counter. I decided to stay at the secluded rear counter to pay for my little purchase.
--imagine Oliver North limiting himself to so simple a truth; every breast-breasting confession seems to come with a gaudy rationalization. "No excuse, sir" would be so much simpler. It not only saves time but saves the miscreant from embarrassing himself further by offering feeble excuses.
John Benner
Editor
John Benner
Editor
I quickly swept them off of the counter with my arm.
"Hi," she said. "What can I do for you?"
Ri, she said. What can I do for you?
I looked behind the counter and saw the packages of film. "I need a 36-exposure roll of tri-x, please."
"Sure," she replied. "Do you want those rubbers, too?"
A. T. Frostley
"Price check on condoms!"
I was certain that my face turned scarlet. "Yes, I guess I do."
"Have a nice time. Tell Shari 'hi' for me, okay?" "Sure thing." I wondered how she could be so casual about this. I knew Shari was going to kill me.
It was only after this first trip to the drug store that I began to discover all the things that go with being the owner of rubbers. I had to find a place to keep them so my mother wouldn't find them and ask embarrassing questions. I realized that keeping a spare in my wallet was a bad idea because it caused a raised circular outline on the leather.
I got home one day to find my brother and a friend of his usual stashes as an AK47 in the water balloon.
Only years later did I discover that, if I hadn't been too particular, I could have purchased rubbers just about anywhere. I found that they were sold in the restroom of any respectable gas station or bar. One of my favorite pieces of graffiti appears on a rubber dispenser in the restroom of a bar here in town. It simply says: "Don't buy this gum. It tastes like rubber."
I hope this means that my son, when he goes to buy rubbers for his first (and probably not sanctioned) sexual encounter, will have an easier time of it.
These days, with many people fearing AIDS and other diseases transmitted through sexual contact, various health organizations have recommended rubbers in full-page newspaper advertisements. Rubber companies have started advertising rubbers on television, and some grocery stores now sell them in the checkout lines.
Did Lt. Col. Oliver North learn his lesson?
The Iran-contra hearings are proving less than educational for the one witness who may have the most to learn: Oliver North.
There he was in his beribboned uniform telling a congressional committee that he had lied to Congress and again, month after month. "I want you to know," he said, "that lying does not come easy to me." That may have been his most surprising assertion yet. Think of all the practice he's had. "I admit that I participated in the preparation of documents that were erroneous, misleading, evasive and wrong." North said. "I make no excuses for what I did." Whereupon he proceeded to make excuses for almost everything he did — lying to Congress, using funds not his, and covering up his actions.
Paul Greenberg
Syndicated Columnist
North could scarcely confess a deception without making excuses for it, and he confessed indiscretions with the same bravado with which he committed them. One moment he said that "the grossest misjudgment I have made in my life" (it must have been hard to make that choice) was his fabrication of some phony documents to hide the gift of a security system for his home. The next moment he blamed the government for not paying for it. The next, he offered to take on a legendary terrorist mano-a-mano . . .
Once upon a time, military men were taught a simple, concise response when they had done something for which there was no excuse. It went, "What happened?" Then it happened to that expression? It is impossible to
It's as if North has learned nothing from all this. He is still able to strut while sitting down and under oath. His aye is a "yes . . . but" and his nay is a self-serving defense. To summarize his testimony: yes, he lied, deceived and did what he ought not to have done, but there always was a good reason.
Unfortunately, Oliver North seems to be setting the tenor of the whole committee's deliberations. Senator Daniel Inoyue, whose reputation as an impartial judge was much stronger before he began chairing these hearings, decided to wear his own Distinguished Service Cross to the hearings for the first time last week. He didn't have to do that; his empty sleeve is testimony enough to his services to his country. But the bemedalied presence of Ollie North reduces everything to a form of personal competition. Principles, even simple ones like telling the truth, tend to be obscured by all the macho he brings out.
In order to defend certain principles — truth, honor, country — Oliver North winds up muddying them. The depth of that betrayal does not yet seem to have struck him. In order to repent, one must be aware of what one has done, and Oliver North's confession-cum-apologia would indicate that he
has only the vaguest notion of what he's done
anything to admit and defend it.
There is no denying the man's charm, his good looks and confidence, his almost savening sense of humor. One can see how he got so far and, alas, how he fell so fast. The sins of Congress in handing aid to the Nicaraguan resistance, or rather mishandling it, have given the colonel and his always vigilant counsel Brendan Sullivan, an opportunity to put their inquisitors on trial. It is a sight that cannot help but please Americans, who tend to root for the governor, especially congressmen and their staffs of lawyers. Col. North is the picture of the gladiator at bay, and not an unappealing one.
Yet there is something missing in Oliver North — the something that in others counsels prudence and produces self-restraint. It is most important that a military officer who serves a republic, a government of laws, has a strong sense of self — where it begins and leaves off, how far it can be exerted in the service of one's country and the point beyond which it dare not go, what encroachments it rightly may allow others to make on it, and what it must not sacrifice to their demands or to its own aspirations.
The next time the service academies revise their reading lists, they might do well to consider including some of Oliver North's testimony. It could prove invaluable in teaching young officers what to avoid. As for the education of Col. North, that would seem a more formidable assignment. He seems remarkably assured giving testimony that ought to do anything but assure him. Perhaps it is the surroundings. He acts like an adamant captive in the midst of the enemy camp. Like any military man, he bridles at a bunch of civilians sitting around and second-guessing the decisions made by an officer under pressure.
MR. BADGER by A.D. long
WHAT did THE PRESIDENT KNOW?
Colonel North. Did you send
memoranda to the President
regarding the diversion of
funds to the contros?
US Capitol Building
Yes, I did, Senator.
Where are these memos?
I think I shredded those.
Did I get 'em all?
KCPT-19
LIVE
WATCH
You've testified that the President didn't know about the diversion of funds.
That's correct.
Yet, you assumed that the President approved your actions?
Yes, I did.
KOOP!
WATER
SENATOR BARGER
(D) WIKI CORSSIN
How could the President approve actions which he knew nothing about??
It's called "deniability."
4
Wednesday, July 15, 1987
Kansan Summer Weekly
Opinions and Editorials
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
North's smoke screen
Marine Lt. Col. Oliver North had his day in court, and he became quite an apt performer in front of the cameras. Being the able actor he was, North turned the hearings into a public forum to gain support for Nicaraguan contra spending.
North, a decorated war veteran, testified about the diversion of Iranian arms sales to contras and the role he and other administration officials played in the scam. The hearings became a forum for North, the attorneys and committee members to accuse one another. North's long-awaited appearance drew a packed committee hearing room and 150 tourists who lined up outside the room daily.
In the beginning, North was prepared to become the fall guy, to shoulder the blame. But since then, he changed his mind after learning that criminal charges were to be brought against him. His defense was based on the assumption that
his superiors had knowledge of the operation. He assumed that he acted with President Reagan's consent in the affair.
In a prepared statement made last Thursday, North portrayed himself as a staff officer who did what he was ordered. "I did not engage in fantasy that I was the president or vice president or Cabinet member or even the director of the National Security Council." But since North did what he was told, he sat before the committee.
North dug his own grave by bypassing Congress, but in an attempt to cover his tracks, North shifted some of the blame on what he called Congress' inconsistent policy.
"I suggest to you that it is the Congress which must accept the blame in the Nicaraguan freedom-fighter matter. Plain and simple, you are to blame because of the fickle, vacillating, unpredictable, on-again policy toward the contras."
Enough is enough.
It's time to pull PTL's plug
Stop us if you've heard this one before.
On Tuesday, Jerry Falwell, current leader of the scandal-wracked PTL so-called ministry, said PTL must raise $11.5 million before Oct. 1 to survive
Many people who have better sense than to send money off to televangelists — to be spent on God knows what — are getting quite a kick out of following the seemingly daily revelations about the inner workings of the TV ministries. Unfortunately, the men involved, Jim Bakker, Oral Roberts and Falwell, make themselves only too easy targets.
Falwell said the money must be raised to show that PTL is viable. The ministry is $72 million in debt and has 1,400 creditors on its tail.
The real story here is not that the ministry is seeking
more money. That's old hat.
Also, it isn't surprising that its Heritage USA theme park generates $1.5 million in one month. What is surprising is that this money pays for only about half of PTL's operating expenses.
In other words, the PTL ministry requires about $3 million a month to keep itself going. It is, of course, in the best interest of the ministry to continue operating. Part of that $3 million pays the salaries of its employees.
It is time for PTL to look at itself objectively. Most businesses $72 million in debt would have the good sense to close up shop. It isn't likely that the U.S. government will offer to bail out the PTL ministry.
Perhaps then its followers would find a charity worthy of the $1.5 million they could donate each month.
Miss America's gaffe
Kellye Cash, Miss America 1987, has accomplished a notable feat: In one swift, stupid statement, she made the citizens of three states and the organizers of the Miss America pageant wince.
In summing up her accomplishments as Miss America, Cash said she was glad to visit places she "never thought people actually lived in — like North and South Dakota and Nebraska."
Perhaps it takes winning a national title and allegedly becoming an articulate, intelligent (but most of all, shapely) representative of our country to find out that people really do live in North Dakota, South
Dakota and Nebraska.
This stupid comment from Cash only serves to do two damaging things: It perpetuates the "dumb, blonde" stereotype that so many truly intelligent, articulate women are trying to overcome, and it sets back the efforts of the pageant organizers.
Let us hope that this isn't a larger reflection upon education in our country. But studies of our educational system have indicated that U.S. children are not as proficient in geography and demographics as they should be. Maybe Cash is an accurate representative of our country.
What a disheartening thought.
News staff
John Benner ... Editor
Dawn O'Malley ... Managing editor
Jane Zachman ... News editor
Pam Miller ... Campus editor
Paul Belden ... Assoc. Campus Editor
Tim Hamilton ... Sports editor
Darry Chang ... Photo editor
Connie Sheridan ... Graphics editor
Tom Ebien ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Lisa Weems .Business manager
Lisa Osment .Retail sales manager
Sally Depew .Campus sales manager
Dan Pennington .Classified manager
Greg Knipp .Production manager
Janee Hines .Rotational sales Manager
Jeanne Hines .Sales and marketing advaver
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 columns should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
can be mailed of Drought to the Kansan newsroom. 11-17544-0111 Mail.
Letters, guest columns and staff 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 Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest columns. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom. 113 Staffer Fell Hall
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawson, Kan. 60405, 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. 60404. Annual subscriptions by mail are $40 in Douglas County and Kan. County. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student activity费.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kanu, 68045.
'What's the matter with Kansas?'
Beauty of Land of Ahs deserves close inspection
Once, crossing the Midwest, a pioneer found himself dying of thirst. While the rest of his wagon train went on to the green pastures and gold in California, this pioneer became crazy from dehydration. He bit off his lips and did not form an appreciation for the Kansas prairie.
I am a teacher at a school in the United States. I have been teaching for 15 years and have helped many students improve their skills. I am also a member of the school's board of directors and a regular contributor to the school's newsletter. I am passionate about education and want to help other students achieve their goals.
As I see it, most early Kansans were not taken by the romanticism of those who continued west. Instead, they mixed idealism with the knowledge that some days. One day, they hoped it would pay off.
Meanwhile, these Kansans knew about daily rewards over and above long-term profits. They were happy to pay a fee.
Today we conform to a faster pace, and old values are out of date. Some Kansans think we're still not modern enough to pursue a more worldly lifestyle. Kansans seem to be embarrassed at themselves by doing and saying the strangest things. For example:
--businesses escaping the urban areas, by then neglected. Hence, the city becomes "new" because it has moved radically outside itself.
Ilsabe
Schlingenslepen
*The European put-on. Some of us seem to think that if we begin to spell differently, we'll fool people into thinking us worldly. This explains the lovely new "Exocentre" in Toopka.
**The o'」 Kansas twang. It doesn't exist, as does the funny talk of New Englanders, who create vowel sounds not recognized as English by most linguists. Yet, I can detect the Kansas twang when someone admits to living in the state. "G-a-a-d, K-a-nas is s-o-o boring."
$\bullet$ Somewhere is nowhere syndrome. In cities experiencing economic growth, expansion is favored over improvement. Suburbs grow, each with their own shopping mall. Eventually, a loose cluster of townships emerges of homes and
Staff Columnist
On the other hand, some Kansans are uncharacteristically (for Kansans) romantic about the way things "used to be." They want to bring back the old days that were ... actually not all that great. But there are some unromantic aspects of that history that seem timely again.
- **Realistic expectations.** A good thing about the handplow was that you already knew the desired ends would require hard work. Today, the difficult task might be to improve a city, yet we tend to think that technology will do all the work. Our ideas, like the plow, need to be painstakingly guided.
Kansas?)
●Hard work. I like to think early Kansans were less concerned with the "self-made" man, then a modern breed, than with making the plains inhabitable for the least of its setters. I like to think they were, translated into modern English, more liberal (but dare we even say such a thing about
An unromantic view of nature. It is easy for Coloradoans and Californians to romanticize the mountains and the ocean. And it is probably good, since they are usually most outspoken about environmental conservation.
Still, there is always the point beyond just being made aware that the land is being polluted and ruined by us, where conservation stops and pollution continues. Here, Kansas history intervenes, implying it is much easier to care for a land that you rely on for survival daily, than one that makes a pretty postcard.
The plains being just a little bit plain is nothing to bemoan. After all, the beauty of purple mountains majesty is just a cliche. With Kansas, the more you look at it, the more you like it. Colorado is and always has been a monument to beauty, but the beauty of Kansas comes more as a daily reward.
I used to grab a little of it on jogs along the Kansas river (where there are no mountains obstructing the view.) Without stepping one foot outside the state, I saw a piece of landscape that was new every day. The beauty was there, though some days I really had to squint for it.
So, while other states have cosmopolitan cities and natural landmarks that burst out at you, they also have their drawbacks. We shouldn't try, nor wish, to copy them. To get to know the shy state of Kansas takes some effort. Even then, it's less of a lasting romance than a risky day-to-day love affair. As the early settlers might have said, in their own words, "Go for it."
Buying rubbers is an awkward situation
Few things can compare to the gripping fear of buying rubbers for the first time. This occasion usually falls only too close to the advent of puberty, before the delicate male psyche is even fully able to deal with acne.
Women can empathize with men. Surely going to the doctor to get that first prescription for the birth control pill can be equally harrowing. Both men and women know the terror of the trip to the
From many accounts, pharmacists are cruel men. So, apparently, is everyone behind the drug counter with the power to dispense rubbers. Anyone who has seen *The Summer of* 42 knows how far this cruelty can go. I once had a nightmare that goes something like the cartoon that appears on this nage.
I still remember my first time as if it were yesterday. The very worst events in life somehow fade conveniently from our minds, but the memory of my first rubber purchase still sits neatly atop the pile of my reminiscences.
I knew the druggist at the nearest store, so I drove to a neighboring suburb. Along the way, I wondered where I was going to go next time, if indeed there was to be a next time.
I
Just as I was beginning to breathe a sigh of relief, my girlfriend's best friend walked out of the stockroom and behind the counter to ring up my rubbers.
I went to the counter, which mercifully was situated at the rear of the store. Everything seemed to be going just fine. The rubbers were peg-hooked on the front of the counter. I decided to stay at the secluded rear counter to pay for my little purchase.
John Benner
Editor
John Benner
Editor
I quickly swept them off of the counter with my arm.
"Hi," she said. "What can I do for you?"
I looked behind the counter and saw the packages of film. "I need a 36-exposure roll of tri-x, please."
"Sure," she replied. "Do you want those rubbers, too?"
W. K. Fletcher
"Price check on condoms!"
I was certain that my face turned scarlet. "Yes,
I guess I do."
"Have a nice time. Tell Shari 'hi' for me, okay?" "Sure thing." I wondered how she could be so casual about this. I knew Shari was going to kill me.
It was only after this first trip to the drug store that I began to discover all the things that go with being the owner of rubbers. I had to find a place to keep them so my mother wouldn't find them and ask embarrassing questions. I realized that keep it clean, don't let anyone else cause it caused a raised circular outline on the leather.
I got home one day to find my brother and a friend of his using one of my stashes as an extremely durable water balloon.
Only years later did I discover that, if I hadn't been too particular, I could have purchased rubbers just about anywhere. I found that they were sold in the restroom of any respectable gas station or bar. One of my favorite pieces of graffiti appears on a rubber dispenser in the restroom of a bar here in town. It simply says: "Don't buy this gum. It tastes like rubber."
These days, with many people fearing AIDS and other diseases transmitted through sexual contact, various health organizations have recommended rubbers in full-page newspaper advertisements. Rubber companies have started advertising rubbers on television, and some grocery stores now sell them in the checkout lines.
I hope this means that my son, when he goes to buy rubbers for his first (and probably not sanctioned) sexual encounter, will have an easier time of it.
Did Lt. Col.Oliver North learn his lesson?
The Iran-contra hearings are proving less than educational for the one witness who may have the most to learn: Oliver North.
There he was in his beribboned uniform telling a congressional committee that he had lied to Congress and again, month after month. "I want you to know," he said, "that lying does not come easy to me." That may have been his most surprising assertion yet. Think of all the practice he's had. "I admit that I participated in the preparation of documents that were erroneous, misleading, evasive and wrong." North said. "I make no excuses for what I did." Whereupon he proceeded to make excuses for almost everything he did — lying to Congress, using funds not his, and covering up his actions.
(3)
Paul Greenberg
--imagine Oliver North limiting himself to so simple a truth; every breast-breasting confession seems to come with a gaudy rationalization. "No excuse, sir" would be so much简约. It not only saves time but saves the miscreant from embarrassing himself further by offering feeble excuses.
North could scarcely confess a deception without making excuses for it, and he confessed indiscretions with the same bravado with which he committed them. One moment he said that "the grossest misjudgment I have made in my life" (it must have been hard to make that choice) was his fabrication of some phony documents to hide the gift of a security system for his home. The next moment he blamed the government for not paying for it. The next, he offered to take on a legendary terrorist mano-a-mano . . .
Syndicated Columnist
It's as if North has learned nothing from all this. He is still able to strut while sitting down and under oath. His ave is a "yes . . . but" and his nay is a self-serving defense. To summarize his testimony: yes, he lied, deceived and did what he ought not to have done, but there always was a good reason.
Once upon a time, military men were taught a simple, concise response when they had done something for which there was no excuse. It went, in its entirety: "No excuse, sir." What ever happened to that expression? It is impossible to
Unfortunately, Oliver North seems to be setting the tenor of the whole committee's deliberations. Senator Daniel Inoyue, whose reputation as an impartial judge was much stronger before he began chairing these hearings, decided to wear his own Distinguished Service Cross to the hearings for the first time last week. He didn't have to do that; his empty sleeve is testimony enough to his services to his country. But the bemedaled presence of Ollie North reduces everything to a form of personal competition. Principles, even simple ones like telling the truth, tend to be obscured by all the macho he brings out.
In order to defend certain principles — truth, honor, country — Oliver North winds up muddying them. The depth of that betrayal does not yet seem to have struck him. In order to repent, one must be aware of what one has done, and Oliver North's confession-cum-alpologia would indicate that he
has only the vaguest notion of what he'd done - just enough to admit and defend it.
There is no denying the man's charm, his good looks and confidence, his almost saving sense of humor. One can see how he got so far and, alas, how he fell so fast. The sins of Congress in handling aid to the Nicaraguan resistance, or rather mishandling it, have given the colonel and his always vigilant counsel Brendan Dillivan, an opportunity to put their inquistors on trial. It is a sight that cannot help but please Americans, who tend to root for the underdog. Outnumbered by his host of congressmen and their staffs of lawyers, Col. North is the picture of the gladiator at bay, and not an unappealing one.
Yet there is something missing in Oliver North — the something that in others counsels prudence and produces self-restraint. It is most important that a military officer who serves a republic, a government of laws, has a strong sense of self — where it begins and leaves off, how far it can be exerted in the service of one's country and the people it serves; how far its actions it rightly may allow others to make on it, and what it must not sacrifice to their demands or to its own aspirations.
The next time the service academies revise their reading lists, they might do well to consider including some of Oliver North's testimony. It could prove invaluable in teaching young officers what to avoid. As for the education of Col. North, that would seem a more formidable assignment.
He seems remarkably assured giving testimony that ought to do anything but assure him. Perhaps it is the surroundings. He acts like an adamant captive in the midst of the enemy camp. Like any military man, he bridles at a bunch of civilians sitting around and second-guessing the decisions made by an officer under pressure.
MR. BADGER by A.D. long
WHAT DID THE PRESIDENT KNOW?
Colonel North. Did you send
memoranda to the President
regarding the diversion of
funds to the contrasts?
U.S. Capitol Building
Yes, I did, Senator.
Where are these memos?
I think I shredded those.
Did I get 'em all?
KCPT-19
LIVE
WATCH
You've testified that the President didn't know about the diversion of funds.
That's correct.
Yet, you assumed that the President approved your actions?
Yes, I did.
SENATOR BARGER
(UP) WIJCORNSTIN
How could the President approve actions which he knew nothing about??
It's called "deniability."
4
Wednesday, July 15, 1987
Kansan Summer Weekly
Opinions and Editorials
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
SUMMER
WEEKLY
EDITION
North's smoke screen
Marine Lt. Col. Oliver North had his day in court, and he became quite an apt performer in front of the cameras. Being the able actor he was, North turned the hearings into a public forum to gain support for Nicaraguan contra spending.
North, a decorated war veteran, testified about the diversion of Iranian arms sales to contras and the role he and other administration officials played in the scam. The hearings became a forum for North, the attorneys and committee members to accuse one another. North's long-awaited appearance drew a packed committee hearing room and 150 tourists who lined up outside the room daily.
In the beginning, North was prepared to become the fall guy, to shoulder the blame. But since then, he changed his mind after learning that criminal charges were to be brought against him. His defense was based on the assumption that
his superiors had knowledge of his operation. He assumed that he acted with President Reagan's consent in the affair.
In a prepared statement made last Thursday, North portrayed himself as a staff officer who did what he was ordered. "I did not engage in fantasy that I was the president or vice president or Cabinet member or even the director of the National Security Council." But since North did what he was told, he sat before the committee.
"I suggest to you that it is the Congress which must accept the blame in the Nicaraguan freedom-fighter matter. Plain and simple, you are to blame because of the fickle, vacillating, unpredictable, on-again policy toward the contras."
North dug his own grave by bypassing Congress, but in an attempt to cover his tracks, North shifted some of the blame on what he called Congress' inconsistent policy.
It's time to pull PTL's plug
Stop us if you've heard this one before.
Enough is enough.
Many people who have better sense than to send money off to televangelists — to be spent on God knows what — are getting quite a kick out of following the seemingly daily revelations about the inner workings of the TV ministries. Unfortunately, the men involved, Jim Bakker, Oral Roberts and Falwell, make themselves only too easy targets.
On Tuesday, Jerry Falwell, current leader of the scandal-wracked PTL so-called ministry, said PTL must raise $11.5 million before Oct. 1 to survive.
Falwell said the money must be raised to show that PTL is viable. The ministry is $72 million in debt and has 1,400 creditors on its tail.
The real story here is not that the ministry is seeking
In other words, the PTL ministry requires about $3 million a month to keep itself going. It is, of course, in the best interest of the ministry to continue operating. Part of that $3 million pays the salaries of its employees.
more money. That's old hat.
Also, it isn't surprising that its Heritage USA theme park generates $1.5 million in one month. What is surprising is that this money pays for only about half of PTL's operating expenses.
It is time for PTL to look at itself objectively. Most businesses $72 million in debt would have the good sense to close up shop. It isn't likely that the U.S. government will offer to bail out the PTL ministry.
Perhaps then its followers would find a charity worthy of the $1.5 million they could donate each month.
Miss America's gaffe
Kellye Cash, Miss America 1987, has accomplished a notable feat: In one swift, stupid statement, she made the citizens of three states and the organizers of the Miss America pageant wince.
In summing up her accomplishments as Miss America, Cash said she was glad to visit places she "never thought people actually lived in — like North and South Dakota and Nebraska."
Perhaps it takes winning a national title and allegedly becoming an articulate, intelligent (but most of all, shapely) representative of our country to find out that people really do live in North Dakota, South
Dakota and Nebraska.
This stupid comment from Cash only serves to do two damaging things: It perpetuates the "dumb, blonde" stereotype that so many truly intelligent, articulate women are trying to overcome, and it sets back the efforts of the pageant organizers.
Let us hope that this isn't a larger reflection upon education in our country. But studies of our educational system have indicated that U.S. children are not as proficient in geography and demographics as they should be. Maybe Cash is an accurate representative of our country.
What a disheartening thought.
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Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
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'What's the matter with Kansas?'
Beauty of Land of Ahs deserves close inspection
Mary Ann
Once, crossing the Midwest, a pioneer found himself dying of thirst. While the rest of his wagon train went on to the green pastures and gold in California, this pioneer became crazy from dehydration. He bit off his lips and did not form an appreciation for the Kansas prairie.
As I see it, most early Kansans were not taken by the romanticism of those who continued west. Instead, they mixed idealism with the knowledge that life out here can be hell some days. One day, they hoped it would pay off.
Today we conform to a faster pace, and old values are out of date. Some Kansans think we're still not modern enough to pursue a more worldly lifestyle. Kansans seem to be embarrassed at themselves by doing and saying the strangest things. For example:
Meanwhile, these Kansans knew about daily rewards and above long-term profits. They were always aware of how the economy worked.
--businesses escaping the urban areas, by then neglected. Hence, the city becomes "new" because it has moved radically outside itself
$\bullet$ The European put-on. Some of us seem to think that if we begin to spell differently, we'll fool people into thinking us worldly. This explains the lovely new "Exocentre" in Topeka.
● The o! Kansas twang. It doesn't exist, as does the funny talk of New Englanders, who create vowel sounds not recognized as English by most linguists. Yet, I can detect the Kansas twang when someone admits to living in the state. "G-a-a-d, K-a-nas is s-oo boring."
*Somewhere is nowhere syndrome. In cities experiencing economic growth, expansion is favored over improvement. Suburbs grow, each with their own shopping mall. Eventually, a loose cluster of townships emerges of homes and
Ilsabe Schlingenslepen
Staff Columnist
On the other hand, some Kansans are unequivocally terisitical (for Kansans) romantic about the way things "used to be." They want to bring back the old days that were. . . actually not all that great. But there are some unromantic aspects of that history that seem timely again.
**Realistic expectations.** A good thing about the handpowel was that you already knew the desired ends would require hard work. Today, the difficult task might be to improve a city, yet we tend to think that technology will do all the work. Our ideas, like the plow, need to be painstakingly guided.
Kansas?)
- Hard work. I like to think early Kansans were less concerned with the "self-made" man, then a modern breed, then with making the plains inhabitable for the least of its settlers. I like to think they were, translated into modern English, more liberal (but dare we even say such a thing about
An unromantic view of nature. It is easy for Coloradoans and Californians to romanticize the mountains and the ocean. And it is probably good, since they are usually most outspoken about environmental conservation.
Still, there is always the point beyond just being made aware that the land is being polluted and ruined by us, where conservation stops and pollution continues. Here, Kansas history intervenes, implying it is much easier to care for a land that you rely on for survival daily, than one that makes a pretty postcard.
The plains being just a little bit plain is nothing to bemoan. After all, the beauty of purple mountains majesty is just a cliche. With Kansas, the more you look at it, the more you like it. Colorado is and always has been a monument to beauty, but the beauty of Kansas comes more as a daily reward.
I used to grab a little of it on jos along the Kansas river (where there are no mountains obstructing the view.) Without stepping one foot outside the state, I saw a piece of landscape that was new every day. The beauty was there, though some days I really had to squint for it.
So, while other states have cosmopolitan cities and natural landmarks that burst out at you, they also have their drawbacks. We shouldn't try, nor wish, to copy them. To get to know the shy state of Kansas takes some effort. Even then, it's less of a lasting romance than a risky day-to-day love affair. As the early settlers might have said, in their own words, "Go for it."
Buying rubbers is an awkward situation
Few things can compare to the gripping fear of buying rubbers for the first time. This occasion usually falls only too close to the advent of puberty, before the delicate male psyche is even fully able to deal with acne.
Women can empathize with men. Surely going to the doctor to get that first prescription for the birth control pill can be equally harrowing. Both men and women know the terror of the trip to the
From many accounts, pharmacists are cruel men. So, apparently, is everyone behind the drug counter with the power to dispense rubbers. Anyone who has seen The Summer of 42 knows how far this cruelly can go. I once had a nightmare that goes something like the cartoon that appears on this page.
1970
I still remember my first time as if it were yesterday. The very worst events in life somehow fade conveniently from our minds, but the memory of it still sits neatly atop the pile of my reminiscences.
I knew the druggist at the nearest store, so I drove to a neighboring suburb. Along the way, I wondered where I was going to go next time, if indeed there was to be a next time.
Just as I was beginning to breathe a sigh of relief, my girlfriend's best friend walked out of the stockroom and behind the counter to ring up my rubbers.
I went to the counter, which mercifully was situated at the rear of the store. Everything seemed to be going just fine. The rubbers were peg-hooked on the front of the counter. I decided to stay at the secluded rear counter to pay for my little purchase.
--imagine Oliver Norv limithing himself to so simple a truth; every breast-beating confession seems to come with a gaudy rationalization. "No excuse, sir" would be so much simpler. It not only saves time but saves the miscreant from embarrassing himself further by offering feeble excuses.
John Benner
Editor
I quickly swept them off of the counter with my arm.
"Hi." she said. "What can I do for you?"
"I, she said. What can I do for you."
I looked behind the counter and saw the packages of film. "I need a 36-exposure roll of tri-x, please."
"Sure," she replied. "Do you want those rubb-ers, too?"
M. T. PARKING
"Price check on condoms!"
I was certain that my face turned scarlet. "Yes, I guess I do."
"Have a nice time. Tell Shari 'hi' for me, okay?" "Sure thing." I wondered how she could be so casual about this. I knew Shari was going to kill me.
It was only after this first trip to the drug store that I began to discover all the things that go with being the owner of rubbers. I had to find a place to keep them so my mother wouldn't find them and ask embarrassing questions. I realized that keeping rubbers out of reach caused it caused a raised circular outline on the leather.
I got home one day to find my brother and a friend of his using one of my stashes as an extremely durable water balloon.
Only years later did I discover that, if I hadn't been too particular, I could have purchased rubbers just about anywhere. I found that they were sold in the restroom of any respectable gas station or bar. One of my favorite pieces of graffiti appears on a rubber dispenser in the restroom of a bar here in town. It simply says: "Don't buy this gum. It tastes like rubber."
I hope this means that my son, when he goes to buy rubbers for his first (and probably not sanctioned) sexual encounter, will have an easier time of it.
These days, with many people fearing AIDS and other diseases transmitted through sexual contact, various health organizations have recommended rubbers in full-page newspaper advertisements. Rubber companies have started advertising rubbers on television, and some grocery stores now sell them in the checkout lines.
Did Lt. Col.Oliver North learn his lesson?
The Iran-contra hearings are proving less than educational for the one witness who may have the most to learn: Oliver North.
There he was in his beribboned uniform telling a congressional committee that he had lied to Congress again and again, month after month. "I want you to know," he said, "that lying does not come easy to me." That may have been his most surprising assertion yet. Think of all the practice he's had. "I admit that I participated in the preparation of documents that were erroneous, misleading, evasive and wrong." North said. "I make no excuses for what I did." Whereupon he proceeded to make excuses for almost everything he did — lying to Congress, using funds not his, and covering up his actions.
1983
Paul Greenberg
North could scarcely confess a deception without making excuses for it, and he confessed indiscrements with the same bravado with which he committed them. One moment he said that "the grossest misjudgment I have made in my life" (it must have been hard to make that choice) was his fabrication of some phony documents to hide the gift of a security system for his home. The next moment he blamed the government for not paying for it. The next, he offered to take on a legendary terrorist mano-a-mano...
--imagine Oliver Norv limithing himself to so simple a truth; every breast-beating confession seems to come with a gaudy rationalization. "No excuse, sir" would be so much simpler. It not only saves time but saves the miscreant from embarrassing himself further by offering feeble excuses.
Syndicated Columnist
'It’s as if North has learned nothing from all this. He is still able to sturt while sitting down and under oath. His aye is a ‘yes . . . but’. And his nay is a self-serving defense. To summarize his testimony: yes, he lies, deceived and did what he ought not to have done, but there always was a good reason.
Once upon a time, military men were taught a simple, concise response when they had done something for which there was no excuse. It went, in its entirety: "No excuse, sir." What ever happened to that expression? It is impossible to
Unfortunately, Oliver North seems to be setting the tenor of the whole committee's deliberations. Senator Daniel Inoyue, whose reputation as an impartial judge was much stronger before he began chairing these hearings, decided to wear his own Distinguished Service Cross to the hearings for the first time last week. He didn't have to do that; his empty sleeve is testimony enough to his services to his country. But the bemedaled presence of Ollie North reduces everything to a form of personal competition. Principles, even simple ones like telling the truth, tend to be obscured by all the macho he brings out.
In order to defend certain principles — truth, honor, country — Oliver North winds up muddying them. The depth of that betrayal does not yet seem to have struck him. In order to repent, one must be aware of what one has done, and Oliver North's confession-capulation would indicate that he
has only the vagueest notion of what he's done — just enough to admit and defend it.
There is no denying the man's charm, his good looks and confidence, his almost sensing sense of humor. One can see how he got so far and, alas, how he fell so fast. The sins of Congress in handing aid to the Nicaraguan resistance, or rather mishandling it, have given the colonel and his always vigilant counsel Brendan Sullivan, an opportunity to argue on trial: It is a sight that cannot help but please him, and for the underdog, Outnumbered by his host of congressmen and their staffs of lawyers, Col. North is the picture of the gladiator at bay, and not an unappealing one.
Yet there is something missing in Oliver North — the something that in others counsels prudence and produces self-restraint. It is most important that a military officer who serves a republic, a government of laws, has a strong sense of self — where it begins and leaves off, how far it can be exerted in the service of one's country and the point beyond which it dare not go, what encroachments it rightly may allow others to make on it, and what it must not sacrifice to their demands or to its own aspirations.
The next time the service academies revise their reading lists, they might do well to consider including some of Oliver North's testimony. It could prove invaluable in teaching young officers what to avoid. As for the education of Col. North, that would seem a more formidable assignment. He seems remarkably assured giving testimony that ought to do anything but assure him. Perhaps it is the surroundings. He acts like an adamant captive in the midst of the enemy camp. Like any military man, he bridles at a bunch of civilians sitting around and second-guessing the decisions made by an officer under pressure.
MR. BADGER by A.D. long
WHAT DO THE PRESIDENT KNOW?
Colonel North. Did you send
memoranda to the President
regarding the diversion of
funds to the contraxs?
THE CAPITAL BUILDING OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Yes, I did, Senator.
Where are these memos?
I think I shredded those.
Did I get 'em all?
KEPT-19
LIVE
WATC
You've testified that the President didn't know about the diversion of funds.
That's correct.
Yet, you assumed that the President approved your actions?
Yes, I did.
KEY FAIL
WAY AWAY
SENATOR RADGER
(0) WISCONSIN
How could the President approve actions which he knew nothing about??
It's called "deniability."
Kansan Summer Weekly/Wednesday, July 15. 1987
5
Low summer student population poses challenge to businesses
By LIZ SYVERSON Special to the Kansan
The city's lowered student population during the summer may create a slump in Lawrence business, but the slow months can be a good time to utilize money-making strategies, a local businessman said recently.
"So what if the students are gone? Take the time to improve your image Bill Muggy, owner of the Bill Muggy Bookstore, 1420 Crescent Road, said.
Muggy told members of the local Small Business Council on June 25 that business owners needed to develop strategies to improve their businesses.
The Small Business Council, a committee of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, provides guidance and advice to local small businesses.
"Almost any business can improve. Maybe by throwing out a few sparks, we can start some fires of creativity." Muguy said.
To create a few sparks of his own, Muggy bought a yellow double-decker bus, which is the symbol of the bookstore. Muggy called it his version of the Goodyear blimp. Distributing a catalog and the use of employee-generated ideas, such as Panama Jayhawk T-shirts, have also revitalized business, Muggy said.
Debbie Moore, director of small business and community affairs of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, said Lawrence businessmen had diversified their business interests to expand beyond the student consum-
Businesses handle summer months differently.
Gordon Shreves, owner of Gordon's Boot Center, 2449 Iowa St., said that summer sales were down 20 percent.
night's The Men's Shop, 839 Massachusetts St., said, "Back in the old days, July and August were very slow months. We are not as reliant upon student business as we were."
However, Ralph and Melody Smith, owners of Joe's Bakery, 616 W. Ninth St., close their doors to summer business. "We simply close down after graduation. Seventy-five percent of our students. When you work as intensely as we do during the school year, you need a vacation," Melody Smith said.
Included in his advice to small businessmen, Muggy said that becoming familiar with other business operations was important. Cooperative shipping with Carol Lee Products was a cost-cutting measure for the Jayhawk Bookstore.
He urged businesses to be aware of what is being produced locally. "Why buy something from a distant source when you can buy some items locally?"
Pete Whitenight, owner of White-
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Wednesday, July 15, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
Wyly Continued from p. 1
he has a strong marriage.
"I think he feels sincerely that he did what he had to do. He had a mission and he carried it out."
Wyly said that public reaction was now based more on what people had seen on television and less on their political feelings.
"Most of the reactions before the hearings were emotional. Those who were against American intervention in Central America were against them, to them, he represented the U.S.'s policy of intervention." Wlyl said.
"His personality is very much a real personality. He comes across as a very genuine human being, and that bolstered their opinions about
him."
Although he does not know North personally, Burdett Loomis, chairman of the KU political science department, agreed with Wyly that North's personality had made him believable.
"North himself is doing a good P.R. job," he said.
Public opinion polls released Monday showed a turnaround in North's favor. An ABC News poll indicated that 84 percent of those surveyed believed that North was telling the truth.
Before North began his testimony July 6, an ABC News poll indicated that only 58 percent thought North was truthful.
ly by NBC News and the Wall Street Journal two months ago, 54 percent of those polled disapproved of Reagan's policy to help support the contras. Last Sunday, a poll showed only 43 percent disapproved of his policy.
Polls also indicate North's testimony may be changing the opinion of many about the contras.
While North's popularity increased since the start of his televised testimony, his personality became more than the truth itself, Loomis said.
"Oliver North is the perfect guy for the Reagan presidency because his personality has become the policy," he said. "He has managed to avoid the truth."
"For Reagan, the truth isn't very important. For North, the law isn't very important, and then the law ends up getting trampled," he said.
The Associated Press supplied some information for this story.
According to polls conducted joint-
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Wed., July 15 Key Largo
Director:
John Huston
The tough Edward G. Robinson,
the disillusioned Bogart and
acid-tongued Bacall meet to form a
memorable trio in this moody tale
of a lone survivor. Florida Keys, Bogat and Bacall in classic form, (1948, 101 min.)
Thur., July 16
Sabotage
Director:
Alfred Hitchcock
This vintage film by the master traces the attempts of a professional saboteur to destroy London. This fascinating early work features Sylvia Sidney and two hocknock "touches." (1936, 76 mm.)
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Kansan Summer Weekly
Wednesday, July 15, 1987
Arts and Entertainment
7
ALEXANDER C. MARTINI
KU professor works with hands and heart to sculpt limestone bronze statues for KU buildings
In an airy, high-ceilled room with sunlight streaming through open doors, the sculptor scooped up a handful of warm wax and, almost reverently, smoothed some on a woman's figure.
The figure, titled Prairie Spirit or Kansas Spirit, is the creation of Elden Tefft, professor of art and a renowned sculptor.
Prairie Spirit was commissioned by the Alpha Chi Omega sorority in honor of their centennial, Tefft said. It will be completed next year and installed on the north side of the Adams Alumni Center on the site of the original Alpha Chi Omega house.
"This represents the spirit that's come from Kansas all these years." Tefft said. "We're talking about the people of the prairies and maybe even back around the time of the Indians."
The Jayhawk in front of Strong Hall, the 10-foot Moses in front of Smith Hall, the portrait bust of William Allen White in Stauffer-Fitt Hall, and the University seal, medal, and plaque were created by Tefft also.
Tefft said he began sculpting while attending Lawrence Memorial High School in the late 1930s. His mentor
was Bernard Frazier, a University of Kansas professor who had been the first male graduate in the KU department of design. They worked in a small studio in the basement of Spooner-Thayer Art Museum.
"I was always interested in making things and in all kinds of art," Tefft said. "I tried everything until I had earned I had to go back to sculpture."
Gesturing around the large, equipment-filled foundry that he works in now, Tefft said, "This is quite a ways up from those days."
The foundry contains the special furnaces that are needed for bronze casting, the process Tefft usually uses.
"I did most of my foundry learning around the world," Tefft said. "Actually, when I started working, there were no foundries, no bronzes, in a university like this."
Teft said he traveled to Mexico, Europe, South and Central America and the Orient to study bronze casting systems and techniques. In the middle 1950s, he convinced Franklin Murphy, then the chancellor of KU, that the University needed to build a foundry.
"He said, 'Build one,' and we had it
functioning by 1960," Tefft said. "So we invited sculptors from all over the country and held the first National Bronze Casting Conference here."
About 100 sculptors attended the conference the first year, he said. The conference, which was held every two years, soon became known as the International Sculptors Conference. It was held at KU until 1976, when organizers decided to change locations for each conference. Last year it was held in Oakland, Calif., and several thousand sculptors from around the world attended, Teftt said.
Besides Prairie Spirit, Tefft also working on a small sculpture for the Buddy Award, which will be presented for the first time this fall. Copies of the work will be presented to annual recipients of the award.
Bobby Patton, chairman of the theater department, said that the award honored Buddy Rogers, a former KU student and famous actor in the 1920s. Rogers will be the first recipient of the award at the 1987 KU homecoming.
"We were just so excited when Tefft agreed to do this because he's such a fine artist. He has a beautiful vision of the world." Patton said.
Story by CAROLINE REDDICK Photos by DARCY CHANG
Left, Elden Tefft, professor of art, lays balls of petroleum oil on Prairie Spirit, a sculpture commissioned by the Alpha Chi Omega sorority. In the background is the model for Moses, which stands in front of Smith Hall. Below left, Tefft carves from a wax figure that will be the model for the Buddy Award, which was created to honor distinguished KU alumni in theater or communication studies who have been friends to the University of Kansas. Below right, Tefft was inspired to carve this cat after a two-month stay in China last summer. The sculpture, Gate Guardian, is made from limestone.
A hand gripping a wooden object.
[Image of a tiger's face with visible fur texture and markings.]
Film gives audience a taste of Vietnam veterans' bitter pill
By DEBRA A. PETERSON
Special to the Kansan
Some people say the United States became indifferent to the Vietnam conflict because it went on for so long that it became a supper-time war. Families could sit down for a meal and, between bites of peas and carrots, watch TV films of helicopters landing and people running, always running, and listen to Walter Cronkite talking about how many guys got killed that day.
When the war was over, a generation of U.S. citizens who'd ingested it along with their dinners began asking what it was all about. The media couldn't explain it. The military wouldn't.
Recently, Oliver Stone's *Platoon* tried to show us what Vietnam was about. A convention in Canada this spring featured speakers and writers who'd been there, and they tried to tell us.
Now, Stanley Kubrick's Full Metal Jacket, based on The Short-Timers by Gustav Hasford, makes us swallow slices of several Marines' Vietnam experiences. We're served raw chunks of terror, humiliation and intimidation, carved with a serrated knife in flickering firelight with explosions and gunfire for dinner music.
In Vietnam, the villager who served rice to an U.S. soldier in the morning might cut that soldier's throat at night. The enemy was everywhere, and nowhere, in a guerrilla war where the number one rule was, Trust Nobody.
There are two distinct halves in Full Metal Jacket. The first half follows a group of recruits through Marine boot camp at Parris Island, S.C., in the mid-60s. The intellectual Everyman of the film, Joker, played by Matthew Modine, is our eyes and ears. Through Joker's transformation from raw recruit to mean, green killing machine, we experience war as an exercise in the absurd.
Joker is always ready with a quip, delivered in a dead-pan manner that's almost too practiced.
His drill sergeant is cut from the same cloth as the sergeant in An Officer and a Gentleman. The classic put-downs, racial slurs, name-calling and questions about a recruit's sexual preference are all there.
But the screenplays of Kubrick, Hasford and Michael Herr do not show the human side of the sergeant. We never see him one-on-one with a recruit. He yells to communicate and resorts to physical abuse if the men don't understand. Despite this harassment, his goal is always clear: to root out any trace of weakness that could get a man killed.
But, one of the recruits, Leonard Lawrence, played by Vincent D'Ontrofi, cannot take the abuse. Fat, stupid and inept, Leonard is dubbed Gomer Pyle by the sergeant because of his slack-jawed facial expression and puppy-dog innocence. Leonard's stupid mistakes force the sergeant to punish the entire squad by making them exercise whenever Leonard goofs.
Eventually, the men retaliate one
night in a brutal scene paced by music that combined the sound of deep breathing with sharply-struck piano notes. This scene marks the turning point in Leonard's Marine experience. Now, he begins to excel at playing piano training. He becomes very good at cleaning and firing his rifle.
The tight shots on Leonard's face as he steadily improves his marksmanship reveal what Joker has begun to suspect, that Leonard is not playing with a full deck. The boot camp brainwashing strategy of tearing a man to pieces and rebuilding him into a soldier hasn't worked with Leonard. He can't be put together again.
The climactic and bloody end to the first half of the movie drew cheers from some audience members and shocked gums from others. Watch
A long, slow fade to a tepia wash on the screen followed by Nancy Sinatra's hit, These Boots Are Made for Walkin', provides the transition into
the second half of the film.
The camera fades up on a wide pan of a Da Nang street. Seated at a café table is Joker, his hair grown back since basic, and another inept man with whom Joker works. Both are correspondents for Stars and Stripes, the military's official newspaper.
Joker has begun wearing a peace symbol by this time. That, coupled with his irreverence toward the military, gets him sent to Hue.
But, one scene doesn't match the tone of the rest of the film. In it, when the squad discovers two dead U.S. soldiers, the camera zooms down so that the audience looks up at the living men from ground level.
From the struggle to capture Hue to the end of the film, the camera works keep us close to, and at eye level with, the Marines. When they crouch to move in, we stay low to the ground too. When a man is shot and even if we are there to help him, we are there at his feet because we made to feel like one of the guys.
In a ponderous, solemn, almost
preachy fashion, the camera moves to each squad member so he can eulogize over the dead men. Their statements are stiff and out of character, creating a jarring, heavy bit of unreality in an otherwise fairly realistic film.
Kubrick also seems to have kept us in the dark about the inner workings of his characters deliberately. We see the surface and think we have inside the man, but every man we meet eventually acquires a distinct, cold stare that says, "You can never come in."
Full Metal Jacket doesn't achieve Platoon's carefully orchestrated climax, and it doesn't give us that movie's fully-rounded characters. But Full Metal Jacket's episodic nature and frank, almost casual presentation of atrocities help us comprehend the complexity behind Joker's simple comment at the end, "I'm alive and I'm glad." We begin to taste, finally, the very bitter pill that Vietnam veterans have had to swallow.
Kansan Summer Weekly
Wednesday, July 15, 1987
Arts and Entertainment
7
PETER A. GLEESON
KU professor works with hands and heart to sculpt limestone bronze statues for KU buildings
In an airy, high-ceilled room with sunlight streaming through open doors, the sculptor scooped up a handful of warm wax and, almost reverently, smoothed some on a woman's figure.
The figure, titled Prairie Spirit or Kansas Spirit, is the creation of Elden Tefft, professor of art and a renowned sculptor.
Prairie Spirit was commissioned by the Alpha Chi Omega sorority in honor of their centennial, Tefft said. It will be completed next year and installed on the north side of the Adams Alumni Center on the site of the original Alpha Chi Omega house
"This represents the spirit that's come from Kansas all these years," Teft said. "We're talking about the people of the prairies and maybe even back around the time of the Indians."
The Jayhawk in front of Strong Hall, the 10-foot Moses in front of Smith Hall, the portrait bust of William Allen Allen White in Stauffer-Fall Hall, and the University seal, medal, and plaque were created by Tefft also.
Tefft said he began sculpting while attending Lawrence Memorial High School in the late 1930s. His mentor
was Bernard Frazier, a University of Kansas professor who had been the first male graduate in the KU department of design. They worked in a small studio in the basement of Spooner-Thayer Art Museum.
"I was always interested in making things and in all kinds of art," Tefft said. "I tried everything until I finally decided I had to go back to sculpture."
Gesturing around the large, equipment-filled foundry that he works in now, Tefft said. "This is quite a ways up from those days."
The foundry contains the special furnaces that are needed for bronze casting, the process Tefft usually uses.
"I did most of my foundery learning around the world," Teft said. "Actually, when I started working, there were bronzes, in bronze, in a university like this."
Tefft said he traveled to Mexico, Europe, South and Central America and the Orient to study bronze casting systems and techniques. In the middle 1950s, he convinced Franklin Murphy, then the chancellor of KU, that the University needed to build a foundry.
"He said, 'Build one,' and we had it
functioning by 1960," Tefft said. "So we invited sculptors from all over the country and held the first National Bronze Casting Conference here."
About 100 sculptors attended the conference the first year, he said. The conference, which was held every two years, soon became known as the International Sculptors Conference. It was held at KU until 1976, when organizers decided to change locations for each conference. Last year it was held in Oakland, Calif., and several thousand sculptors from around the world attended, Teft said.
Besides Prairie Spirit, Tefft also is working on a small sculpture for the Buddy Award, which will be presented for the first time this fall. Copies of the work will be presented to annual recipients of the award.
Bobby Patton, chairman of the theater department, said that the award honored Buddy Rogers, a former KU student and famous actor. Rogers will be the first recipient of the award at the 1987 KU homecoming.
"We were just so excited when Tefft agreed to do this because he's such a fine artist. He has a beautiful vision of the world," Patton said.
Story by CAROLINE REDDICK Photos by DARCY CHANG
Left, Elden Teiff, professor of art, lays bails of petroleum on Prairie Spirit, a sculpture commissioned by the Alpha Chi Omega sorority. In the background is the model for Moses, which stands in front of Smith Hall. Below left, Teft carves from a wax figure that will be the model for the Buddy Award, which was created to honor distinguished KU alumni in theater or communication studies who have been friends to the University of Kansas. Below right, Teff was inspired to carve this cat after a two-month stay in China last summer. The sculpture, Gate Guardian, is made from limestone.
100%
Film gives audience a taste of Vietnam veterans'bitter pill
By DEBRA A. PETERSON
special to the Kansan
Some people say the United States became indifferent to the Vietnam conflict because it went on for so long that it became a supper-time war. Families could sit down for a meal and, between bites of peas and carrots, watch TV films of helicopters landing and people running, always running, and listen to Walter Cronkite talking about how many guys got killed that day.
When the war was over, a generation of U.S. citizens who'd ingested it along with their dinners began asking what it was all about. The media couldn't explain it. The military wouldn't.
Recently, Oliver Stone's *Platoon* tried to show us what Vietnam was about. A convention in Canada this spring featured speakers and writers who'd been there, and they tried to tell us.
Now, Stanley Kubrick's Full Metal Jacket, based on The Short-Timers by Gustav Hasford, makes us swallow slices of several Marines' Vietnam experiences. We're served raw chunks of terror, humiliation and intimidation, carved with a serrated knife in flickering firelight with explosions and gunfire for dinner music.
In Vietnam, the villager who served rice to an U.S. soldier in the morning might cut that soldier's throat at night. The enemy was wearing a scarf where, in a guerrilla war where the number one rule was, Trust Nobody.
There are two distinct halves in Full Metal Jacket. The first half follows a group of recruits through Marine boot camp at Parris Island, S.C., in the mid-60s. The intellectual Everyman of the film, Joker, played by Matthew Modine, is our eyes and mouth. Though Joker's transformation from a violent skilling machine, we experience war as an exercise in the absurd.
Joker is always ready with a quip, delivered in a dead-pan manner that's almost too practiced.
His drill sergeant is cut from the same cloth as the sergeant in An Officer and a Gentleman. The classic put-down, racial slurs, name-calling and questions about a recruit's sexual preference are all there.
But the screenplays of Kubrick, Hasford and Michael Herr do not show the human side of the sergeant. We never see him one-on-one with a recruit. He yells to communicate and resorts to physical abuse if the men don't understand. Despite this harassment, his goal is always clear: to root out any trace of weakness that could get a man killed.
But, one of the recruits, Leonard Lawrence, played by Vincent D'Onofrio, cannot take the abuse. Fat, stupid and inept, Leonard is dubbed Gomer Pyle by the sergeant because of his slack-jawed facial expression and puppy-dog innocence. Leonard's stupid mistakes force the sergeant to punish the entire squad by making them exercise whenever Leonard goofs.
Eventually, the men retaliate one
night in a brutal scene paced by music that combined the sound of deep breathing with sharply-struck piano notes. This scene marks the turning point in Leonard's Marine experience. Now he begins to excel at playing and training of music training. He becomes very good at cleaning and firing his rifle.
The tight shots on Leonard's face as he steadily improves his marksmanship reveal what Joker has begun to suspect, that Leonard is not playing with a full deck. The boot camp brainwashing strategy of tearing a man to pieces and rebuilding him into a soldier hasn't worked with Leonard. He can't be put together again.
The climactic and bloody end to the first half of the movie drew cheers from some audience members and fans from others. Watch Leonard's face.
A long, slow fade to a sepia wash on the screen followed by Nancy Sinatra's hit, These Boots Are Made for Walkin', provides the transition into
the second half of the film
The camera fades up on a wide pan of a Da Nang street. Seated at a cafe table is Joker, his hair grown back since basic, and another inept Marine with whom Joker works. Both are correspondents for *Stars and Stripes*, the military's official newspaper.
Joker has begun wearing a peace symbol by this time. That, coupled with his irreverence toward the military, gets him sent to Hue.
In a ponderous, solemn, almost
From the struggle to capture Hue to the end of the film, the camera work keeps us close to, and at eye level with, the Marines. When they erough to move in, we stay low to the edge of the water, so everyone gathers around to help him, we are there at his feet. We're made to feel like one of the guys.
But, one scene doesn't match the tone of the rest of the film. In it, when the squad discovers two dead U.S. soldiers, the camera zooms down so that the audience looks up at the living men from ground level.
preachy fashion, the camera moves to each squad member so he can eulogize over the dead men. Their statements are stiff and out of character, creating a jarring, heavy bit of unreality in an otherwise fairly realistic film.
Kubrick also seems to have kept us in the dark about the inner workings of his characters deliberately. We see the surface and think we have seen inside the man, but every man we meet eventually acquires a distinct, cold stare that says, "You can never come in."
Full Metal Jacket doesn't achieve Platoon's carefully orchestrated climax, and it doesn't give us that movie's fully-rounded characters. But Full Metal Jacket's episodic nature and frank, almost casual presentation of atrocities help us comprehend the complexity behind Joker's simple comment at the end, "I'm alive and I'm glad." We begin to taste, finally, the very bitter pill that Vietnam veterans have had to swallow.
8
Wednesday, July 15, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
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Kansan Summer Weekly
Wednesday, July 15, 1987
Sports
9
Nationals edge AL 2-0 with 13th inning triple
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Tim Raines two-run triple in the 13th inning last night gave the National League a 2-0 victory over the American League in an All-Star Game that made a mockery of baseball's year of the home run.
longest All-Star Game in history. The Nationals now have won all eight extra-inning games and lead the series with a record of 37-20-1.
Pitching dominated like never before in 52 previous All-Star games.
in 57 previous All-Star games. In the twilight zone of Oakland Alameda County Coliseum, it was more like the dead ball era. In the midsummer showcase of a season of record paces for home runs and scoring, the only records set were for
offensive futility
Both team managed just seven hits, the fewest ever, through nine innings, and no All-Star Game had ever gone scoreless past the sixth inning. Only 11 times before were there no home runs, the last time in 1978.
But Raines, who missed the first four weeks of the season before resigning with Montreal, finally produced the verdict.
Atlanta's Ozzie Virgil opened the 13th with a single, and pitcher Lee Smith struck out trying to bunt because there were no pinch-hitters left on the NL bench. Montreal's Hubie Brooks singled to right field, moving Virgil to second, and Willie McGee filed out before Raines tripled off Howell, whose 4.96 earned run average was the highest among the 17 All-Star pitchers.
Smith pitched three innings of two-
hit ball with four strikeouts for the hit球, and Sid Fernandez, the last player left on the NL roster, pitched the 13th for a save.
AL starter Bret Saberhagen, Kansas City's 15-game winner, was almost perfect in his three innings of pitching.
Royals rookie Kevin Seitzer threatened to score in the American 10th with a fly ball to the center-field track, which ended the inning.
adidas
Ultimate play
A group of ultimate frisbee players practiced last night in the field behind Oliver Hall
Jan M. Morris/KANSAN
AUBURN, Ala. (AP) — Heisman Trophy winner Bo Jackson said yesterday that he had agreed to a contract with the Los Angeles Raiders that would enable him to fulfill his dream of playing both professional football and baseball.
Bo to play for Raiders
Jackson said he would join the NFL team in the fall as a running back after he finishes playing outfield for the Kansas City Royals, where he is the team's leading home run-hitter
Neither Jackson nor his agent, Richard Woods, would comment on the terms of the contract. But sources said the deal was for $2.6 million over five years, including a $1 million signing bonus. He also will receive a $1 million loan.
He is believed to receive about $300,000 a year from the Royals on a five-year deal.
Rock Chalk tennis match will include professionals
Jackson, the No. 1 pick in the 1986 NFL draft, turned down a $7 million, five-year contract with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
Woods said it may be a few days before the Raiders contract is signed.
When Jackson would join the Raiders depends on the success of the Royals, who trail Minnesota by two games in the American League West. If Kansas City fails to win the division title, its season would be over Oct. 4, but if the team is involved in playoffs and World Series, the season could run until November.
Raiders coach Tom Flores said Jackson's agent approached the team, which had drafted the former star in the seventh round last April.
At his news conference, Jackson said he was pleased with the way his rookie season was going and pledged that baseball would continue to be his "No. 1 priority," with football only being a part-time job.
"This all happened in just the last couple of weeks." Flores said.
Special to the Kansan
By ELAINE SUNG
Hodges, who was injured last spring, said that he and a group of other KU players were invited by the university to attend the circuit in order to gain experience.
It's a stepping stone for some; a way to gain points for a world rank. To the organizers, it is the culmination of weeks of planning.
Jackson said several times this year that his football days were over.
"With that kind of competition, you can't be satisfied by just winning one match. You have to be hungry for the win and set your goals high. My ultimate goal it to play well enough to get a ranking, and I think I can do it."
"You can't help but improve when you're playing good, professional players," Hodges said. "You improve every week, and you get to work hard."
Wildey, who made it to the No. 2 singles finals in the Big Eight conference tournament last spring, looks to gain computer points leading to world ranking, and said that the location of the tournament was an ideal opportunity for him.
Senior Reggie Hodges, and sophomores Jeff Gross and Jim Secrest are in the qualifier.
He hopes to play well enough on the circuit to get a ranking, whether it be circuit or world. Hodges said.
The Rock Chalk Tennis Championship, scheduled for July 17 through July 26, is the first of a four-stop satellite circuit.
More than 200 college and professional players are expected to compete in the tournament. Matches are scheduled to be played on the courts outside Robinson Center.
Perelman was contacted by the president of the Missouri Valley Association in January 1987 and was asked if he was interested in holding one of the legs of the tournament at KU.
The tournament is being sponsored by the United States Tennis Association and Mainline Printing of Topeka. Scott Perelman, KU men's and women's tennis coach, is the director of the tournament, which will be awarding $12,500 in prize money.
"I knew we needed to find a corporate sponsor, so I approached Mainline Printing," Approached Mainline said. "When they agreed, that just kicked the whole thing off."
KU has several players in both the qualifier and the main draw. Former Jahewkay Mike Wolf and sophomore Craig Wilde, the top singles players on the KU team last spring, both have wild card spots in the main draw as well as a wild card berth in the doubles competition.
The qualifier, with more than 128 players, will run the first three days of the tournament. Sixteen will make it into the 68-man main draw, which will begin on July 21.
Brown's Junior Team roster includes KU guard.
By JOHN MONTGOMERY Special to the Kansan
KU basketball coach Larry Brown announced his final roster for the U.S. Junior World Team Sunday, and Kansas guard Kevin Pritchard was among the 12 players selected.
Brown cut seven players, including Kansas recruit Lincoln Minor, from the original 19 that were chosen to try out.
He said Pritchard earned a spot on the team with strong play throughout practice last week in Allen Field House.
"I think he worked hard like he always does," Brown said. "We're going to see a lot of zones, and he might be the best pure shooter we have."
Pritchard said he was excited to be going with the team to the Junior World Championship July 23-30 in Bormio, Italy.
"I think I can help this team," Pritchard said. "I just went out there at the beginning of practice and tried to play as hard as I could and do the things I can do. Luckily, things happened my way."
The U.S. Junior World Team will play an exhibition game at 7 onight in Allen Field House against former Jayhawks such as Darnell Valentine, Greg Dreiling, Cedric Hunter, Mark Burgeon, Ron Kelley, Calvignin and Ticket Bills. Tickets for the game are available at $4 for adults and $2 for children.
The team will leave tomorrow for
Brown wants to put NY rumors to rest
By JOHN MONTGOMERY Special to the Kansan
Larry Brown wants to put aside for good the rumors about who's coaching the KU basketball team next season.
Brown told the media at a press conference Sunday evening that he had not been in contact with the NBA New York Knicks since early May and that he intended to stay in Kansas.
"I thought when I got back and signed my contract, people would take that as an indication I was going to coach at KU, which I had every intention of doing," Brown said.
The University of Kansas announced May 8 that Brown had signed a new contract for four more years. The new contract renews annually so that a four-year contract is always in effect.
The most recent speculation about the New York coach job arose when the Knicks hired A Bianchi, a former coach of
Brown's, as general manager. The New York Daily News reported in a story that Brown again had been in contact with the team.
"I haven't been saying 'no comment,'" Brown said. "I'm saying I'm coaching here."
Kansas sophomore guard Kevin Pritchard echoed Brown's feelings.
The New York Daily News also said Brown had "no comment" about discussions. Brown said that there was a misunderstanding and that he had not been in contact with the Knicks.
The Knicks announced Monday that the team had hired Rick Patino as head coach Patino led Providence College to the Final Four last year and is a former Knicks assistant.
Europe and play two exhibition games in Frankfurt, West Germany, before going on to Italy to compete against teams from 11 other nations.
Brown said that he was honored to have been considered for the position and that he still has ties to the New York area. But, he said, he was tired of the speculation.
Brown also said that Minor, a transfer from Midland Community
That gets old. Coach Brown has
to do what he has to do, and he has to what's best for him," Pritchard said. "As a player, you just try to block it out and do what you're supposed to do."
Pritchard said that when he was recruited, Brown said he would be here when Pritchard graduated
Brown said he first talked to the Knicks in late April, but he was happy to be staying at KU.
"I met with the Knicks, and everybody knows that," Brown said. "I got criticized for going, and I tried to explain myself, but it didn't come out the way I would have liked."
Brown's contract negotiations began in January 1986. The lengthy negotiations and resignation of KU Athletic Director Monte Johnson in March created uncertainty about Brown's future.
"I was really proud of him," Brown said. "He's had a little taste of me now. He needs to get away from me for a while."
"I've been here four years," Brown said. "I'm a senior member of the Big Eight coaching fraternity."
College, Midland, Texas, had played well.
Brown said the cuts were difficult to make, but those cut would have the
Minor will play on the East team at the U.S. Olympic Festival beginning Saturday at the University of North Carolina.
Pritchard said he thought the team's strength was in both its speed and good rebounding.
He said many of the players selected could play more than one position. Six of the 12 spots on the roster were filled by guards.
"We wanted quickness because we have to create scoring opportunities," he said.
opportunity to play at the festival.
Brown said he was pleased with the talent of his final squad and thought the team could do well in the Big Eight Conference.
"It'd be pretty darn good," Brown said. "We'd be great. Unfortunately, we don't recruit that way here."
The 11 other members of the U.S. Junior World Team are Stacey Augmon, Nevada-Las Vegas; Robert Brickey, Duke; Ron Huerry, Arkansas; Larry Johnson, Southern Methodist; Gary Payton, Oregon State; Dwayne Schintzius, Florida; Lionel Simmons, La Salle; LaBradford Smith, Louisville; Steve Thompson, Syracuse; Brian Williams, Maryland and Scott Williams, North Carolina.
All of the 12 men on the squad are freshmen or sophomores.
Brown's assistant coaches for the U.S. Junior World Team are Gary Williams of Ohio State University and Marshall Hamilton of Broughton High School in Raleigh, N.C.
Two former KU students to vie for world titles in orienteering
By ELAINE SUNG
Special to the Kansan
When orienteering is mentioned, most people look confused, but to two former University of Kansas students, it is the chance to travel around the world and compete with the best.
Peggy Dickison and Mike Eglinski are two of ten racers representing the United States at the World Orienteering Championships this fall.
Dickison, currently working in Washington, D.C., and Mike Eglinski, a research assistant at KU, will travel to LaBresse, France to participate in the championships, scheduled for Sept. 2-5.
Dickison currently is ranked number one in the nation, and she is also head coach of the national junior orienteering team. Eglinski present number seven. The two won the intercollegiate team title in 1983 and 1984.
Orienteering involves cross-country running and map-reading skills. At each meet, runners are given a map with ten different points on it.
Dickison also won the intercollegiate women's title in 1984 and 1985.
each representing a marker on the course. Runners run the distance between points, called a leg, at their maximum speed, and read the map to decide the best trail to use during each leg.
Twenty-four nations will send a team of men and women to the competition. The United States is sending the top three finishers in each of the men's and women's competitions to compete in the world championships. The remaining spots are filled by a committee that evaluates each athlete's previous experience and past records.
"You have to think while you're tired," Egkinski said. "The courses are all different, so you can never have a perfect run."
The United States usually places low in the competitions, Dickison said. The Scandanavians finish at the Czechoslovakians and the Swiss.
"They have developed this into a national sport," she said. "They have little kids starting out in orientering, but here most people don't start until after college.
"Their experience will count for a
The best any American has finished was eighth in the team relay several years ago.
whole lot. We'll also have to get accustomed to the food, the weather and the terrain, plus we'll have jet lag."
"I'd like to make the top 30," Dickison said. "But I honestly don't think it's possible."
Eglinski was chosen by the committee to race in the world championships. He said he hoped to make it to the tournament, but had no specific goal in placing.
"I'd just like to feel like I ran hard, and I didn't make too many mistakes," Eglinski said.
The courses are all different, ranging in length and difficulty.
Beginners usually compete on two-mile courses, where trails are easier to follow and markers are more visible. More experienced orientees compete on six, to seven or eight miles, with markers hidden from the trail.
A typical orientering season is from October to April, when the weather is cooler and the leaves have fallen from the trees.
Mike Eglinski, research assistant at the University of Kansas, works out on West campus. He was preparing for the World Orienteering Championships in LaBresse, France, September 2-5.
USA
Jan M. Morris/KANSAN
City wins bid for Games
Judy Billings of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce said Tuesday that this will be announced at a press conference at the Adams Alumni Center today. The selection was the result of a bid submitted by the Convention Bureau to be host for the 1987 games are being held in Syracuse, N.Y. The 1986 games were held in St. Louis, Mo.
Lawrence has been selected host for the 1988 Amateur Athletic Union/ Junior Olympic Multi-sport Games.
More than 10,000 people are expected in Lawrence for the games, which will run Aug. 7-13, 1988.
"We are expecting 4,500 to 5,000 athletes." Billings said. "The athletes get to Lawrence by winning state, regional and district competitions."
Wayne Bly of Lawrence, AAU Region Eight director, said that athletes would be competing in 18 different sports.
"We should have about 2,000 15-18 year-olds compete in track and field. We should have a lot of athletes in 13-and-under boys' basketball and in wrestling." Bly said. "Some of the other sports like water polo and table tennis won't have as many."
10
Wednesday, July 15, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
Men sweat, endure heights to break down smokestack
By JEAN KETTER Special to the Kansas
Special to the Kansar
Chimney mechanics can't be afraid of heights, hard work or getting dirty.
The four men who are tearing down KU's outmoded concrete smokestack work 10-hour days at heights of up to 250 feet, and when they finish a day's work, they say they're too tired for night life.
Don Stiener, a worker on the project, comes down at the end of the day with his tan skin paled from the concrete dust and his medium-length brown hair wind-blown under his dusty hard hat.
All the workers on the project are from Poplar Bluff, Mo., and stay in a Lawrence motel through the duration of the job.
"By the end of the day, I just want a shower, supper and a bed. I'm too tired to go out," the said Joe Whitlow, an officer on the project who quit last week.
The men, employees of Gerard Chimney Co. St. Louis, ride a chair hoist up the stack between 7:45 and 8 a.m. and work until around 6 p.m. Only Leroy Brower, project foreman, comes down to get the men's lunches. The men also keep a water jug on the platform.
There are no bathrooms at the top of the stack, so the men sometimes urinate over the side
"The men just have to do what comes naturally when it comes to
using the bathroom, but we always check wind direction." Whitlow sait.
Brower said the men remained on the stack all day because moving up and down the stack on the diesel-power hoist would be too time-consuming.
To break up the concrete, they use
so-pound jackhammers suspended
from the ceiling.
Although the job may look dangerous, Brower said he had seen few accidents in the 30 years he had worked in the field.
"Gerard Construction has a pretty safe record." he said.
But when accidents do occur, they are usually fatal or crippling because of the heights the men work at, Brower said.
Whitlow said that while working for another company in Terre Haute, Ind., he saw a man fall 200 feet to his death.
Brower said his men wore safety belts at heights of more than 30 feet because federal job-safety rules required it.
The platform they stand on, about the width of a doorway, is made of overlapping 2-by-10-inch boards resting on brackets. The brackets are attached to a cable circling the stack. The cable passes through pulleys to the ground so the platform can be loosened and lowered.
The chimney mechanics on this job earn $11.33 an hour and time-and-a-half for overtime.
"The men can earn $35,000 to $40,000 a year." Brower said.
Chimney mechanics don't just tear down chimneys. They also build, repair and paint chimneys and smokestacks, Brower said. He has worked all over the United States and in Europe and helped repair a 1,380-foot smokestack for a copper smelter in Madrid last year.
Whitlow has worked for many different chimney companies all over the United States. He once painted an 720-foot smokestack in Milwaukee.
"Every job is different. It never gets boring up there." Whitlow said.
Lining up there. *Whitlow said*
On June 3, the workers began
tearing down the KU smokestack,
which was built in 1922.
Brower said the original seven-week deadline won't be met for many reasons.
The men don't work on rainy or windy days, nor on the two days a week that the subcontractors clear the debris at the bottom, Brower said.
As the men progress toward the bottom, they have to break up thicker concrete and cut more reinforcement bars. At the top, the men could remove two or three tiers of $4\frac{1}{2}$-foot sections a day. Now they can only see one foot-wide section down a day, Brower said.
Workmen must also cut through an additional inner concrete lining that runs from 30 to 60 feet above the base of the stack.
KU student will march
By a Kansan reporter
A KU marching band member has been selected to play in the "We the People 200" parade on Sept. 17, in Philadelphia, Pa., celebrating the bicentennial of the U.S. Constitution.
Mark Simerly, Lakewood, Colo., senior, will play in the Fanfare Unit of the parade, which is made up of brass and percussion, he said. Simerly plays the euphonium.
"It's the same as a baritone," Simerly said. "The euphonium is a concert instrument, and the baritone is more for marching bands."
He was nominated by Robert Foster, director of KU bands.
"Foster felt I had given service to the band," he said. "I guess he thought I deserved the nomination.
"I've spent four years in the marching band, and I was a high school all-stater. I'm pretty good, but I'm not the best at the University."
Simerly, a computer science major, has performed with the KU Marching Jayhawks, KU Symphonic Band and KU Concert Band.
The Fanfare Unit will take part in the parade's opening ceremony and introduce each of the parade's sections. The band will perform for an evening show to be broadcast nationally by CBS-TV.
"It's the same type of group that played at the Olympics and at the Statue of Liberty celebration," Simerly said.
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STUDENT INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITIES
MARC, the association of local governments for metropolitan Kansas City, is now accepting applications for college credit internships for the fall and spring semesters. These are not "go-for" positions. MARC internships give inexperienced students the chance to perform the same tasks that are required in professional business and government positions. Internships are available in the following departments:
PUBLIC AFFAIRS DEPARTMENT—Students in the fields of journalism, English, communications, and public relations will write articles and reports, work with the media, and plan and implement promotional campaigns. Contact Mary Beth Gordon.
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL (816)474-4240
RESEARCH DATA CENTER (RDC)—The RDC houses the region's most comprehensive of economic and demographic information. Students in the business, economics, marketing, public administration and urban planning will assist in the development and marketing of the center's products and services. Contact Alice Watland.
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT—Urban Planning students will collect and analyze local and regional demographic and economic data as well as assist small communities in developing and updating comprehensive plans. Contact Marlene Nagel.
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L
Kansan Summer Weekly/Wednesday. July 15, 1987
11
Two KU students must pay fines
Sentencing ends county's first false I.D. case since 1983
By KRISTEN HAYS Staff writer
Staff writer
Two KU students who were involved this spring in manufacturing and selling false drivers' licenses out of Oliver Hall were sentenced Friday to pay $100 fines and court costs.
The students are Pamela A. Troufette and Leigh Ann Dennert, both Overland Park freshmen who were roommates in Oliver Hall last semester. The court costs amounted to $88.
Troutfetter and Dennert were charged May 11 with one count each of aiding and abetting dealing in false identification, which is a felony. They later pleaded guilty to an amended charge of attempted possession of a false driver's license, which is a misdemeanor.
Two students from Missouri Western College in St. Joseph, Mo., Steven C. Dean, Osage Beach, Mo., and Keri Lee Dickerson, Camdenton,
Mo., were also charged in Lawrence May 11 with one count of dealing in false identification and possession of forgery devices.
KU Police Lt. Jeanne Longaker said KU police received an anonymous phone call May 6 alerting them that a false identification operation was taking place in Oliver Hall. That night Dean, Dickerson, Troutetter, and Dennert were arrested in the hall.
Dean was sentenced Friday in Lawrence District Court to one to two years imprisonment for dealing in false documents on the KU campus.
Dean was originally charged with one count of dealing in false documents and one count of possession of forgery devices. He pleaded June to dealing in false documents, and the other charge was dismissed.
Dickerson will be sentenced today in district court. She pleaded guilty to
an amended charge of unlawful use of a driver's license.
Denney said that while use of false identification is a misdemeanor, the penalty for manufacturing and dealing false drivers' licenses became a class E felony in 1983. That law was expanded in 1986 to include anything used for identification, such as a KU I.D.
The penalty for a class E felony is up to five years in prison and a $10,000 fine.
Jim Denney, director of KU police on the Lawrence campus, said the demand for false drivers' licences had risen in Lawrence in the past three years as the legal drinking age went from 18 to 21.
"There's a supply and demand problem," he said. "Students didn't need one three years ago, when the drinking age was 18. Now there is a need to be filled."
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12
Wednesday, July 15, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
SIDEWALK SALE DOWNTOWN
DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
SIDEWALK SALE
THURSDAY, JULY 16
FREE WATERMELON
Register to win a trip for two by Maupintour Travel Service and Braniff Airlines.* *Restrictions apply*
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ALL SPRING & SUMMER MERCHANDISE!
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Hurry for best selection. Sales start at 7:30 a.m. til 8:30 p.m. All purchases final and entire stock not included.
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North Face, Sierra West, Woolrich
Jacket 30% off
Speedo Swim Suits 30% off
& Accessories
Sale
SKIS, SNOWBOARDS
Head Skis, Raichle Boots,
Tyrola Bindings, Poles
Burton Snoblards
$159/$119 and $289/$259
Ski bags and boot bags
from $10 to $28
Bic Ski Racks
$89/$60
Thule Crosscountry Rack
$27/$19.95
Alpine Goggles
30% off
Glovees- Kombi and Saramac
40% off
Alpine Gaitors
$8
Goretex
$10
XC Gaitors
$12
Sierra West and Powderline Skis Pants
30% off
Bibs
30% off
Limna Racks
10% off
$5
SALE
Bicycles & Accessories
1986 Bicycles up to $65 off
Terry and Fat Chance Bicycles 10% off
Vetta Racks $15
Rhode Gear Continental Racks $15
Rhode Gear Road Rack $10
Diadora Ironman Shoes $50/$35
Nike Touring Shoes $39.95/$25
Jackson Gloves $7
Jackson Shorts $14.98
Short-Sleeve Jerseys 30% off
Assorted Saddles $10
Kiwi Helmets 20% off
Rhode Gear and Cannondale Backs 50% off
TB Handlebars $5
Bull Moose Bars $25
Bike and Hike Tent $95/$75
Light weight Eureka Tent $115/$95
Yakima Root Racks 10% off
Reformate Trainers $105/$79.95
All Bike Shorts 10% off
Touring Turbo Box Tires $14.98$/8
Hamilton Eagle Cycle Computer $69.95/$50
Wheels-Front $12
Rear $14
Wrench Sets 20% off
Spenco Grips $10.95/$6.00
Brake lever Pads $3.95/$17.95
Se-w-up tires Vittor'S Slicks $24.95/$19.95
Se-w-up tires Continental'I Tri $24.95/$19.95
Se-w-up tires Sorrier $24.95/$19.95
SUNFLOWER
804 Mass., Lawrence, Kansas 60644
913-843-5OQO
Sale
Sailboards & Accessories
1986 Mistral Superlight $995/$895
1987 Mistral Competition $1000/$895
1987 Fleetwood $800/$895
1986 Fanatic Rat $1100/$895
Used Superlight Hull $300
Windsure Boom, Mast Feet 10% off
Oneil Wet Suits 20% off
Gaastra Sails 15% off
Chest harnesses and Fleetwood harnesses 15% off
Sailing Slippers $20/$14.95
Mistral Cooler $19.$10/$10
I
1
Kansan Summer Weekly/Wednesday, July 15, 1987
13
Enjoy smooth, creamy
Frozen Yogurt that tastes like Ice Cream
but with 80% less fat!
--FREE SAMPLES--
I Can't Believe It's
YOGURT!
Frozen Yogurt Store
OPEN: 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Daily
Noon-11 p.m. Sundays
Louisiana Shopping Center
BEFORE YOU BUY, Check the KANSAN. Our advertisers might save you money.
"A FUNNY FILM EXUBERANT SATIRE."
R 7:30 & 9:30
11:30 Fri. & Sat. 5:30 mat. Sat.
BASL 790-1612
Tuesday: OPEN MIC NIGHT (Every Tuesday!)
Wednsday: Terry Ebeling
Thursday: ??????????????????
Friday: Rotting Carcus
Saturday: Name This Band
The
ROCK CHALK BAR
--plus an additional $100.00 OFF!
Contact Frank
at
Classified Ads
ANNOUNCEMENT
Bison Country
ENTERTAINMENT
LIBERTY HALL
At Your Request is Lawrence's Best and Most Afraid for any occasion. 941-660-3828
Tonight! Beatles stars on the patio at Dom Hesits, New Hampshire 9 p.m.
Sound 1847. Feel the rhythm of the night.
Sound 1847. Feel the rhythm of the night.
FOR RENT
2 bdrm duplex, on bus route, 15min walk to union,
washer/dryer/water/disposal, CA, Cats OK
$350 mo. 842-440 evenings and weekends 1027 New
York
Commercial office space available in Lawrence's newly developed University Corporate & Research Park. For more information call 841-7120.
EMERY PLACE APTS. A few 18r's and one 21r left for summer and fall. Reasonable rates. Great location / 2/3 block fraser Hall. Parking on premises, laundry facilities available. Call 412-842-4138 or 412 Ohio for more info. Excellent location. Caret. carpet, air, equipped kitchen, low utilities, available Aug. 15th at 1341 Ohio $310 Call 842-4242
ELEGANT RESTORATION? 953 Tenn. 3 brs. 1
Mansion, 16' x 20' x 7' w/ fireplace,
wälder/dyer, ceiling fans, central air, minibinds. OFF STREET parking, lawn care provided.
822-4673 for lawn care $750.00 low utilities.
822-4673 for landscaping $750.00
Apartments bedroom
- Laboratory retrieved
• Close to KU & Hillcrest
Avalon
- Gas and water paid
- Rental furniture available
- On KU bus route
- Extra storage space
Shopping Center
* On KU bus route
9th & Avalon Rd. 841-5797
Naismith Hall Contracts for sublease this fall
$160.00 Security Deposit PAID BY US
749-2338
Glenhaven
- Three story luxury
- apartments
- Close to Ku
- Off street parking
- Washers, dryers &
microwaves
1131 Ohio 841-5797
Village squarF
A related facility with plenty of space
Spacious 2 bedroom
Laundry facilities
Waste facilities
Swimming pool
10-12月 leaves
Female roommate wanted to share brand new spacious two bedroom apt. for fall, own room, on bus route, washer, dryer, and microwave. 217-50 House Mates Wanted: 3 to 4 people needed for a house north of stadium-like location. Rent $80-$120 per month. "Richard" "Pigger" E82 121-800. 106 Ahwana
VILLAGE SQUARE
843-294
thirth Avenue
SUNRISE PLACE
---
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APPEARS
2040 HEATHERWOOD DR.
LAWRENCE, KS 68044
BDRM. APTS.
STILL AVAILABLE
FOR FALL
- Hollywood style bath
Sunrise Apartment
Offering luxurious townhouses
and apartment living.
Stop by to see our
show unit at
9th and Michigan
or call .
841-1287
for an appointment.
Office hours are 1.5-M-F
- Covered Carports
- Swimming Pool
- On KU Bus Route
- 1 blk. to K.U. bus route
- Satellite television
NAISMITH PLACE
OUSDAML & 25th Ct.
841-1815
- Fully equipped kitchen
- Low utility bills
- FF refrig, Disposal,
- Private balconies
- Basketball court
BRAND NEW
2 BEDROOM ART
- On site management
- Gas heat, C-A
- On site management
* Rental furniture available
- 1 & 2 BR apartments
- Close to KU & on
- Lease before Aug. 1,
- Quiet location
- Laundry facilities
TRAILRIDGE
Dishwasher
- Starting at $250
For more info. call between 9-6, Mon.-Fri., 843-4754
HILLVIEW APTS.
--rental furniture available from Thompson-Crawley
STUDIOS APARTMENTS TOWNHOUSES
2500 W. 6th St. 843-7333
OAK MEYER GARDENS* need leaving 2 bernir,
remobbed, on bus route, possibility pet allow-
ance.
905 Emery Rd. 841-5797
3 swimming pools, tennis courts basketball courts excellent
- Rental furniture available
--water paid, balcony or patio
Starting at $260
205 F R 241.570°
Sleeping room • b a r m, ap s, close to campus
Summer & Winter leave. No Peltz, 842-8071
- 1 & 2 BR units
One and two bedroom luxury apartments to rent. Two blocks from the Kansas Union. Call at 817-349-2650. One bedroom apartment. Quit location, close to downtown and KU bus route. $260 plus utilities.
- 1 BD APT—walk-in closet.
maintenance, KU bus
- Custom furnishings
- Laundry facilities
Consider:
- Rental furniture available
apartments--all near KU!
one bedroom and studio. Water and gas paid.
Close to Downtown and KU bus route. 749-6808.
- On bus route - near shopping
- In car service area
MASTERCRAFT
- Energy efficient
- Affordable rates
- Variety of floorplans
- Variety of floorpians
- Designed for private
from Thompson-Crawley
- Designed for privacy
- Many great locations
- Professional management
CAMPUS PLACE—1145 Louisiana 841-1429
HANOVER PLACE-14th & Mass. 811.1012
SUNDANCE—7th & Florrae
TANGLEWOOD—10th & Arkansas
OPEN DAILY 1-5
Sublease large one bedroom apartment 2 rooms from Kansas Union, Ac carpet, gas heat, or 9 to 12 month lease. $250 electricity. 864-3413, 842-9860. Sunflower House now taking applications for fall semester. Please call or drop by to find out about cooperative living. 749-6871, 1406 Tenn.
EDDINGHAM PLACE
OAKS & GASLIGHT APTS.
1815 W. 24th
842-4461
Two bedroom apartment. One block from Student
Building. Washer/Dryer on premises,
parking 749 0805.
LEASING PROMOTION
$245
NEW
Furnished by Thompson-Crawley UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS AVAILABLE
1
FURNISHED
Two bedroom efficiency apartment Downtown location. New Carpet 749-0805.
Apartments
- 10 or 12 month
- Gas heat
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
FURNISHED
2. 3. 4 BDRM
24th & Eddingham (next to Gammons)
15th & Kasold
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
- On site manager
FOR SALE
Our Display Units Open Daily 9-5
contract
- On KU Bus Route
- Exercise Weightroom
- Swimming pool
Satellite T.V.
- Laundry
- Swimming pool
Professionally managed by
EDDINGHAM PLACE
- Fully equipped kitchen
Livingroom Factory Outlet. Just received truckload of furniture on our group's day. From Makerspace at the Grand at 7, Muhammad Quain Furniture Warehouse 738 New Hampshire MAIX'S COMICS Book, Playmats, Pen and Pencil Set.
- Fire place
749-4226
- Laundry room
- On-Site Management
Truckload Dineite Sale 1/2 price while they from $39 Mack & Quain Furniture Warehouse
For sale Electric guitar with case and amp.
stereo and campfire. Call after 519-748-2704.
For sale Kypos Model 2 Computer with 100 disc of
digital music and stereo amplifier to books
asking $600 for unit (816) 346-0400 Will Sell
- MOTHRAIL GOOD USED FURNITURE
* MONDAY 10.5-30 p.m. FURNITURE
* SATURDAY 10.2-6 p.m. FURNITURE
- Energy efficient
AUTOSALES
Waterbed kit Sale. Truckloads of selection arriving daily. Complete Kit size $99. Bookcase size Q $29. Crate size $19. Bed size $49. Bed Pad $99. Accessories 1/2 Price. Open 10-8 Daily Mark & Quain Purchase Warehouse 738 New York, NY.
Two bottled pop machines $100 each Will also hold long necks 723-3360
1976 Pinto station wagon, 4-speed. AC.
841-8188,雯情暖 condition. T0
841-8188,雯情暖
--w/microwave
HELP WANTED
Moped 1966 excellent condition. Honda Spree $300.
Moped 1967 excellent record, manual typewriter,
tablet 841-6824
Can you buy Jeep, Cars, 4x4's Seized in drug raids for under $100.00 *F* for facts today.
OR SALE-Queen Size Waterbed, complete
Electric typewriter-call B at 749-7585.
In It True You Can Buy Jeep for 444 through the
Iberia Airlines. Get the facts today! Call
1-812-312-9700.
Assistant Director/Business Affairs, Organizations and Activities Center. The Assistant Director is responsible for leading the business procedures component of the organizations and activities center. Complete job description available open request. Required experience in project management, experience in closely related field, experience in developing and presenting programs. Preferred experience includes managing complex tasks and provide detailed guidance. Salary is $17,000 for 12 months. Submit resume to Avenel Hewson, 6501 Burge Union, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 69045. Applications must be postmarked on or before FY18.
Illustrator wanted. Must currently be a student or have been a student in the spring. Will be it to be a faculty member, staff, and ask for Beth Williams for details. Closing July 12; Project Life Bureau of Child Research, an organization with no affiliation.
Director, Office of Minority Affairs, University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas. Provides Leadership training for students by assisting them with their transition into and retention within the University, assess student needs and opportunities which may hinder their personal, social and/or career development; develops programs to seek external funding support; oversee the implementation of required qualifications; Bachelor's degree, experience in administration in education and/or knowledge of college student personnel work; experience in research, teaching, and research ethnic, economic and cultural backgrounds; budget management and program development experience; and minimum 3 years of professional experience in the relevant field. Optional - work experience in higher education; grant and proposal writing experience; Salary: $24,000 a year plus a list of five references to: Professor Robbie Stewart, Chairperson of Search Committee, 216 S. Dearborn Blvd., Chicago, IL 60605, Kansas 60455, (913) 834-4766. A complete Job description is available upon request. Deadline September 2, 2018. EB/AAE
OVERSEAS JOBS Also Crusisee Listings.
Now Hiring To $94K, 80-657-600-670. OJ U7938
part time teacher's aid for preschool program to
start July 27th. Classroom experience with Sys
teacher or for other preschool age group, avail
to start, Aug 1st. Apply at Children
learning center, 331 Main
GOVERNMENT JOBS $10.90-$85.20/jr.wy
Call 867-687-6000 for current
email address
PERSONAL
RIDER TO ST LOUIS wanted to share expenses July 17th 841-4675
BUS, PERSONAL
Graduate assistant Positions Office of residential Programs Graduate Student status and group life programs residence hall, and off-campus housing administration / 2/time position held by the school. July 20, 1987 will be given priority. Begin August 1, 1987. For more information contact Fred McKinley, Director of Information, Strong Hall, the university of Kansas, Lawrence, Ks 600-6022. Equal Opportunity / Affirmative Action
PYRAMID
PIZZA
Excellent Investment for part time home assembly work. For info call 321-7840 8400 Ext 621
**STUDY ABROAD ADVISOR Office of Study**
Abroad announces a full time, professional position,
12 month appt. Responsibilities include the
design and implementation of a yearly
and summer study abroad programs. Required
qualifications include Bachee's degree, profi-
tional background in the field of study/travel /work abroad and/or
personal experience in a study abroad program.
Field of study/travel /work abroad and/or
description available at the Study Abroad Office.
Must submit a letter of application resume, and
recommendation letter to Study Abroad.
July 24, 1987 Contact person: Gale Carter,
Departmental Secretary, Office of Study Abroad,
Saint Louis University, Lawrence, Kansas.
K65445 AA/EO Alumnoyer
Buy one
Get one free
Mondays &
Wednesdays
Open every night
this summer!
4:30-12:30
Program Assistant, half-time School of Education, Office of the Dean. Assist budget officer/ Experience in bookkeeping/ accounting program/ Applications should include information regarding education and work experience and names of candidates to Suzanne Collins, School of Education, 117 Abbey Hall, Lawrence, 66454. Applies to: July 17, start date is August 18. EO/AA
Nightly Specials
842-3232
HADACHE, BACKACHE, ARM PAIN, LEG PAIN? Student and most insurance accepted. For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark Johnson 843-3979
GREENS
PARTY SUPPLY 808 W.23rd
Weekly Beer Specials
Busch 12 pk. $3.98
Coors Light 12 pk. $5.19
Lite 24 pk. $8.99
Julv 15-21
Ladies- Take a break from the Books, Pamper Yourself. Have a Complimentary Facial, call afternoons or evenings. Michele 749-1659 Rare and Used Records. Buy, Sell, or Trade
SERVICES OFFERED
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749
Expert tutoring service in STATISTICS AND ECONOMICS. All levels. Call Demmas B42-10535 GRAF X-Scientific and statistical illustration, maps, drawings, slides, editing and Phone
Graduate Students Experienced editor will
be required for dissertation or
Reasonable rates: 1.287-2,298
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion bives. Overland Park (913) 847-6077
www.overlandpark.com
Your driver's license with patrol testing upon suction. Transpiration provided. 841-2165
Joda E Friends
HAIR SALON
CARPENTER'S CABIN
- PEDICURES
- EAR PIERCING
- Our staff does unique services
- FACIALS
- MANICURES
- HI -LIGHTING
Please come by and see us for the best in hair care.
DONALD G. STROLE
Attorney at Law
- D.W.I.'s & Traffic
* Fake I.D.'s & other criminal offenses
* Family Law & other legal problems
TAROT THERAPY Readings, counseling. By appointment. 843-4235
16 East 13th St. 842-1133
TYPING
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing an order processing.
AABS absolutely Fast T typing is Back. Dependen-
tance. Wait, I see "Dependent".
No, it's just "Dependent".
Let's re-read the last line.
"Available. Kathy N1824 1809 days. Back. 3864 eva."
The dot after "Back" is a comma.
The dot after "Dependent" is a comma.
So the text is:
AABS absolutely Fast T typing is Back. Dependen-
tance. Available. Kathy N1824 1809 days. Back. 3864 eva."
1-1-1 THO Word processing. Conscientious,
Responsible, Reliable. Call 842-3114 for service.
The Woman Who Accurately Corrects Your Scribbles
Trains her accurately and grammatically correct letters of letter
writing.
AAA WORKPROCESSING quality work, low
prices 4924 MHz 1924 after 5 pm mf; anytime
work, low prices 4924 MHz 1924 after 5 pm mf; anytime
Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard
security 12/8% 25cm paper Fill Cursors
Mnemonics
A-Z Word Processing Service Quality resumes,
designations, Reasonable rates. File storage,
instructions.
Experienced Typist at reasonable rate. Call Holly at 843-0111.
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing.
Term papers, theses, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter
printing, spelling corrected 842-7247
Fast and clean typing assured. Call 841-6846 any time
For professional typing/word processing, call
Professional Summer special $12.50/pack,
double-space green.
Quality typing, excellent spelling, punctuation,
grammar editing, Pseudop delivery available
for online help.
TYPLING Plus assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses; dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes HAVE M.S. Degree 841-6254
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE WORDCORDS- Legal, Thesis, Office
WOORDCORDS- Why for typing "Word processing"
853-3147
FOP-NOTH SERVICES professional word processing; managements, resumes, letters, the book.
Typing Great rates- help with spelling- call
842 2629
WANTED
Responsible nonnaming roommate to share 2 bedroom apt at Meadowbrook. 265 room. Call 1-800-937-4848.
Classified Information Mail-In Form
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.
Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansan.
Deadlines
Deadline is on Monday at 4:00pm 2 days prior to publication.
Deadline for cancellation is at 4:00pm 2 days prior to publication.
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
Classifications
300 for sale 500 help wanted
310 auto sales 700 personal
400 lost/found 710 bus personal
800 services offered
900 typing
990 wanted
Classified Mail Order Form
(phone number published only if included below)
Please visit www.ad.by/bowen
Please print your ad one word per box:
ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
DATE AND PRINTED
Date ad begins.
Total days in paper.
Amount paid.
Classification.
---
DLOLW KANSAN POLICY
Make checks payable to:
University Dally Kansas
Lawrence, KS 65043
Lawrence, KS 65043
14
Wednesday, July 15, 1987/Kansan Summer Weekly
City commission gives resident 30 days to fix dilapidated house
By KRISTEN HAYS Staff writer
The Lawrence City Commission last night adopted a resolution stating that a Lawrence man living in a deteriorated home at 2015 Vermont St., has 30 days to make extensive repairs or the house will be demolished.
The man, Ray Barland, said he didn't understand why his neighbors were so concerned about the state of the property, which he said was his primary residence.
"I don't like to throw away old stuff that's good," he said.
But a report submitted by the city housing inspector said the house had a dilapidated foundation, no running water or electricity, and lumber and debris were piled on the porch and in the front yard.
Richard Garrett, 2018 Vermont St. told the city commission he had watched the deterioration of the property for many years. "On
November 1 (1986) the house was condemned. There's debris in the yard and junk cars have been stored there. Only one red Pinto is there now," he said.
Joanne Wylie, 2009 Vermont St., said the house had met the minimal city safety code before, but the standard wasn't maintained.
The house has been declared blighted five times since 1979. Each time, Wylie said, the debris was picked up and crude repairs were made, only to be allowed to deteriorate after city staff inspected the property.
Barland said he had talked with contractors, plumbers and electricians, but he couldn't find anyone to work at a reasonable cost.
"They all have dollar signs in their eyes." he said.
Commissioner Bob Schumm said he walked around the site earlier yesterday, and found the city inspector's description accurate.
"I question whether it's economically sensible to improve the property when it's in such a deteriorated state," he said.
Barland replied, "I'm aware of that. I'm doing that."
The commission unanimously adopted the resolution that Barland make the repairs in 30 days or the house would be demolished.
However, Commissioner Dennis Constance added to the resolution that if Barland made noticeable progress in his repairs, the commission could vote to extend his repair time an additional 30 days.
In other business, an ordinance concerning demolition permit procedures was approved in its first readiness commissioner Sandra Praeger, opposing.
The ordinance states that the building official shall not issue a demolition permit until at least 30 days after a request for a permit has been made.
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
Mon.-Wed.: $1.75 Pitchers
Thursdays: 50¢ Draws
Fri. & Sat.: 75¢ Draws
Madhatter 8 until ? 700 New Hampshire 842-9402
Bullwinkles 1344 Tennessee 843-9762
--with this coupon
FREE PLANT with this coupon
PENCE
--w/coupon
COUPONS
Nursery *Garden Center* Greenhouse 15th and New York 843-2004
JoVic fashion FOOTWEAR
NOW OPEN
Your One Price Shoe Store
818 Mass.
Your One Price Shoe Store
ALL 1299 pr.
--reg. $14
w/coupon
First Quality Brand Name Shoes for Women and Children
CHECKERS
PIZZA
16 inch Two Toppings & 2 Pops
$6.99 + tax expires 7-31-87
2214 YALE RD.
841-8010
HAIRCUTS
1
Expires 7-28-87
This To Do Loop
$12
FOR MEN AND WOMEN
10 Visits $25 or
Expires 7-31-87
(913) 842-5921
9TH & MISSISSIIPI
LAWRENCE, KS 66044
10 Visits $25
or
MONEY SAVER
Unlimited Use
$15 a month
$2 a visit
25th & Iowa·841-6232
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
Expires 7-28-87
CHECKERS
CHECKERS
PIZZA
16 inch Deluxe
$7.99 + tax
expires 7-31-87
2214 YALE RD.
841-8010
Nobody knows the athlete's foot like The Athlete's Foot
10%
OFF
ANY SHOE Valid through 7-29-87
The Athlete's Foot.
Valid through 7-29-87
942 Mass.
Firestone
Lube Oil & Filter $ 1 2^{8 8} $
24th & Iowa
Please present coupon offer expires 7/28/87
---
Sub & Stuff Sandwich Shop
---
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
$2.00 OFF
Any 3 or more pizzas
842-1212
FREE MEDIUM SOFT DRINK
with the purchase of any sub
1618 W. 23rd St.
expires 7-28-87 with this coupon only void with other offers
Buy One No. 1 Texas Burrito and be seated for
TALKING TO THE HEAD ON SUNSHINE
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
BORDER
BANDIDO
---
---
1528 W. 23rd
1820 W. 6th
*expires 7-28-87*
*Not valid
w/delivery*
842-8861
749-2770
TEXAS INSTITUTE OF MEDICINE
1/2 PRICE MOVIE RENTAL
expires 7.28.87
not to be used with any other promotion
VIDEO BIZ'
832 Iowa Street
Lawrence, KS 66044
(913) 749-3507
VIDEO BIZ
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
$100 OFF Any 2 or more pizzas
842-1212
25% OFF ANY Men's or Lady's Fragrance
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
RANEY
RANEY Drug Stores 843-9012
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
Esquire
Barber
Service
Since 1969
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST + FREE
DELIVERY
$100 OFF
Any Pizza Ordered
11 a.m.-4 p.m.
842-1212
1/4 - Pound Runza Hamburger
Now for a limited time get our award-winning 1/4-pound, freshly ground hamburger for just 65c!! That's half off our regular price ($1.30). Try the best-tasting, freshest burger in town today.
NAME ___
ADDRESS ___
DATE ___
Coupon expires 7-28-87 2700 Iowa, Lawrence
65¢
DOUBLE TROUBLE
MEDIUM LARGE
TWO TOPPING or TWO TOPPING
PIZZA PIZZA
Coupon good $5.99 $6.99
thru Dine in • Carry out • Delivery
RUNZA-
DIVIS 1944
RESTAURANT
Minsky's
PIZZA
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
50c OFF
Any 1 pizza
842-1212
---
$1.00 off Evening Buffet (7 days a week)
50¢ off Luncheon Buffet (7 days a week)
$1.00 VALUE
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
Expires 12/31/87
NOW YOU CAN
CHARGE FOR DELIVERY!
Minsky's
PLZZA
2228 IOWA
842-0154
749-4244
FREE DELIVERY
Minsky's
PIZZA
2228 IOWA
842-0154
Authorized Sales & Repair Center
FREE $25 Gift Certificate
w/coupon
LEADING EDGE $ ^{R} $
PIZZA LASAGNA SALADS
SPAGHETTI MANICOTTI
Valentino's Ristorante
MICROTECH
Computers 841-9513
25th & Iowa Holiday Plaza
Leading Edge is a trademark of Leading
Edge Hardware products, inc
ate
LINNEX LEOU
LEAGUE COLT
IBM
---
1/2 Priced Yogurt
50% Discount on small or medium cone or cup with this coupon
limit 2
coupon expires 7/21/87
I Can't Believe It's YOGURT!
Frozen Yogurt Stores
Louisiana Purchase Shopping Center
23rd and Louisiana, Lawrence
Open: 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Daily; Noon-11 p.m. Sunday
Phone (913) 843-5500
This coupon
entitles bearer
to one 25¢ game
during open bowling
25 $ ^{\c}$ BOWLING
Let It Roll!
For The Jayhawk
Level 1
Call 864-3545
THE KANSAS UNION
JAYBOWL
---
WEATHER
Today: Sunny and warm, high 93, no precipitation expected. Overnight low 70.
Tomorrow: Hazy and humid, high 91, overnight low 70.
Weekend: Sunny and hot each day, high 90-95, low 70-72. Little to no precipitation.
Escalating prices at the pump Walking tour of Spencer Museum #1 seed upset in Rock Chalk Tennis Tourney
Page 3
Page 7
Page 9
Wednesday
July 22, 1987
Vol. 97, No. 152
(USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
Repair schedule
U.S. ships guard fir Kuwaiti oil cargo
FUJAIRAH, United At rates (AP) — U.S. warlready yesterday to escort two Kuwaiti ships flying through the perilous Perswhere Iran threatens to att
Khor Fakkan is 90 mile the Strait of Hormuz, the gateway to the gulf between Oman.
Two Kuwaiti tankers nered as U.S. vessels flew flag off Khor Fakkan, an Airport in Fujairah, one of sheikdoms that make up t Arab Emirates.
This Great Taste...
Defense Department on Washington said the two to their naval escort would surrender the aircraft in three-day trip to Kuwait,
The tankers, the Bridget Gas Prince, are the fi Kuwaiti tankers to be They are part of a 15-v task force deployed in the g protection reflagged tankers mile voyage to Kuwait's oil terminal.
On Monday, the U.N. Council passed a resolution lace-up fire which ported but Iran ignored it
Iran said its Revolution marines seized three Ku boats' in the northern ence yesterday and captured The Tehran radio report details.
Kuwait also has chart tankers each from the Sd and Britain.
France, which severely with Iran last Friday in a dispute, said its warships two French tankers scenter the gulf later this w
on was
by "We
ere able
ands
and placed
there was
by "
ers will out the fire.
of the had rect the
Nebras faces $
OSHA also
to moving back "Our on this, excellent
WASHINGTON (AP) $2.59 million fine was pretender by the Occupation and Health Administrator the nation's largest in Iowa Beef Processors charges of failing to report 1,000 cases of employee illnesses at its plant in Ila Neb.
In recent weeks OSHA similar record-keeping IBP's Emporia plant. J degrass, assistant s labor for OSHA, said t investigation came after lodged a complaint against IBM.
es have
to come
his, you
IBP spokesman Gar said the company "will citation and proposed if the Dakota City plant, working days to take it independent occupation, health review commission"
OCHA, a labor Department
op
write what
so say that a
than light,
is impossi-
to explain
what you've to someone at this until this doesn't and another
access didn't
Call The "Pizza Experts"At Pizza Hut Delivery.
15. It was
, p. 6, col. 1
Pendergrass said he could not comment about the specifics of the Emporia investigation because it
cry, proposed the fine following an investigation of IRP's Dakota City beef slaughtering and processing plant.
January after the United Food and Commercial Workers International Convention, the company with violating federal jobin reporting requirements.
From staff and wire reports.
Campus telephones will be out of service Friday night
Campus telephones will be out or service Friday from 5:30 p.m. until midnight, the KU director of telecommunications said this week.
By a Kansan reporter
The telephones will be turned off so that the campus telephone system can be switched over to a new system, Dewey Allaire said.
He said that during this time the telephone dialing system on campus also would be changed.
With the new system, to call an off-campus number, dial '8' instead of 7.
Also, to dial the emergency '911' number, it will no longer be necessary to dial the prefix of '9' to get off campus. The emergency police, fire and ambulance emergency number can be reached by just dialing '911'.
calls. also dial '8.'
Alaina said telecommunications workers would be going through campus buildings and offices this week to make sure the phones are working.
Alaire said people should call 864-4039 to report problems with their campus telephones.
Extra! Extra!
Kyle Calvano, 9. and Scott Breithaupt, 10. pass the time while waiting to sign up as extras for the movie Kansas.
Darcy Chang/KANSAN
WEATHER
Today: Sunny and warm, high 93, no precipitation expected. Overnight low 70.
Tomorrow: Hazy and humid, high 91, overnight low 70.
Weekend: Sunny and hot each day, high 90-95, low 70-72. Little to no precipitation.
Escalating prices at the pump Walking tour of Spencer Museum #1 seed upset in Rock Chalk Tennis Tourney
Wednesday
July 22,1987
Vol. 97, No. 152
(USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published by the students of the University of Kansas since 1889
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
U.S. ships guard first Kuwaiti oil cargos
FUJAIHAH, UNITED Arab Emirates (AP) - U.S. warships stood ready yesterday to escort the first two Kuwaiti ships flying U.S. flags through the perilous Persian Gulf, where Iran threatens to attack.
Two Kuwaiti tankers newly registered as U.S. vessels fwell the F.U. flag off Khor Fakkan, an Arabian Sea port in Fuairairk, one of seven small
sheikdoms that
Arab Emirates
Khor Fakkan
the naval base of
H gateway to the g
Oman.
Defense Depa Washington said their Navy escort yesterday or three-day trip to
The tankers, t Gas Prince, a Kuwaiti tanker They are part task force deplec; protect reflag mile voyage to oil terminal
Reconstruction of the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity house, damaged by fire April 26, is on schedule, and students should be able to move in for the fall semester, said the fraternity's alumni board president.
On Monday,
Council passed
ing a cease-fi-
port, but Iran
Iran said its F
marines seized
boats" in the no
yesterday and
The Tehran ra-
d details.
By KATHI POLCAR Special to the Kansan
France, who with Iran last I dispute, said it two French t enter the gulf I
Kuwait also tankers each fi and Britain.
OSHA
Neb face
Repair schedule for Sig Ep house going smoothly
In recent we similar recor IBP's Empirol dgrass, as labor for OSI investigation lodged a cc against IBP.
IBP spokes said the citation and p the Dakota State University independent credit health review
THE FIRE PROTECTION DEPARTMENT
OSHA, a Lacy, proposed investigation beef slaughter plant.
WASHINGT $2.59 million firterday by the and Health A the nation's Iowa Beef I charges of fail 1,000 cases of illnesses at its Neb.
State-of-the-art fire protection in plan
Pendergrass comment ab Emporia in
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"Basically, it will be a brand new house with a new look. We'll have a pitched roof, Pella (replacement) windows, a state-of-the-art fire protection system.
Campus t service Frid midnight, t communica talent
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A gray and mauve color scheme will be used throughout the house, and a new sign is planned for the front lawn, Gray said.
By a Kansan t
Pizza Hut
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In Lawrence
The teleph
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He said that during this time the telephone dialing system on campus also would be changed.
DELIVERY
With the new system, to call an off- campus number, dial '8' instead of '9'. For long-distance and KANS-A-N
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Alaire said people should call 864-4039 to report problems with their campus telephones.
Allaire said telecommunications workers would be going through campus buildings and offices this week to make sure the phones are working.
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In Kwanton County, KY 42506
Pizza Hut
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take it as safe and
图
inspection was fraternity. "We wns; we were able exit signs and would be placed things. There was between us." city members will sit, about the before the fire. president of the di students had di board direct the
s' attitudes have
say said. "To come
ing like this, you
t closer."
4 forward to move and getting back ones said. "Our id so hard on this, an excellent